King The Gnostics 6
King The Gnostics 6
King The Gnostics 6
Following the axiom, " that the body is more than the
raiment," the foregoing chapters have been devoted to the
consideration 01 the notions which our talismans have invested
with visible form. .these visible forms, therefore, their
materials, and manufacture, n o w come before us for explanation
—a wide field for curious research, and extending into m a n y
divoise regions 01 iiiciHooio 0 i ).
The genuine Abraxas-gems, that yet fill our cabinets, came
originally for the most part out of Egypt; others, as their
differing style shows, from Asia; others again from Syria,
where m a n y l_>asilidans had established tliemselves at an eaiiy
period. Amongst these philosophising semi-Christian sects the
figure of Abraxas was held m high esteem. " They used it
(says Bellermann) as a Teacher in doctrine, in obedience to w h o m
they directed their transcendental researches and mystic
instruction ; as a Token and a Password amongst the initiated, to
show that they belonged to the same fraternity; as an Amulet
and a Talisman, and lastly as a Seal to their documentst
Gnostic intagli are almost the sole productions of the Glyptic
Art, during the time it was dying out, all through the last two
centuries of the Western Emiire, if w e except a few rude
figures of the goddess Roma, Victories, and Eagles made for
legionary rings. As m a y easily be supposed the art displayed
in these designs is at its lowest ebb, being itself a degenerate
successor to the debased Egyptian school of Alexandria. The
* Their barbarism, however, is so rude a style that one would have
often in advance of that of their real placed its execution three centuries
period. A convincing example is later, but for the company in which
the one found in the great treasure- it was found. Another point ot
trove of Tarsus, where the latest interest was its retaimng m e origiu.u
coins went no later than Gordiau III. setting—a cable-mounted frame, with
It was a black hematite, with a four- loop, of massy gold proof of t n c
wTinged, sceptre-holding Ahon, reverse value placed upon its poten y.
Venus Anadyomene, with her usual (Franks Collection.)
11L1L flru'rlS'rHUIU] bCitllcnLU in
THE GNOSTICS AND THEIE REMAINS. 275
traceu. upon the stone. In all likelihood the same artists were
trio Alexandrian glass-workers, famed long, before for their
engraved vases, Martial s " tepido toreumata N i l i , " for Pliny
uses tlie significant expression, " vitrum, ahud torno teritur,
a n u u argentimore caelatur, some glass vessels are cut out by
means of the drill, others carved in relief in the same manner as
silver plate." The z in these inscriptions is invariably formed
by drawing a short line across the diagonal of a Z, so that in
rude work, it cannot be distinguished from the latter character.
These inscriptions are often found superadded upon the backs
of gems of much earlier date, evidently for the purpose of
converting them into talismans. Of such conversions the most
remarkable known to m e are, a fine cameo (Marlborough
Cabinet) a bust of Commodus; on the reverse of which has
been rudely cut the Abraxas-god surrounded by a legend,
unintelligible though sounding like Greek words.
AOYrENNAIOAEMNNAIBAZIAIIKOZ
M T i\l 0 T
CiBETv
•0EQ/s/
Jb IG. 12.
280 THE GNOSTICS AND THEIR REMAINS.
L E G E N D S A N D E0EMUL7E.
p r °~
and over patients already filled with tiio belief of his power to
relieve them! l l e n e o the Casting-out of devils became the
grand staple of their trade with all the T l i a u m a t u r g i s t s , both
old and new, of the ages with which w e are dealing. That the
cure should be permanent was a thing perfectly immaterial, it
sufficed the exorcist s purpose if the mamtestation of his power
should be successful for the moment, to the edification of the
awestruck; crowd of believers, and to the confusion of the few
jxdiiouixiistic doubters amongst the crowrd.
Such spells gave power likewise over demons ranging about
unconfined in fleshly prison. Eucrates, in Lucian's amusing
Philopseudes, boasts that he is so accustomed to meet thousands
of them roving about, that he has come not to mind them at all,
more especially since " The Arabian has given m e a ring made
out of the nail from a cross, and taught m e the spell composed
of m a n y JSwriics. J. lie last remark is valuable for our purpose :
it proves that the legends in an unknown tongue on our
talismans are sometimes to be explained from the Arabic,* and
also m a y consist of strings of titles of the one deity invoked.
