FROM INSCRIPTIONS it appears that
both at Pessinus and Rome the high-priest of Cybele
regularly bore the name of Attis. It is therefore
a reasonable conjecture that he played the part of
his namesake, the legendary Attis, at the annual festival.
We have seen that on the Day of Blood he drew blood
from his arms, and this may have been an imitation
of the self-inflicted death of Attis under the pine-tree.
It is not inconsistent with this supposition that
Attis was also represented at these ceremonies by an
effigy; for instances can be shown in which the divine
being is first represented by a living person and
afterwards by an effigy, which is then burned or otherwise
destroyed. Perhaps we may go a step farther and
conjecture that this mimic killing of the priest, accompanied
by a real effusion of his blood, was in Phrygia, as
it has been elsewhere, a substitute for a human sacrifice
which in earlier times was actually offered.
A reminiscence of the manner in which
these old representatives of the deity were put to
death is perhaps preserved in the famous story of
Marsyas. He was said to be a Phrygian satyr or
Silenus, according to others a shepherd or herdsman,
who played sweetly on the flute. A friend of
Cybele, he roamed the country with the disconsolate
goddess to soothe her grief for the death of Attis.
The composition of the Mother’s Air, a tune
played on the flute in honour of the Great Mother
Goddess, was attributed to him by the people of Celaenae
in Phrygia. Vain of his skill, he challenged Apollo
to a musical contest, he to play on the flute and
Apollo on the lyre. Being vanquished, Marsyas
was tied up to a pine-tree and flayed or cut limb
from limb either by the victorious Apollo or by a Scythian
slave. His skin was shown at Celaenae in historical
times. It hung at the foot of the citadel in
a cave from which the river Marsyas rushed with an
impetuous and noisy tide to join the Maeander.
So the Adonis bursts full-born from the precipices
of the Lebanon; so the blue river of Ibreez leaps
in a crystal jet from the red rocks of the Taurus;
so the stream, which now rumbles deep underground,
used to gleam for a moment on its passage from darkness
to darkness in the dim light of the Corycian cave.
In all these copious fountains, with their glad promise
of fertility and life, men of old saw the hand of
God and worshipped him beside the rushing river with
the music of its tumbling waters in their ears.
At Celaenae, if we can trust tradition, the piper
Marsyas, hanging in his cave, had a soul for harmony
even in death; for it is said that at the sound of
his native Phrygian melodies the skin of the dead
satyr used to thrill, but that if the musician struck
up an air in praise of Apollo it remained deaf and
motionless.
In this Phrygian satyr, shepherd,
or herdsman who enjoyed the friendship of Cybele,
practised the music so characteristic of her rites,
and died a violent death on her sacred tree, the pine,
may we not detect a close resemblance to Attis, the
favourite shepherd or herdsman of the goddess, who
is himself described as a piper, is said to have perished
under a pine-tree, and was annually represented by
an effigy hung, like Marsyas, upon a pine? We
may conjecture that in old days the priest who bore
the name and played the part of Attis at the spring
festival of Cybele was regularly hanged or otherwise
slain upon the sacred tree, and that this barbarous
custom was afterwards mitigated into the form in which
it is known to us in later times, when the priest
merely drew blood from his body under the tree and
attached an effigy instead of himself to its trunk.
In the holy grove at Upsala men and animals were sacrificed
by being hanged upon the sacred trees. The human
victims dedicated to Odin were regularly put to death
by hanging or by a combination of hanging and stabbing,
the man being strung up to a tree or a gallows and
then wounded with a spear. Hence Odin was called
the Lord of the Gallows or the God of the Hanged, and
he is represented sitting under a gallows tree.
Indeed he is said to have been sacrificed to himself
in the ordinary way, as we learn from the weird verses
of the Havamal, in which the god describes how
he acquired his divine power by learning the magic
runes:
“I know that I hung on the
windy tree
For nine whole nights,
Wounded with the spear, dedicated
to Odin,
Myself to myself.”
The Bagobos of Mindanao, one of the
Philippine Islands, used annually to sacrifice human
victims for the good of the crops in a similar way.
Early in December, when the constellation Orion appeared
at seven o’clock in the evening, the people knew
that the time had come to clear their fields for sowing
and to sacrifice a slave. The sacrifice was presented
to certain powerful spirits as payment for the good
year which the people had enjoyed, and to ensure the
favour of the spirits for the coming season. The
victim was led to a great tree in the forest; there
he was tied with his back to the tree and his arms
stretched high above his head, in the attitude in
which ancient artists portrayed Marsyas hanging on
the fatal tree. While he thus hung by the arms,
he was slain by a spear thrust through his body at
the level of the armpits. Afterwards the body
was cut clean through the middle at the waist, and
the upper part was apparently allowed to dangle for
a little from the tree, while the under part wallowed
in blood on the ground. The two portions were
finally cast into a shallow trench beside the tree.
Before this was done, anybody who wished might cut
off a piece of flesh or a lock of hair from the corpse
and carry it to the grave of some relation whose body
was being consumed by a ghoul. Attracted by the
fresh corpse, the ghoul would leave the mouldering
old body in peace. These sacrifices have been
offered by men now living.
In Greece the great goddess Artemis
herself appears to have been annually hanged in effigy
in her sacred grove of Condylea among the Arcadian
hills, and there accordingly she went by the name of
the Hanged One. Indeed a trace of a similar rite
may perhaps be detected even at Ephesus, the most
famous of her sanctuaries, in the legend of a woman
who hanged herself and was thereupon dressed by the
compassionate goddess in her own divine garb and called
by the name of Hecate. Similarly, at Melite in
Phthia, a story was told of a girl named Aspalis who
hanged herself, but who appears to have been merely
a form of Artemis. For after her death her body
could not be found, but an image of her was discovered
standing beside the image of Artemis, and the people
bestowed on it the title of Hecaerge or Far-shooter,
one of the regular epithets of the goddess. Every
year the virgins sacrificed a young goat to the image
by hanging it, because Aspalis was said to have hanged
herself. The sacrifice may have been a substitute
for hanging an image or a human representative of
Artemis. Again, in Rhodes the fair Helen was
worshipped under the title of Helen of the Tree, because
the queen of the island had caused her handmaids,
disguised as Furies, to string her up to a bough.
That the Asiatic Greeks sacrificed animals in this
fashion is proved by coins of Ilium, which represent
an ox or cow hanging on a tree and stabbed with a
knife by a man, who sits among the branches or on
the animal’s back. At Hierapolis also the
victims were hung on trees before they were burnt.
With these Greek and Scandinavian parallels before
us we can hardly dismiss as wholly improbable the
conjecture that in Phrygia a man-god may have hung
year by year on the sacred but fatal tree.