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The Taurobolium
While Mithras was worshipped almost exclusively by men, most of the wives and
daughters of the Mithraists took part in the worship of Magna-Mater,
Ma-Bellona, Anahita, Cybele, and Artemis. These goddess religions practiced a
regeneration ritual known as the Taurobolium, or bull sacrifice, in which the
blood of the slaughtered animal was allowed to fall down upon the initiate,
who would be lying, completely drenched in a pit below. As a result of their
association with practitioners of this rite, Mithraists soon adopted the
Taurobolium ritual as their own.

This baptism of blood became a renewal of the human soul, as opposed to mere
physical strength. Mithraic baptism wiped out moral faults; the purity aimed
at had become spiritual. The descent into the pit was regarded as symbolic
burial, from which the initiate would emerge reborn, purified of all his
crimes and regarded as the equal of a god. Those who made it through the
Taurobolium were revered by their brethren, and accepted in the fold of
Mithraism.

"The taurobolium had become a means of obtaining a new and eternal life; the
ritualistic ablutions were no longer external and material acts, but were
supposed to cleanse the soul of its impurities and to restore its original
innocence; the sacred repasts imparted an intimate virtue to the soul and
furnished sustenance to the spiritual life."

Franz Cumont
Les Mysteres de Mithra

The bull has been exalted throughout the ancient world for its strength and
vigour. Greek myths told of the Minotaur, a half-man half-bull monster who
lived in the Labyrinth beneath Crete, and took an annual sacrifice of six
young men and six maidens before being slain by the hero Theseus. Minoan
artwork depicted nimble acrobats leaping bravely over the backs of bulls. The
altar in front of Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem was adorned with bull horns
believed to be endowed with magical powers. The bull was also one of the four
tetramorphs, the symbols later associated with the four gospels. The mystique
of this powerful animal still survives today in the ritualistic bull-fighting
of Spain and Mexico, and in the rodeo bull-riding of the U.S.

The bull was an obvious representation of masculinity by nature of its size,
strength, and sexual power. At the same time, the bull symbolized lunar
forces by virtue of its horns and earthly forces by virtue of its powerful
root to the ground. The ritual sacrifice of the bull symbolized the
penetration of the feminine principle by the masculine. The slaying of the
bull represented the victory of man's spiritual nature over his animality;
parallel to the symbolic images of Marduk slaying Tiamut, Gilgamesh killing
Humbaba, Michael subduing Satan, St. George slaying the dragon, the Centurion
piercing Christ's side, Lewis Carroll's "beamish boy" slaying the Jaberwock,
and Sigorney Weaver slaying the Alien.

According to the archetypal hero myth recited in Roman Mithraic rituals, the
infant Mithras formed an alliance with the sun and set off to kill the bull,
the first living creature ever created. While the bull was grazing in a
pasture, Mithras seized it by the horns and dragged it into a cave. The bull
soon escaped, but was recaptured when Mithras was given the command by the
raven, messenger of the sun, to slay the bull. With the help of his dog,
Mithras succeeded in overtaking the bull and dragging it again in the cave.
Then, seizing it by the nostrils, he plunged deep into its flank with his
knife.

As the bull died, the world came into being and time was born. From the body
of the slain beast sprang forth all the herbs and plants that cover the
earth. From the spinal cord of the animal sprang wheat to produce bread, and
from the blood came the vine to produce wine. The shedding of the sacrificial
blood brought great blessings to the world, which Ahriman tried to prevent.
The struggle between good and evil which at that moment first began was to
continue until the end of time.

"This ingenious fable carries us back to the very beginnings of civilization.
It could never have risen save among a people of shepherds and hunters with
whom cattle, the source of all wealth, had become an object of religious
veneration"

Franz Cumont
Les Mysteres de Mithra

Mithraic sculpture depicted the Taurobolium with invariable consistency.
Mithras was always depicted in the cave kneeling on the back of the bull,
dagger in hand, wearing a flowing cape and Phrygian cap (the rounded, conical
hats currently en vogue amongst rap-music fans). He was shown pulling back
the bull's head by its nostrils and stabbing it with the dagger, back foot
extended over the bull's right leg. A dog and a snake were shown leaping into
bull's wound, representing the dualistic conflict of good and evil at the
moment of creation. A scorpion was shown at the bull's genitals, depicting
evil seeking to destroy life at its source. Ears of corn sprung from the tail
of the bull representing victory of good over evil.