Virgil's
Crines cnusa sacerdos
Ter centum tonat ore dcos, Erebumque, Ghaosque,
xcincminanique xiecaxon, tua virguus ora J-nanaj;
aprjv Lai tat Tovair ap7jv aprjv patvpapt papir) /xapei. aprjv aprjv aprjv.
Again Irenams copies out a formula " couched m H e b r e w words,
to inspire greater a w e into the Gallic neophyte (at L u g d u n u m ) , "
as used b y certain Gnostics there in administering baptism :
a
pavwtpa ^a^oo'O'e p aiavopa paraota povaoa Kovcra papaipop o a-
x"ai, I invoke Thee, S u p r e m e over every vntue, the .Light of
the Father b y n a m e , the G o o d Spirit, the Life, because thou hast
reigned m the b o d y . Another of their formulas was—]\Ieo*a"ta ov
<papcy fapxpif/aip v x ' o <• r t^ r* Vp y / t p
" I do not separate the Spirit, the H e a d , and the Supercelestial
ZZZ OM€CU)TOYAP
T r» Y t IA \XJ r t w M A H* U IN
«f # AGOAIHTOC
ATCJO)ACACJOAAOONC CJLIAIMAOOHAO
COM6C6IAAMABPAC lOUAOYlOOVH
C3ZYPPAHAKPAMMA (jUAIYHAHIC
AHGeeiYCjJY
KPAMMAKAMAPICCC6
rrONBAA^ABANTHC HAGUAAYCOJL
IM6CC1AAMUJBHAM THGCCOIACC
. . . GNIAMBGONAPOY OOHAOJHNIIVI
. . . NTAMIXAHAA HAIOYHAA6Y
MOPAXGI^Y CMHAIAOAY
. . . PAB6T6MAI . . . IHHOOtOCOYH
...ANCO I0O0JHH
Dark red agate, 1 X | in. : sent me by Mr. Whelan, Nov. 25, 1881.
neglected is a very sound one. " All these sects have evidently
borrowed their symbols, and probably also their respective
exp anations, from the iconology and mysteries of the Egyptians
and other nations of the East. If as regards the meaning of
11 1 nl
SvP c s and symbols they had no better information, the
Gnostics of Egypt and Syria had at least national tradition
to depend upon a point assuredly 01 some weight. If
tiierefore the more recent sects of Gnostics with their sym-
bolical learning have established new opinions and fresh modifi-
cations of religion upon the basis of the old, w e are not there-
fore to conclude that they knew nothing about, and wantonly
gave a n e w meaning to, the symbols which they thus mis-
applied. This is the only rational point of view in which these
amulets and engravings ought to be s t u d i e d . "
Easpe's collection I shall now proceed to supplement by
copies of several unpublished examples—themost interesting that
have come under m y notice in a long course of study, and such
as servo best to illustrate the theories proposed in the foregoing
A n d to show the curious and puzzling nature of the
whole class, they often present the critical examiner with signs
and SKjlee, n o w supposed the exclusive property of national
religions, the most diverse from one another, as they were
remote from the recognised metropolis of Gnosticism. Inter-
mingled with the regular Greek characters appear strange
gns analogous in form, often identical with, the Caste-marks
of the Hindoos, and which in their turn became the parents of
those used by the media)val alchemists and Eosicrucians, and
(during the same ages) of the true professors of Masonry. The
consideration of these Sigla, of which I have collected a lar^e
series belonging to all ages and countries, has proved sufficiently
fruitful to supply muterials for a separate and important sub-
division of this Treatise. One example, described under " talis-
mans and a m u l e t s , presents unmistakeable evidence of the use
of Buries in the Alexandrine studio, whilst another, shortly to
be noticed, demonstrates that the Gnosis m a y dispute with
Hibernia her supposed peculiar invention of the mysterious
y .
A tablet of aquamarine (?) communicated to m e by the
LT 2
2.i2i THE GNOSTICS AND THEIR REMAINS.
. iePKP ....
BACJOPrOAGOPO
AAXAMXABPAC . .
HTAACJONAICA . .
AGOOATIAAYNA.
MICBOH0€1M.
J.ICV6TSC.
CABACOGCOYGAHCU
PMAPCABAOYttGI
OP0O0AYMA0IM
YXPCOCCM6NOX
AnePKPHct>TA0O
-^ J'
GAOJGOY.
