|
Some say that the
name Carthage was the punic word for New City, which would seem
an apt title, as it was the new city founded by queen Dido of
Phoenician Tyre. However, Robert Graves tells us there was once
an incarnation of the universal and ancient Great Goddess, whose
name was also Car, and who may have pre-dated other goddesses
around the Mediterranean. There is evidence that the new city
may, indeed, have been named for this very goddess.
The goddess Car of
historical record, who ruled the area today comprising Tunisia,
Libya, and the Algerian Sahara, was known in more recent times
as a lunar goddess. Like most lunar goddesses, her name would
describe the car or chariot of the moon that she drove across
the night sky, sometimes in brilliant light, sometimes in mysterious
darkness. But Graves presents convincing evidence, in The Greek
Myths, that in extremely ancient times she was really a solar
goddess who was later replaced in various cultures by the likes
of Apollo.
Car was originally
the goddess who drove the chariot of the sun. And since it is
the sun, not the moon, which is related to fire, burning, and
the color red, this would be a more logical identification for
a phoenician goddess. Phoenix itself means red. And the sacred
bird of the Phoenicians, the phoenix, immolates itself on its
own funeral pyre, just as the Phoenician queen Dido, founder of
Carthage, would end her own life.
For reasons too complex
to elaborate here, astrologically and mythologically, the bull
has been associated since antiquity with earth and water, while
the horse was related to fire and air. The constellation Sagittarius
is a fire sign, and according to Oldfield Howey's landmark work,
The Horse in Magic and Myth, this constellation is seen
most clearly dominating the night sky in the southeastern United
States, where the bones of the Centaur of Volos have most recently
come to rest at the University of Tennessee.
Pegasus is only one
of the many horses that fly, others being the Celtic Epona, the
Cretan Leukippe, the White Horse that founded Prague, Wotan's
horse Sleipnir, as well as the horses that traditionally draw
the sun through the skies. From Asia to England, the hobby horse
was the traditional vehicle of the shaman through the night sky,
evolving in the Middle Ages into the witches' broomstick.
Both before and since
the development of the horse-drawn chariot--2000 years after the
ox-cart, an evolution that can be traced in Stuart Piggott's Wagon,
Chariot and Carriage --horses were often associated with women,
from Lady Godiva to the Valkyries. In tribute to the earth goddess,
Northern kings were reborn from a sacrificed horse, part of the
fertility festival. Many British and western European kings were
named Marc (horse) or Marches-Marquez (rider). According to Barbara
Walker's The Women's Encyclopedia of Myths and Secrets,
the Slavic horse, interestingly named Volos, was a stallion that
was ritually castrated and slaughtered up to 18th century AD,
when he was Christianized into a human and named St Vlas.
|