During the celebration of the vernal equinox, the Phrygian priests of the
Great Mother attributed the blood shed in the Taurobolium to the redemptive
power of the blood of the Divine Lamb shed on the Christian Easter. It was
maintained that the dramatic Taurobolium purification ritual was more
effective than baptism. The food that was taken during the mystic feasts was
likened to the bread and wine of the communion; the Mother of the Gods (Magna
Mater) recieved greater worship than the Mother of God (Mary), whose son also
had risen again.

An inscription in the Mithraeum under the Church of Santa Prisca in Rome
referred to Mithras saving men by shedding the eternal blood of the bull. On
the very spot on which the last Taurobolium took place at the end of the
fourth century, in the Phrygianum, today stands the Vatican's St. Peter's
Basilica.


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The Decline of Mithraism
"As the religious history of the empire is studied more closely, the triumph
of the church will, in our opinion, appear more and more as the culmination
of a long evolution of beliefs. We can understand the Christianity of the
fifth century with its greatness and weaknesses, its spiritual exaltation and
its puerile superstitions, if we know the moral antecedents of the world in
which it developed."

Franz Cumont
The Oriental Religions in Roman Paganism

As the final pagan religion of the Roman Empire, Mithraism paved a smooth
path for Christianity by transferring the better elements of paganism to this
new religion. After Constantine, Emperor from 306-337 A.D., converted on the
eve of a battle in 312, Christianity was made the state religion. All
emperors following Constantine were openly hostile towards Mithraism. The
religion was persecuted on the grounds that it was the religion of Persians,
the arch-enemies of the Romans.

The absurdity with which Christianity enveloped Roman paganism was
characterized by the early Church writer Tertullian (160-220 A.D.), who
noticed that the pagan religion utilized baptism as well as bread and wine
consecrated by priests. He wrote that Mithraism was inspired by the devil,
who wished to mock the Christian sacraments in order to lead faithful
Christians to hell. Nonetheless, Mithraism survived up to the fifth century
in remote regions of the Alps amongst tribes such as the Anauni, and has
managed to survive in the near-east until this day.

Mithras is still venerated today by the Parsis, the descendants of the
Persian Zoroastrians now living mainly in India. Their temples to Mithras are
now called 'dar-i Mihr' (The Court of Mithras). A scholar living among Parsis
in Karachi, Pakistan reported that a Parsi mother, finding one of her
grandchildren fighting with a younger child, told him to remember that
Mithras was watching and would know the truth. Upon initiation, Parsi priests
are given a 'Gurz', the symbolic Mace of Mithras, to represent the priestly
duty to make war on evil. The priests continue to conduct their most sacred
rituals under Mithra's protection.

In Iran, up until 1979, traditional Mithraic holidays and customs still
continued to be practiced. The Iranian New Year celebration called 'Now-Ruz'
would take place during the spring and continue for thirteen days. During
this time Mehr (Mithras) was extolled as ancient god of the sun. The
'Mihragan' festival in honour of Mithras, Judge of Iran, also ran for a
period of 5 days with great rejoicing and in a spirit of deep devotion.

These celebrations were encouraged under the Western-style cultural
liberalism of the 1963 Revolution of the Shah, until exiled Islamic
fundamentalist Ayatollah Khomeini returned to Iran in 1979 to impose strict
Islamic codes of behaviour and dress on all Iranians. Khomeini immediately
reversed the Westernization movement and proclaimed Iran to be an Islamic
republic. Finally, all traditional Mithraic rituals were suppressed in the
land that was once Persia, birthplace of the religion of Mithras.


