Neith a goddess
of great antiquity
Part Two: Aspects of Deborah story absorbed into Egyptian Neith mythology
by
Damien F. Mackey
“One of the features of Neith worship, according to Herodotus, was a
great festival known as the Feast of Lamps, during which her devotees all
through the night kept numerous lights burning. So we have Neith, who is
worshipped at the House of the Bee with a festival of torches, and Deborah,
“the Bee” who is married to “torches” [Lapidoth]. A coincidence?
Gary Greenberg
By far the majority of the ancient pagan gods, we have found,
had their origins in antediluvian heroes
or villains. But this does not mean that the mythology associated with any one of
them was incapable also of absorbing, or appropriating, much later literary
aspects.
The goddess Athene
(Athena), for instance - {the Greek version of Neith: “Among
the festivals confirmed in Greek papyri for Athena-Neith at Sais is the festival of lamps (Lychnocaia) …”}: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/312531134_The_Illumination_of_Lamps_Lychnokaia_for_Neith_in_SaisEsna_in_Greco-Roman_Egypt
- plays a part in Homer’s The Odyssey that I think has been dragged
straight out of the Book of Tobit. See e.g. my article:
Similarities
to The Odyssey of the Books of Job and Tobit
There I noted:
The ‘Divine’
Messenger
From whom the son, especially, receives help during his travels.
In the Book of Tobit, this messenger is the angel Raphael (in the guise of “Azarias”).
In The Odyssey, it is the goddess Athene (in the guise of “Mentes”).
Now, Gary Greenberg has convincingly proposed that a part
of the account of the biblical Deborah can be discerned in some of the Neith
mythology:
Neith and the Two Biblical Deborahs:
One and the Same
….
[Neith's] role as both mother
goddess and warrior is most evident from the Hymn to Neith preserved at the
Esna temple, where she is quoted as saying:
“An august god will come
into being today. When he opens his eyes, light will come into being; when he
closes them, darkness will come into being. People will come into being from
the tears of his eye, gods from the spittle of his lips. I will strengthen him
by my strength, I will make him effective by my efficacy, I will, make him
vigorous by my vigor. His children will rebel against him, but they will be beaten
on his behalf and struck down on his behalf, for he is my son issued from my
body, and he will be king of this land forever. I will protect him with my arms
. . .. I am going to tell you his name: It will be Khepri in the morning and
Atum in the evening; and he will be the radiating god in his rising forever, in
his name of Re, every day.”
Compare elements of this hymn
with the Song of Deborah.
- Deborah and Neith both talk about their role as a mother;
- Deborah and Neith each talk about how their actions led to an increase in population;
- In both stories we find a rebellion of new gods battling against heaven;
- In both stories, the mother, in her role as mother, promise to intervene in the fighting;
- In both stories, the mother fights on the side of the chief deity;
- In both stories there is talk about the enemy being struck down; and
- In both stories the side representing the chief deity wins.
Additionally, we note that in
the prose version, Barak is made effective by Deborah’s participation, and, in
the Hymn to Neith, Re was made effective and vigorous by the actions of the
goddess.
One difference between the two
stories is that the Neith is identified as the mother of the chief deity, but
the child of Deborah is not named. This is not surprising given the
monotheistic nature of Hebrew religion. Permitting a character to have too
close a resemblance to the chief Egyptian deity would be highly offensive.
Although we don’t know the
name of Deborah’s child, we do know the names of the only two persons with a
close relation to her. Her husband’s name, Lapidoth, translates as “torches”.
Barak’s name means “lightening.” Both of these names are interesting in
connection with the iconography of Neith.
One of the features of Neith
worship, according to Herodotus, was a great festival known as the Feast of
Lamps, during which her devotees all through the night kept numerous lights
burning. So we have Neith, who is worshipped at the House of the Bee with a
festival of torches, and Deborah, “the Bee” who is married to “torches”. A
coincidence?
Perhaps, but certainly very
suggestive of a close mythological relationship.
Neith and Deborah also have a
connection as Judges. In the New Kingdom story known as “the Contendings of
Horus and Set”, Neith appears twice in a judiciary role. In this story, Set and
Horus sue for the right to succeed Osiris as king of Egypt. Early in the story
we are told that the struggle has been going on for eighty years but the
dispute was unresolved. The gods then implored Thoth to send a letter to Neith,
asking for guidance on how to resolve the dispute. Neith replied that the
office should go to Horus, and then adds that if the gods don’t award judgment
to Horus, “I shall become so furious that the sky will touch the ground.” This
threat sounds very much like a description of lightening, an interesting phrase
considering that Deborah’s general, the enforcer of her will, is named “lightening.”
Later in the story of the “Contendings”, Neith is once again called upon to
make a decision.
From the above, we can see a
number of points of comparison between Neith and Deborah the warrior/judge. Not
only were there thematic similarities between the Hymn to Neith and the Song of
Deborah, we find both are judges, both are associated with the bee, and both
have an important connection to torches and perhaps lightening. ….
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