Library Cthulhu

Title of interest

While most of the essays in the collection are monotheist, there are some polytheist reads in Travel and religion in antiquity edited by Philip Harland.

Religion in the road in ancient Greece and Rome
Have horn, will travel: the journeys of Mesopotamian deities
The divine wanderer: travel and divinization in late antiquity
Roman translation: Tacitus and ethnographic interpretation
Library Cthulhu

Another academic text for polytheists.

Rethinking Ghosts in World Religions edited by Muzhou Pu/Mu-chou Poo.

Among the articles of potential interest:
"Wind and smoke : giving up the ghost of Enkidu, comprehending Enkidu’s ghosts"
"Belief and the dead in Pharaonic Egypt"
"The Roman manes : the dead as gods"
"The ghostly troop and the battle over death : William of Auvergne (d. 1249) connects Christian, Old Norse, and Irish views"

book(s) of (the) becoming?

This is a matter I have been researching of late, one which is rather puzzling.

Several years ago someone mentioned a book(s) to me called The Book of Becoming or Book of The Becoming. At the time, early 2000s, I got curious and noticed there were several alleged textual copies of it on various internet sites, usually in connection with 'Necronomicon' text copies of various sources. However when it was mentioned to me someone else who was there and didn't know the person mentioning it had heard of it as well and mentioned some names from it the first person seemed upset at being mentioned.

The odd thing is that it seems to have been rather prominent at one time, and seems to have just randomly disapeared without any sign. There are some roleplaying books with the same name these days but no search engine results that match.

I'm writing this wondering if anyone else has heard of this, knows any more about it, or knows where those textual copies may still be floating around on the internet.

There were various conspiracies that were mentioned as well to me. These I take with more than a grain of salt, however if anyone has heard of them as well it would be rather interesting.

Apparently the original copies of the book(s) were allegedly on the Orbiter Columbia (I was told about this shortly after the incident with the orbiter being destroyed during atmospheric reentry), and were supposed to be launched onboard some satelite which would either end up orbiting the sun closely or diving in to it. The shuttle was allegedly sabatoged to make sure the book(s) wouldn't make it back to earth.

What else I was told was that a being was trapped in each of the books (making the originals the only ones that had any power). That at various times various people had controlled them. The next I definitely find rather dubious, but apparently some rock band had controlled them which allowed them to rise to prominence. However they were either being forced to give up control of the books or were doing so willingly, one of the members deciding not to, who allegedly died in a plane crash. This sounds like Ozzy Ozbourne and his guitarist who died in a plane crash. However I doubt this on many levels, though odder things have happened I suppose.

Apart from this I cannot remember much apart from the beings trapped in the books were supposed to be elemental almost in nature and circa Summerian times or before that, trapped by some being or such in the books.

Any further information or knowledge?

(cross posted various places)
crown

Old Irish Resources online

I know there are some folks here who have interests in the Irish language, particularly Old Irish. For those who like to 'go to the source' for their info rather than relying solely on the opinions of others, I was recently pointed to two new resources having come online that might be of interest.

In no particular order, there is the eDIL (that's no less than the electronic version of the _Dictionary of the Irish Language_! ) is online via the Royal Irish Academy at:
http://www.dil.ie/

Also newly available (or newly found out about) is Dr. Julianne Nyhan's Lexicon of Old Irish. A searchable piece of work well worth looking into at:
http://epu.ucc.ie/lexicon/entry
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Library Cthulhu

Pilgrimage

I work in a library primarily devoted to monotheism, but sometimes I come across gems.

Pilgrimage in Graeco-Roman and Early Christian Antiquity: Seeing the Gods edited by Jas Elsner and Ian Rutherford. New book published by Oxford, with six essays on Greek and seven on Roman sacred pilgrimage. I JUST unpacked it this morning, so I have no idea if it's any good, but I thought it would be worth mentioning.
Fidus
  • malkhos

Baal Myth

I have been working on a literary project that consists of turning the cycle of Ugaritic myth into a short novel, epic in style. That is somewhat recherché I know. Who except for the lover of the obscure even knows what ‘Ugaritic’ might be?

