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THE MEANING OF NEOS ALEXANDRIA'S
SYMBOL
In early 2007 the members of Neos Alexandria determined that we needed a representative symbol for our group. We wanted one that would be distinctive and yet easily reproducible by all of our members, whatever their level of artistic skill. We also wanted something that suggested the dual nature of our group, honoring both the Egyptian and Greco-Makedonian heritage that serves as the foundation of Neos Alexandria. We spent several months debating a number of worthy symbols before finally deciding upon the image that adorns our website, which was drafted for us by the talented artist Joan Lansberry. Anyone
who has visited the site certainly knows what our symbol is –
but they may not understand what it means. Like most symbols, ours is
complex and has many layers of meaning. Additionally, it is worth
pointing out that there is no one right, true, and only interpretation
of what our – or any symbol – means to its viewer.
Each of us may take away different things while contemplating it.
Sometimes our understanding of a symbol will evolve over time, as we
learn new things or our experiences change. Two people can see in a
symbol completely different and contradictory things – and
still value it deeply. So while the following explanation is not to be
taken as an orthodox pronouncement on the meaning of Neos
Alexandria’s symbol – it is, nevertheless, what
many of us think of when we examine it. The
first layer is that of the Winged Solar Disc itself. This image is said
to represent Horus of Behedet, a powerful sun god and fierce warrior.
According to a late Ptolemaic text from the temple of Horus at Edfu
(Behedet), the barque of Re was beset by terrible creatures who were
trying to stop the Sun’s daily journey through the heavens.
Horus of Behedet came to his aid, spearing the hippopotamus-formed
creatures with his mighty weapon. In gratitude Re declared to Thoth
that “the Winged Solar Disc, with Uraei, should be brought
into every sanctuary wherein he dwelt, and into every sanctuary of all
the gods of the lands of the South and the North, and in Amentet [the
Underworld], in order that they might drive away evil from therein...."
Thus
this image was found displayed in all of the temples in Egypt and
depicted hovering over the head of the King, its healing and protective
rays raining down upon him. It was such a powerful and popular image
that the common people would have representations of it made in cheap
metals, wood and stone to hang in their own homes or wear as a
protective amulet.
Nor
is this image to be found solely in ancient Egypt. The image is
represented in many places throughout the Near East including Persia,
Mesopotamia, Anatolia, northern Syria and even in Palestine. In fact,
Biblical scholars believe that the author of Malachi 4:2 is referring
to this symbol when he writes, “the Sun of Righteousness
shall arise with healing in His wings.” The
wings can be interpreted in a number of ways. For some they may suggest
the wings of powerful birds like the hawk or eagle. Both of these birds
were connected with kingship in antiquity. The eagle is the sacred
animal of Zeus, the ruler of gods and men. Its nest is found in the
highest places, that it might, like Zeus, survey the world below from
its celestial perch. The eagle is famed for its wisdom and prowess
– as well as its protective qualities. When Ptolemy Soter was
an infant, so the legend goes, he was exposed by his parents. An eagle
swooped down, covered him with its massive wings, and sheltered him
from the elements until he was found by a kindly stranger who cared for
him. The eagle, symbolizing this, was placed on many of the
Dynasty’s coins – and passed from there into the
iconography of Rome, Germany, England, the United States, and numerous
other countries. Similarly, the goddess Isis enfolds her worshippers in
her gentle wings and shields them from the hardships of life. Her wings
suggest the comfort of faith and the power of grace. These wings also
bring to mind the hawk who is the embodiment of Horus, whose powers the
current reigning Pharaoh personified. Like Horus, the hawk is a noble
hunter, a protector of its young, gifted with speed and dexterity. Its
wings could also symbolize thought – which soars to the
heavens, flying above the mundane world of limitations, swift and keen
as the wind that gives it mobility. For this reason in Egyptian
hieroglyphs the hawk came to symbolize divinity and was used for many
gods besides Horus. Within
the heart of the Solar Disc one can see another image closely connected
to it in symbolism, the so-called Stella Vergina.
