Haldi and Mithra Mher PDF
Haldi and Mithra Mher PDF
Haldi and Mithra Mher PDF
ARMEN PETROSYAN
The subject of this article is an illustrative example of how important it is to join the efforts of the
“eastern” and “western” scholars in the study of the complex problems of antiquity. In this view, we
would like to stress, once again, the purpose of our journal: to make the works of scholars from different
countries available and understandable to one another.
Igor Diakonoff was first to write about the Urartian-Armenian roots of Mithraism. This author was
known and acknowledged both in the West and in the Soviet Union, yet nevertheless, his study remained
unnoticed to the western Armenologists and specialists in Mithraism. On the other hand, Diakonoff, as he
himself confessed (1991, personal), had no sufficient knowledge of the Armenian epic for a proper
analysis of the relevant material. Thus, the issue discussed in this article may serve as a link between not
only eastern and western scholars but also between specialists in various disciplines: Urartian, Iranian,
Caucasian, and Armenian studies, as well as experts in mythology and epic.
Namzitara, where Namzitara meets the supreme god Enlil disguised as a raven. The god promises that Namzitara‟s
descendants will “seize” the justice si-sa: see Afanasieva 1997: 320-321, 451 (cf. Mher the Younger will go out from the rock
when justice is established in the world).
13
Shalian 1964: 371.
14
According to one opinion, these lands can be localized in the Armenian Highlands: see, e.g., Lipinski 1971: 49-50.
15
For the ancient Near Eastern elements of the Armenian epic, see Petrosyan 2002.
16
This epithet has also been explained as “Lion-tearer”: see Harutyunyan 2000: 44.
17
Kapancjan 1940: 114.
18
For the cult of Haldi, see Hmayakyan 1990: 33ff.
19
Belli 1999: 37ff.
20
The name Haldi is referred to in an Aramaic inscription from the Mannean kingdom southeast of Urartu (Lemaire 1998: 21-
22; Teixidor 1997/98: 734). One may suppose that the cult of Haldi was not exclusively Urartian: see Salvini 2001: 354. For a
discussion of how Haldi‟s cult could have penetrated Manna, see Tiratsian 2001: 10-12.
21
Diakonoff 1983: 192.
22
Thureau-Dangin 1912: XII, n. 3. There are also other readings of this text.
23
Hmayakyan 1990: 33, 35.
4
8. Festivals dedicated to Haldi and sacrifices offered to him are known in connection with planting
of vineyards. Haldi was the god of viticulture and wine-making as well.24
9. The usual place of the worship of Haldi were the “gates of Haldi.” He, apparently, dwelled in
the cave inside the rock, like Mher.
10. In Urartian art, the images of the lion and the bull side by side are of frequent occurrence. The
great gods were depicted standing on those animals. Moreover, the lions tearing bulls are known in
Urartian zoography.25 It has been surmised that the lion represented the symbol of Haldi was the lion,
while the bull, as in the ancient cultures of Urartu‟s neighbors, was the symbol of the thunder god
(Urartian Teińeba).26 Now it is clear that those symbols are ambiguous27 (e.g., on the shield from Upper
Anzaf, Haldi leads the troops on foot while Teińeba follows him on a lion and the sun god Ńiuini goes on
a bull). However, we can hardly doubt that the lion, king of animals often, if not even always, or in a
certain stage of the history of Urartu, represented Haldi, the king of the gods.28 The combat between the
lion and the bull apparently corresponds to the combat between the gods whose symbols those two
animals represented.
This motif is usual in the ancient culture of Mesopotamia, where it first appears on proto-Elamite
seals and has later manifestations in antiquity (e.g., in Persia and Asia Minor). In the culture of Armenia,
the motif of the lion tearing a bull is first attested to on a silver vessel from Karashamb (according to the
most recent chronology, of the end of the 3rd millennium BC)29 and occurs on sculptures down to the late
Middle Ages.30
24
Hmayakyan 1990: 10, 76-78; Petrosyan 2006.
25
Piotrovskij 1962: 111 (the author indefinitely calls the attacking animal a “predator” but, as the late S.A. Yesayan kindly
confirmed, it is doubtlessly a lion); Yesayan et al., 1991: 17.
26
Piotrovskij 1959: 223; Diakonoff 1983: 193; Hmayakyan 1990: 35.
27
Calmeyer 1983: 182; Salvini 1995: 189-190, with bibliography.
