The religions of Syria never had the
same solidarity in the Occident as those from Egypt
or Asia Minor.From the coasts of Phoenicia and
the valleys of Lebanon, from the borders of the Euphrates
and the oases of the desert, they came at various
periods, like the successive waves of the incoming
tide, and existed side by side in the Roman world without
uniting, in spite of their similarities.The
isolation in which they remained and the persistent
adherence of their believers to their particular rites
were a consequence and reflection of the disunited
condition of Syria herself, where the different tribes
and districts remained more distinct than anywhere
else, even after they had been brought together under
the domination of Rome.They doggedly preserved
their local gods and Semitic dialects.
It would be impossible to outline
each one of these religions in detail at this time
and to reconstruct their history, because our meager
information would not permit it, but we can indicate,
in a general way, how they penetrated into the Occidental
countries at various periods, and we can try to define
their common characteristics by showing what new elements
the Syrian paganism brought to the Romans.
The first Semitic divinity to enter Italy was Atargatis, frequently mistaken
for the Phoenician Astarte, who had a famous temple
at Bambyce or Hierapolis, not far from the Euphrates,
and was worshiped with her husband, Hadad, in a considerable
part of Syria besides.The Greeks considered her
as the principal Syrian goddess ([Greek:Suria
thea]), and in the Latin countries she was commonly
known as dea Syria, a name corrupted into Iasura
by popular use.
We all remember the unedifying descriptions of her itinerant
priests that Lucian and Apuleius
have left.Led by an old eunuch of dubious habits,
a crowd of painted young men marched along the highways
with an ass that bore an elaborately adorned image
of the goddess.Whenever they passed through a
village or by some rich villa, they went through their
sacred exercises.To the shrill accompaniment
of their Syrian flutes they turned round and round,
and with their heads thrown back fluttered about and
gave vent to hoarse clamors until vertigo seized them
and insensibility was complete.Then they flagellated
themselves wildly, struck themselves with swords and
shed their blood in front of a rustic crowd which pressed
closely about them, and finally they took up a profitable
collection from the wondering spectators.They
received jars of milk and wine, cheeses, flour, bronze
coins of small denominations and even some silver pieces,
all of which disappeared in the folds of their capacious
robes.If opportunity presented they knew how
to increase their profits by means of clever thefts
or by making commonplace predictions for a moderate
consideration.
This picturesque description, based on a novel by Lucius of Patras, is undoubtedly
extreme.It is difficult to believe that the sacerdotal
corps of the goddess of Hierapolis should have consisted
only of charlatans and thieves.But how can the
presence in the Occident of that begging and low nomadic
clergy be explained?
It is certain that the first worshipers
of the Syrian goddess in the Latin world were slaves.During the wars against Antiochus the Great a number
of prisoners were sent to Italy to be sold at public
auction, as was the custom, and the first appearance
in Italy of the Chaldaei has been connected
with that event.The Chaldaei were Oriental
fortune-tellers who asserted that their predictions
were based on the Chaldean astrology.They found credulous clients among the farm
laborers, and Cato gravely exhorts the good landlord to oust them from his
estate.
Beginning with the second century
before Christ, merchants began to import Syrian slaves.At that time Delos was the great trade center in this
human commodity, and in that island especially Atargatis was worshiped by
citizens of Athens and Rome. Trade spread her worship in the Occident. We know that
the great slave revolution that devastated Sicily
in 134 B. C. was started by a slave from Apamea, a
votary of the Syrian goddess.Simulating divine madness, he called his companions
to arms, pretending to act in accordance with orders from heaven. This
detail, which we know by chance, shows how considerable
a proportion of Semites there was in the gangs
working the fields, and how much authority Atargatis
enjoyed in the rural centers.Being too poor to
build temples for their national goddess, those agricultural
laborers waited with their devotions until a
band of itinerant galli passed through the distant
hamlet where the lot of the auction had sent them.The existence of those wandering priests depended,
therefore, on the number of fellow-countrymen they
met in the rural districts, who supported them by sacrificing
a part of their poor savings.
Towards the end of the republic those
diviners appear to have enjoyed rather serious consideration
at Rome.It was a pythoness from Syria that advised Marius on the sacrifices he
was to perform.
Under the empire the importation of
slaves increased.Depopulated Italy needed more
and more foreign hands, and Syria furnished a large
quota of the forced immigration of cultivators.But those Syrians, quick and intelligent as they were
strong and industrious, performed many other functions.They filled the countless
domestic positions in the palaces of the aristocracy and were especially
appreciated as litter-bearers. The imperial and municipal administrations,
as well as the big contractors to whom customs and
the mines were farmed out, hired or bought them in
large numbers, and even in the remotest border provinces
the Syrus was found serving princes, cities
or private individuals.The worship of the Syrian
goddess profited considerably by the economic current
that continually brought new worshipers.We find
her mentioned in the first century of our era in a
Roman inscription referring in precise terms to the
slave market, and we know that Nero took a devout
fancy to the stranger that did not, however, last
very long. In the popular Trastevere quarter she had a temple until the end of
paganism.
During the imperial period, however,
the slaves were no longer the only missionaries that
came from Syria, and Atargatis was no longer the only
divinity from that country to be worshiped in the Occident.The propagation of the Semitic worship progressed
for the most part in a different manner under the
empire.
