Mathisen further explains that if we take a look at the sky chart above, we can see that the the large and important constellation of Virgo, the Virgin (Kanya in the Indian language) is rising behind Leo. He discusses that in spite of the great volume of literature written about these extremely important goddesses in the ancient world, very few historians appear to make the connection of the fact that Virgo following Leo probably accounts for the image of the goddess either riding in a chariot pulled by a lion or riding on a lion herself.
In the great temple at Hieropolis, the Syrian Goddess Atargatiswas supported by lions and she held a scepter in one hand and a spindle in the other (Johanna Stuckey, 2009). August is shared by the astrological signs of Leo the Lion and Virgo the Virgin, and is sacred to the following Pagan deities: Ceres, the Corn Mother, Demeter, Lugh, and all goddesses who preside over agriculture (Witches Of The Craft -- Lammas).
Goddesses and antelopes
Many goddesses in mythology are therefore connected to agriculture as symbolised by the sickle and sheaves of grains they hold -- and their association with lions seems to portray their strength, justice and connection with prosperity. The association of goddesses with antelopes, however, particularly in India, requires further analysis.
Apart from the connection to the lion, archeological depictions and rituals of ancient cultures of Kerala, Tamil Nadu, and other parts of northern and southern India portray goddesses flanked by a deer or antelope. Goddess Durga also has a black buck as her vahana or "vehicle," as indicated in the Tamil Thevara hymn (Pathikam 921) that praises Durga as Kalaiyathurthi, or "the one who rides a deer".
In Tamil Nadu, the blackbuck (Kalaimaan) is considered to be the vehicle of the Hindu goddess Korravai [6][7]. Korravai (Korṛawai) or Korravi was the goddess of war and victory in the ancient Tamil pantheon. She was considered the mother of Murugan, the Hindu god of war, now the patron god of Tamil Nadu,[1]. The earliest references to Korravai are found in the ancient Tamil grammar Tolkappiyam, considered to be the earliest work of the ancient Sangam literature. Korravai is identified with the goddess Durga, especially in early iconography where she is presented as fierce and bloodthirsty. Harvest and war were important aspects in the life of the ancient Tamils and they worshiped Korravai for the success in both the fields and upon the battlefield. Later Korravai was adopted into the Hindu pantheon and connected to the goddesses Durga, Kali and Parameswari.
At the Mukteshwar temple at Bhubhanehwar in Orissa, a goddess is depicted as dancing on a black buck (10th century) and this goddeess dancing frantically on the antelope's back is reminiscent of the southern martial goddesses of victory Korravai. In Tamil Nadu, the connection between the blackbuck (Kalaimaan) and the goddess Korravai is indicated in the stone carving at Mamallapuram, where the goddess is seen flanked by both an antelope and a lion.
So the association of the antelope with the grama-devathas or goddesses of agriculture needs to be analysed. Could there be a connection to the goddess's role in farming rituals?
When Goddesses ride through the seasons
In Greek mythology the Horae were the goddesses of the seasons. They were originally the personifications of nature in its different seasonal aspects, but in later times they were regarded as goddess of order in general, and of natural justice. Traditionally, they guarded the gates of Olympus, promoted the fertility of the earth, and rallied the stars and constellations. The course of the seasons was also symbolically described as the dance of the Horae, and they were accordingly given the attributes of spring flowers, fragrance and graceful freshness.
The story of how the four seasons came to be, originates with Demeter, the Greek mythological goddess of the harvest. She was the goddess who blessed the earth and made sure that everyone had a great harvest. However, according to the stories, whether or not the harvest would be good depended largely on her moods. The myth of Demeter and Persephone explains the origins of the seasons. Demeter is assigned the zodiac constellation Virgo the Virgin by Marcus Manilius in his first century Roman work Astronomicon. In art, the constellation Virgo is often depicted holding Spica as a sheaf of wheat in her hand and sitting beside the constellation Leo the Lion.
During the month of August, the Great Solar Wheel of the Year is turned to Lammas, one of the four Grand Sabbats celebrated each year by Wiccans and modern Witches throughout the world. Lammas marks the start of the harvest season and is a time when the fertility aspect of the sacred union of the Goddess and Horned God is honored. This union may help in our analysis of the antelope connections among goddesses in India.