28
The lion is the symbol uniting Haldi and Mher the Elder with other embodiments of the “resurrecting” god. In Armenian
folklore, the legendary hero Muńeł Mamikonean too was called “Lion” (Srvandztyantz 1982: 95); supposedly he, like Ara the
Handsome, was brought back to life with the help of the aralezk„, the mythical dog-like creatures who licked the wounds of
killed heroes and raised them from the dead. The Abkhazian double of Ara and Muńeł, who resurrected with the help of dogs,
was called Aslan „Lion,‟ see in detail Petrosyan 2002: 88f.).
29
Cf. Oganisyan 1988: 146, 151.
30
H.Petrosyan 2001: 73.
31
For Sanasar, as the epic version of the thunder god, see Abeghian 1966: 414; Petrosyan 2002: 21-22.
32
Russell 1994: 183 f.
5
XII.3.19). It is not excluded that the god Mihr of the northwest of Armenia, like Mher of the south, was
connected with the pre-Iranian onomastic element xald/t-.33
from the second half of the 8th century BC (e.g., the name Urzana of the king of Ardini/Musasir is possibly of Iranian origin).
In this same period, the name of Haldi‟s wife is mentioned as Bagmańtu (or: Bagbartu) in Assyrian sources. Its first part may
correspond to the Iranian baga- „god,‟ while the second is reminiscent of the second element of Ahura Mazda. For this
interpretation of the names of Varubani and Bagmańtu, see in Hmayakyan 1990: 110-111, n. 87 and Petrosyan 2002: 92, 126;
for the Iranian elements in this region, see, e.g., Grantovskij 1970: 298ff.; Burney 1993.
40
Kent 1953: 152-153.
41
See, e.g., Girshman 1962; Tiratsyan 1964; Stronach 1967; Salvini 1995: 150-151.
42
Salvini 2001a: 260-261, n. 8, 14.
43
See, e.g., Acharyan 1977: 296; Djahukian 1987: 534 (the ending is explained in different ways).
44
These heroes have been compared with Gk. Prometheus, Iran. Aži Dahāka, Phryg. Agdistis, Serb. Marko, Nord. Loki,
Sveigðr (one can continue this list: cf., e.g., the characters of Iran. Isfandiar, Rus. Sviatogor, Germ. Hrungnir et al.). For Mher
and his parallels, see, e.g., Abeghian 1966: 144-153; Avdalbegyan 1969; Adontz 1948; Melik-Ohandzanyan 1946; Chikovani
1966; Dalgat 1972; Boyle 1975; Ardzinba 1985, Charachidzé 1986; Petrosyan 2002; Tomashevich 2007.
45
Especially interesting is Sosruqo. This fiery hero is born from the stone fecundated by a shepherd. He finds fire for the Narts,
gives them the seeds of millet and the intoxicating drink. He is endowed with features of solar deity; after his death he
continues to live underground and strives for breaking away from there. Some of his traits are more similar to those of
Artawazd (if he frees himself and appears on the earth, the soil will no longer be fertile), see, e.g., Mizhaev 1982, Brojdo 1936:
30-33.
46
For those names, see Tallqvist 1914: 83; Saporetti 1970: 283; Freydank 1976: 87.
7
of the Urartians and was introduced into the Urartian pantheon by another tribe: he was the supreme god
of the Urartian state but not the ethnic god of the Urartians.47
Haldi became the head of the state pantheon of Urartu as a result of the political activities of King
Ińpuini48 (late 9th century BC), whose family originated from Ardini/Musasir. The figure of Haldi was
ideologized and transformed, if we may say so, into a political program,49 and Ińpuini‟s successors
strenuously continued transplanting that cult into the conquered lands of the Armenian Highlands. In the
process of supposed syncretization with the local version of Mitra and ideologization, the cult of Haldi
was significantly changed and had important characteristics not usual for Ancient Eastern cults.50
It seems that in early Armenian tradition Haldi was identified with Ara the Handsome. A badly
preserved passage by the continuator of the 10th century historiographer T„ovma Arcruni (IV.18) makes
assume that the resurrection of Ara the Handsome was localized around the Lezuoy (later Lezk„) village
(3-4 kilometers north of Van). Subsequently recorded legends narrate that the Amenap„rkič„ ('Savior of
All') chapel of the village, situated on the rock, was built at the place of a heathen temple. It was in this
temple that the Aralezk„ licked and cured the sick and the dead, and it was here that Ńamiram put Ara's
body.51
An inscription of Ińpuini from Lezk„ witnesses to the construction of a stronghold at the place of
that village, as well as another building referred to by the ideogram É (“house”). In N.V. Harut„iunyan‟s
opinion, that building was a susi temple.52 In general, the ideogram É meant both secular and worship
buildings. The latter, as the susi temples, were almost always dedicated to the god Haldi. Thus, it seems
probable that there existed a temple of Haldi at the place of the village Lezk„, where subsequently Haldi
was identified with Ara the Handsome.