At the beginning of our era the Syrian
merchants, Syri negotiatores, undertook a veritable colonization of the
Latin provinces. During the
second century before Christ the traders of that nation
had established settlements along the coast of Asia
Minor, on the Piraeus, and in the Archipelago.At Delos, a small island but a large commercial center,
they maintained several associations that worshiped
their national gods, in particular Hadad and Atargatis.But the wars that shook the Orient at the end of the
republic, and above all the growth of piracy, ruined
maritime commerce and stopped emigration.This
began again with renewed vigor when the establishment
of the empire guaranteed the safety of the seas and
when the Levantine traffic attained a development
previously unknown.We can trace the history
of the Syrian establishments in the Latin provinces
from the first to the seventh century, and recently
we have begun to appreciate their economic, social
and religious importance at its true value.
The Syrians’ love of lucre was
proverbial.Active, compliant and able, frequently
little scrupulous, they knew how to conclude first
small deals, then larger ones, everywhere.Using the special talents of their
race to advantage, they succeeded in establishing themselves on all coasts of
the Mediterranean, even in Spain. At
Malaga an inscription mentions a corporation formed
by them.The Italian ports where business was
especially active, Pozzuoli, Ostia, later Naples,
attracted them in great numbers.But they did
not confine themselves to the seashore; they penetrated
far into the interior of the countries, wherever they
hoped to find profitable trade.They followed
the commercial highways and traveled up the big rivers.By way of the Danube they went as far as Pannonia,
by way of the Rhone they reached Lyons.In Gaul
they were especially numerous.In this new country
that had just been opened to commerce fortunes could
be made rapidly.A rescript discovered on the
range of the Lebanon is addressed to sailors from
Arles, who had charge of the transportation of grain,
and in the department of Ain a bilingual epitaph has
been found mentioning a merchant of the third century,
Thaim or Julian, son of Saad, decurion of the city
of Canatha in Syria, who owned two factories in the
Rhone basin, where he handled goods from Aquitania.
Thus the Syrians spread over the entire province as
far as Treves, where they had a strong colony.Not even the barbarian invasions of the fifth century
stopped their immigration.Saint Jerome describes
them traversing the entire Roman world amidst the
troubles of the invasion, prompted by the lust of gain
to defy all dangers.In the barbarian society
the part played by this civilized and city-bred element
was even more considerable.Under the Merovingians
in about 591 they had sufficient influence at Paris
to have one of their number elected bishop and to
gain possession of all ecclesiastical offices.Gregory of Tours tells how King Gontrand, on entering
the city of Orleans in 585, was received by
a crowd praising him “in the language of the Latins, the Jews and the
Syrians." The merchant
colonies existed until the Saracen corsairs destroyed
the commerce of the Mediterranean.
Those establishments exercised a strong
influence upon the economic and material life of the
Latin provinces, especially in Gaul.As bankers
the Syrians concentrated a large share of the money
business in their hands and monopolized the importing
of the valuable Levantine commodities as well as of
the articles of luxury; they sold wines, spices, glassware,
silks and purple fabrics, also objects wrought by
goldsmiths, to be used as patterns by the native artisans.Their moral and religious influence was not less considerable:for
instance, it has been shown that they furthered the development of monastic life
during the Christian period, and that the devotion to the crucifix
that grew up in opposition to the monophysites, was
introduced into the Occident by them.During the
first five centuries Christians felt an unconquerable
repugnance to the representation of the Saviour of
the world nailed to an instrument of punishment more
infamous than the guillotine of to-day.The Syrians
were the first to substitute reality in all its pathetic
horror for a vague symbolism.
In pagan times the religious ascendency
of that immigrant population was no less remarkable.The merchants always took an interest in the affairs
of heaven as well as in those of earth.At all times Syria was a land of ardent
devotion, and in the first century its children were as fervid in propagating
their barbarian gods in the Occident as after their conversion they were
enthusiastic in spreading Christianity as far as Turkestan and China.As soon
as the merchants had established their places of business
in the islands of the Archipelago during the Alexandrian
period, and in the Latin period under the empire,
they founded chapels in which they practised their
exotic rites.
It was easy for the divinities of
the Phoenician coast to cross the seas.Among
them were Adonis, whom the women of Byblos mourned;
Balmarcodes, “the Lord of the dances,”
who came from Beirut; Marna, the master of rain, worshiped
at Gaza; and Maiuma, whose nautical holiday was
celebrated every spring on the coast near Ostia as
well as in the Orient.
Besides these half Hellenized religions,
others of a more purely Semitic nature came from the
interior of the country, because the merchants frequently
were natives of the cities of the Hinterland,
as for instance Apamea or Epiphanea in Coele-Syria,
or even of villages in that flat country.As
Rome incorporated the small kingdoms beyond the Lebanon
and the Orontes that had preserved a precarious independence,
the current of emigration increased.In 71 Commagene,
which lies between the Taurus and the Euphrates, was
annexed by Vespasian, a little later the dynasties
of Chalcis and Emesa were also deprived of their power.Nero, it appears, took possession of Damascus; half
a century later Trajan established the new province
of Arabia in the south (106 A. D.), and the oasis of
Palmyra, a great mercantile center, lost its autonomy
at the same time.In this manner Rome extended
her direct authority as far as the desert, over countries
that were only superficially Hellenized, and where
the native devotions had preserved all their
savage fervor.From that time constant communication
was established between Italy and those regions which
had heretofore been almost inaccessible.As roads
were built commerce developed, and together with the
interests of trade the needs of administration created
an incessant exchange of men, of products and of beliefs
between those out-of-the-way countries and the Latin
provinces.
