Mythology Book

(ff) #1

116


I PAY THE


DUE PENALTY


IN BLOOD


CYBELE AND ATTIS


T


he ancient Greeks saw
the goddess Cybele as the
mother of the gods and of
mankind. She first appeared in
Phrygia, now part of west-central
Turkey. The Greeks associated her
with the mother goddess Rhea, as
did the Romans, who made Cybele
the center of a popular cult from the
4th century bce onward. Cybele
played a key role in the foundation
of Rome: she gave Aeneas her
sacred pines to build his ships,
begged her son Jupiter to make
them unsinkable, and turned them
into sea nymphs at journey’s end.

Cybele’s worship was usually
accompanied by frenetic, orgiastic
rites. She was attended by ecstatic
women called Maenads, who were
known for their frenzied dancing.
Her male attendants were called
Corybantes. These wild beings
made loud, discordant music with
cymbals, pipes, and drums,
drowning out all other sounds.

In this altar dedicated to Cybele
and Attis, Cybele is pulled in her lion
chariot, while the beautiful Attis
leans against a tree. Detail of relief,
Roman altar, 295 ce.

IN BRIEF


THEME
Cults

SOURCE
Fasti and Metamorphoses,
Ovid, 8 CE.

SETTING
Phrygia, part of the ancient
kingdom of Anatolia.

KEY FIGURES
Cybele The Phrygian great
mother goddess, who
represented all of womankind.

Atalanta A huntress turned
into a lion by Cybele as
punishment.

Hippomenes Atalanta’s
husband, also a lion.

Attis Companion and
devotee of Cybele.

Sagaritis A tree nymph; she
seduced Attis and was
punished by death.

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117
See also: The cult of Dionysus 52 ■ Aphrodite and Adonis 88–89 ■ Vesta and Priapus 108–09 ■
Mithras and the bull 118–19

ANCIENT ROME


Cybele drove a chariot drawn by
two lions—the huntress Atalanta
and her husband Hippomenes,
who had been transformed into
wild animals for defiling Cybele’s
sanctuary with their lovemaking.
On her head, she wore a turreted
crown, because she built the first
city walls and towers.

Cybele’s beloved
Attis, a Phrygian mortal, won
Cybele’s favor with the purity
of his love. Cybele made him her
consort and the guardian of her
shrine. He in turn promised to
remain chaste and boyish forever.
“If I break my promise,” he said,
“may the first woman I sleep with
be my last.” Alas, this promise
proved too hard to keep. When
Attis was tempted by a naiad,
the tree nymph Sagaritis, he was
unable to resist her advances and
lost his virginity to her. In her fury,
Cybele hacked at Sagaritis’s tree,
thus fatally wounding the nymph
herself, who died in Attis’s arms.
As a naiad, her very life force was
connected to the tree.

Insane with grief, Attis believed
the roof of his chamber was falling
in, and that the Furies—who
represented the pangs of conscience
that plagued the guilty—were
coming to attack him. He ran
screaming in terror to the top of
Cybele’s sacred Mount Dindymus.
He dragged his long, beautiful hair
through the dirt, and shouted that
he deserved his fate, and should
pay the penalty in blood.
Taking up a jagged stone, Attis
cut off his genitals, which had been
the cause of his downfall. His

The priests of Isis conduct a ritual
banquet in this fresco from the Temple
of Isis at Herculeaneum—a Roman
town destroyed by a volcanic eruption.

blood, which had seeped down at
the foot of a pine tree, turned into
violets. Attis himself died of his
wounds. Following his example,
his manservants also dragged
their hair and castrated
themselves. The sorrowing Cybele
buried him where he fell, and he
was reborn as a pine—the tree that
ever after was sacred to Cybele.

Worship of Attis
Due to Attis’s self-mutilation, death,
and resurrection, he also came to
represent fertility. Like other gods
reflecting the seasons, he could
be seen as dying in winter, and
being reborn in the spring. After
his death, Cybele’s priests were
always eunuchs who had castrated
themselves in memory of Attis.
This castration also ensured they
kept the vow of chastity that he
himself had broken.
In the Roman calendar, several
days of the festival of Cybele
honored Attis; March 15 was the
day Cybele met him, March 22 his
self-mutilation, March 24 his death,
and March 25 his resurrection. ■

Foreign goddesses


Cybele was not the only imported
goddess to play a crucial role in
Roman religion. The Egyptian
goddess Isis had a cult following
in Rome, especially among
courtesans and the lower classes.
When the hero of Apuleius’s novel
Metamorphoses (The Golden Ass)
had his religious revelation, it was
with a vision of the goddess Isis.

Devotees of Isis were initiated
into secret rites that promised a
life after death, and festivals in
spring and fall celebrated
rebirth and resurrection.
The emperors Augustus and
Tiberius opposed Isis worship
because she was not a Roman
goddess. They ordered her
temples destroyed and that
statues of her be thrown into
the Tiber. Caligula made the
cult legal again as part of his
strategy to undo Tiberius’s
policies. Isis remained popular
until the rise of Christianity in
the 4th century bce.

I deserved this! I pay the
due penalty in blood! Let the
parts that harmed me perish!
Attis, Fasti

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