IAGCJOBAOPS
NeMONO0IAAP
[KPI*ieY6AAI*IPK
IPAAN NYUMfclNfcr*PA
BCxJGAIANAGIAYGGA
CJGICOIAIAIANIN
Nl JAZXI't'VAA
ZON
MIE1XAHA
TAbrInnvrt^
AHAEEEENTE
NBAPANTH
NIAW
CTOXBA0A
HMAAAXIC0OM
MAKOXyOX
A B P A M M AGO0H
ABPAMMHA
The llobrew Patriarch figures in this legend, and in many
more of the same kind, as the divinely inspired founder of a
THE (TNOSTICS AND THEIR REMAINS. 295
^ j
XNOYMICMAABeiCBGINYQG6G
\_i \J \ \J W m IV! C i M C r 6 r\\ LJAVilVlrA H' r I_I i l i —
H i e same Adonis had the name " Sal-Anbo " (which often
occurs in Gnostic legends) as appears from tho statement in
Lampndius, "that Heliogabalus exhibited Salanbo with all the
lamentation and tossing of head proper to tho Syrian ceremony,''
whereby ho gave the omen of his own impending fate.
The Delphic E has already been noticed—but its importance
demands further particulars of its history, which have been
preserved by Hutarch in his curious treatise upon the subject.
The Greeks with their usual fondness for explaining all
mysteries ratwnishcally, considered the letter as the simple
numrral, Five, set up in the Temple to denote the original and
proper number of the far-famed " Wise M e n ; " but which in
later times had been raised to seven, by the addition of two
more w h o had small claims to the honour. The legend went
that these I IVO Wise Men, to commemorate the accidental meeting
of them all m Delphi at the same festival, had dedicated the
numeral carved m wood, which, decaying through age, tho
Corinthians replaced by a facsimile m bronze; which last was
finally transmuted by Livia Augusta into another of gold, as
more consistent with the dignity of the god of the place, whose
son her husband claimed to be, and whose received image ho
represented m his features.
FIG. 13.
PAltT IV.
THE FIGURED MONUMENTS OF
CxxsOSTICISM.
TQI NIKQNTI A Q Z O AYTQI <t>ATEIN
AMU TOY MANNA TOY KEKPYMMENOY KAI
AQZO AYTQ "fHOON AEYKHN KAI E m
THN YH<l>ON ONOMA KAINON TETPAMMEN
O OYAEIZ ETNfl El M H O AAMBANQN.
THE FIGURED MONUMENTS OF
(TNOSTICISM.
* " Each tribe either found or of Hebal, of red agate, holding in his
introduced m the Caaba their do- hand seven arrows, without heads or
mestic worship; the temple was feathers, the instruments and symbols
adorned or defiled with 360 idols of of profane divination."— Gibbon,
nioi, eagles, lions, and antelopes; chap. 42.)
and most conspicuous was the statue
306 THE GNOSTICS AND THEIR REMAINS.
IABATAOP
OONATHCAAI
APBA0I
AAM
ACJL)
"TV VXD
Ltv 11J
t> rt mine e^ e,
01*
Meirem M irein
If H N A M E P C O and MAPCOHNI are really the same, it will be
conclusive against n, where the eni is an affix. T h e form then
mignT DO
VXD 'J'JJ
emmeir.
Query what of the U) ?
101 placed on each side of the Chnuphis serpent engraved
in green jade (S. S. Lewis) is correct Itobrew for k With m e , "
which gives an appropnate sense if understood as a prayer for
the constant presence of the protecting Spirit.
M E Z XANAACO, " The Messiah be propitious unto m e . "
M A P W H N I , * "Enlighten mine o y e s . "
K A T A A K A T . T h e Basilidan n a m e for the Saviour is written
b y Epiphanius K A T A A K A T X , w h o ridicules it as an expression
taken from Isaiah (xxviii. 10) without any regard to the
The Syrian Alexander Sevcrus converted into "Maria." H N A M -
expresses ms indignation at tlie sight t r U J , which often accompanies the
of a certain notorious rogue, Arabi- figure of the Cynocephalus, seems to
anus, coming to Court, by exclaiming be equivalent to the phrase in the
" O Marna, O Jupiter," &c, where text: and as that beast belongs to
Ins native "Our Lord " he renders Thoth, god of knowledge, this inter-
by " Jupiter," for the benefit of his pretation has at least appropriateness
li-oman hearers. 1 Ins word the in its favour.
monkish transcribers very naturally
314 GNOSTICS AND THEIR REMAINS.
"There is One Baiit, One Athor, their power is one and the
same, there is One Achori. Hail Father of the universe, hail
God under three forms ! Concerning the three figures a
word is necessary in explanation of their titles. As for the
hawk-head Ea, Horapollo gives for reason of the type ; " H i e
liawk stands for the Supreme Mind, and for the intelligent
soul. The hawk is called m the Egyptian language ' Baietli,
from bai soul, and eth heart, which organ they consider the
seat or mclosure of the soul. A sufficient explanation this
for the shape m which the talisman is formed. Achoreus, the
virtuous priest-councillor of the last of the Ptolemies (
priest-councinor ui uue idbu ui LUO Ptuiciuies ( . ^
Lucan), derives his name from the sacred serpent here invoked.
