Witchcraft Introductory Study Course

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Catal Huyuk


Open Letter | What is Welsh Faerie Witchcraft | Thirteen Treasures Correspondence Course | Questionnaire
Registration Form | Introduction to Paganism | Who Are Pagans? | Pagans -- Children of the Earth
Welsh and Celtic Mythology | Legends of the Old Religion | Legend of the Lady | Legend of the Horned God | Legend of Lillith
Maya | The Goddess | The Horned God | The Welsh Family of Gods | The Many Other Names of the Goddess
The Great God Pan | Names of the God | Welsh Faerie Quarters | The Four Basic Tools | The Picts | Catal Huyuk | Lesson 1 Exam

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starCATAL HUYUK

(Excerpt from Catal Huyuk by James Mellaart; Thames & Hudson, London, 1967.) "Outside the ring of professional archaeology, Catal Huyuk is still a name of little meaning. But the recent excavation of the site...still far from complete...has in fact given it an importance of an outstanding kind. For already Catal Huyuk ranks with Jericho in Jordan as one of man's first known essays into the development of town life. Before 6000 B.C., Catal Huyuk was a city of a remarkable and developed kind.

"The site lies 32 miles southeast of Konya in southern Turkey and is one of several sites being excavated on the Anatolian plain.

"Catal Huyuk has yielded among other splendors, a unique sequence of sanctuaries and shrines, decorated with wall paintings, reliefs in plaster, animal heads, and containing statues, which give us a vivid picture of Neolithic man's concern with religion and beliefs.

"Out of 139 living rooms excavated, not less than one-fourth appear to have served the religion. Such worship rooms or shrines are more elaborately decorated than houses and they are frequently the largest buildings.

"Although these buildings are used for religious practices, no provisions for animal sacrifices have been discovered. No pits for blood or caches of bones of sacrificed animals such as we find in the Early Bronze Age shrines of Beyce Sultan.

"The only evidence of burnt offerings consist of small deposits of charred grain preserved between a plastering of red clay on ceremonial hearths.

"In plaster reliefs goddesses appear solely in anthropomorphic form and the place of the male is taken by bulls and rams, a more impressive exponent of male fertility. Only the bull, stag and leopard occur in full outline as well as in the form of heads, whereas the ram is never fully shown, and is simply represented by rams heads. Stags, boars, and leopards are rare and may be regarded as attributes of the deities, rather than as symbols of the god and goddess themselves.

"Several representations of breasts, constructed with animal bones, were also found, which evidently have a ritual and symbolic meaning of their own.

"The statuettes found in the shrines are a most valuable source for the reconstruction of Neolithic religion at Catal Huyuk, and in contrast to most other Neolithic sites they do not entirely consist of Mother Goddesses but also show a male deity. Moreover, many of these statuettes occur in groups, carved in the same material.

"They are anything but uniform and one definitely has the impression that different aspects of the deities are stressed. Various ages, hieros gamos (ritual marriage), pregnancy, birth, command over wild animals, etc. are all clearly defined and many of the statuettes tell a story beside simply representing the Goddess or the God. The frequency with which the goddess is shown associated with wild animals probably reflects her ancient role as the provider of game for a hunting population, and as patroness of the hunt.

"The birth of a god is frequently portrayed in the shrines. Differences in age distinguish between the god as son (the boy-god on the leopard; the adolescent god), the hunter in a leopard-skin cap, or the consort/husband, who is shown bearded and seated on his symbol, the bull.

"The same distinction in age is made a number of times in representing the goddess as mother or daughter and occasionally as twin goddesses in paster on the west wall of some of the shrines.

"The Divine Family was then patterned upon that of man, and the four aspects in order of importance: mother, daughter, son, father.

"The general feeling one gets from these materials favors the existence of but two deities...the Great Goddess and her son/paramour The Sky Father.

"As the only source of life, women became associated with the process of agriculture, with the taming and nourishing of domesticated animals, with the ideas of increase, abundance and fertility; hence, a religion which aimed at exactly that same conservation of life in all its forms, its propagation and the mysteries of its rites connected with life and death, birth and resurrection, were evidently part of Her sphere rather than that of man. It seems likely that the worship of the Goddess was administered mainly by women with the presence of male priests by no means excluded, and such rare objects as obsidian mirrors, leopard skins, and finely-wrought belt fasteners may have been part of the ritual paraphernalia of female and male priests."

The above description of a community of 7,000 years ago and its religious practices mirrors closely those of Great Britain, prior to the arrival of the Celts.

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