Rainbows in mythology

The rainbow has been a favorite component of mythology throughout history. Rainbows are part of the myths of many cultures around the world. The Norse saw it as Bifrost; Abrahamic traditions see it as a covenant with God not to destroy the world by means of floodwater. Whether as a bridge to the heavens, messenger, archer's bow, or serpent, the rainbow has been pressed into symbolic service for millennia. There are myriad beliefs concerning the rainbow. The complex diversity of rainbow myths are far-reaching, as are their inherent similarities.

Noah's Thanksoffering (c.1803) by Joseph Anton Koch. Noah builds an altar to the Lord after being delivered from the Flood; God sends the rainbow as a sign of his covenant (Genesis 8–9).

Rainbow deities

  • In Mesopotamian and Elamite mythology, the goddess Manzat was a personification of the rainbow.[1]
  • In Greek mythology, the goddess Iris personifies the rainbow. In many stories, such as the Iliad, she carries messages from the gods to the human world, thus forming a link between heaven and earth.[2] Iris's messages often concerned war and retribution.[3] In some myths, the rainbow merely represents the path made by Iris as she flies.[4]
  • Many Aboriginal Australian mythologies include a Rainbow Serpent deity, the name and characteristics of which vary according to cultural traditions. It is often seen as a creator god, and also as a force of destruction. It is generally considered to control the rain, and conceals itself in waterholes during the dry season.
  • In Chinese mythology, Hong is a two-headed dragon that represents the rainbow.
  • In Mesoamerican cultures, Ix Chel is a maternal jaguar goddess associated with rain. Chel means rainbow in the Yucatán Poqomchi' language. Ix Chel wears a serpent headdress and presides principally over birth and healing.
  • Anuenue, the rainbow maiden, appears in Hawaiian legends as the messenger for her brothers, the gods Tane and Kanaloa.[5]
  • Several West African religions incorporate personified rainbow spirits. Examples include Oxumare in the Yoruban religion Ifá; Ayida-Weddo in Haitian Vodou, as practiced in Benin; and the pythons Dagbe Dre and Dagbe Kpohoun in West African Vodun, as practiced by the Ewe people of Benin.
  • In Māori mythology there are several personifications for the rainbow, depending on its form, who usually appear representing omens and are appealed to during times of war. The most widespread of these are Uenuku and Kahukura.[6][5]
  • For the Karen people of Burma, the rainbow is considered as a painted and dangerous demon that eats children.
  • In Muisca religion, Cuchavira or Cuhuzabiba, who was called "shining air" is the rainbow deity,[7] which in the Andes rain and sun were both very important for their agriculture.
  • Amitolane is a rainbow spirit from the mythology of the Zuni, a Native American tribe.
  • In Albanian folk beliefs the rainbow is regarded as the belt of the goddess Prende, and oral legend has it that anyone who jumps over the rainbow changes his sex.[8]
  • In pre-Hispanic Andean cosmology, the rainbow was related with both the sacred serpent or Amaru and the thunder god Illapa.<John E. Staller, Lightning (Illapa) and its manifestations: huacas and Ushnus, 177-79><The Incas have gone inside: pattern and persistence in Andean iconography, pg 179-99 > It was simultaneously considered as a mediating symbol between the lower, middle and upper worlds. <https://www.dukeupress.edu/inka-bodies-and-the-body-of-christ pg. 145-47></ref>

Rainbow bridges

Heimdall before the Rainbow Bridge
  • In Norse religion, a burning rainbow bridge called the Bifrost connects Midgard (earth) with Asgard, home of the gods.[9] Bifrost can be used only by gods and those who are killed in battle. It is eventually shattered under the weight of war – the Ragnarok (German Götterdämmerung). The notion that the rainbow bridge to heaven is attainable by only the good or virtuous, such as warriors and royalty, is a theme repeated often in world myths.
  • In Japanese mythology, the Floating Bridge of Heaven may have been inspired by the rainbow. The creator deities Izanami and Izanagi stood upon this bridge as they brought the Japanese archipelago into existence.[10]
  • In Navajo tradition, the rainbow is the path of the holy spirits, and is frequently depicted in sacred sandpaintings.[11]
  • Māori mythology tells a tale of Hina, the moon, who caused a rainbow to span the heavens even down to the earth, for her mortal husband to return to earth to end his days, since death may not enter her celestial home.[6]
  • Shamans among Siberia's Buryats speak of ascending to the sky-spirit world by way of the rainbow.

Rainbows and archery

  • The rainbow is depicted as an archer's bow in Hindu mythology. Indra, the god of thunder and war, uses the rainbow to shoot arrows of lightning.[9]
  • In pre-Islamic Arabian mythology, the rainbow is the bow of a weather god, Quzaḥ, whose name survives in the Arabic word for rainbow, قوس قزح qaws Quzaḥ, "the bow of Quzaḥ".
  • The Sumerian farmer god Ninurta defended Sumer with a bow and arrow, and wore a crown described as a rainbow.[12]

Rainbow taboos

  • The Sumu of Honduras and Nicaragua refer to the rainbow as walasa aniwe, "the devil is vexed". These people hide their children in their huts to keep them from looking or pointing at the rainbow.[13] Similar taboos against pointing at rainbows can be found throughout the world, in over a hundred cultural traditions.[14]
  • In Amazonian cultures, rainbows have long been associated with malign spirits that cause harm, such as miscarriages and (especially) skin problems. In the Amuesha language of central Peru, certain diseases are called ayona'achartan, meaning "the rainbow hurt my skin".[15] A tradition of closing one's mouth at the sight of a rainbow in order to avoid disease appears to pre-date the Incan empire.
  • In the mythology of ancient Slavs, a man touched by the rainbow is drawn to heaven, and becomes a "Planetnik" – half-demonic creature – which is under the power of the thunder and lightning god Perun.
  • In Latvian legends it was believed that the rainbow drank from river or lake like a living creature and thus released rain from its body. It was forbidden to approach the water source if there was a rainbow, or they would risk being accidentally swallowed by the rainbow, and later fall down during rainfall as nothing but bones.