That Iaos was recognised by the Greeks as an epithet for
the Sun in the autumnal quarter has been shown from
Macrobius. The philosophical interpreters of the ancient
mythology discovered in Dwnysos also a mere type of the same
luminary. " One is Zeus, Hades, Helios, and I h o n y s o s . And
foerapis is substituted for the last m an oracle quoted by Julian :
nor must it be forgotten that the main object of Macrobius in
the above-quoted dissertation is to prove, that Serapis is a
representative of the various powers of the Solar deity all
combined in one figure. Again, to the yame effect, comes
Vir0n s famous aposnojj e
Yos, 0 clanssima mundi,
Liunnna labentem qui ccelo ducitis annum,
ljihcr et alma Ceres!
where " L>acchus and " Ceres do no more than interpret
Osiris and Isis, the Sun and Moon. Here lies the reason for
equipping Bacchus with horns m some of his statues.
"Accedant capiti cornua Bacchus e r i s , " ^ays Sappho to
Phaon. .b or m Hebrew a radiated and a homed head is ex-
pressed by the same word. W h e n Moses came down from the
Mount, " c o r n u t a erat facies ejus, according to the version
of the Yulgate; and on the strength of this mistranslation
Christian art hath ever graced the Jewish lawgiver with these
appenua^eb.
In this very title lao undoubtedly lies the origin of the
universal persuasion of the ancients that the Jehovah of the
G-NOSTICS 323
A B R A X A S , N E W T Y P E OF.
A most singular variation upon the normal type of the
Abraxas pantheus gives him the head, of Serapis for that of the
usual cock. In the field between the serpents are the genital
o , 1 ¥ si^cj lopLc&ciiLGU in <i, tsLd^e of rest,
not as the fascmum properly appear on amulets; and unmis-
takaoiy displaying the seal of circumcision. This circumstance
is another proof to be added to all those previously observed,
that the fabricators of this class of talismans "were the Egyptian
Jews. As the distinguishing principle of the Gnosis in all its
forms was the reprobation of the " doing the work of the
Demiurgus that is, the propagation of the species it is
evident that the object of this symbolism was not of a religious
kind. It is probable that the idea was to produce a talisman of
medicinal use, perhaps for the cure of impotence or other
affections of the parts represented. Of medicinal talismans,
exp s & ^ ^ l r purpose by the legencis they bear, numerous
examples have been already published. The one now described
was made known to m e through an impression brought by
the l i c v . S. S. .Lewis of a jasper m the J_>ourgignon collection
at Rome. Another very uncommon subject in the same
collection is a skeleton seated on a throne, holding a lance, or
perhaps sceptic. Although perfectij corresponding with the
medneval representation of Death, yet the spirited though rude
extension of the mtaglio is that of the earlier Gnostic period,
and the idea intended was that of a larva, not that of the
.Destroying Power. In the Stosch Cabinet is a similar figure
bome along in a car by steeds as fleshless as himself, like
the Wild Hunter of the German legend.
FIG. 14.
THE GNOSTICS AND THEIR REMAINS. 3Aj
nay, not even a male consort, but being a female sprung from
a female that created thee, though she herself knows not her
mother, but believes herself to exist alone. .But I invoke the
mother. At this address the Demiurgus is struck with con-
fusion (as well he might be), and forced to acknowledge the
baseness of his origin : whereupon the inner m a n of the Gnostic
casts off his bondage as well as his own angel, or soul,
which remains with the Demiurgus for further use, and
ascends still higher into his proper place. For every m a n is
made up of body, soul, and inner man, this last being the more
spiritual nature. This same belief was the popular one of the
Jews, as appears from Ithoda's exclamation at the unhoped-for
reappearance of Peter, w h o m she supposed already put to death.
