The Plutonium of Hierapolis and the Descent of Christ
into the "Lowermost Parts of the Earth" (Ephesians 4,9)
Larry J. Kreitzer
In a recent commentary on the epistle to the Ephesians I suggested that
the letter was originally intended for the Christian congregation at Hierapolis within the
region of Phrygia in Asia Minor and that it was written by an unnamed disciple of Paul who
was a member of the church at Colossae 1.
It may well be that this disciple was given special responsibility for the neighbouring
congregation of Hierapolis by his home church in Colossae 2. This proposed scenario offers a new way of
reading the epistle as a whole, and opens up the possibility of interpreting the letter as
one in which the inter-church relationships between the three congregations in the Lycus
valley (those in Hierapolis, Colossae, and Laodicea) are all being addressed by the
Writer. In short, the suggestion is that the church at Hierapolis is a daughter-church of
the church at Colossae, a scenario which means that many of the other perplexing features
of the letter we now know as Ephesians can be explained. One such passage on which this
proposed scenario may throw some light is the curious declaration contained in 4,9-10.
This parenthetical aside is one of the most enigmatic passages in Ephesians; it is
generally agreed that the couplet is intended to explain the quotation of Psalm 68,18 (LXX
67,19) which appears in 4,8. In the commentary I suggested that 4,9-10 is a veiled
reference to the Plutonium of Hierapolis, a small subterranean cavern situated next to the
temple of Apollo in the centre of the city and commonly regarded as a passageway to the
underworld. In other words, I take it that the reference to Christ descending "into
the lowermost parts of the earth" (ei0j ta_ katw/tera me/rh th=j gh=j) is a remark
which builds upon this well-known geological feature of Hierapolis and as such would have
been perfectly understandable to the members of the congregation to whom the letter was
addressed, even if it is something of a puzzle for us today 3. The declaration in 4,9-10 that Christ descended
into the underworld and then ascended far above the heavens therefore stands as a powerful
expression of his conquering the forces of death and triumphantly claiming the city of
Hierapolis as his own.
The suggestion that
something as obscure as the Plutonium in Hierapolis may provide us with the hermeneutical
key to unlock the mystery surrounding the original setting of the epistle is admittedly a
novel idea, but it is not as far-fetched as it may at first appear. The site was a
well-known tourist attraction within the ancient world 4, and it is mentioned by several writers of
antiquity including Strabo, Pliny the Elder, Dio Cassius, Ammianus Marcellinus, and
Damascius of Alexandria 5.
Within this short study I would like to add one small piece of evidence in support of this
proposed way of reading the passage in Ephesians, evidence which to my knowledge has not
been marshalled before in any discussion of the provenance of the epistle 6. I speak of numismatic
issues from the city of Hierapolis itself. These coins depict a well-known story from
Graeco-Roman mythology, namely the abduction of Persephone by Hades, the god of the
underworld. They are clearly associated with the Plutonium insofar as it was taken to be
an entrance to Hades" realm. However, before we proceed to examine the coin evidence, it might be worthwhile to review the substance of the mythological
story itself.
I. The Abduction of
Persephone by Hades in Mythology
The abduction of Persephone
by Hades (or Pluto, as he is otherwise known) is a frequent theme within Graeco-Roman
mythology 7.
Persephone, also known simply as Kore (the Maiden), was the daughter of the earth-goddess
Demeter, and the story of a mother"s anguished search for, and eventual reunion with,
her abducted daughter gave rise to a religious cult widely practised in the ancient world.
The most important centre for worship of Demeter and Persephone (Kore) was at Eleusis,
fourteen miles west of Athens, home of the famous Eleusinian mysteries. In addition, many
ancient sites sacred to the two goddesses have been identified, including one in Corinth
dating back to the sixth century BCE 8.