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Manichaeism and Later Heresies
Back in early medieval Europe, a form of Mithraism had managed to survive for
centuries beyond the edicts of Constantine. Even when it had been dethroned
by Christianity, the Mithraic faith lived on in dignified opposition by
mutating into a Christian heresy known as Manichaeism, which was to become a
source of strife and bloodshed right down to the Middle Ages. The Persian
dualism of Zarathustra introduced such strong principles into Europe that
they continued to exert an influence long after the fall of the Roman Empire.
The Manichaean faith succeeded as an heir to Mithraism, spreading within
decades throughout the territories once covered by Mithraism in Asia and
throughout the Mediterranean, eventually encompassing regions from China to
North Africa, Spain, and Southern France.

Mani was born in 216 A.D. nearly 500 years after the incarnation of Mithras,
and given the title 'The Seal of the Prophets' (a title since given to
Mohammed by Islam). He was also called the Bagh, or the Lord to succeed
Mithras. Mani preached a dualistic theological system emphasizing the purity
of the spirit and the impurity of the body. He believed that the universe was
controlled by the opposing powers of good and evil which had become
temporarily intertwined, but at a future time would be separated and return
to their own realms. Manichaean ethics focused on freeing the soul from the
body and opposing material and physical pleasures. Mani's followers attempted
to assist this separation by leading ascetic lives, preaching renunciation of
the world, and discouraging marriage and procreation.

Ironically, Manichaeism was denounced in the west by the Papacy as a
dangerous heresy considered detrimental to social life and common human
institutions. It was also condemned in Persia for similar reasons. Mani was
persecuted and finally put to death in 276 A.D., as were many of his
followers. Regardless, Manichaeism spread widely and was a major religion in
the East until the 14th century. It died out in the West by the 6th century,
but later led to the creation of several early Christian heresies, such as
the those of the Cathars and the Albigenses.

The Albigenses were a heretical Christian sect whose influence became
widespread in Southern France around the year 1200. Its theology was based
entirely upon Manichaean dualism. The Dominican Order was founded in 1205 in
order to combat this heresy. Following the assassination of the papal legate
in the year 1208, Pope Innocent III declared a crusade against the
Albigenses. This developed into a political conflict with civil war between
the north and south of France lasting until 1229.

The Knights Templar, a religious military order founded by Crusaders in
Jerusalem in 1118, came into contact with Manichaean heretics who despised
the Cross, regarding it as the instrument of Christ's torture. This tenet was
believed to have been adopted by the Templars, who were suppressed and
charged with blasphemy in 1312 for committing homosexual acts, worshipping
the demon Baphomet, and ritually spitting upon crucifixes. To this day, the
Knights Templar have been emulated by dozens of mystical sects and secret
societies, including the Freemasons, the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn
and the notorious Ordo Templi Orientallis reformulated by Aleistair Crowley.


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Conclusion
"If Christianity had been checked in its growth by some deadly disease, the
world would have become Mithraic."

Joseph Renan, French religious historian and critic
Marc-Aurele et la Fin du Monde Antique

The Mithraic legacy resulted in customs still carried out today, including
the handshake and the wearing of the crown by the monarchy. Worshippers of
Mithras were the first in the western world to preach the doctrine of divine
right of kings. It was the worship of the sun, combined with the theological
dualism of Zarathustra, that disseminated the ideas upon which the Sun-King
Louis XIV (1638-1715) and other deified sovereigns of the West maintained
their monarchial absolutism.

Of all the Roman pagan religions, none was so severe as Mithraism. None
attained an equal moral elevation, and none could have had so strong a hold
on mind and heart as the worship of this sun god and saviour. The major
competitor with Christianity during the second and third centuries A.D., not
even during the Moslem invasions had Europe come closer to adopting an
Eastern religion than when Diocletian officially recognized Mithras as the
protector of the Roman Empire. But in the end, Christianity finally became
the champion of the inevitable conflict with the Zoroastrian faith for the
dominion of the known world.

In theory, a proper coup-d'etat by the Mithras-worshipping Roman centurions
could have prevented the Emperor Constantine from establishing Christianity
as the official religion of the Roman Empire. Mithraism could quite possibly
have survived through the following centuries with the theological assistance
of the Manichaean Heresy and its various offshoots, assuming that the
teachings of Jesus of Nazareth had somehow have been simultaneously quashed
(possibly through an increased number of crucifixions).