These annexations, therefore, were
followed by a renewed influx of Syrian divinities
into the Occident.At Pozzuoli, the last port
of call of the Levantine vessels, there was a temple
to the Baal of Damascus (Jupiter Damascenus) in which leading citizens
officiated, and there were altars on which two golden camels were offered
to Dusares, a divinity who had come from the interior
of Arabia.They kept company with a divinity of
more ancient repute, the Hadad of Baabek-Heliopolis
(Jupiter Heliopolitanus), whose immense temple, considered one of the
worlds wonders, had
been restored by Antoninus Pius, and may still be
seen facing Lebanon in majestic elegance.Heliopolis
and Beirut had been the most ancient colonies founded
by Augustus in Syria.The god of Heliopolis participated in the privileged
position granted to the inhabitants of those two cities, who worshiped in a
common devotion,
and he was naturalized as a Roman with greater ease
than the others.
The conquest of all Syria as far as
Euphrates and the subjection of even a part of Mesopotamia
aided the diffusion of the Semitic religions in still
another manner.From these regions, which were
partly inhabited by fighting races, the Caesars drew
recruits for the imperial army.They levied a great number of legionaries, but especially
auxiliary troops, who were transferred to the frontiers.Troopers and foot-soldiers from those provinces furnished
important contingents to the garrisons of Europe and
Africa.For instance, a cohort of one thousand
archers from Emesa was established in Pannonia, another
of archers from Damascus in upper Germany; Mauretania
received irregulars from Palmyra, and bodies of troops
levied in Ituraea, on the outskirts of the Arabian
desert, were encamped in Dacia, Germany, Egypt and
Cappadocia at the same time.Commagene alone furnished no less than six cohorts
of five hundred men each that were sent to the Danube and into Numidia.
The number of inscriptions consecrated
by soldiers proves both the ardor of their faith and
the diversity of their beliefs.Like the sailors
of to-day who are transferred to strange climes and
exposed to incessant danger, they were constantly
inclined to invoke the protection of heaven, and remained
attached to the gods who seemed to remind them in their
exile of the distant home country.Therefore
it is not surprising that the Syrians who served in
the army should have practised the religion of their
Baals in the neighborhood of their camps.In
the north of England, near the wall of Hadrian, an
inscription in verse in honor of the goddess of Hierapolis
has been found; its author was a prefect, probably
of a cohort of Hamites stationed at this distant post.
Not all the soldiers, however, went
to swell the ranks of believers worshiping divinities
that had long been adopted by the Latin world, as did
that officer.They also brought along new ones
that had come from a still greater distance than their
predecessors, in fact from the outskirts of
the barbarian world, because from those regions in
particular trained men could be obtained.There
were, for instance, Baltis, an “Our Lady”
from Osroene beyond the Euphrates; Aziz, the strong god of Edessa,
who was identified with the star Lucifer; Malakbel, the Lords
messenger, patron of the soldiers from Palmyra, who appeared with several
companions at Rome, in Numidia and in Dacia. The most celebrated of those gods
then was the Jupiter of Doliche, a small city of Commagene,
that owed its fame to him.Because of the troops
coming from that region, this obscure Baal, whose
name is mentioned by no author, found worshipers in
every Roman province as far as Africa, Germany and
Brittany.The number of known inscriptions consecrated
to him exceeds a hundred, and it is still growing.Being originally nothing but a
god of lightning, represented as brandishing an ax, this local genius of the
tempest was elevated to the rank of tutelary divinity of the imperial armies.
The diffusion of the Semitic religions
in Italy that commenced imperceptibly under the republic
became more marked after the first century of our
era.Their expansion and multiplication were rapid,
and they attained the apogee of their power during
the third century.Their influence became almost
predominant when the accession of the Severi lent
them the support of a court that was half Syrian.Functionaries of all kinds, senators and officers,
vied with each other in devotion to the patron gods
of their sovereigns, gods which the sovereigns patronized
in turn.Intelligent and ambitious princesses
like Julia Domna, Julia Maesa, Julia Mammea,
whose ascendency was very considerable, became
propagators of their national religion.We all
know the audacious pronunciamento of the year 218
that placed upon the throne the fourteen-year-old
emperor Heliogabalus, a worshiper of the Baal of Emesa.His intention was to give supremacy over all other
gods to his barbarian divinity, who had heretofore
been almost unknown.The ancient authors narrate
with indignation how this crowned priest attempted
to elevate his black stone, the coarse idol brought
from Emesa, to the rank of supreme divinity of the
empire by subordinating the whole ancient pantheon
to it; they never tire of giving revolting details
about the dissoluteness of the debaucheries for which
the festivities of the new Sol invictus Elagabal
furnished a pretext.However, the question arises
whether the Roman historians, being very hostile to
that foreigner who haughtily favored the customs of
his own country, did not misrepresent or partly misunderstand
the facts.Heliogabalus’s attempt to have
his god recognized as supreme, and to establish a
kind of monotheism in heaven as there was monarchy
on earth, was undoubtedly too violent, awkward and
premature, but it was in keeping with the aspirations
of the time, and it must be remembered that the imperial
policy could find the support of powerful Syrian colonies
not only at Rome but all over the empire.
Half a century later Aurelian
was inspired by the same idea when he created a new
worship, that of the “Invincible Sun.”Worshiped in a splendid temple, by pontiffs equal
in rank to those of ancient Rome, having magnificent
plays held in his honor every fourth year, Sol invictus
was also elevated to the supreme rank in the divine
hierarchy, and became the special protector
of the emperors and the empire.The country where
Aurelian found the pattern he sought to reproduce,
was again Syria.Into the new sanctuary he transferred
the images of Bel and Helios, taken from Palmyra,
after it had fallen before his arms.