[16]

Other legends

  • In the Hebrew Book of Genesis, after the flood had almost wiped out the entire human race, Yahweh told Noah that he will set the rainbow as a token of his promise that he would never send another flood large enough to destroy all life.[17] It is said that no rainbows appeared during the lifetime of 2nd-century rabbi Simeon bar Yochai, as his own righteousness was sufficient to guarantee God's mercy.[18]
  • In Ireland, a common legend asserts that a pot of gold is to be found at the end of a rainbow, guarded by a leprechaun.
  • In a Chinese folktale, Hsienpo and Yingt'ai are star-crossed lovers who must wait until the rainbow appears to be alone together. Hsienpo is the red in the rainbow, and Yingt'ai is the blue.[19]
  • The Fang of Gabon (Africa) are initiated into the religion by a "transcendent experience when they arrive at the rainbow's center, for there they can see both the entire circle of the rainbow and of the earth, signaling the success of their vision".[19] The Fang also prohibit their children from looking at the rainbow.
  • For Buddhists, the rainbow is "the highest state achievable before attaining Nirvana, where individual desire and consciousness are extinguished." Accordingly, there is mention of a rainbow body.[20]
  • According to syncretic Malay shamanism and folklore, the rainbow is said to have been formed from the sword of the earth serpent Sakatimuna who was defeated by the archangel Gabriel.[21]
  • Rainbows are widely seen in Native American stories and prophecies. The Cherokee believe the rainbow forms the hem of the Sun's coat.[22]

References

  1. Lambert, W. G. (1980). "Manziʾat/Mazziʾat/Mazzât/Mazzêt". Reallexikon der Assyriologie und vorderasiatischen Archäologie. Vol. 7. pp. 344–346.
  2. March, Jennifer R. (2014). Dictionary of Classical Mythology. Oxbow Books. pp. 270–271. ISBN 978-1-78297-635-6.
  3. Lee, Raymond L. Jr.; Fraser, Alistair B. (2001). The Rainbow Bridge: Rainbows in Art, Myth, and Science. Penn State Press. p. viii. ISBN 9780271019772.
  4. Andrews, Tamra (2000). "Rainbows and Rainbow Myths". Dictionary of Nature Myths: Legends of the Earth, Sea, and Sky. Oxford University Press. p. 162. ISBN 978-0-19-513677-7.
  5. Craig, Robert D. (2004). Handbook of Polynesian Mythology. ABC-CLIO. p. 174. ISBN 9781576078945.
  6. Best, Elsdon (1982). "Maori Religion and Mythology Part 2: Rainbow Myths". Victoria University of Welligton.
  7. Ocampo López, 2013, Ch. 8, p.53
  8. Elsie, Robert (2001). A Dictionary of Albanian Religion, Mythology and Folk Culture. London: Hurst & Company. p. 258. ISBN 1-85065-570-7.
  9. "Rainbows in Myth". National Geographic. Archived from the original on 8 August 2014.
  10. Roberts, Jeremy (2009). Japanese Mythology A to Z. Infobase Publishing. p. 4. ISBN 978-1-4381-2802-3.
  11. "Native American Rainbow Mythology". Native Languages of the Americas.
  12. Black, J.; Green, A. (2004). "Rainbow". Gods, Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia: An Illustrated Dictionary (2nd ed.). p. 153.
  13. Conzemius, Eduard (1932). Ethnographical Survey of the Miskito and Sumu Indians of Honduras and Nicaragua. Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology. p. 127.
  14. Blust, Robert (2021). "Pointing, Rainbows, and the Archaeology of Mind". Anthropos. 116 (1): 145–162. doi:10.5771/0257-9774-2021-1-145. ISSN 0257-9774. S2CID 236605041.
  15. Valadeau, Céline; Castillo, Joaquina Alban; Sauvain, Michel; Lorese, Augusto Francis; Bourdy, Geneviève (8 January 2010). "The rainbow hurts my skin: Medicinal concepts and plants uses among the Yanesha (Amuesha), an Amazonian Peruvian ethnic group". Journal of Ethnopharmacology. 127 (1): 175–192. doi:10.1016/j.jep.2009.09.024. PMID 19835943.
  16. Šmits, Pēteris (1936). "Latvian folktales and legends (Latviešu pasakas un teikas) Vol. 13". Latviešu valodas resursi. Valters un Rapa. Retrieved Oct 25, 2023. An example of such legend (Latvian language only)
  17. "Genesis 9:11–17". Bible Gateway.
  18. Schwartz, Howard (2006). Tree of Souls: The Mythology of Judaism. Oxford University Press. p. 79. ISBN 978-0-19-532713-7.
  19. Lee & Fraser 2001, p. 31
  20. Ray, Reginald (2001). Secret of the Vajra World: The Tantric Buddhism of Tibet. Shambhala Publications. p. 323. ISBN 9781570627729.
  21. Skeat, Walter William (1900). "Chapter 1: Nature". Malay Magic. London: Macmillan and Co., Limited. pp. 1–15, 582.
  22. Bastian, Dawn Elaine; Mitchell, Judy K. (2004). Handbook of Native American Mythology. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781851095339.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.