The Homeric Hymn to
Demeter, generally dated to circa 650-550 BCE 9, is the most important literary expression of the
Demeter-Persephone myth, although facets of the basic story are alluded to within a number
of ancient writings. The abduction of Persephone by Hades is mentioned in Hesiod Theogony
914, Diodorus Siculus Library of History 5:4:1 and 5:68:2, Apollodorus The
Library 1:5:1, Ovid Fasti 4:417-454 and Metamorphoses 5:385-408,
Apuleius Metamorphoses 6:2, Cicero Against Verres 2:4:48, and Pausanias Guide
to Greece 8:42:2 and 9:23:2. Towards the end of the classical period, the late
fourth-century CE writer Claudian even composed a full-length version of the myth,
suitably altering the name of the central character for his Latin audience; we know this
work as The Rape of Proserpina.
Most agree that at some
level the story of Demeter and Persephone is an agricultural myth in which the cycle of the seasons
and crop production are symbolically represented 10. Persephone lives and rules as Hades" queen
in the underworld for four months out of the year, corresponding to the barren winter
months 11; in the
spring she returns to her mother Demeter in the world above, thereby assuring the annual
growth of crops and the fruitfulness of life. In this sense, the cosmology surrounding the
Demeter/Persephone myth is central to the drama that is enacted in their story 12. Although the
Homeric Hymn to Demeter describes Hades" ascent from the underworld and his
abduction of Persephone as taking place on the plains of Nysia, it does not mention the
place at which he descends back to the underworld with his newly captured prize. A number
of geographical sites are identified within the mythological tradition as the place of the descent back to the realm of
Hades 13. The place
most frequently mentioned in this regard is Eleusis in Attica, no doubt as a result of the
close association with Demeter and the Eleusinian mysteries which had been celebrated
there for centuries. A good example of this is the Orphic Hymn to Pluto (18:11-15):
o#j ktate/eij qnhtw=n qana/tou
xa/rin, w] polude/gmwn
Eu3boul0, a0gnopo/lou Dhmh/teroj o3j pote pai=da
numfeu/saj leimw=noj pospadi/hn dia\ po/ntou
tetpw/roij i3ppoisin u9p 0 Atqi/doj h1gagej a1ntron
dh/mou 0Eleusi=noj, to/qi per pu/lai ei1s 0 0Ai/dao.
All-Receiver, with death at your command, you are master of mortals;
Euboulos, you once took pure Demeter"s daughter as your bride
when you tore her away from the meadow and through the sea
upon your steeds you carried her to an Attic cave,
in the district of Eleusis, where the gates to Hades are 14.
Similarly, the
second-century CE travel-writer Pausanias describes Eleusis as the place where Hades/Pluto
descended to the underworld after he had carried off the virgin Persephone 15. The identification
of Eleusis as the site of Hades" return to the realm of the dead is supported by the
presence of a subterranean passage near the entrance to the sanctuary of Demeter and Kore. This small passage
is located in the Plutonium, a grotto built into the base of the rocky hill overlooking
the temple complex in Eleusis. The subterranean opening is still visible today, as are the
foundations of a small temple to Hades (Pluto) which stands nearby. There remains some
debate about the precise role that the so-called Plutonium played within the Eleusinian
rites, but the fact that there was an underground passageway is beyond doubt 16. Perhaps it served
some purpose during the re-enactment of the annual return of Persephone from the realm of
the dead 17. The
precise relationship between the Homeric Hymn to Demeter and the Eleusinian
mystery-cult is also a matter of great debate 18. Despite the fact that the setting of the story of the abduction of Persephone in Eleusis may be somewhat
uncertain, the subsequent journeys of Demeter in search of her lost daughter have long
been associated with the town through the mystery cult based there 19.
However, there is another
strand of the myths surrounding the cult of Demeter and Persephone which associates them
with Sicily 20. Some
ancient sources even state that Sicily was sacred to Demeter and Persephone, and that the
island was given by Zeus to his brother Hades as a wedding present when Hades married
Persephone 21. A
number of ancient sources set Hades" abduction of Persephone in Sicily, usually near
the village of Henna in the centre of the island 22, although the spring of Cyane in the city of
Syracuse on the coast is another site sometimes so mentioned 23. The site of a cave or an underground cavern is a
frequent feature in the locating of such legends. Thus, Diodorus Siculus Library of
History 5:3:3 associates the story of Hades" abduction of Persephone with the
village of Henna due to the fact that there is nearby "a large cave which contained
an underground entrance" ( sph/laion eu0me/geqej
ei2xon xa/sma kata/geion).