The sovereigns, then, twice attempted
to replace the Capitoline Jupiter by a Semitic god
and to make a Semitic religion the principal and official
religion of the Romans.They proclaimed the fall
of the old Latin idolatry and the accession of a new
paganism taken from Syria.What was the superiority
attributed to the creeds of that country?Why
did even an Illyrian general like Aurelian look for
the most perfect type of pagan religion in that country?That is the problem to be solved, but it must remain
unsolved unless an exact account is given of the fate
of the Syrian beliefs under the empire.
That question has not as yet been
very completely elucidated.Besides the superficial
opuscule of Lucian on the dea Syria, we find
scarcely any reliable information in the Greek or
Latin writers.The work by Philo of Byblos is
a euhemeristic interpretation of an alleged Phoenician
cosmogony, and a composition of little merit.Neither have we the original texts of the Semitic
liturgies, as we have for Egypt.Whatever
we have learned we owe especially to the inscriptions,
and while these furnish highly valuable indications
as to the date and area of expansion of these religions,
they tell us hardly anything about their doctrines.Light on this subject may be expected from the excavations
that are being made in the great sanctuaries of Syria,
and also from a more exact interpretation of
the sculptured monuments that we now possess in great
numbers, especially those of Jupiter Dolichenus.
Some characteristics of the Semitic
paganism, however, are known at present, and it must
be admitted that it would appear at a disadvantage
if judged by those noticeable features that first
attract our attention.It had retained a stock of very primitive ideas and some
aboriginal nature worship that had lasted through many centuries and was to
persist, in part, under Christianity and Islam until the present day. Such were the worship of
high elevations on which a rustic enclosure sometimes
marked the limits of the consecrated territory; the
worship of the waters that flow to the sea, the streams
that arise in the mountains, the springs that gush
out of the soil, the ponds, the lakes and the wells,
into all of which offerings were thrown with the idea
either of venerating in them the thirst-quenching
liquid or else the fecund nature of the earth; the
worship of the trees that shaded the altars and that
nobody dared to fell or mutilate; the worship of stones,
especially of the rough stones called bethels that
were regarded, as their name (beth-El) indicates, as the residence of the
god, or rather, as the matter in which the god was embodied. Aphrodite Astarte
was worshiped in the shape of a conical stone at Paphos,
and a black aerolite covered with projections and
depressions to which a symbolic meaning was attributed
represented Elagabal, and was transferred from Emesa
to Rome, as we have said.
The animals, as well as inanimate
things, received their share of homage.Remnants
of the old Semitic zoolatry perpetuated themselves
until the end of paganism and even later.Frequently
the gods were represented standing erect on animals.Thus the Dolichean Baal stood on a steer,
and his spouse on a lion.Around certain temples there were sacred parks, in
which savage beasts roamed at liberty, a reminder of the time when they were
considered divine.Two animals especially were
the objects of universal veneration, the pigeon and
the fish.Vagrant multitudes of pigeons received
the traveler landing at Ascalon, and they played about the enclosures of all the
temples of Astarte
in flocks resembling white whirlwinds.The pigeon
belonged, properly speaking, to the goddess of love,
whose symbol it has remained above all to the people
worshiping that goddess.
“Quid referam ut volitet crebras
intacta per urbes
Alba Palaestino sancta columba
Syro?"
The fish was sacred to Atargatis,
who undoubtedly had been represented in that shape
at first, as Dagon always was. The fish were kept in ponds in the proximity of
the temples. A superstitious fear prevented people from touching them, because
the goddess punished the sacrilegious by covering their bodies with ulcers and
tumors. At certain
mystic repasts, however, the priests and initiates
consumed the forbidden food in the belief that they
were absorbing the flesh of the divinity herself.That worship and its practices, which were spread
over Syria, probably suggested the ichthus symbolism in the Christian period.
However, over this lower and primordial
stratum that still cropped out here and there, other
less rudimentary beliefs had formed.Besides inanimate
objects and animals, the Syrian paganism worshiped
personal divinities especially.The character of the gods that were originally
adored by the Semitic tribes has been ingeniously reconstructed.
Each tribe had its Baal and Baalat who protected it
and whom only its members were permitted to worship.The name of Ba’al, “master,”
summarizes the conception people had of him.In the first place he was regarded
as the sovereign of his votaries, and his position in regard to them was that of
an Oriental potentate towards his subjects; they were his servants, or rather
his slaves.
The Baal was at the same time the “master”
or proprietor of the country in which he resided and
which he made fertile by causing springs to gush from
its soil.Or his domain was the firmament and
he was the dominus caeli, whence he made the
waters fall to the roar of tempests.He was always
united with a celestial or earthly “queen”
and, in the third place, he was the “lord”
or husband of the “lady” associated with
him.The one represented the male, the other the
female principle; they were the authors of all fecundity,
and as a consequence the worship of the divine couple
often assumed a sensual and voluptuous character.
As a matter of fact, immorality was
nowhere so flagrant as in the temples of Astarte,
whose female servants honored the goddess with untiring
ardor.In no country was sacred prostitution
so developed as in Syria, and in the Occident it was
to be found practically only where the Phoenicians
had imported it, as on Mount Eryx.Those aberrations, that were kept up until the
end of paganism, probably have their explanation in the primitive constitution
of the Semitic tribe, and the religious custom must have been originally one of
the forms of exogamy, which compelled the woman to unite herself first with a
stranger.
As a second blemish, the Semitic religions
practised human immolations longer than any other
religion, sacrificing children and grown men in order
to please sanguinary gods.In spite of Hadrians prohibition of those murderous
offerings, they
were maintained in certain clandestine rites and in
the lowest practices of magic, up to the fall of the
idols, and even later.They corresponded to the
ideas of a period during which the life of a captive
or slave had no greater value than that of an animal.
These sacred practices and many others,
on which Lucian complacently enlarges in his opuscule
on the goddess of Hierapolis, daily revived the habits
of a barbarous past in the temples of Syria.Of
all the conceptions that had successively dominated
the country, none had completely disappeared.As in Egypt, beliefs of very different date and origin
coexisted, without any attempt to make them agree,
or without success when the task was undertaken.In these beliefs zoolatry, litholatry and all the
other nature worships outlived the savagery that had
created them.More than anywhere else the gods had remained the chieftains of
clans because the
tribal organizations of Syria were longer lived and
more developed than those of any other region.Under the empire many districts were still subjected
to the tribal regime and commanded by “ethnarchs”
or “phylarchs." Religion, which sacrificed
the lives of the men and the honor of the women to
the divinity, had in many regards remained on the
moral level of unsocial and sanguinary tribes.Its obscene and atrocious rites
called forth exasperated indignation on the part of the Roman conscience
when Heliogabalus attempted to introduce them into
Italy with his Baal of Emesa.
How, then, can one explain the fact
that in spite of all, the Syrian gods imposed themselves
upon the Occident and made even the Caesars accept
them?The reason is that the Semitic paganism
can no more be judged by certain revolting practices,
that perpetuated in the heart of civilization the
barbarity and puerilities of an uncultivated society,
than the religion of the Nile can be so judged.As in the case of Egypt we must distinguish between
the sacerdotal religion and the infinitely varied popular
religion that was embodied in local customs.Syria possessed a number of great sanctuaries in which
an educated clergy meditated and expatiated upon the
nature of the divine beings and on the meaning of traditions
inherited from remote ancestors.As their own
interests demanded, that clergy constantly amended
the sacred traditions and modified their spirit when
the letter was immutable, in order to make them agree
with the new aspirations of a more advanced period.They had their mysteries and
their initiates to whom they revealed a wisdom that was above the vulgar beliefs
of the masses.
Frequently we can draw diametrically
opposite conclusions from the same principle.In that manner the old idea of tabu, that seems
to have transformed the temples of Astarte into houses
of debauchery, also became the source of a severe
code of morals.The Semitic tribes were haunted
with the fear of the tabu.A multitude of things
were either impure or sacred because, in the original
confusion, those two notions had not been clearly differentiated.Man’s ability to use the
products of nature to satisfy his needs, was thus
limited by a number of prohibitions, restrictions
and conditions.He who touched a forbidden object
was soiled and corrupted, his fellows did not associate
with him and he could no longer participate in the
sacrifices.In order to wipe out the blemish,
he had recourse to ablutions and other ceremonies
known to the priests.Purity, that had originally
been considered simply physical, soon became ritualistic
and finally spiritual.Life was surrounded by
a network of circumstances subject to certain conditions,
every violation of which meant a fall and demanded
penance.The anxiety to remain constantly in a
state of holiness or regain that state when it had
been lost, filled one’s entire existence.It was not peculiar to the
Semitic tribes, but they ascribed a prime importance to it And the gods, who
necessarily possessed this quality in an eminent degree, were holy beings ([Greek:hagioi])
par excellence.
In this way principles of conduct
and dogmas of faith have frequently been derived from
instinctive and absurd old beliefs.All theological
doctrines that were accepted in Syria modified the
prevailing ancient conception of the Baals.But
in our present state of knowledge it is very difficult
indeed to determine the shares that the various influences
contributed, from the conquests of Alexander to the
Roman domination, to make the Syrian paganism what
it became under the Caesars.The civilization of the Seleucid empire is little
known, and we cannot determine what caused the alliance of Greek thought with
the Semitic traditions. The religions of the
neighboring nations also had an undeniable influence.Phoenicia and Lebanon remained moral tributaries of
Egypt long after they had liberated themselves from
the suzerainty of the Pharaohs.The theogony of
Philo of Byblos took gods and myths from that country,
and at Heliopolis Hadad was honored according to Egyptian rather than Syrian
rite." The rigorous monotheism of the Jews, who were dispersed over the entire
country, must also have acted as an active ferment of transformation. But it was Babylon
that retained the intellectual supremacy, even after
its political ruin.The powerful sacerdotal caste
ruling it did not fall with the independence of the
country, and it survived the conquests of Alexander
as it had previously lived through the Persian domination.The researches of Assyriologists have shown that its
ancient worship persisted under the Seleucides, and
at the time of Strabo the “Chaldeans” still
discussed cosmology and first principles in the rival
schools of Borsippa and Orchoe. The ascendancy
of that erudite clergy affected all surrounding regions;
it was felt by Persia in the east, Cappadocia in the
north, but more than anywhere else by the Syrians,
who were connected with the Oriental Semites
by bonds of language and blood.Even after the
Parthians had wrested the valley of the Euphrates
from the Seleucides, relations with the great temples
of that region remained uninterrupted.The plains
of Mesopotamia, inhabited by races of like origin,
extended on both sides of an artificial border line;
great commercial roads followed the course of the
two rivers flowing into the Persian Gulf or cut across
the desert, and the pilgrims came to Babylon, as Lucian
tells us, to perform their devotions to the Lady of
Bambyce.