Briefly, everyone knows that the Bible is full of myth, and that these myths might come in some sense from an older, ‘pagan’ civilization. Casual readers of the old testament might get the impression that the Canaanites had been wiped out sometime before King David, but this is not the case. The whole area that we think of as Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and Israel/Palestine, was inhabited in antiquity right up until the conversions to Christianity and Islam at the End of the Roman Empire by Semitic peoples who embraced many local versions of the same ancient religion that underlay Biblical myth. Jews were only a small part of the population of this area, and, just as today many holy places are shared by Jews and Palestinians, Morton Smith tells the detailed history of a shrine was used on Jan 6 each year by ‘Canaanites’ to celebrate the festival of the wine god Eschol and on the next day by to Jews to celebrate Yahweh’s triumph over Eschol, until St. Helena tore it down and built a church of the Epiphany (celebrating Jesus’ wine miracle at Cana). The temple of Baal at Heliopolis (modern Baalbek) was the largest temple of any kind in the world until the construction of the new St. Peters—but its Corinthian columns are still the largest ever executed (a replica of one is used as a water tower in St. Louis)—I could go on, but suffice to say that the traditional religion of this area was remarkably vigorous right up until the end.

Be that as it may, Ugarit was a city on the coast of Syria that happened to have been burnt down and sacked in the 14th century BC—preserving the clay tablets of the personal library of the city’s priest of Baal—Ilimiku by name—mostly his own compositions. And this is the principal source for our knowledge of the ‘Canaanite’ myth that underlies the Bible. But no one knows of these texts except for a few experts—certainly less than a thousand people in the world can even read the language and script in which the tablets are written (and I am not one of them)—and they are even tedious to read in translation (available for the most part only at Seminary and major university libraries) because the individual tablets are badly preserved. So I set out to make a literary version of these myths that might be appealing to the modern lay reader, and have used not only these tablets but the traces of Semitic myth that one may find in the Bible, in Hesiod and a few other hard to find places. What I have is an introduction that expands on this very message, and four chapters, the first one describing the creation of the world, and three more following the struggles of Baal as described by Ilimiku: against the God of the Ocean, in a struggle to achieve a supremacy recognized by the gods, and against death.

The project is most similar in English literature on the one hand to those of Blake and Milton, insofar as it explores biblical myth, and to Tolkien’s, insofar as it aims to reconstruct a lost mythos working with the broken pieces available to us. Though I make no claim to have equaled their achievement, I hope this gives you an idea of the genre.

An integral part of the concept from the beginning was to illustrate the text using images found on the web—mostly originating from my favored period of art between, let us say, 1840 and 1940, and if possible art published in that period in postcard form. This will remind the alert reader of Eco’s Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana, but the idea was well formed in my mind before reading that excellent novel. Patrons of the old Art Magic site may recall my list there of pre-Raphaelite paintings intending to illustrate biblical scenes, but equally applicable to older Semitic myths.

I have just posted a draft of the first chapter dealing with creation in my Live journal:

http://malkhos.livejournal.com/182…


If you make the effort to look at it, please leave a reply, especially if you find anything profoundly defective about it.
ME!

Slavic mythology books question...

I've been hard pressed finding books about Slavic mythology and, even more so, paganism. I was wondering if anybody knew of some particularily good reads out there, or any good translations of Slavic myth (Polish, Ukranian and Serbian especially). Thanks in advance.
oak in winter

Book Request

I'm looking for books and articles dealing with figures from Greek and Roman mythology. More specifically: their context. What might they have been representing, how they were perceived by contemporaries, and so on. Any suggestions?

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I'm looking for books and articles dealing with figures from Greek and Roman mythology. More specifically: their context. What might they have been representing, how they were perceived by contemporaries, and so on. Any suggestions?

<i><crossposted to <lj comm="recons"> and my own journal></i>