In short, there were a
number of places within the ancient world which claimed to be the actual site where Hades
descended to the underworld with his plundered maiden Persephone. It appears that the only
requirements needed to substantiate such a claim were a cave or some unusual opening into
the earth and a desire to anchor the mythology to a given local setting 24. Is there any evidence that the city of
Hierapolis, with its famous Plutonium, was also associated with the Demeter-Persephone
mythology? We turn now to consider the numismatic evidence which appears to support
precisely such an association.
II. The Depiction of the
Abduction of Persephone by Hades on Coinage from Hierapolis
Given that the story of the
abduction of Persephone has such a prominent place within the mythology of the ancient
world, artistic representations of the scene are to be expected. One of the most striking
of these is to be found on a red-figure krater which is within the British Museum
collection. This superb piece of Apulian pottery, which stands 2 feet 9½ inches high, is
dated to circa 360-350 BCE. The central figures depicted on the vase are Persephone and
Hades, speeding away in a chariot drawn by a team of four horses. The bearded Pluto looks
admiringly at his captured prize Persephone, who is dressed in bridal gear and veil,
avoiding his gaze and looking down demurely. To the right is the figure of Hecate, leading
the way to the underworld with a four-flamed torch; to the left, behind the chariot, we
see a depiction of the god Hermes wearing his familiar helmet and winged shoes (Figure #) 25. This basic depiction of the abduction of
Persephone by Hades is very stylized and is an image frequently repeated in Graeco-Roman
art. It also serves as the basic pattern for the coin issues which form our main concern
within this study.
A number of coins from
Hierapolis contain subject matter associated with the cult of the mother-goddess Demeter,
or Cybele, as she was perhaps better known in the region of Phrygia 26.
Included among these are coins which depict the abduction by Hades of
Demeter"s daughter, Persephone. For example, we note a bronze coin 27 which has on its
obverse the head of a young Dionysos, crowned with ivy and facing right, surrounded with a
border of dots and the inscription TWN IERAPOLEI in the field (Figure #2). The reverse
of the coin shows a depiction of Hades, wearing a chlamys and brandishing a sceptre in his
left hand; he rides within a chariot pulled by four galloping horses. Persephone is beside
Hades in the quadriga; he supports her with his right hand and she is bent backwards, as
if she has fainted, her hair flowing in the wind behind her. Another example 28 shows the same
reverse scene along with the words IERA POLE ITWN surrounding the scene above, NEWKO in exergue, and R WN in
the field (Figure #3). The Hades and Persephone
reverse is also featured on a number of other bronze coins, some of which bear the obverse
bust of Boule and some of which bear the bust of the city-goddess of Hierapolis. It is
difficult to date these coins precisely, but they were in all likelihood struck before the
Roman imperial period, and thus can be regarded as local issues of the city of Hierapolis
itself.
However, the reverse
depicting Hades and Persephone is also found on a number of Imperial provincial issues
from the city of Hierapolis. Coins bearing the obverse portraits of Nero (54-68 CE),
Caracalla (198-217 CE), and Otacilia Severa (244-?249 CE) are all extant. The fact that
the same basic scene is used by several generations of moneyers (covering a period of
three hundred years or so!) demonstrates something of the longevity of the reverse type.