A parallel symbolism of seasons can be observed in the ancient culture of Kerala based on the extensive research which highlights that many of the goddesses of the Kerala region, who are now enthroned in grand temples, were in previous times local village deities (gramadevathas) who -- like Demeter, Ceres and Ishtar -- were worshipped for protecting their crops. With the encroachment upon rice fields and other agricultural lands due to urbanization, the goddesses were enshrined in larger abodes which became the present popular temples such as those at Kodungalloor, Atukaal, or Chottanikkara. The main deities of all these temples, Bhadrakali or Kali Devi are therefore closely linked with seasons as indicated by the annual festivals and associated rituals which are celebrated mostly during the Malayalam months from Kumbmam through Meenam and up to Medam (corresponding to English months from mid-February through mid-May). The Malayalam month Kumbham which coincides with the lapse of winter, marks the initiation of productive phase in plants, when they get ready for fertility soon after their hermitage in the previous period of chilly nights.
According to Nair (2016) when the Sun reaches at the tenth degree of the constellation Aries (pathamudayam in Kerala -- late April of the Medam month corresponding to spring in Europe), it is a festive occasion in many of the Bhadrakali temples of Kerala, especially in the villages which were the once rice bowls of the region. On this occassion a kanyaka (virgin) carries the sacred antler of a deer in the belief that Goddess Parvathi is riding on the antelope. The temple where the antler is worshipped in reticence is opened only on the eve of pathamudayam to facilitate the annual ceremonial offering -- puja and ponkala -- to the Goddess of the temple, after which the temple remains closed during the rest of the year. This day on pathamudayam when the temple is opened is very auspicious as the sun passes on this day into Aries at the vernal equinox, a solar event that is believed to be an appropriate time for commencing rice cultivation. It is on this day that farmers plough a few yards and sow a pinch of paddy seeds to mark the begining of the agricultural year following which the seeds sprout and the rice plants flourish in the seasonal monsoon showers that unfailingly visit the region during that time of year.
The sun's entry into the constellation of Aries in Medam (the corresponding Malayalam month) thus marks the begining of the advent of the glorious Sun up the starry vault of heaven to reach His golden throne during Chingam (mid-August to early September) in the constellation of Leo, when rice is harvested from the fields, thus paving the way for a sumptuous Onam (Nair, 2016).
Therefore the ceremonial procession of the gramadevatha or Goddess Bhagavathy mounted on an antelope may reference the zodiac sign Aries (associated with the symbol of a horned ram), during the patahmudayam in Medam. Aries transports Her through the forthcoming seasons, finally to see her mount the Lion during the harvest of rice in the month of Chingam which represents the constellation Leo; while the benevolent Sun smiles at Her all the time. So we see the transition of the Goddess from zodiac sign Aries, on the antler / antelope which may be an ancient ritual of worshipping the agricultural cycle, because according to Nair (2010), the antler was the first plough to be used by the ancient people of India [editor's note: I will present some discussion following this article upon the possibility that the antler in these traditions and rituals represents a constellation other than Aries]. And then at last the kanya or virgin arrives for the grand festival of Kerala, Onam, during the month of Chingam / Singam, when she has finally reached the constellation of Leo. The rise of Virgo closely following Leo was celebrated in many other ancient cultures as seen in the association of Demeter and Lammas Sabbat with this time of year, thus revealing the importance of the goddesses in ancient agriculture.
The mingling of the seasons with Mother Earth can be seen clearly through these rituals and ceremonies of the goddesses or grama devathas. Mother Earth after her hibernation during the chilly nights of the Makara season of the Malayalam calander (mid-December to January) gets ready for her productive phase in Kumbham season (February to mid-March) when she is anointed with much pomp while the festivity continues up to the Meenamseason (March to mid-April ) with the arrival of Vasantham (spring).
During Medam (early May) the fields are getting ready with the first ploughing on the auspicious day of pathamudayam, which is symbolised by the virgin gramadevatha, often represented in traditional ceremonies by a young girl who has not attained puberty, crowned by the antler, who is taken in a ceremonial procession. The antler, reminiscent of the first tool to be used for ploughing, is kept as an object of worship in certain temples.
Following the ceremonious ploughing and land preparation, rice (the main staple crop of Kerala) is sown in the fields during early period of the Malayalam month Edavam (mid-May) with the rains arriving to nurture them during mid-Edavam (late May to early June) and taking them to maturity. The crop then becomes fertile as the rain recedes and the wind dances briskly among the stalks during Mithunam to Karikkidam seasons (late June to mid-July). By this time the productive earth stands proudly adorned by golden sheaves rustling in the strong breeze and thereafter the smiling sun takes her hand to start his ascent towards the constellation of the king of beasts, the Leo, where we see the shy Virgin Mother Earth joining the radiant sun in a waltz of seasons, as the constellation Virgo rises closely behind Leo.
