PART
2 – Ch.XII.5
(The
principal prehistoric divinities of
XII. 5. Saturn as Zeus
Dachie and Dokius Caeli filius.
During
Graeco-Roman antiquity, Saturn appears to have been also worshipped as Zeus
Dachie, as supreme divinity of
The
Pelasgians, as Herodotus tells us,
had in the beginning no particular names for their divinities, but they simply
called them Theous, zei, gods
(lib. II. c. 52).
These
names of theos and deus,
which in the beginning had been attributed to Uranos and Saturn, as
personifications of the divinity of the sky and the earth, were later replaced
in the public cult with the expressions of Zeus and Jupiter (Macrobius,
Saturn. I. 10).
In fact
though, the Greek Zeus, with its forms of Dis, Deus (Eolian) and Sdeus
(Beotian), as well as the Latin Jupiter
(diu’piter, divus pater, deus pater),
were only simple appellations (Stephani,
Thesaurus, 1). Agamemnon was also
honored with the name of Zeus (Lykophron, Alex. v.1124) and so was Hercules (Aelianis, H.
A. XvII.40), while Aeneas was named Jupiter (Preller-Jordan, R.M.I. 94; II.321).
From
the historical point of view of the beliefs, as well as the ritual, Zeus
Dodonaios Pelasgichos from Epirus (Homer,
Iliad, XVI. v.233), Zeus Peloros (Batonis
Sinopensis, Fragm. Hist. Graec. IV. 349; Pauly, Real-Encyclopadie, p.592), or ‘Omoloios from
The
most famous cult of the great “Pelasgian
god”, as known by history to this day, was at
We find
authentic traces of the extended cult of the great divinity of
Even
from the most obscure times of prehistory, various pastoral Pelasgian tribes
emigrated from the
One
characteristic belief of all the Pelasgian tribes was that their national God
listens and understands better their prayers and needs.
Apart
from the archaic cult of Zeus Dacie,
we find at the Pelasgians of Cappadocia another religious reminiscence from
their European country.
They
said, according to what Pausanias
tells us (lib. III. 16.8), that the sacred image of Diana, so much venerated in Taurica (
Apart
from their religious beliefs and traditions, their idiom also had a very
pronounced Pelasgian character. Part of the localities occupied by these
Pelasgians of Cappadocia, as we can ascertain from the writings of antiquity,
had the names of: Cerasus, Morthula,
Gauraena, Campae, Corna, Corne, Domana, Orsa, Dascusa, Dagusa (Ptolemy, lib. V.c.6), Dacora (Sozomenis, Hist. eccles. VII.17), Rimnena or Romnena (Strabo,
Geographica, Ed. Didot, lib. XII. 1. 4). A river is called Apsorrhus (Ptolemy, lib.
V. 6; Romanian “apsora”, diminutive for water, apa) and a mountain Scordicus (Ptolemy, lib. V.6.; Scordisci,
people in
The
Romans treated them as friends and allies, gave them all the freedoms they
asked for, even the right to have a king of their own (Diodorus Siculus, lib. XXXI. 19; Strabo, Geogr. lib.XII. 2. 11), while the emperor Claudius founded
in
But
primitive traces of the religion, whose powerful centre had once been in the
Carpathians of Dacia, appear not only on the
The
cult of Zeus Dacie was also dominant even from the most obscure times, in
Diodorus Siculus tells us that they
were called Dactyli, meaning Dactuli, mountain tribes identical with
the Corybanti (Strabo, Geogr. lib. X. 3.7. seqq), the sons of Saturn. (Stesimbrotus, contemporary of Pericles,
considers the Dactyli as the sons of
Zeus, and the Corybanti as
descendents of Saturn – Frag. Hist. Graec. II p.57 – exactly as the Latins called themselves Saturni gens -
Virgil, Aen. VII. 203). Their
particular weapons were the bow and arrows (Plato, Vol.II, Ed.Didot, p.263; Pausanias, lib. I. 23. 4), and they were the first people in those
parts who extracted metals from the earth and processed them.
The
inhabitants of
The
authors of antiquity considered that under Ursa
Major dwelt the Getae and the Scythians.
The
poet Ovid, in his sad elegies from
Tomis, writes (Trist. Lib. V. 3.v.7-8) that he dwells in a barbarian land, on
the shores of the
It is
the same religious tradition which dominated in
These
tribes of shepherds and mine workers, removed from the Carpathians during the
times of power and expansion of the Pelasgian race, had still kept as
inheritance the cult and institutions of the religion of Zeus Dacie, exactly as
the inhabitants of Delos and Delphi worshipped with a special fervor
Apollo the Hyperborean, called also Apollo
Dicaeus (Pliny, H. H. lib.
XXXIV.c.19.10), where Dicia was only
a geographical variant of the name
This Zeus
Dachie appears also with the name of Dokius filius Caeli in the ancient traditions of the Pelasgians,
who, as Gellius tells us, had been
the first to teach the people to build edifices from clay (Pliny, H. N. VII. 57.4). By his genealogy and by his civilizing
role, this Dokius filius Caeli was identical with Saturn, the son of the Sky,
of the Greek theogonies. Dokius is a simple eponym, he was a genial
representative of the Pelasgian race of