It also testifies to the longstanding association of the city of Hierapolis with the
legend of Hades and Persephone. No doubt this association was fostered by the presence of
the Plutonium in the city and the identification of the local Phrygian cult of Cybele with
that of the mother-goddess Demeter 29. The coins issued under Nero are of particular
importance for our purposes in that the early portraiture suggests that they would have
been issued during the first few years of his reign as Emperor. Thus, these coins may have
been struck within twenty-five years or so of the writing of the document we now know as
the epistle to the Ephesians. The most interesting of these is a small bronze coin 30 which depicts the
draped bust of a youthful Nero facing to the right with the word NERWN in the field on the left and the word KAISAR in the field on the right. The
reverse scene gives us the standard picture of Hades and Persephone in a chariot, although
this time it is a biga, perhaps due to the difficulty of portraying four horses on so
small a surface. The scene is surrounded by an unusual inscription MAGUTHES NEETEROS IERAPOLEITWN ("Magutes
the Younger, of the Hierapolitans"), probably a reference to a local magistrate from
the city responsible for the minting of the coin issue. Interestingly, a companion coin
was also issued at the same time which carries the exact same reverse inscription 31. The obverse of this
coin has a draped bust of Agrippina the Younger, Nero"s mother, facing to the right
with the word AGRIPPEINA in the
field on the left and the word SEBASTH in the field to the right. The reverse image is of the goddess Demeter, seated
on a throne and facing left while holding an ear of corn and poppies, symbolic emblems of
her role as goddess of agriculture. This second coin not only reinforces the association
between the city and the fertility cult of the mother-goddess Demeter, but also helps to
date the coins to the beginning of Nero"s reign. Agrippina the Younger fell out of
favour with her son Nero, who arranged for her murder in 59 CE; thus both coins were
issued in the first five years of Nero"s reign (between 54 and 59 CE). The coins
testify to the importance of Hierapolis as a centre for the worship of the mother-goddess,
and prompt us to consider what connection there might be to the most celebrated expression
of that cult in antiquity, the Eleusinian mysteries.
_______________________
391
III. The Demeter/Persephone
Myth and the Church at Hierapolis
The substance of the
Eleusinian rites was a celebration of the movement from sorrow to joy. Demeter"s
sadness at being separated from Persephone is transformed into happiness at being reunited
with her daughter as Persephone ascends from the underworld 32. In one sense, it is not difficult to see how the
underlying idea of Persephone"s return from Hades might be viewed as something of a
parallel to the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. The parallels are even
stronger when we consider the localized Phrygian expression of the mother-goddess cult,
namely, the worship of Cybele. Here the focus of comparison is on the figure of Attis, the
lover and consort of Cybele, who is murdered and after three days rises from the dead 33. Similarities to the
basic Christian story of the death of Christ and his resurrection from the dead after
three days are obvious, even if a clear explanation as to how they come about is not.
Not surprisingly, some early
Christian writers took it upon themselves to distance the claims of Christianity from what
they perceived to be superstitious myths and cultic worship of these pagan deities,
whether it was associated with the figures of Demeter and Persephone or Cybele and Attis.
The classic case in point is Clement of Alexandria, whose Exhortation to the Greeks
2 contains a vitriolic attack on the Hellenistic mystery cults, including a condemnation
of celebrations associated with the "mystic drama" ( dga=ma mustiko/n) of Demeter and Persephone enacted at
Eleusis 34.
Clement"s response is generally regarded as reactionary and extreme, conducting
something of a smear campaign against his opponents when he makes accusations about sexual
improprieties in the course of his argument. Yet his writing illustrates that, among some
late first-century Christians at least, the Eleusinian cult was perceived to be a threat
to the Christian faith 35.
This is certainly not the
place to discuss the complex matter of the relationship between early Christianity and the
so-called "mystery religions"; that debate has been going on for a long time and
no doubt will continue for many years to come 36. Most of the evidence suggests that the formal
clash between the Hellenistic mystery religions and Christianity takes place in the
second, third and fourth centuries CE much too late for the letter to the Ephesians
to be a major factor in the scholarly discussion.
However, it is certainly not
beyond the bounds of possibility that Ephesians 4,9 may have something to
contribute to the discussion about the role that Hellenistic religions played in the
development of early Christianity 37.
This is particularly true if, as is here being proposed, the cryptic reference to Jesus
Christ descending into the "lowermost parts of the earth" is a deliberate
allusion to the Plutonium of Hierapolis on the part of the unnamed writer of the letter.