Thus the puzzle of the "Lion" after which the harvest month Chingam is named, its association with the benevolent Mother earth who is also the Mother of Agriculture as a symbol of prosperity or harvest, and the question of association of the antelope or deer with its elegantly branched antlers which was apparently used as a plough by the first farmers of our fields, are all answered, while from above, Heavens blesses the virgin mother who has become productive with the arrival of the Chingam-Kanni, corresponding to the English months from early August to early September. Only the question of sickle remains to be answered as to whether the sickle outline found in Leo's is connected to the harvesting tool used by women in agriculture and symbolized in the depictions of the gramadevathas and goddesses, holding them in their hands.
So with renewed awareness of our connection to generations stretching back for thousands of years, and their connection to the cycles of the heavens, we can get ready to welcome the arrival of the Virgin Mother of Earth crowned by antlers and riding on her mount, the king of beasts, towards the constellation of Leo, as we prepare to celebrate the festival of Onam during the month of Chingam.
Bibliography
1. Horae in https:/en .wikwipedia.org/wiki/ Horae
2. JohannaStuckey (2009) Beltane Vol.8-3
3. Koravi. http common.wikimedia.org/wiki/File: Durga-Korravai.jpg
4. Mathisen (2012). The Mathisen Corollary-January 2012, MatriFocus –Cross-Quarterly For the Goddess Woman
5. Nair, V.S. (2016). History-Straight From The Horse’s Mouth; The State Institute of Languages, Kerala pp.268
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My comments on this subject:
I am grateful to Kamala Nayar for her insights into the festival of Onam.
In fact, this important festival (the existence of which I was previously unaware) is absolutely overflowing with connections to the worldwide celestial system which underlies the Star Myths of many other cultures, including the myths of ancient India.
The time of year surrounding the point of the September equinox is associated in the ancient system of celestial metaphor with the soul's plunge out of the realm of spirit and into the "lower realm" of the incarnate condition. Note, for instance, that the famous Eleusinian Mysteries of ancient Greece (whose origins stretch back far into the centuries prior to the "classical" period) were also celebrated at this particular season each year (around the beginning of September), and were closely associated with the goddesses Demeter and Persephone, as well as with the understanding of our situation during this incarnate life as a soul that has been plunged into the lower realm, taking on a body.
The festival of Onam is traditionally associated with the legend of King Mahabali, who was a benevolent ruler of a mythical Golden Age in ancient Kerala. Concerned that Mahabali has acquired too much power, Vishnu takes on his avatar of the dwarf Vamana, and attends a great sacrifice festival which Mahabali is holding as a means of consolidating and demonstrating his great earthly power.
Disguising himself as a mendicant holy man, Vamana requests a boon from the king, which was customary at such formal rituals. Mahabali asks what boon Vamana would have Mahabali give, and Vamana requests as much land as Vamana can cover in three paces. Amused, Mahabali grants the wish, at which point Vamana (who is in fact the god Vishnu) grows to enormous size and begins to take his three universe-encompassing strides.
With the first step, Vamana covers the entire earth. With the second step, he strides across the heavens. For the third step, the king offers his own head, and Vamana steps upon it, sending Mahabali to the underworld.
Thus, the prosperity of the Golden Age is ended -- but Mahabali is permitted to return once each year, at the festival of Onam, during which the abundance of that mythical time is again celebrated, with feasting, ritual dances, decorations of flowers, the wearing of new clothes, and other similarly symbolic activities.
I am convinced that this myth, which has echoes in myths found around the world (including in Norse myth, as discussed in my latest book) has a celestial origin. This celestial origin, in fact, explains the many parallels of this important episode.
As touched upon in my latest book, the various avatars of Vishnu (and the other gods of ancient India) often relate to nearby constellations in the vicinity of the constellation most commonly associated with that god. This pattern, in fact, is similar to the transformations of the god Zeus in Greek myth, for example -- Zeus is most closely associated with the constellation Hercules in the heavens, but he takes on different "avatars" during different mythical episodes, often while in the process of seducing mortal women, such as when he takes on the form of a Swan (see the nearby constellation of Cygnus), or the form of a celestial shower (the nearby column of the glorious Milky Way itself), or even the form of a Bull (during the abduction of Europa).
Similarly, the various avatars of Vishnu can be shown to be associated with various different constellations (some of which are discussed in Star Myths of the World, Volume Four: Norse Mythology). The avatar of Vamana, which is the dwarf avatar of Vishnu, is almost certainly associated with the constellation Hercules, a constellation which can be shown to play the role of a dwarf in many myths from around the world, including the god Bes of ancient Egypt, as well as dwarf-figures in the Norse myths (also discussed in the new book).
Note that the constellation Hercules appears to be taking mighty strides across the heavens -- and that indeed the forward leg of the constellation (as outlined by H. A. Rey) appears to be stepping on the "head" of the constellation Ophiuchus, just as Vamana steps upon the head of Mahabali in the Vishnu mythology: