MINOAN ‘HORNS OF CONSECRATION’ REVISITED: A SYMBOL OF SUN WORSHIP IN PALATIAL AND POST-PALATIAL CRETE?

Authors

  • Emilia Banou Department of History, Archaeology and Management of Cultural Commodities, Kalamata, University of Peloponnese, Greece

Keywords:

Symbol of ‘mountain’, Symbol of ‘horizon’, peak sanctuaries, Goddess with Upraised Arms, bull, consecration, Minoan, Mycenaean.

Abstract

In this article a previously proposed interpretation of Minoan ‘horns of consecration’ as a symbol of sun is reexamined. A clay model of ‘horns of consecration’ from the peak sanctuary of Petsophas, the results of astronomical research on Minoan peak sanctuaries, the idols of the so-called ‘Goddess with Upraised Arms” and a clay model of ‘horns of consecration’ from the Mycenaean cemetery of Tanagra are put forward as evidence for a possible adoption - or a parallel development under the influence of adjacent cultures - by the Minoans (and by the Mycenaeans, at least after 1400 B.C.) of religious notions related to the Egyptian symbols of the ‘mountain’ and the ‘horizon’, both connected with the Sun in Egyptian cosmology and religion. It is concluded that the ‘horns of consecration’ may represent a practical device as well as an abstract symbol of the Sun, a symbol of catholic importance, which embraced many aspects of Minoan religious activities as represented on Minoan iconography.

Downloads

Published

2023-07-25

Issue

Section

Articles