The Achamoth here mentioned is the Sephandomad of
Zoroaster, the Wisdom of the later Jews—so fully described by
the pseudo-Solomon under that title (vii. 25). " She is the
Spirit of the virtue of God, the pure emanation of the brightness
of the Almighty, the brightness of the eternal Light, the minor
without spot of his majesty, the image of his g o o d n e s s . " " Wis-
d o m hath made her house upon seven p l l l a r s . " The naked woman,
or Venus Anadyomene, so often seen on these gems, is the same
idea expressed by the ancient Greek type. One given by Caylus
( iicc. d Ant. vi. J. i. 21) explains its destination m terms
_) , p eir coiriipt x>yzantme orthography:
IA CO CABAx) AAONAI HKAI EAAAZEIU)N T O T T A P T A P O T
CKOTIN, Sabaoth, Jjord, come and deliver m e from
tlie darkness of Hell!
Could the long legends covering so m a n y of these jasper tablets
be interpreted, most probably their purport would be found of
the same nature with the just-cited Heracleonitan passport for
the rieroma: it were but a natural precaution on his friends'
part to supply the deceased brother with a correct copy of such
long-winded involved professions of faith, and which otherwise
would be extremely apt to escape his m e m o r y ; the more
especially as being only confided to him by his spiritual guides
when he was already at the last gasp.
m e practice itseii, the origm untioiiutecuy lay in the 'very
ancient Egyptian rule of placing in the m u m m y cases those
GNOSTICS AND THEIR REMAINS. 331
X . f
T h e gem-talismans that remain in such varied abundance are
themselves recognised in the few surviving writings of the
Gnostic teachers. T h e I tstis-Soplda is full of allusions to the
Seals and Numbers of the different ./Loiis a n d the other Poweis,J
and with the repeated promise of the Saviour to reveal these
all unto his hearers; a promise which, unfortunately, is not
fulhlled in the book as it has c o m e d o w n to us. Nevertheless
the very allusion sumciently declares the sense m which w e are
to understand the C<t>PAriC so frequently to be seen on
the talismans. T h e motive for providing the defunct believer
ticket to have been the pass of some as his introduction to the faithful m
" Brother in Christ Jesus," in the whatever part he might require their
primitive ages of the onurch, serving ncip.
THE GNOSTICS AND THEIR REMAINS. 337
app e ou m e , which i
app^e invariably ^
u accompanies the sacred images
of mciia. O n the head ad is a crown, m
in the Oriental style
style, and
JI1
the close-iittin<r trarment reacliui
o& garment, reaching
reacnmg from neck to ankle, and
and n o w
^ ™Si ° for, t h e swaddling-clothes_of
V S & ^ OII1CS the ha-hY, is profusely
studded with precious stones—the offerings of a later time. The
very tradition as to its place of manufacture supplies an inkling
of the truth ; for it is said to be the work of a m o n k at
Jerusalem, and carved out of one of the sacred olive-trees. The
pious artist must have been inspired by the sight of the Indian
prototype, for tiio resemblance is far too close to be accidental, if
indeed, the whole affair be not another instance of a " christened
l/lj V Li
iiuunsiiiiig uxaiiiuiiuiDin
flourishing Mamcheism uiof iu
the
C xiiuigouaco
Albigenses in the twelfth
century. The fact 01 these sectaries having received the same
share of persecution from Catholics as the \\ aidenscs them-
selves is not alone sunicient to prove them equally good
Protestants "with the latter; though that is n o w taken for
granted, especially by expounders of the ivpocai^pse,
hard put to it to nncl the required J. w o Witnesses against
the Scarlet _Lady.
Gnosticism has left traces of itself, whether by direct or
indirect descent amongst those mysterious sects of the .Libanus,
the Druses and Anseyrets. As late as Justinian s & , ac-
cording to Procopius, no fewer than a millio
million Polytheists,
(the last also a sect of Gnostics)
Mamcheans and SamctTitcins
were exterminated in Syria alone, during the systematic perse
cution, so & carried on by ttins
h pedantic bigot. As that
region soon afterwards fell under the more tolerant Caliphs, w h o
never troubled themselves about the religion of their subjects,
provided their tribute were punctually paid, these doctrines
m a y very well have come down m some sort to our days,
comiuci m G the secluded pos-ition of the people holding them,
and the tenacity
a j of life possessed
p every well-defined system
nj eveiv J btem
of religious ideas.
Ami tlio mob! ancient c>i for tliO'V claimed Simon jliigus for their
fouiKlcr.
FIG. 15.