As the name indicates there is scholarly disagreement about whether
this represents a sun or a star – though it is generally held
that the symbol was connected with the Makedonian royal family, since
it is found on the larnax or burial urn of Olympias, Philip II (though
some claim this urn belongs to Philip III Arrhidaeus) and on numerous
coins minted by the royal family. Vergina is the modern name of Aigai,
home of the Argead dynasty which claimed descent from Herakles and
Dionysos and ruled Makedonia in northern Greece from 700 to 309 bce.
The most famous king of this Dynasty was the son of Philip II,
Alexander III known to history as “the Great” and
conqueror of the whole of the eastern world. In 331 bce Alexander was
crowned Pharaoh of Egypt and founded the great city of Alexandria. Upon
Alexander’s death, his general Ptolemy took over control of
Egypt, inaugurating the fusion of Greek and Egyptian culture which we
celebrate today over two thousand years later. Like Alexander, Ptolemy
was a Makedonian (and there was even a tradition in antiquity that
Ptolemy’s father was not Lagos but rather Philip, making them
half-brothers) and so to honor these two outstanding men –
and the Greco-Makedonian heritage they were so proud of - we have
included the Stella Vergina in our official symbol.
There
were several different forms of the Stella Vergina
used in antiquity. It could have eight, twelve, or sixteen points
– and we have opted for this last because that number held
deep symbolic value for the ancient Egyptians. Sixteen represented
abundance, fertility, completeness, and perfection. Sixteen was
considered such a holy number because of its connection with the Nile river and the god of the Nile’s
inundation Hapi (whom the Greeks called either Apis or Neilos). The
association with sixteen arose because of the nileometers which were
used to gauge the holy river’s levels. These nileometers
contained markings a cubit apart – at around 8 cubits, the
river would swell its banks and bring the much-needed nourishing waters
and rich alluvial soil necessary to produce abundant crops and keep
Egypt from being swallowed by the desert wastes that surrounded it.
Sixteen cubits saw the river at its most powerful and beneficial
heights. Anything above that would be disastrous. Therefore this number
came to represent the god in both his fertile and benevolent aspect.
For some, the Stella Vergina
may also resemble a compass star, which can suggest finding
one’s way amid the tumultuousness of life, and the gods as
guides in the process. It further symbolizes the hope of many of us
that revived pagan religions will someday be found in all four corners
of the globe and that the worship of the gods will flourish everywhere
once more. Thus informed by Above
the Winged Solar Disc one sees a single serpent coiled. Traditional
Solar Discs were adorned with two serpents, representing the Uraei or
the twin Eyes of Re who represented sovereignty, protection, solar
ferocity, the divine power of the Pharaoh, and the unification of Upper
and Lower Egypt. Our symbol has only one serpent, however. That is
because he represents Agathos Daimon, the tutelary spirit of
Alexandria. In
ancient Greece the Agathos Daimon or “Good Spirit”
was a protective being who guarded the household and cared for the
individual, much like the similarly snake-formed Zeus Meilikhios and
Zeus Ktesios. He brought good luck and warded off evil, and families
would keep tame, poisonless serpents to represent him, feeding them
with honeyed cakes and milk. Aside from this humble domestic worship,
however, the Agathos Daimon seems not to have received any kind of
formal, state-sponsored worship. Things
were different, however, in Alexandria. Pseudo-Kallisthenes in the Alexander
Romance records that when Alexander the Great was laying down
the foundations of what would become the most famous city in antiquity,
a serpent appeared and was killed. Alexander repented the hasty action,
built a shrine to it and ordered that the serpent be given heroic
honors. Agathos Daimon became one of the most popular deities in
Hellenistic and Roman Alexandria, equated with Serapis, represented on
coins, and featuring in a host of legendary and mythical narratives
such as the Potter’s Oracle. Furthermore,
snakes – which may or may not have represented Agathos Daimon
- play a major role in the story of Alexander and the Ptolemies.
Alexander was conceived after Olympias was seen to lay with a giant
serpent; serpents guided Alexander and his army to the oasis of Siwah
when they got lost in the desert seeking the oracle of Ammon; a serpent
appeared to Alexander in a dream to instruct him in how to heal Ptolemy
who was dying from the wound of a poisoned arrow; a serpent appeared to
Ptolemy during the dream in which Serapis commanded that his
cult-statue be moved from Sinope to Alexandria; in the reign of Ptolemy
II a 20 foot snake was brought to the city; and of course there is the
famous story of how Cleopatra met her death by the bite of a serpent,
bringing a close to the glorious Ptolemaic Dynasty. What,
one might naturally ask, contributed to the rise in prominence of such
a humble domestic spirit to such stellar heights? The answer to that
lies in the nature of Alexandria itself. The
city of Alexandria was a completely new creation. While both the Pharos
and the settlement of Rhakotis had existed there previously, they were
very minor sites of no importance. Following in the footsteps of
Alexander, Ptolemy built a huge city on the site, the largest, most
complex, most highly cultured city the world had ever seen before. To
do that Ptolemy put a call out and received hosts of people from all
parts of the Greek world and beyond. People rushed there to escape the
old world, its wars, blood feuds, and limited opportunities. They
sought their fortunes and the freedom to follow their dreams, creating
new lives for themselves and their families in a new land. And like the
immigrants who have flocked to America over the last two hundred years,
they built a society that was mobile, individualistic, cosmopolitan. A
society where it didn't matter where you came from, what your race was,
what your family name might be - only what you could do with your hands
and brains. Most ancient Greek cities had three categories of people -
citizens, non-citizens, and resident aliens. Alexandria only had the
first two - because everyone living there was, to some sense, a
resident alien. And like the immigrants in America, when the rush of
newness and excitement and wild creativity crested, people began to
feel lonely, cut off from the past, rootless. They needed something to
combat that. And so they turned to Agathos Daimon. But instead of just
watching over the home or the individual, he would guard the whole
city, which was reenvisioned not just as a collection of private homes
and families, but as one home for all people, one family sharing the
common bonds of existence as a citizen of Alexandria, with Agathos
Daimon as the protector and nurturer of the individual. And
that is what he does for us today in the New Alexandria, a city of the
heart and of our dreams. He is there to guide and protect us as we
establish our own religious community and seek to revive the beautiful
Greco-Egyptian syncretic tradition. But
there is also another level to that serpentine symbol, for Agathos
Daimon lies coiled in a figure eight. There are two complimentary
levels to this part of the symbol. First, the figure eight suggests the
Ogdoad or primordial grouping of deities at Hermopolis who together
caused the world to manifest and collectively represented the fullness
or completeness of the cosmos. The gods, who are responsible for the
creation and maintenace of the world, lie at the heart of all we do. We
seek to honor all of them collectively, both the gods of Greece and of
Egypt. Additionally, the figure eight signifies eternity – or
more specifically, the teachings of the Alexandrian Gnostics concerning
the ourorobos or world-serpent consuming its tail. This stood for the
cyclical, eternally returning patterns of time - or to put it another
way: growth, destruction, and rebirth as the ourorobos consumes and
produces itself by turns. The ancients saw this pattern reflected in
the ebb and flow of the Nile river, which brought life and abundance in
its appearance, death and famine in its absence. The serpent was the
guardian of those mysteries, concealed in the kiste
or wicker basket along with the phallic liknon and
presented at the height of the mysteries to the devotees. It was
handled and “passed through the bosom” to enfuse
the initiate with its transformative and life-giving powers, and to
convey its closely-guarded wisdom.
When
the temples and schools of Alexandria were closed, a light vanished
from the world. The light of the Pharos. The light of the radiant Solar
Disc. The light of learning which keeps the darkness of ignorance at
bay. Now that light is reemerging into the world, kindled by each of us
who hold the ancient gods dear to our hearts and seek the undying
wisdom of antiquity, given form and expression in a new era, a new
world. What once was, shall be again. Death shall give way to life.
Alexandria shall be reborn. Such is the meaning we find in our symbol; such is the purpose of the group Neos Alexandria. |