Ever since the Captivity, constant
spiritual relations had existed between Judaism and
the great religious metropolis.At the birth of
Christianity they manifested themselves in the rise
of gnostic sects in which the Semitic mythology formed
strange combinations with Jewish and Greek ideas and
furnished the foundation for extravagant superstructures.
Finally, during the decline of the empire, it was
Babylon again from which emanated Manicheism, the
last form of idolatry received in the Latin world.We can imagine how powerful the religious influence
of that country on the Syrian paganism must have been.
That influence manifested itself in
various ways.First, it introduced new gods.In this way Bel passed from the
Babylonian pantheon into that of Palmyra and was honored throughout northern
Syria. It also caused ancient divinities to be
arranged in new groups.To the primitive couple
of the Baal and the Baalat a third member was added
in order to form one of those triads dears to Chaldean
theology.This took place at Hierapolis as well
as at Heliopolis, and the three gods of the latter
city, Hadad, Atargatis and Simios, became Jupiter, Venus and Mercury in Latin
inscriptions. Finally,
and most important, astrolatry wrought radical changes
in the characters of the celestial powers, and, as
a further consequence, in the entire Roman paganism.In the first place it gave them a second personality
in addition to their own nature.The sidereal
myths superimposed themselves upon the agrarian myths,
and gradually obliterated them.Astrology, born on the banks of the Euphrates,
imposed itself in Egypt upon the haughty and unapproachable clergy of the most
conservative of all nations. Syria received it without reserve and surrendered
unconditionally;
numismatics and archeology as well as literature prove this.King Antiochus of Commagene,
for instance, who died 34 B. C., built himself a monumental tomb on a spur of
the Taurus, in which he placed his horoscope, designed on a large bas-relief,
beside the images of his ancestral divinities.
The importance which the introduction
of the Syrian religions into the Occident has for
us consists therefore in the fact that indirectly they
brought certain theological doctrines of the Chaldeans
with them, just as Isis and Serapis carried beliefs
of old Egypt from Alexandria to the Occident.The Roman empire received successively the religious
tribute of the two great nations that had formerly
ruled the Oriental world.It is characteristic
that the god Bel whom Aurelian brought from Asia to set up as the protector of
his states, was in reality a Babylonian who had emigrated to Palmyra, a cosmopolitan
center apparently predestined by virtue of its location
to become the intermediary between the civilizations
of the Euphrates and the Mediterranean.
The influence exercised by the speculations
of the Chaldeans upon Greco-Roman thought can be asserted
positively, but cannot as yet be strictly defined.It was at once philosophic and religious, literary
and popular.The entire neo-Platonist school
used the names of those venerable masters, but it
cannot be determined how much it really owes to them.A selection of poems that has often been quoted since
the third century, under the title of “Chaldaic
Oracles” ([Greek:Logia Chaldaika]) combines
the ancient Hellenic theories with a fantastic
mysticism that was certainly imported from the Orient.It is to Babylonia what the literature of Hermes Trismegistus
is to Egypt, and it is equally difficult to determine
the nature of the ingredients that the author put into
his sacred compositions.But at an earlier date
the Syrian religions had spread far and wide in the
Occident ideas conceived on the distant banks of the
Euphrates.I shall try to indicate briefly what
their share in the pagan syncretism was.
We have seen that the gods from Alexandria
gained souls especially by the promise of blessed
immortality.Those from Syria must also have satisfied
doubts tormenting all the minds of that time.As a matter of fact the old Semitic ideas on man’s
fate in after-life were little comforting.We
know how sad, dull and hopeless their conception of
life after death was.The dead descended into
a subterranean realm where they led a miserable existence,
a weak reflection of the one they had lost; since they
were subject to wants and suffering, they had to be
supported by funeral offerings placed on their sepulchers
by their descendants.Those ancient beliefs and
customs were found also in primitive Greece and Italy.
This rudimentary eschatology, however,
gave way to quite a different conception, one that
was closely related to the Chaldean astrology, and
which spread over the Occident towards the end of the
republic.According to this doctrine the soul
returned to heaven after death, to live there among
the divine stars.While it remained on earth it was subject to all the bitter
necessities of a destiny determined by the revolutions of the stars; but when it
ascended into the upper regions, it escaped that fate and even the limits of
time; it shared equally in the immortality of the sidereal gods that surrounded
it. In the opinion of some, the soul was attracted by the rays of the sun, and
after passing through the moon, where it was purified, it lost itself in the
shining star of day. Another more purely
astrological theory, that was undoubtedly a development
of the former, taught that the soul descended to earth
from the heights of heaven by passing through the
spheres of the seven planets.During its passage
it acquired the dispositions and qualities proper to
each planet.After death it returned to its original
abode by the same route.To get from one sphere
to another, it had to pass a door guarded by a commandant
([Greek:archon]). Only the souls of initiates
knew the password that made those incorruptible guardians
yield, and under the conduct of a psychopompus
they ascended safely from zone to zone.As the
soul rose it divested itself of the passions and qualities
it had acquired on its descent to the earth as though
they were garments, and, free from sensuality, it
penetrated into the eighth heaven to enjoy everlasting
happiness as a subtle essence.
Perhaps this doctrine, undoubtedly
of Babylonian origin, was not generally accepted by
the Syrian religions, as it was by the mysteries of
Mithra, but these religions, impregnated with astrology, certainly propagated
the belief that the souls of those worshipers that had led pious lives were
elevated to the heights of heaven, where an apotheosis made them the equals of
the luminous gods. Under the
empire this doctrine slowly supplanted all others;
the Elysian fields, which the votaries of Isis and Serapis still located in the depths of the earth,
were transferred into the ether bathing the fixed
stars, and the underworld was thereafter reserved
for the wicked who had not been allowed to pass through
the celestial gates.