Haldi, like the other local deities, was renamed Mithra/Mihr, adopting the name of the Iranian god.
In this identification a major role could have played Haldi‟s supposed earlier syncretization with the
Mitannian Aryan Mitra, as well as their common characteristics (e.g., connection with fire and war).
The figures of Mher and the Western Mithras have several common traits, which are not evident in
the figure of Haldi and, at least partly, can be explained by the later development of those characters (for
example the figure of the horseman Mher inside the rock, the two candles burning beside him, the wheel
of Fortune whirling before him).53
According to Pseudo-Plutarch (3rd century AD), Mithras, hating women, impregnated a rock,
which gave birth to Diorphos. He was slain by Ares and transformed into a mountain located near the
Araxes River (De Fluuiorum et montium nominibus, XXIII, 5).54 Here the characters of heroes have been
mixed: Mithras‟ son is born from the rock instead of him. However, this myth witnesses to the
localization of the Western Mithras‟ birth in Armenia.55
The main center of the state cult of Mihr in Armenia Major was situated at the Upper Euphrates,
close to the border with Pontus. It was in Pontus that the Chaldians lived, and only in Pontus the majority
of the kings were called Mithridates (the most famous of them was Mithridates VI Eupator, father-in-law
of Tigran the Great).
47
Salvini 1989: 83-85. In his discussion of the Hurrian and Urartian pantheons, Diakonoff writes (1981: 82): “Haldi seems to
be a newcomer in the pantheon, which we hope to demonstrate in another article.” That article, as far as we know, has never
been published.
48
Salvini 1987: 405; Salvini 1989: 83-85; Salvini 1995: 39; see also Hmayakyan 1994.
49
Salvini 1989: 86
50
For instance, no ancient empire except Urartu attempted to introduce the cult of her supreme god into every conquered town;
no other important Oriental deity (except probably Yahve) lacked temple economy; a statue of an ancient Oriental deity could
normally exist only in its home temple, but Haldi‟s home lay altogether outside of the imperial Urartian territory; no statues
were erected in the numerous new sanctuaries, and the rites were performed before a stela, a tree, etc.: see Diakonoff 1983:
303.
51
Srvandztyantz 1978: 52; Abeghian 1985: 248 ff.
52
KUKN 19.
53
For those parallels, see, e.g., Boyle 1978: 73.
54
This mountain can be identified with Mount Ararat where, according to the epic “Vipasank„,” King Artawazd is imprisoned.
55
Widengren 1966: 444.
8
The first factual testimonies to the cult of Mithras are connected with the garrison Carnuntum in
Pannonia (present-day Hungary), where in 71 and 72 AD the legion XV Apollinaris was stationed.56 This
legion, which gave rise to the western Mithraism, in 63 AD was sent to Armenia to support Corbulo.57
There, at the junction of the Euphrates and Aratsani (Murat) Rivers, where the Romans under the
command of Petus had been defeated by the Parthians, Corbulo concluded a peace treaty with Tiridates,
who was to receive the crown of Armenia from Nero (Tacitus, Annales XV.26-29). Apparently, the
soldiers of that legion could have become familiar with the religion of Mithra in Armenia.58
The cult of Mithra in the northwest of Armenia Major, like the cults of other gods of that region,
did not leave prominent inheritors in the Armenian folklore. Haldi in the south, renamed Mher, became
the prototype of two heroes of the great epic of Sasun.
LITERATURE
56
According to Plutarch (Vit. Pomp. 24), the cult of Mithra was first brought to Italy by the Cilician pirates. This information
seems to be correct, but these first “Mithraists” of the West, apparently, had no successors.
57
Cumont 1956: 47 f.
58
See also Daniels 1975: 251; Russell 1987: 261ff.; Russell 1994.
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