With the absence of Christianity due to the continuation of Mithraism in the
west, the rise of Islam may similarly have been prevented in the seventh
century, and the violence of the crusades need not have occurred. Assuming
that Islam had not enveloped Persia, the worship of Mithras could have
continued within the pantheon of Zarathustra. Consequently, Mithraism would
have made an even stronger indentation upon the pantheons of India and China,
and possibly spread beyond to other far-eastern countries.

Columbus set sail during the Inquisition, another savage event representing
the culmination of over a thousand years of European Christianity. Had
Mithraism survived the millennium until the year 1492, the Indigenous people
of the Americas would have been exposed to Mithraic worshippers instead of
Catholic missionaries. Quite possibly, the Taurobolium would have been
transposed upon the buffalo hunt rituals of the Plains Indians and the
sacrificial ceremonies of the Maya, Inca, and Aztec, and these great empires
would not have been annihilated by the brutal European conquerors who
plundered in the name of King and Christ.

By playing quantum physicist through manipulating causality and further
extending this 'What If?' scenario (and selectively ignoring countless
variables) it is possible to reconstruct our current North American society
with Mithraism in place of Christianity as the predominant religion and
cultural driving force. After all, best selling author Mary Stewart used the
concept of the local revival of Mithraism in medieval Britain for her novel
Merlin of the Crystal Cave. The great Mithraic researcher Franz Cumont also
commented extensively on the possibility that Mithraism had survived beyond
Constantine.

"The morals of the human race would have been but little changed, a little
more virile perhaps, a little less charitable, but only a shade different.
The erudite theology taught by the mysteries would obviously have shown a
laudable respect for science, but as its dogmas were based upon a false
physics it would apparently have insure the persistence of an infinity of
errors. Astronomy would not be lacking, but astrology would have been
unassailable, while the heavens
would still be revolving around the earth to accord with its doctrines. The
greatest danger, would have been that the Caesars would have established a
theocratic absolutism supported by the Oriental ideas of the divinity of
kings. The union of throne and altar would have been inseparable, and Europe
would never have known the invigorating struggle between church and state.
But on the other hand the discipline of Mithraism, so productive of
individual energy, and the democratic organization of its societies in which
senators and slaves rubbed elbows, contain a germ of liberty. We might dwell
at some length on these contrasting possibilities, but it is hard to find a
mental pastime less profitable than the attempt to remake history and to
conjecture on what might have been had events proved otherwise."

Franz Cumont
Les Mysteres de Mithra


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BIBLIOGRAPHY
Indubitably the world's most widely recognized researcher of Mithraic Studies
was Franz Cumont. Born in 1868, Cumont published his monumental work of some
931 pages, Textes et monuments figures relatifs aux mysteres de Mithra in
1896, followed by Les Mysteres de Mithra, as well as The Oriental Religions
in Roman Paganism. His research into Roman pagan religions has been the basis
of most of the factual content of this report.

1. Beny, Roloff. Iran: Elements of Destiny. McClelland and Stewart Ltd.
London, 1978.
2. Cumont, Franz. Les Mysteres de Mithra. Dover Publications, Inc. New York,
1956.
3. Cumont, Franz. The Oriental Religions in Roman Paganism. Dover
Publications, Inc. New York, 1956.
4. Eliade, Mircea. Patterns in Comparative Religion. The World Publishing
Company. Cleveland, 1958.
5. Hinnells, John R. Persian Mythology. Peter Bedrick Books. New York, 1985.
6. Perowne, Stewart. Roman Mythology. Hamlyn Publishing Group Ltd. London,
1969.



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Entry Page Photograph:
A Roman Mithraic marble statue from the second century A.D., shot in 1992
when I was visiting the British Museum. Mithras is seen with his foot over
the bull's leg, holding back it's neck by the mouth, wearing his Phrygian cap
and flowing cape, and stabbing his knife into the bull. Also visible are the
snake and dog rushing towards the wound, and the scorpion attempting to
pierce the bull's testicles. A unique feature of this statue is that instead
of blood, three spikes of wheat emanate from the wound of the sacrificed
bull.


(c) 1993 Dave Fingrut

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