The sublime regions occupied by the
purified souls were also the abode of the supreme
god. When it transformed the ideas on the destiny
of man, astrology also modified those relating to
the nature of the divinity.In this matter the
Syrian religions were especially original; for even
if the Alexandrian mysteries offered man just as comforting
prospects of immortality as the eschatology of their
rivals, they were backward in building up a commensurate
theology.To the Semitic races belongs the honor
of having reformed the ancient fetichism most thoroughly.Their base and narrow conceptions of early times to
which we can trace their existence, broaden and rise
until they form a kind of monotheism.
As we have seen, the Syrian tribes worshiped a god of
lightning, like all primitive races.That god opened the reservoirs of the firmament
to let the rain fall and split the giant trees of
the woods with the double ax that always remained
his emblem.When the progress of astronomy removed
the constellations to incommensurable distances, the
“Baal of the Heavens” (Ba’al
[vs]amin) had to grow in majesty.Undoubtedly
at the time of the Achemenides, he was connected with
the Ahura-Mazda of the Persians, the ancient god of the vault of heaven, who had
become the highest physical and moral power, and this connection helped to
transform the old genius of thunder. People continued to worship the material
heaven in him; under the Romans he was still simply called Caelus, as
well as “Celestial Jupiter” (Jupiter
Caelestis, [Greek:Zeus Ouranios]), but
it was a heaven studied by a sacred science that venerated
its harmonious mechanism.The Seleucides represented him on their coins with a
crescent over his forehead and carrying a sun with seven rays, to symbolize the
fact that he presided over the course of the stars;
or else he was shown with the two Dioscuri at his
side, heroes who enjoyed life and suffered death in
turn, according to the Greek myth, and who had become
the symbols of the two celestial hemispheres.Religious uranography placed the residence of the
supreme divinity in the most elevated region of the
world, fixing its abode in the zone most distant from
the earth, above the planets and the fixed stars.This fact was intended to be expressed by the term
Most-High ([Greek:Hupsistos]) applied to the
Syrian Baals as well as to Jehovah. According
to this cosmic religion, the Most High resided in the
immense orb that contained the spheres of all the
stars and embraced the entire universe which was subject
to his domination.The Latins translated the
name of this “Hypsistos” by Jupiter
summus exsuperantissimus to indicate his preeminence
over all divine beings.
As a matter of fact, his power was
infinite.The primary postulate of the Chaldean
astrology was that all phenomena and events of this
world were necessarily determined by sidereal influence.The changes of nature, as well as the dispositions
of men, were controlled according to fate, by the
divine energies that resided in the heavens.In
other words, the gods were almighty; they were the
masters of destiny that governed the universe absolutely.The notion of their omnipotence resulted from
the development of the ancient autocracy with which
the Baals were credited.As we have stated, they
were conceived after the image of an Asiatic monarch,
and the religious terminology was evidently intended
to display the humility of their priests toward them.In Syria we find nothing
analogous to what existed in Egypt, where the priest thought he could compel the
gods to act, and even dared to threaten them.
The distance separating the human and the divine always
was much greater with the Semitic tribes, and all
that astrology did was to emphasize the distance more
strongly by giving it a doctrinal foundation and a
scientific appearance.In the Latin world the
Asiatic religions propagated the conception of the
absolute and illimitable sovereignty of God over the
earth.Apuleius calls the Syrian goddess omnipotens
et omniparens, mistress and mother of all things."
The observation of the starry skies,
moreover, had led the Chaldeans to the notion of a
divine eternity.The constancy of the sidereal
revolutions inspired the conclusion as to their perpetuity.The stars follow
their ever uncompleted courses unceasingly; as soon as the end of their journey
is reached, they resume without stopping the road already covered, and the
cycles of years in which their movements take place extend from the indefinite
past into the indefinite future. Thus a clergy of astronomers necessarily
conceived Baal, Lord of the heavens, as the Master of eternity or He whose
name is praised through all eternity" titles
which constantly recur in Semitic inscriptions.The divine stars did not die, like Osiris or Attis;
whenever they seemed to weaken, they were born
to a new life and always remained invincible (invicti).
Together with the mysteries of the
Syrian Baals, this theological notion penetrated into Occidental paganism. Whenever an inscription to
a deus aeternus is found in the Latin provinces
it refers to a Syrian sidereal god, and it is a remarkable
fact that this epithet did not enter the ritual before
the second century, at the time the worship of the
god Heaven (Caelus) was propagated.That the philosophers had long before placed the first
cause beyond the limits of time was of no consequence,
for their theories had not penetrated into the popular
consciousness nor modified the traditional formulary
of the liturgies.To the people the divinities
were beings more beautiful, more vigorous, and more
powerful than man, but born like him, and exempt only
from old age and death, the immortals of old Homer.The Syrian priests diffused the idea of a god without
beginning and without end through the Roman world,
and thus contributed, along lines parallel with the
Jewish proselytism, to lend the authority of dogma
to what had previously been only a metaphysical theory.
