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—through a misunderstanding of a phrase in Aelian—the Lydian
custom that Herodotus (1, 93) and Aelian (Var. Hist., iv. 1) refer to;
both these writers mention the custom of the women of Lydia
practising prostitution before marriage. Aelian does not mention the
motive that Herodotus assigns, the collection of a dowry; neither
associates it with religion. Aelian merely adds that when once
married the Lydian women were virtuous; this need have nothing to
do with the Mylitta-rite.
272.1 E.g. Hosea iv. 13; Deut. xxiii. 18; 1 Kings xiv. 24.
272.2 Weber, Arabien vor dem Islam, p. 18.
272.3 C. I. Sem., 1, 263.
272.4 Strab., 272.
272.5 Strab., 559.
272.6 Pind. Frag., 87; Strab., 378; (Cults, ii. p. 746, R. 99g).
273.1 Cities and Bishoprics, i. 94. In his comment he rightly points

out that the woman is Lydian, as her name is not genuine Roman;
but he is wrong in speaking of her service as performed to a god
(Frazer, Adonis, etc., p. 34, follows him). This would be a unique
fact, for the service in Asia Minor is always to a goddess; but the
inscription neither mentions nor implies a god. The bride of Zeus at
Egyptian Thebes was also a temple-harlot, if we could believe
Strabo, p. 816; but on this point he contradicts Herodotus, 1, 182.
273.2 Et. Mag., s.v. Ἱκόνιον.
274.1 De Dea Syr., 6; cf. Aug. De Civ. Dei, 4, 10: “cui (Veneri) etiam
Phoenices donum dabant de prostitutione filiarum, antequam eas
jungerent viris”: religious prostitution before marriage prevailed
among the Carthaginians in the worship of Astarte (Valer. Max., 2,
ch. 1, sub. fin.: these vague statements may refer either to
defloration of virgins or prolonged service in the temple).
274.2 See Frazer, op. cit., p. 33, n. 1, quoting Sozomen. Hist.
Eccles., 5, 10, 7; Sokrates, Hist. Eccles., 1, 18, 7-9; Euseb. Vita
Constantin., 3, 58. Eusebius only vaguely alludes to it. Sokrates
merely says that the wives were in common, and that the people had
the habit of giving over the virgins to strangers to violate.
Sozomenos is the only voucher for the religious aspect of the
practice; from Sokrates we gather that the rule about strangers was
observed in the rite.
274.3 18, 5.
274.4 This is confirmed by the legend given by Apollodoros (Bibl., 3,
14, 3) that the daughters of Kinyras, owing to the wrath of Aphrodite,
had sexual intercourse with strangers.
275.1 Justin, 21, 3; Athenaeus, 516 A, speaks vaguely, as if the
women of the Lokri Epizephyrii were promiscuous prostitutes.
275.2 Pp. 532-533.
275.3 The lovers, Melanippos and Komaitho, sin in the temple of
Artemis Triklaria of the Ionians in Achaia; the whole community is
visited with the divine wrath, and the sinners are offered up as a
piacular sacrifice (Paus., 7, 19, 3); according to Euphorion,
Laokoon’s fate was due to a similar trespass committed with his wife
before the statue of Apollo (Serv. Aen., 2, 201). It may be that such
legends faintly reflect a very early ἱερὸς γάμος once performed in
temples by the priest and priestess: if so, they also express the
repugnance of the later Hellene to the idea of it; and in any case this
is not the institution that is being discussed.
276.1 Antike Wald u. Feld Kulte, p. 285, etc.
277.1 Why should not the priestess rather play the part of the
goddess, and why, if we trust Plutarch (Vit. Artaxerx., 27), was the
priestess of Anaitis at Ekbatana, to whose temple harlots were
attached, obliged to observe chastity after election?
277.2 Vol. i. pp. 94-96.
277.3 Op. cit., p. 35, etc.
