The Southern (Italian) Death Cults – yes, I
am talking about Orphic Mysteries
Thurii crops up quite a bit in the reading
I have been doing on Orphism and early mystery cults in the ancient Mediterranean.
There were a number of excavations there and tombs dated to 300 B.C that
contained votive leaves with inscription in Greek to Orpheus which the dead
would presumably carry with them on their trip in to the underworld. Why
Orpheus? Well, he is right there at the start of the earliest accounts of the
mapping of the ancient Greek concept of the underworld as the first mortal to
make it down there (and back)on a quest for Eurydice, his love, cruelly cut
down in her prime by a poisonous snake bite. Some accounts have him as the
original gazetteer of the place giving the names to the four rivers of Hell.
Orphic mystery cults where initiates either
see or visit the underworld undergoing a salvation or transformation of some
sort go back quite a way in Greece and the Greek colonies and apart from
Orpheus there are the Eleusis Cults and Dionysian Cults with which Orpheus is
closely linked and often identified with (via the death and resurrection myths
of Dionysus). The roots are deep in proto-Greek religion and run throughout its
latter development, influencing Greek tragedy (dromeon or performance as
ritual) and cropping up in Greek literature and philosophy (Plato, Myth of Er
in Book X of The Republic several dialogues, Aristophanes Frogs and others).
The classic Homeric underworld seems a
pretty grim place from the earliest accounts, a place of judgement (Minos and
Radamanthus et aliis), the other dead mere shades of their former selves,
unable to enjoy the things of life, living on blood sacrifice from the odd
passing Homeric hero (Odysseus). Under Orphic influence, whose rites saw the
underworld as a place of wisdom and transformation and possibility of salvation
always around the corner, the underworld becomes a more fleshed out and
well..fun place to be.
The dead start having lives of their own,
dwelling paces, sunny fields, decent food to eat, tools and possessions – in
fact it becomes a mirror of the world above, looked at through the lens of
Orphic eschatology as ‘the kuklos or the circle of existence – the ultimate
goal of the fully initiated to escape the wheel entirely and be reborn as the
god and return to the eternal void.
It’s
here in the personal salvation aspect that Orpheus provides one of the strands
available to the seeker of esoteric knowledge in the Mediterranean of the Hellenistic
period and antiquity, the others being Gnosticism and Judean cults. In this
crucible, Christianity, at first a rather obscure cult found an ideal breeding
ground in which to hone its ideas, learn a bit from the many other
esoteric/salvationist wisdom groups and creeds on offer and take advantage of the
febrile zeitgeist of the 1st and 2nd Centuries and
coupling that with already available existing networks of subterranean magical
cults and mystery worshippers to finally adapt and thrive and ultimately take
control of the spiritual reins of the pagan Roman Empire itself.
I don’t think that Ovid had much of this in
mind when writing about Orpheus but was certainly aware of the many cultic
practices and primitive rustic myths surrounding this Christ/Osiris like
figure. Just how much Orphism/Gnosticism went into the making of early Christianity
is a moot point, but certainly makes for a interesting debate.