The Baals were universal as well as
eternal, and their power became limitless in regard
to space as it had been in regard to time.These
two principles were correlative.The title of
“mar’olam” which the Baals bore occasionally may be
translated by Lord of the universe, or by Lord of eternity, and efforts
certainly have been made to claim the twofold quality for them. Peopled with
divine constellations and traversed by planets assimilated to the inhabitants of
Olympus, the heavens determined the destinies of the entire human race by their
movements, and the whole earth was subject to the changes produced by their
revolutions. Consequently the old Ba’al [vs]amin was necessarily transformed into a universal
power.Of course, even under the Caesars there
existed in Syria traces of a period when the local
god was the fetich of a clan and could be worshiped by the members of that clan
only, a period when strangers were admitted to his altars only after a ceremony
of initiation, as brothers, or at least as guests and clients. But from the period when our knowledge
of the history of the great divinities of Heliopolis
or Hierapolis begins, these divinities were regarded
as common to all Syrians, and crowds of pilgrims came
from distant countries to obtain grace in the holy cities.As protectors of the entire human race
the Baals gained proselytes in the Occident,
and their temples witnessed gatherings of devotees
of every race and nationality.In this respect
the Baals were distinctly different from Jehovah.
The essence of paganism implies that
the nature of a divinity broadens as the number of
its votaries increases.Everybody credits it with
some new quality, and its character becomes more complex.As it gains in power it also has a tendency to dominate
its companion gods and to concentrate their functions
in itself.To escape this threatening absorption,
these gods must be of a very sharply defined personality
and of a very original character.The vague Semitic
deities, however, were devoid of a well-defined individuality.We fail to find among them a well organized society
of immortals, like that of the Greek Olympus where
each divinity had its own features and its own particular
life full of adventures and experiences, and
each followed its special calling to the exclusion
of all the others.One was a physician, another
a poet, a third a shepherd, hunter or blacksmith.The Greek inscriptions found in
Syria are, in this regard, eloquently concise. Usually they have
the name of Zeus accompanied by some simple epithet:kurios ([Greek:kurios], Lord),
aniketos ([Greek:aniketos], invincible),
megistos ([Greek:megistos], greatest).All these Baals seem to have been brothers.They
were personalities of indeterminate outline and interchangeable
powers and were readily confused.
At the time the Romans came into contact
with Syria, it had already passed through a period
of syncretism similar to the one we can study with
greater precision in the Latin world.The ancient
exclusiveness and the national particularism had been
overcome.The Baals of the great sanctuaries had enriched themselves with the
virtues of their neighbors;
then, always following the same process, they had
taken certain features from foreign divinities brought
over by the Greek conquerors.In that manner their
characters had become indefinable, they performed incompatible
functions and possessed irreconcilable attributes.An inscription found in
Britain assimilates the
Syrian goddess to Peace, Virtue, Ceres, Cybele, and
even to the sign of the Virgin.
In conformity with the law governing
the development of paganism, the Semitic gods tended
to become pantheistic because they comprehended all
nature and were identified with it.The various
deities were nothing but different aspects under which
the supreme and infinite being manifested itself.Although Syria remained deeply and even coarsely
idolatrous in practice, in theory it approached monotheism
or, better perhaps, henotheism.By an absurd
but curious etymology the name Hadad has been explained
as “one, one” (’ad ’ad).
Everywhere the narrow and divided
polytheism showed a confused tendency to elevate itself
into a superior synthesis, but in Syria astrology lent
the firmness of intelligent conviction to notions
that were vague elsewhere.The Chaldean cosmology,
which deified all elements but ascribed a predominant
influence to the stars, ruled the entire Syrian syncretism.It considered the world as a great organism which
was kept intact by an intimate solidarity, and whose
parts continually influenced each other.
The ancient Semites believed
therefore that the divinity could be regarded as embodied
in the waters, in the fire of the lightning, in stones
or plants.But the most powerful gods were the
constellations and the planets that governed the course
of time and of all things.
The sun was supreme because it led the starry choir, because
it was the king and guide of all the other luminaries and therefore the master
of the whole world. The astronomical doctrines
of the “Chaldeans” taught that this incandescent
globe alternately attracted and repelled the other
sidereal bodies, and from this principle the Oriental
theologians had concluded that it must determine the
entire life of the universe, inasmuch as it regulated
the movements of the heavens.As the intelligent light it was especially the
creator of human reason, and just as it repelled and attracted the planets in
turn, it was believed to send out
souls, at the time of birth, into the bodies they
animated, and to cause them to return to its bosom
after death by means of a series of emissions and
absorptions.
Later on, when the seat of the Most-High was placed beyond
the limits of the universe, the radiant star that gives us light became the
visible image of the supreme power, the source of all life and all intelligence,
the intermediary between an inaccessible god and mankind, and the one object of
special homage from the multitude.
Solar pantheism, which grew up among
the Syrians of the Hellenistic period as a result
of the influence of Chaldean astrolatry, imposed itself
upon the whole Roman world under the empire.Our very rapid sketch of the constitution of that
theological system shows incidentally the last form
assumed by the pagan idea of God.In this matter
Syria was Rome’s teacher and predecessor.The last formula reached by the religion of the pagan
Semites and in consequence by that of the Romans,
was a divinity unique, almighty, eternal, universal
and ineffable, that revealed itself throughout nature,
but whose most splendid and most energetic manifestation
was the sun.To arrive at the Christian monotheism
only one final tie had to be broken, that is to say,
this supreme being residing in a distant heaven had
to be removed beyond the world.So we see once
more in this instance, how the propagation of the
Oriental cults levelled the roads for Christianity
and heralded its triumph.Although astrology was
always fought by the church, it had nevertheless prepared
the minds for the dogmas the church was to proclaim.