277.4 Op. cit., p. 44.
278.1 I pointed out this objection in an article in the Archiv. f. Relig.
Wissensch., 1904, p. 81; Mr. S. Hartland has also, independently,
developed it (op. cit., p. 191).
278.2 Vol. ii. p. 446.
278.3 Origin of Civilisation, pp. 535-537.
279.1 Vide Westermarck, History of Human Marriage, p. 76.
279.2 Mr. Hartland objects (loc. cit., p. 200) to this explanation on
the ground that the stranger would dislike the danger as much as
any one else; but the rite may have arisen among a Semitic tribe
who were peculiarly sensitive to that feeling of peril, while they found
that the usual stranger was sceptical and more venturesome: when
once the rule was established, it could become a stereotyped
convention. His own suggestion (p. 201) that a stranger was alone
privileged, lest the solemn act should become a mere love-affair with
a native lover, does not seem to me so reasonable; to prevent that,
the act might as well have been performed by a priest. Dr. Frazer in
his new edition of Adonis, etc. (pp. 50-54), criticises my explanation,
which I first put forth—but with insufficient clearness—in the Archiv.
für Religionswissenschaft (1904, p. 88), mainly on the ground that it
does not naturally apply to general temple-prostitution nor to the
prostitution of married women. But it was never meant to apply to
these, but only to the defloration of virgins before marriage. Dr.
Frazer also argues that the account of Herodotus does not show that
the Babylonian rite was limited to virgins. Explicitly it does not, but
implicitly it does; for Herodotus declares that it was an isolated act,
and therefore to be distinguished from temple-prostitution of
indefinite duration; and he adds that the same rite was performed in
Cyprus, which, as the other record clearly attests, was the
defloration of virgins by strangers. Sozomenos and Sokrates attest
the same of the Baalbec rite, and Eusebius’s vague words are not
sufficient to contradict them. One rite might easily pass into the
other; but our theories as to the original meaning of different rites
should observe the difference.
280.1 But vide Gennep, Les Rites de passage, p. 100.
280.2 Cf. Arnob. Adv. Gent., 5, 19, with Firmic. Matern. De Error.,
10, and Clemens, Protrept., c. 2, p. 12, Pott.
281.1 1, 199.
281.2 The lady who there boasts of her prostitute-ancestresses
describes them also as “of unwashed feet”; and this is a point of
asceticism and holiness.
282.1 Op. cit., p. 199.
282.2 K.A.T.3, p. 423.
283.1 Vide supra, p. 163. The writer of the late apocryphal
document, “The Epistle of Jeremy,” makes it a reproach to the
Babylonian cult that “women set meat before the gods” (v. 30), and
“the menstruous woman and the woman in child-bed touch their
sacrifices” (v. 29), meaning, perhaps, that there was nothing to
prevent the Babylonian priestess being in that condition. But we
cannot trust him for exact knowledge of these matters. Being a Jew,
he objects to the ministration of women. The Babylonian and Hellene
were wiser, and admitted them to the higher functions of religion.
283.2 Vide Cults, iv. p. 301.
283.3 Vide Inscription of Sippar in British Museum, concerning the
re-establishment of cult of Shamash by King Nabupaladdin, 884-860
B.C. (Jeremias, Die Cultus-Tafel von Sippar).
284.1 Sumerian and Babylonian Psalms, p. 75.
284.2 Vide Langdon in Transactions of Congress for the History of
Religions (1908), vol. i. p. 250.
284.3 Vide Zeitung für Assyriologie, 1910, p. 157.
284.4 Formula for driving out the demon of sickness, “Bread at his

head place, rain-water at his feet place” (Langdon, ib. p. 252).


284.5 Delitsch, Wörterbuch, i. 79-80.
284.6 Zeit. für Assyr., 1910, p. 157.
284.7 Vide Hippocrates (Littré), vi. 362; Stengel, Griechischer
Kultusaltertümer (Iwan Müller’s Handbuch, p. 110).
285.1 Referred to in the comedy of Eupolis called the “Baptai.”
285.2 Jastrow, op. cit., p. 500.
285.3 Op. cit., p. 297, 487; the priest-exorciser, the Ashipu, uses a
brazier in the expulsion of demons.
285.4 Vide Golther, Handbuch der Germanischen Mythologie, p.
580; cf. my Cults, v. p. 196.
285.5 Cults, vol. v. pp. 383-384; cf. iv. p. 301.
286.1 Cults, v. p. 356; cf. p. 363 (the purifying animal carried round
the hearth).
286.2 Eur. Herc. Fur., 928.
286.3 Dio Chrys. Or., 48 (Dind., vol. ii. p. 144), περικαθήραντες τὴν
πόλιν μὴ σκίλλῃ μηδὲ δαδί, πολὺ δὲ καθαρωτέρῳ χρήματι τῷ λόγῳ
(cf. Lucian, Menipp., c. 7, use of squills and torches in “katharsis,” (?)
Babylonian or Hellenic); Serv. ad Aen., 6, 741, “in sacris omnibus
tres sunt istae purgationes, nam aut taeda purgant aut sulphure aut
aqua abluunt aut aere ventilant.”
286.4 “To take fire and swear by God” is a formula that occurs in the
third tablet of Surpu; vide Zimmern, Beiträge zur Kenntniss Babyl.
Relig., p. 13; cf. Soph. Antig., 264.
286.5 Salt used as a means of exorcism in Babylonia as early as
the third millennium (vide Langdon, Transactions of Congress Hist.
Relig., 1908, vol. i. p. 251); the fell “of the great ox” used to purify the
palace of the king (vide Zimmern, Beiträge, p. 123; compare the Διὸς
κῴδιον in Greek ritual).
287.1 Vide Thureau-Dangin, Cylindres de Goudéa, pp. 29, 93.
287.2 Vide Evolution of Religion, pp. 113, 114, 117; Cults, v. p. 322
(Schol. Demosth., 22, p. 68).
287.3 5, 13, 6.
287.4 Vide Cults, iii. pp. 303-304; Evolution of Religion, p. 121.
288.1 Vide supra, p. 146.
288.2 Vide Cults, iii. p. 167.
288.3 Published in Zimmern’s Beiträge, p. 123; cf. Weber,
Dämonenbeschwörung, pp. 17-19.
289.1 Il., xvi. 228.
289.2 Od., ii. 261.
289.3 Il., i. 313.
290.1 Od., xxii. 481: In the passage referred to above, Achilles uses
sulphur to purify the cups.
290.2 Od., xiii. 256-281: This is rightly pointed out by Stengel in his
Griechische Kultusaltertümer, p. 107.
290.3 Evolution of Religion, pp. 139-152; Cults, iv. pp. 295-306.
291.1 Vide Cults, iv. pp. 144-147, 300: To suppose that Hellas learnt
its cathartic rites from Lydia, because Herodotus (i. 35) tells us that
in his time the Lydians had the Hellenic system of purification from
homicide, is less natural. Lydia may well have learnt it from Delphi in
the time of Alyattes or Croesus. Or it may have survived in Lydia as
a tradition of the early “Minoan” period; and, similarly, it may have
survived in Crete.
291.2 Vide supra, pp. 176-178.
292.1 Vide Cults, iv. pp. 268-284.
292.2 For similar practices, vide Cults, pp. 415-417.
292.3 Clem. Alex. Strom., p. 755, Pott.
293.1 Paus., 9, 33, 4.
293.2 For the facts vide Zimmern, K.A.T.3, p. 592.
294.1 Works and Days, l. 824.
294.2 Ib., l. 804.
294.3 Expositor, 1909, p. 156.
294.4 Vide Photius and Hesych., s.v. Μιαραὶ ἡμέραι.
295.1 Hell., 1, 4, 12.
295.2 Vide Cults, v. pp. 215-216.
295.3 Cults, iv. p. 259.
295.4 Vide supra, pp. 176-177.
296.1 Sumerian and Babylonian Psalms, p. 196.
296.2 King, Babylonian Religion, p. 196.
296.3 Vide Fossey, La Magie Assyrienne, p. 96.
297.1 Knudtzon, Assyrische Gebete an den Sonnengott, p. 78
(texts belonging to period of Asarhaddon, circ. 681).
297.2 Zimmern, Beiträge, etc., p. 161.
298.1 Zimmern, Beiträge, etc., p. 163.
298.2 Fossey, op. cit., p. 399.
298.3 iv. R. 56, 12; Fossey, op. cit., p. 401.
298.4 Expositor, 1909, p. 150, giving text from iv. R. 40.
299.1 Fossey, op. cit., p. 209.
299.2 Zimmern, Beiträge, p. 173.
299.3 Supra, p. 176.
299.4 Zimmern, op. cit., p. 169.
300.1 Zimmern, Beiträge, pp. 30-31; he mentions also the similar
practice of tying up a sheepskin or a fillet of wool and throwing it into
the fire.
300.2 Zimmern, op. cit., p. 33: note magic use of knots in general,

vide Frazer, G.B.2, vol. i. pp. 392-403; Archiv. für Religionsw., 1908,
pp. 128, 383, 405. The superstition may have prevailed in Minoan
Crete (see A. Evans, Annual British School, 1902-1903, pp. 7-9) and
was in vogue in ancient Greece.
300.3 W. Warde Fowler, The Religious Experiences of the Roman
People, Gifford Lectures, p. 49.
301.1 Vide supra, pp. 248-249; Cults, iv. p. 191.
301.2 For the main facts relating to the Babylonian system and the

“baru”-priests, vide Zimmern, Beiträge, etc., pp. 82-92; for the


Hellenic, vide Cults, iv. 190-192, 224-231; also vol. iii. 9-12.
301.3 The documentary evidence, from a very early period, is given
by Zimmern, Beiträge, etc., pp. 85-97.
301.4 L. 322: Clytemnestra speaks of pouring oil and vinegar into
the same vessel and reproaching them for their unsociable
behaviour.
302.1 We have also one example of an oracle of Ishtar (in plain
prose), Keil. Bibl., ii. p. 179.
303.1 Zimmern, op. cit., p. 89.
303.2 Cults, iii. p. 297.
303.3 Lucian, De Dea Syr., 43.
303.4 Cults, iii. p. 297.
303.5 Vide Cults, iv. pp. 191-192; iii. p. 11.
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES.
Page numbers are given in {curly} brackets.
Plain text version only: endnote markers are given in [square]
brackets.
Minor spelling inconsistencies (e.g. coexist/co-exist, temple-
ritual/temple ritual, etc.) have been preserved.
Add title, subtitle, and author’s name to cover image.
Alterations to the text:
Convert footnotes to endnotes, relabel note markers (append the
original note number to the page number), and add a corresponding
entry to the TOC.
[Title page]
Add commas to author’s bibliography.
[Chapter I]
Change “from the tyranny of a morbid ascetism” to asceticism.
[Chapter III]
“In his Historie des anciennes Religions, Tiele classifies” to
Histoire.
“and their aboriginal god was Possidon” to Poseidon.
[Chapter IV]
“and expecially the powers of the lower world” to especially.
“Even Allat, the goddess of Hell, she who” to Allatu.
“the great Assyrian god Ahshur is quaintly expressed” to Asshur.
“the idea that Istar is the compeer in power” to Ishtar.
“between the Hittites and the Assyrian Babylonian kingdom” to
Assyrian-Babylonian.
“no clear trace of theriomophism either in the” to theriomorphism.
“how far the Minaon religion was purely anthropomorphic” to
Minoan.
[Chapter V]
“I formerly developed in the second volume of my cults” capitalize
and italicize cults.
[Chapter VI]
“Still less is Allalu, the monstrous and grim Queen” to Allatu.
[Chapter VII]
(Alalkomenai, “the places of Athena Alalkomene; Nemea, “the…)
add right double quotation mark after Alalkomene.
[Chapter VII]
“about whom he is particulurly thoughtful” to particularly.
[Chapter IX]
“and regards this Hititte goddess as the ancestress” to Hittite.
[Chapter XIII]
“modern savagery and the history of ascetism” to asceticism.
(and bewail her”: “If you regard her as a deity, do) delete right
double quotation mark.
[Index]
“Hell, Babylonian conception of, 205-206” add period at end of
line.
[Endnotes]
(Page 17, note 1) “Archiv fur Religionswissenschaft, 1904.” to für.
(Page 42, note 1) “that the idiogram of Enlil, the god of” to
ideogram.
(Page 84, note 3) “last of the Babylonian kings, Nabuna ’id, who
prays” to Nabuna’id.
(Page 124, note 1) “Die Phoenizischen Imschriften,” to
Phönizischen Inschriften.
(Page 148, note 1) “Weber, Dämonenbeschworung bei den
Babyloniern…” to Dämonenbeschwörung.
(Page 183, note 3) “pp. 502 503, n. 2” add comma after 502.
(Page 232, note 2) “Lagranges, Études sur les religions
sémitiques” to Lagrange.
(Page 246, note 1) “Stengel, Die griechischen Kultusalterthümer,
p. 89” to Kultusaltertümer.
(Page 286, note 5) “vide Zimmern, Beitrage, p. 123;” to Beiträge.

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