It is reasonable to assume that he was aware of the close connection of the site with the story of the abduction of Persephone
and that he wished to present the Christian message as somehow challenging, or
transcending, the mysteries associated with the local expression of the Demeter/Persephone
cult. We can also assume that he would have known of the identification of Demeter with
Cybele, and that the cult of Cybele and Attis would have been familiar to the local
population, given that this was originally a Phrygian religion and both Colossae and
Hierapolis were in Phrygia. In short, what we have in Ephesians 4,9 may be an instance of
the direct engagement of Christian thinking with the popular religious myths which
prevailed in the Lycus valley. Perhaps there was even within the church at Hierapolis a
need for an apologia along these lines as those new to the faith were attempting to move
from pagan darkness into the light of Christian truth, from childish obsession with empty
myths to full maturity in the faith (see 2,1-7; 4,11-14. 17-18; 5,6-14). This unknown
disciple of Paul thus makes a christological assertion about the power of the risen Lord
who holds the keys to life and death, who has descended into the very bowels of the earth
and has returned to claim the city of Hierapolis in triumph 38.
Summary
After a general discussion of the myth regarding Demeter, Persephone and Hades/Pluto,
the author discusses, in the light of coins of the early Neronian period (54-59 AD), the
likelihood that the Plutonium of Hierapolis is the geographical spot the author wants his
readers to imagine when they read in the Letter to the Colossians that Christ entered the
lowermost parts of the earth.
 |
Fig. 1 A red-figure Apuleian
krater.
British Museum (F-277)
|
|
|
  |
Fig. 2
British Museum (BMC 38) |
| Phrygia |
Hierapolis |
|
|
|
  |
Fig. 3
British Museum (BMC 87) |
| Phrygia |
Hierapolis |
|
By courtesy of the British Museum
1 See my Ephesians
(Epworth Commentary; London 1997). In this regard I am building upon, and refining, the
work of A. T. Lincoln, Ephesians (WBC 42; Dallas 1990), who argues that the
original destination was the churches in Laodicea and Hierapolis, a suggestion
which is based partly on an imaginative reconstruction of the awkward syntax of the Greek
text of verse 1,1 and the absence of the words 0Efe/sw| in
most early manuscripts.
2 The
suggestion that the writer of Ephesians was a member of the church at Colossae and that he
therefore had access to the letter to the Colossians accounts for the obvious literary
dependence of Ephesians upon Colossians.
3 A recent
comprehensive study of the passage is W. Hall Harris, III The Descent of Christ:
Ephesians 4:7-11 & Traditional Hebrew Imagery (Leiden 1996). Harris offers a
thorough survey of critical scholarship on these cryptic verses and concludes that the
author had Christ"s subsequent descent from heaven at Pentecost in mind when writing
4,9-10.
4 L. Casson, Travel
in the Ancient World (London 1974) 232, lists Hierapolis as one of the sites that
people travelled to see in antiquity, describing it as one of "the impressive
curiosities nature offers".
5 These texts
are discussed in my "The Plutonium of Hierapolis: A Geographical Solution for
the Puzzle of Ephesians 4:9-10", EPI TO AUTO: Studies
in Honour of Petr Pokorný on his Sixty-fifth Birthday, J. Mrazek R. Dvorákova
S. Brodsky (eds.) (Prague 1998) 218-233.
6 There has
been something of a reluctance on the part of NT specialists to turn to numismatic
evidence as a window through which to gain valuable glimpses into the first-century world.
I have attempted to address this matter in my Striking New Images. (JSNTSS 134;
Sheffield 1996).
7 For general
introductions to the story see C. Kerényi, The Gods of the Greeks (Harmondsworth
1958) 205-212; R. Graves, The Greek Myths: 1 (Harmondsworth 1960, revised edition)
89-96; M. Senior, Greece and Its Myths: A Traveller"s Guide (Southampton 1978)
58-78; T. Gantz, Early Greek Myth: A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources
(Baltimore 1993) 63-73; M. Mavromataki, Greek Mythology and Religion (Athens 1997)
68-75.
8 N. Bookidis
R.S. Stroud, Demeter and Persephone in Ancient Corinth (Princeton, NJ
1987).
9 C. Kerényi, Eleusis:
Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter (Princeton, NJ 1967) 13, suggests that the
Hymn may be from as early as the eighth century BCE.
10 See, A. C.
Brumfield, The Attic Festivals of Demeter and Their Relation to the Agricultural
Year (Salem, NH 1981); B. Dietrich, "The Religious Prehistory of Demeter"s
Eleusinian Mysteries", La soteriologia dei culti orientali nell" impero
romano (eds. U. Bianchi M.J. Vermaseren) (Leiden 1982) 445-471.
Alternatively, some recent feminist interpreters have seen the myth of Demeter and
Persephone as a commentary on the various stages of life for women within ancient Greek
society. In this sense the rape of Persephone by Hades represents a woman"s
initiation into marriage, the woman"s formal rite of passage from daughter to wife.
For more on this way of interpreting the myth, see: M. Arthur, "Politics and
Pomegranates: An Interpretation of the Homeric Hymn to Demeter", Arethusa 10
(1977) 7-47; B. Lincoln, "The Rape of Persephone: A Greek Scenario of Women"s
Initiation", HTR 72 (1979) 223-235; R.S. Kraemer, Her Share of the
Blessings. Women"s Religions Among Pagans, Jews, and Christians in the
Greco-Roman World (Oxford 1992) 22-29; H. P. Foley, "Female Experience in the Hymn
to Demeter", The Homeric Hymn to Demeter. Translation, Commentary, and
Interpretative Essays (ed. H.P. Foley) (Princeton, NJ 1994) 103-104; D.F. Sawyer, Women
and Religions in the First Christian Centuries (London 1996) 59-61.
11 Ovid, Metamorphoses
5:564, lengthens the time spent in the underworld to six months.
12 The spatial
geography of the Homeric Hymn to Demeter is discussed in L.J. Alderink,
"Mythological and Cosmological Structure in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter", Numen
29 (1982) 1-16. At the same time, it is important to note that there is also a personal
dimension, an interest in relationships, which takes the myth beyond the strict realms of
a cosmological geography. Thus, J. Strauss Clay, The Politics of Olympus: Form and
Meaning in the Major Homeric Hymns (Princeton, NJ 1989) 208, remarks: "Spatially,
the Hymn to Demeter embraces the three domains of the cosmos: Olympus, the earth,
and the underworld. It explores the relations among these three realms as well as the
possibilities of movement and communication between them". (Emphasis
added.)
13 N.J.
Richardson, The Homeric Hymn to Demeter (Oxford 1974) 146-149, discusses this
question.
14 A.N.
Athanassakis, The Orphic Hymns. Text, Translation and Notes (Missoula 1977) 28-29.
15 Guide to
Greece 1:38:5. Pausanius appears to have had quite an interest in Hades/Pluto and the
realm of the underworld. In 2:36:7 he also mentions the town of Lerna, on the Gulf of
Argos, as another site for Hades" descent, and in 6:21:1 a legend associating the
city of Olympia with the place of Hades" ascent/descent is recorded. Meanwhile
2:35:10 mentions a chasm in the earth (gh=j xa=sma) near
Hermione on the gulf of Argos out of which Heracles was said to have brought Cerberus, the
Hound of Hell, from the underworld. In 6:25:2-3 Pausanias says that the town of Elis had a
temple dedicated to Hades and that the Eleans were the only people in the world that he
knew of who worshipped the god. He also mentions that the temple was opened only once a
year and speculates that this may be due to the fact that human beings only go to the
realm of the dead once.
16 For more on
the role of the Plutonium in the Eleusinian rites, see: G. E. Mylonas, Eleusis and the
Eleusinian Mysteries (Princeton, NJ 1961) 146-148; K. Clinton, "The Sanctuary
of Demeter and Kore at Eleusis", Greek Sanctuaries: New Approaches
(eds. N. Marintos R. Hägg) (London 1993) 110-124.
17 The
secondary literature on the Graeco-Roman mystery religions in general, and the Eleusinian
mysteries in particular, is vast, as B. M. Metzger, "A Classified Bibliography of the
Graeco-Roman Mystery Religions 1924-1973, with a Supplement 1974-1977", ANRW
II, 17.3 (1984) 1259-1423, testifies. Among the more helpful discussions on the subject of
the Eleusinian mysteries are: L.R. Farnell, The Cults of the Greek States, III
(Oxford 1907); H.R. Willoughby Pagan Regeneration. A Study of Mystery Initiations
in the Graeco-Roman World (Chicago 1929) 36-67; M.P. Nilsson Greek Popular Religion
(New York 1940) 42-64; G.E. Mylonas, Eleusis and the Eleusinian Mysteries
(Princeton, NJ 1961); C. Kerényi, Eleusis: Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter
(Princeton, NJ 1967); M.P. Nilsson, Geschichte der griechischen Religion, I (Munich
51967) 469-477; G. Wagner, Pauline Baptism and the Pagan Mysteries
(London 1967) 69-88; J. Ferguson, The Religions of the Roman Empire (Ithaca, NY
1970) 99-101; G. D"Alviella, The Mysteries of Eleusis (Wellingborough 1981);
W. Burkert, Homo Necans: The Anthropology of Ancient Greek Sacrificial Ritual and Myth (Berkeley
1983) 248-297; L.H. Martin, Hellenistic Religions: An Introduction (Oxford 1987)
58-72; L.J. Alderink, "The Eleusinian Mysteries in Roman Imperial Times", ANRW
II 18.2 (1989) 1457-1498; K. Clinton, "The Eleusinian Mysteries: Roman Initiates and
Benefactors, Second Century BC to AD 267", ANRW II 18.2 (1989) 1499-1539; H.P.
Foley, "Background: The Eleusinian Mysteries and Women"s Rites for
Demeter", The Homeric Hymn to Demeter. Translation, Commentary, and
Interpretative Essays (ed. H.P. Foley) (Princeton, NJ 1994) 65-75; R. Parker, Athenian
Religion: A History (Oxford 1996) 98-101; J. Finegan, Myth & Mystery. An
Introduction to the Pagan Religions of the
Biblical World (Grand Rapids 1989) 172-179.
18 See F. R.
Walton, "Athens, Eleusis, and the Homeric Hymn to Demeter", HTR 45 (1952)
105-114; N.J. Richardson, The Homeric Hymn to Demeter, 6-11; K. Clinton, "The
Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore at Eleusis", Greek Sanctuaries: New Approaches
(eds. N. Marinatos R. Hägg) (London 1993) 110-124.
19 See R.
Parker, "The Hymn to Demeter and the Homeric Hymns", Greece
and Rome 38 (1991) 1-17, who argues that the link with Eleusis as an original
setting for the hymn is much more central than is generally accepted. J. Travlos,
"Eleusis: the Origins of the Sanctuary", Temples and Sanctuaries of
Ancient Greece (ed. E. Melas) (London 1973) 74-87, is also worth consulting on the
subject.
20 G. Züntz Persephone:
Three Essays on Religion and Thought in Magna Graecia (Oxford 1971), offers an
exhaustive exploration of the Sicilian roots of the mythology surrounding Persephone.
21 Diodorus
Siculus, Library of History 5:2:3. In 5:77:3 he also speaks of the Cretan origins
of the Eleusinian Mysteries.
22 Ovid, Metamorphoses
5:412-424; Fasti 4:417-454; Cicero, Against Verres 2:4:48; Diodorus Siculus,
Library of History 5:2:3; Claudian, The Rape of Proserpina 5:4.
23 Diodorus
Siculus, Library of History 5:3:4.
24 Dietrich, Religious
Prehistory, 452.
25 For a full
description of the piece, see H.B. Walters Catalogue of Greek and Etruscan Vases, 4
(London: The British Museum Department of Greek and Roman Antiquities, 1896) 131-132. The
vase is assigned catalogue number F-277. A similar Apuleian vase, again from the fourth
century BCE, is part of the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York
(#07.128.1).
26 For more on
the relationship between the cult of Cybele and the cult of Demeter, see: M.J. Vermaseren,
The Legend of Attis in Greek and Roman Art (Leiden 1966); J. Ferguson, The
Religions of the Roman Empire (Ithaca, NY 1970) 26-31; G. Sanders, "Kybele und
Attis", in M.J. Vermaseren (ed.) Die Orientalischen Religionen im Römerreich
(Leiden 1981) 264-297; G. Thomas, "Magna Mater and Attis", ANRW II 17.3
(1984) 1500-1535; A.T. Fear, "Cybele and Christ", Cybele, Attis and Related
Cults Essays in Memory of M.J. Vermaseren (ed. E. N. Lane
) (Religion in the Graeco-Roman World #131; Leiden 1996) 37-50; R. Turcan, The Cults of
the Roman Empire (Oxford 1996) 28-74.
27 B.V. Head, Catalogue
of the Greek Coins of Phrygia (London 1906) 233, lists this coin as #38 (Plate XXIX
12).
28 Head, Catalogue
of the Greek Coins of Phrygia, 242, lists this coin as #87 (Plate XXX 10).
29 L. Weber,
"The Coins of Hierapolis in Phrygia", The Numismatic Chronicle 13 (1913)
145, notes that among Phrygian coins the depiction of the rape of Persephone by Hades is
found only on coins from Hierapolis.
30 A. Burnett
M. Amandry P.P. Ripollès, Roman Provincial Coinage: 1 (London 1992),
486 lists this as #2982.
31 Burnett, Roman
Provincial Coinage, 486, lists this as #2983.
32 The
Homeric Hymn to Demeter concludes with a promise of post-mortem blessings to
the initiated and a threat of eternal punishment for the uninitiated. See N.J. Richardson,
"Early Greek Views About Life After Death", Greek Religion and Society,
P.E. Easterling J.V. Muir (eds.) (Cambridge 1985) 50-66.
33 Catullus, Poem
63 explores the devotion of Attis to the goddess Cybele. For a helpful introduction to the
cult of Attis and Cybele as expressed in Catullus" Poem, see S. A. Takács,
"Magna Deum Mater Idaea, Cybele, and Catullus" Attis", Cybele,
Attis and Related Cults: Essays in Memory of M.J. Vermaseren (ed. E.N. Lane)
(Religion in the Graeco-Roman World #131; Leiden 1996) 367-386.
34 Precisely
what these celebrations involved has been a matter of considerable speculation. One of the
most controversial interpretations put forward is that of R. G. Wasson A. Hoffmann
C. A. P. Ruck, The Road to Eleusis: Unveiling the Secret of the Mysteries
(New York 1978). They contend that the initiation celebrations of Eleusis included a
ritual drinking of the kykleon which was laced with an hallucinogenic substance
similar to LSD (it is not without significance that the Swiss chemist Albert Hoffmann is
the man responsible for the discovery of the drug LSD).
35 G. E.
Mylonas, Eleusis and the Eleusinian Mysteries (Princeton, NJ 1961) 288-316,
offers a discussion.
36 H.A.A.
Kennedy, St. Paul and the Mystery-Religions (London 1915); G. C. Ring,
"Christ"s Resurrection and the Dying and Rising Gods", CBQ 6 (1944)
216-229; B.M. Metzger, "Considerations of Methodology in the Study of the Mystery
Religions and Early Christianity", HTR 48 (1955) 1-20; D.H. Wiens,
"Mystery Concepts in Primitive Christianity and in its Environment", ANRW,
II 23:2 (1980) 1248-1284; W.R. Halliday, Pagan Background of Early Christianity
(London 1925) 234-280; H. Rahner, Greek Myths and Christian Mystery (London 1963);
G. Wagner, Pauline Baptism and the Pagan Mysteries (London 1967); A.J.M.
Wedderburn, "Paul and the Hellenistic Mystery-Cults: On Posing the Right
Questions", La soteriologia dei culti orientali nell" impero romano,
U. Bianchi M.J. Vermaseren (eds) (Leiden 1982) 817-833.
37 Nor should
one overlook the interaction between Hellenistic religion and first-century Judaism. See
W.C. Van Unnik, "Flavius Josephus and the Mysteries", Studies in Hellenistic
Religions, (ed. M.J. Vermaseren) (Leiden 1979) 244-279.
38
Interestingly, according to Plutarch, De facie quae in orbe lunae apparet
("The Face on the Moon") 943b the Athenians of old described the dead as Dhmhtreioi ("those who belong to Demeter"). Such claims of
ownership, presuming they had a counterpart in the Demeter cult at Hierapolis, could not
go unchallenged by a Christian writer committed to belief in the resurrection of Jesus
Christ from the dead.
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