![]() Golden rock in a Buddhist temple in Kyaikto, Myanmar In old Europe, young women used to visit special so-called sliding stones to sit on them or crawl over them in order to conceive a child. “In volcanic eruptions, air turned to fire, fire became ‘water’ and ‘water’ changed to stone hence stone constitutes the first solid form of the creative rhythm -the sculpture of essential movement, and the petrified music of creation.Īs for the philosophers’ stone in alchemy, it represents the ‘conjunction’ of opposites, or the integration of the conscious self with the feminine or unconscious side (or in other words, the fixing of volatile elements) it is, then, a symbol of the All.” Yet, as Juan Eduardo Cirlot beautifully puts it in his Dictionary of Symbols, the stone is a symbol of creation per se, about which the alchemists knew very well: We also become petrified (=like a stone) due to fear or trauma. In our times, however, we often disregard the stone as lesser material and speak of a heart of stone or that you cannot get blood from a stone (English proverb). Later in monotheistic religions stones kept their sacred status Jesus said to Peter ( petrus – rock) that he is the rock that Jesus will built his church on in Islam Ka’aba – the Black Stone – is venerated at Mecca. But back at the beginning, when religion was more closely bound to nature, Hermes was worshipped in the form of herms – stone pillars erected at roadsides, while the ancient goddess Artemis of Ephesus (Artemis at Perga) was venerated as a black meteoric stone. This was 4000 BC while in the course of the 3rd millennium BC worship of the sun emerged and stone structures lost their anthropomorphic character. Before monuments to solar worship, such as Stonehenge, were erected, all over Europe people used to carve large-scale sculptures that were human-like in shape. Stone caves were places of initiation, the symbolic wombs where souls descended into embodiment or ascended into the ancestral realm or to higher spiritual realms. For the ancients stones were infused with the spirit of the gods and ancestors. Unsurprisingly, the first chapter of human history was called the Stone Age. ![]() Stones symbolize that which is ancient, eternal, impenetrable and unconscious. Human-shaped stone stelae found in Europe – dated 2000-3000 BC (pictures taken by me at an exhibition in Zurich)
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |