
Sacred Geography of Ancient Greece
In all such qualities those places excel, in which there is a divine
inspiration, and in which the gods have their appointed lots and
are
propitious to the dwellers in them.
Plato
The Neolithic Period (9600 - 3000 BC)
To explore the sacred geography of ancient Greece it is necessary to look
far back in time. During the millennia before the emergence of the classical
Greeks there were other peoples living in the region and traces of their
wisdom traditions may still be found in the old myths. While brilliant in
their achievements, the classical Greeks were not the creators of all the
sophistication for which they are known. Rather, they were more the
inheritors, who then went on to elaborate and express pre-existing wisdom.
The story of the region begins before any written records were kept. What
little we know comes from myths and legends, folklore and the studies of
archaeologists. Nomadic hunter-gatherers wandered across the lands then in
ways no humans on earth do nowadays.
Their movements were guided by the passage of the seasons and the migrations
of vast animal herds. The living earth gave them food and the sun warmed
them. While walking here and there upon the earth, these ancient people –
our own ancestors – also slowly began to find particular places that had a
sense of numinosity, or power, or heightened energy. The two vantage points
that we have on this fabled epoch, mythology and archaeology, show quite
clearly that the earliest Greek cultures were centered on beliefs in the
Great Goddess of the Earth. She gave birth to and through all things. Babies
and springs were her gifts. Caves and forest groves her favored abodes. Over
uncounted centuries, through the birth and passing away of prehistoric
cultures, these mystic places were venerated and visited. The first sacred
sites of humankind, they are the most ancient roots of the pilgrimage
traditions that would later characterize classical Greece.
Around
6500 BC, six thousand years before the classical Greeks, farming and animal
domestication began. Cattle may have been domesticated independently in
southeastern Europe but some crops, such as wheat and barley, were certainly
introduced from the Middle East. Along with ideas of agriculture and animal
husbandry, so also came proto-religious concepts. During the Neolithic
Period, cultures such as the Bandkeramik, Tripolye-Cucuteni, Bell Beaker,
Unetice, Danubian-Carpathian, and the early Aegean traveled over, and traded
within, large regions of southeastern and central Europe. Additionally, the
precious stone Amber, found in the regions of present day Denmark, Poland,
and Lithuania, was widely traded throughout central and southeastern Europe.
All of this human movement occurred near to and within the region of Greece,
and would certainly have influenced the later emergence of more
sophisticated cultures in the Aegean area.
The Bronze and Dark Ages (3000 – 800 BC)
Between 3000 and 1100 BC, various groups of peoples, such as the Ionians,
Achaeans, and Dorians entered Greece from the north. Of Indo-European
origin, they were patriarchal, warlike cultures that believed in masculine
gods which resided in the skies or upon mountain peaks. During these years,
and especially following the Dorian migrations around 1100 BC, there was a
gradual process of cultural blending whereby the emphasis shifted from
veneration of the Earth Goddess as the dominant deity to Zeus, a sky god.
This blending of the indigenous ancient goddess culture with the arriving
patriarchal culture is clearly reflected in different myths deriving from
Neolithic, Bronze Age and Classical periods. Many contemporary people have
the notion that the Greek myths concern only Zeus and the Olympian gods.
This notion, perpetuated since Victorian times when European scholars –
almost entirely men – imparted a definite male bias to their interpretations
and writings is, however, incorrect.
The masculine oriented myths of the Classical era are merely the products of
that male-dominated time. There is a vastly older mythic tradition deriving
from pre-Bronze Age times in which the Great Goddess was the supreme deity.
The Great Goddess was associated with birth, ease of life, fertility, and
seasonal changes, while the later Olympian gods were warlike, distant from
the people, judgmental and often jealous. During the assimilation process,
the Great Goddess was subdivided into different female aspects, such as
Hera, Artemis, Aphrodite, Athena and Hestia. While powerful in their own
right, it is significant that each of these goddesses were still subservient
to male gods or masculinized themselves. For example, during their
development in the Olympian order Hera became a jealous wife, Athena a
masculine woman, and Aphrodite a promiscuous creature.
The establishment of shrines during the Bronze and Dark ages was very often
at locations that had been venerated from earlier Neolithic times. The
sanctuaries were placed at specific sites where the mysterious forces of the
natural world were most accessible. To understand these early sanctuaries it
is necessary to examine them in relation to the natural contexts in which
they were located. Of critical importance in this examination, is
recognition of the fact that the ancient sanctuaries were linked not only to
specific places in the landscape but also to the movements of different
celestial bodies such as the sun, moon, planets and stars.
The early sanctuaries were situated at areas of landscape associated with
the spirits and powers of nature (later anthropomorphized as the goddesses
and gods). Altars were set up, usually flat rocks in positions facing
features of the sacred landscape, and over time more elaborate structures
were added. A variety of rituals were established to honor the spirits of
the landscape, to propitiate and control them, and to provide access to
those powers for visiting pilgrims. It is not possible to say with any
certainty at what point in time early human beings conceived of the
sanctuary, yet it was well before the period of settlement. Archaeological
evidence had demonstrated that dwellings were a later development at
pre-existing places of sanctity. Other pre-Greek civilizations such as the
Minoan, the Mycenean and the Cycladic were also associated with aspects of
the Mother Goddess and related geomantic elements.
The Archaic, Classical and Hellenistic Periods
During the so-called ‘Dark Ages’ (1100 – 800 BC), the Greeks lived in tribal
communities controlled by chiefs or kings who combined the roles of war
leader and priest. There were no palaces and the kings lived in houses
distinguished from those of their subjects only by their greater size. By
the 9th century, power had begun to pass to different hereditary
aristocracies, trade increased between them, and social centers began to
grow in size from villages to cities. By the beginning of the Archaic
Period, the Polis, or city-state became the dominant form of political
organization. The cities dominated the countryside and became the primary
centers of political power, commerce and cultural life. During the Archaic
Period, at different times in different regions of Greece, aristocratic
government became unpopular and a variety of other governing systems
evolved, including tyrannies, oligarchies, and democracies. Throughout the
Archaic, Classical and Hellenistic periods, the many city-states fought
against one another, and therefore it is not correct to speak of a Greek
‘nation’ but rather only of a Greek civilization composed of numerous
autonomous city-states.
Despite their rivalries, the Greeks had a strong sense of common identity,
expressed by the name they gave themselves, Hellenes, and the religion they
practiced. Worshipping the same gods and goddesses, the Greeks also
celebrated pan-Hellenic festivals during which time hostilities ceased and
pilgrims were safe to travel across the countryside. The neutrality of
shrines and especially the oracles of pan-Hellenic importance was supported
by leagues of neighboring states, called amphictionies, such as that of
Delphi, the most famous oracle site. It is against this background of
social, political and religious organization that we may consider the nature
of sacred sites and pilgrimage traditions in the Archaic, Classical and
Hellenistic periods.
In consideration of the practice of pilgrimage in these periods it is
clearly evident that there were two distinct classifications of pilgrimage
sites. These may be categorized as attracting individual or group
pilgrimages. In the category of shrines that attracted individual pilgrims,
there were the age-old oracular shrines, such as Dodona and Delphi; the
shrines dedicated to specific gods and goddesses; and the healing shrines
known as asklepieions. In the category of shrines that attracted group
pilgrimages, there were the hugely visited, state-supported festival sites
of Olympia, Delphi, Isthmia and Nemea. From the 6th century BC to the 4th
century AD, the Greeks made both individual and highly organized
state-sponsored pilgrimages to these holy places all across the Greek realm.
The pilgrimage traditions to both types of shrines are an undeniable
indication of the great degree which the Greeks viewed the gods and
goddesses as intervening in their personal lives and the affairs of the
state.
In the Greek world the word for sanctuary was hieron (meaning holy or
sacred), which suggests the idea of a zone between the divine and human
world where communications between the two realms could exist. The
construction of large temples around the ancient altars from the Bronze and
Dark Ages is a reflection of the monumentalization of Greek sanctuaries
beginning in the 8th century. What was still primary, however, was the
sacred space around the altar, sometimes including a cave, spring, tree or
stone. The architectural elaboration of the temple should, therefore, not be
seen as a change in cult practice but simply as a decision to monumentalize.
It is also important to recognize that much of the inspiration and
structural form of the Greek temples were derived from similar structures in
Egypt and the Middle East. The Classical era temples, besides their
spiritual functions, also served as the emblems of the city-states and the
manifestation of their power within a competitive political system that
spanned the entire region of Greece.
While many urban centers around Greece had their own holy places, pilgrims
would often travel hundreds of miles beyond their place of habitation, by
boat or land, to visit other shrines whose resident gods and goddesses were
believed to be effective for different reasons. Certainly one of the most
famous examples of this sort of shrine visitation was that which occurred at
the oracle site of Delphi. Its earliest use lost in the mists of prehistory,
Delphi was favored by the Mycenaeans from as early as 1500 BC and by the
Greeks from 1000 BC to the 393 AD, when the Christian emperor Theodosius
officially closed the enormous temple complex.
Another type of sacred site which attracted large numbers of pilgrims from
throughout the Greek world were the healing shrines of Asklepios, the son of
the legendary Apollo. His primary sanctuaries, called asklepieion were
located at Epidauros, the island of Kos, Pergamos in Asia Minor, and Lebena
in Crete. While approximately 300 asklepieion shrines were also constructed
in other parts of the Greek world, the healing power of the god was
considered to be most present at the major sanctuaries. When pilgrims came
to an asklepieion shrine they would spend a night a night sleeping in a
building called an avaton, where they hoped to have a dream in which
Asklepios would appear and either heal them or reveal information concerning
how they might heal themselves.
The second major category of
pilgrimage destinations were the state-supported pan-Hellenic festivals
around the country. The emergence of these particular sanctuaries was
directly linked with the rise of the polis and the birth of the city-state.
During the pan-Hellenic festivals thousands of people traveled to worship
the gods and goddesses honored in these celebrations. The festivals of
Olympia, Pythia, Isthmia and Nemea were the most important and were known as
the ‘crown games’. Competitions between the city-states at the festivals
included literature, music and athletics. The prizes for contestants were
wreaths not money and some victors emerged as major politicians. The
artistic elaboration of the shrines was also a form of competition between
the states. The pan-Hellenic shrines served the function of reinforcing
ideas and values central to the polis organization. This was materially
expressed in the creation of monuments dedicated to the achievements of
individual city-states, which were specifically designed to impress visitors
from other regions. Access to the pan-Hellenic shrines was guaranteed during
times of conflict between the different city-states, and even when Xerxes
invaded Greece in 480 BC, the Olympic festival continued.
Official pilgrimage from the 6th century onwards was a definite feature of
the Greek world and ships came from Iberia, Egypt, Cyrene and the Black Sea
to the sanctuaries in Greece and Asia Minor. Diplomatic activity accompanied
the festivals with different city-states sending out officials announcing
the dates of celebrations and to confirm the sacred truces which allowed
pilgrims to travel in safety. Invited states sent official representatives,
called theoroi, to participate in the festivals and make sacrifices on the
behalf of their state.
Sea travel was the primary form of transport for the Greeks and the sailing
season from the beginning of spring in April to the onset of winter in
October came to be the period during which the main state-supported
festivals were held. The dates of the four main festivals were also set to
not conflict with the busiest periods of the agricultural schedule, such as
the grape harvest in mid-September, the grain harvest in May to July, and
the olive harvest between November and February.
Still another category of pilgrimage destination in the Classical Greek
world was that of Mystery Religions. Much about the mystery religions and
their rituals is currently unknown but they seemed to have functioned as
sources of spiritual vitality amidst the institutional bureaucracy of the
state religion. The festival of the Greater Mysteries (as contrasted to the
Lesser Mysteries) occurred at the site of Eleusis during the month of
September and October. The mysteries were essentially a drama in which the
public participated, enacting a ritual progression from sadness to joy, from
the sorrow of the separated mother and daughter to their joyful reunion.
During the week-long festival various rituals were performed by priests and
priestesses at the shrine of Eleusis, and on the fifth day of the festival
many thousands of pilgrims, men and women, rich and poor, walked a distance
of approximately 15 miles from the city of Athens. Aspects of the Eleusinian
mysteries were partially a re-enactment of the myth of Demeter and
Persephone, and participants drank a sacred beverage called the kykeon,
which some scholars theorize may have had a narcotic effect. Occurring for
nearly 1000 years, the procession to Eleusis was the greatest such event
ever organized in the Greek world. The Eleusinian mysteries came to an end
in 396 AD with the destruction of the sanctuary by Alaric the Goth.
Another mystery tradition, the Kaveirian, was practiced on the islands of
Samothrace and Lemnos in the northern Aegean during the Classic and
Hellenistic periods. The Kaveirian Mysteries were most probably imported
from Asia Minor and their contents were then mixed with Greek mythology and
legends.
The Locations of Greek Sanctuaries according to Sacred Geography
In preceding sections of this essay information has been presented regarding
the origin of sacred sites in the Neolithic period and their religious use
from the Bronze Age to the end of Hellenistic times. This information has
been drawn from a variety of orthodox scholarly sources which, while
certainly important, fail to address the issue of the location of the most
ancient sacred sites in terms of geomancy, terrestrial astrology and
landscape geometry. An intriguing fact, little known to most contemporary
scholars of Greek archaeology, is that there is actually a geometrical
pattern to the placement of sacred sites throughout the mainland and islands
of Greece.
Evidence of this grand design was first discovered, at least in historical
times, by the French scholar Jean Richer who was living in Greece in the
1950’s. Having had for many years an interest in the study of mythology,
esoteric doctrines and Greek mythology, Richer often wondered if there might
be a unifying pattern explaining the locations of the most ancient Greek
temples relative to one anther, to the typography of the entire country, and
to the celestial realm. During his visits to numerous temples, on both the
mainland and the islands, he had been perplexed by their sometimes unusual
locations. He had found temples perched high on mountain peaks, in isolated
regions far distant from social centers, and, most mysteriously, at
seemingly random places in the countryside. Richer suspected that the
locations of these temple sites were not arbitrary but were rather a
reflection of a wisdom tradition practiced in deep antiquity and then
forgotten millennia ago.
In 1958 Richer had a profound experience which began to unlock the mysteries
that so intrigued him. While living on the hill of Lycabettos, sacred to the
Earth Goddess Gaia and overlooking the Parthenon of Athens, he had a
visionary dream of Apollo. The dream helped him to recognize that a straight
line could be drawn between the sites of Delphi, Athens, the island of Delos
(where Apollo was supposedly born) and Camiros in Rhodes, the site of the
oldest Apollo temple on that island. The discovery of this line, linking
holy places of ancient Greece, led Richer to discover more examples of
ancient sacred geography including:
-
An alignment linking the sacred mountains of Ida on Crete and Parnassus
at Delphi, which also passed through another sacred mountain at Corinth,
where stood a temple of Apollo.
-
A general alignment of three great Hera sanctuaries at Olympia, Argos
and Samos.
-
An almost equilateral triangle that linked three sanctuaries of Athena
at Delphi, Athens and Tegea.
-
An alignment of the cities of Corinth, Argos and Sparta at a right angle
to the Delphi - Athens - Delos alignment.
Richer felt that these enigmatic alignments of sacred sites were clearly
apparent if an observer could free themselves of the limiting bias of
orthodox archaeology. Instead of studying each temple as a discreet unit,
the observer needed to consider, as if from a bird’s eye view, the network
of sanctuaries across the entire region of Greece. In his book, Sacred
Geography of the Ancient Greeks, Richer wrote,
“The evidence of the monuments shows in an undeniable way, but not yet
clearly perceived, that during more than two thousand years, the
Phoenicians, the Hittites, the ancient Greeks, and then the Etruscans, the
Carthaginians, and the Romans, had patiently woven a fabric of
correspondences between the sky, especially the apparent course of the sun
through the zodiac, the inhabited earth, and the cities built by humanity.”
Other scholars have studied Richer’s theories and the alignments he found.
Writing in Dance of the Dragon: an Odyssey into Earth Energies and
Ancient Religion, Paul Broadhurst has said,
“In the following years, Richer found more of these lines and eventually
uncovered the whole plan behind the Delphic zodiac. Studying the iconography
of coins and temple sculpture, he found that the designs were not merely
decorative, but astrological, reflecting the cosmic influences at work in
each particular segment. He even found he could use this specific knowledge
to predict successfully which symbol would appear on coins from specific
locations. As his researches progressed, he discovered that statues of
mythical beasts and Gods and Goddesses, as well as temple dedications, were
originally designed to reflect the divisions of the zodiac. Temples at great
distances from one another were aligned with their faraway counterparts,
reflecting the heavenly divisions on the surface of the land, all part of a
vast system of Cosmic and Earthly correspondences. Temple sculpture also
reflected the cyclic wheel of the zodiac. The fighting animals common on
temple pediments symbolized certain seasons or astrological periods,
devouring or attacking the dying cosmic influences, with each period
represented by a mythical beast…..Later, Richer found other zodiacs centered
on similar oracular sites having geometrical relationships with one another,
and concluded that he was finding the remnants of a once universal system of
heavenly correspondences which had evolved through Greek and Roman times as
the common denominator of ancient religions, even extending into Byzantine
Christianity.”
In 1994, Richer’s book, Sacred Geography of the Ancient Greeks, was
translated from French into English by Christine Rhone. Based on a deep
familiarity with his work, Rhone commented in her preface to the book,
“Richer’s work on sacred geography can be approached from many levels. He
extends the range of astrological symbols from the familiar ones – the fish
for Pisces, the bull for Aries, and so on – to encompass Olympian and
pre-Olympian deities, circumzodiacal constellations, figures of myth and
legend, revealing the stratum of stellar beliefs that underlay ancient Greek
religion. This expanded range of astrological symbols becomes a key to
interpreting the motifs of architecture, sculpture, vase painting and other
artifacts. These motifs were not chosen merely for aesthetic reasons, as
compositional devices or pictorial narrative, but were chosen to express a
specific temporal and spatial meaning of the artwork in relation to a sacred
center. This was most often an oracle site, a timeless place between the
realms of Earth and the god-like stars. Every object of sacred art, great or
small, was thus a point in single web of meaning that imbued it with a
talismanic power.”
Following Jean Richer’s passing away in 1992, his elder brother Lucien
extended the ‘Apollo’ line passing through Delos, Delphi and Athens, to
discover that it linked other ancient shrines including Skellig Michael in
Ireland, St. Michael’s Mount in Cornwall, England, Mont St Michel in France,
Sacra di San Michele in Italy, San Michele di Monte Gargano on the eastern
coast of Italy, and Mt. Carmel in the Holy Land. Discussing this incredibly
ancient and significant sacred geography, Lucien wrote,
“Jean has shown the way ahead by proving that the great sanctuaries of
ancient times were generally positioned in relation to each other according
to zodiacal directions…..On a global scale, it emerges that the placing of
sacred sites seems to obey precise rules and that, despite appearances, the
various aspects of the terrestrial surface represent highly organized structures.”
In this present essay it has been shown that while the Classical era Greeks
did indeed erect stupendous temples at many sites throughout the mainland
and the islands, the sites where those temples were placed had already been
sacred sites of little known, but deeply knowledgeable, cultures which
existed thousands of years before Greek times. Therefore it can be said with
assurance, as was stated at the beginning of this essay, that the Classical
Greeks were not so much creators of their sacred geography but rather
inheritors of that system from an earlier people.
“Those ancient sages who sought to obtain the presence of divine beings
by setting up shrines and statues seem to me to have shown insight into
the nature of the universe. They understood that it is always easy to
attract
soul and particularly simple to keep it by constructing an
object fashioned
so as to be influenced by it and to receive a share of
it.”
Plotinus, The Soul, 10

Oracle of Zeus, Dodona

Cape Sounion

Temples of Hera and Zeus, Olympia

Temple of Artemis, Vrauronia
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
PYTHAGORAS
Or to give his proper name
Pythagoras of Samos
In Greek this is
rendered

however the name consists of the two Greek words

This is PYTHIOS AGORA
Pythios was
the Dragon slain by Apollo at Delphi

Apollo killing Python. A 1581
engraving by
Virgil Solis for
Ovid's
Metamorphoses, Book I
It should be noted that
Poussin carried a copy of Ovid's Metamorphosis on
his person at all times.
This is not dissimilar
to the painting of St Michael
slaying the Dragon in Esperaza Church next to Rennes le Chateau

*
and
AGORA is a
meeting place

The Pythagorean Cult
worshipping the Sunrise.
So the name of the
apparent philosopher leader of the
Pythagoreans
means
MEETING PLACE OF THE
DRAGON
(please note that Serpent and Dragon are one and the same in mythology)
In Greek mythology the Sun God Apollo slew the Dragon at Delphi and took its
name.
A Temple of Apollo
Pythios can be found at place on Crete that was formerly called
AGORA
View Larger Map
There is however another Temple of Apollo
Pythios on Rhodes
The Knights of St John (who inherited the Knights
Templar land after their
demise) chose to build their Grand Master
Headquarters next to this Temple.
View Larger Map
This Temple is on the
St Michael/Apollo
Ley Line.
It should be noted that most of what we
know about PYTHAGORAS the man was written much later than his supposed
death.
It is every likelihood that he never existed but a body
of wise philosophers did exist and adopted the name Meeting Place of the
Serpents
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