- Rainbows in mythology
The
rainbow , a natural phenomenon noted for its beauty and inexplicability, has been a favorite component ofmythology throughout history. The Norse saw it asBifrost ;Judeo-Christian traditions signs it as a covenant withGod not to destroy the world by means of floodwater. Finding a mythology that does not include the rainbow somewhere may be the true challenge. Whatever theculture or continent, our species' earliestrainbow is the rainbow of the imagination. Whether asbridge ,messenger , archer’s bow, or serpent, the rainbow has been pressed intosymbol ic service for millennia. The myriad rainbow bridges and myths built by the world’s peoples clearly tell us more about human hopes and fears than they do about nature’s rainbow.In
1866 ,Constantino Brumidi 's oil on canvasApotheosis ofGeorge Washington "America’s founding father wears a [calm] expression… as he is propelled heavenward on a rainbow... Surrounded by thirteen maidens, Washington serenely supervises an armed Lady Liberty beneath him as she tramples out the powers of kings and tyrants." The Victorians of Brumidi’s age were merely "inheritors of a long tradition of exploiting the rainbow’s powerful visual symbolism," perpetuated by thousands of years of human communication. Even before humans couldcommunicate enough to teach and learn - we have wanted to understand the world around us, and understand the meaning and origin of life. Unable to do this, cultures developed abelief system , ahistory of their existence to satisfy this innate need forknowledge . It may be no wonder, that the rainbow—bright, elusive, and heavenly—plays a magical, otherworldly part in mostancient and modern belief systems around the world. Again we see themyriad of human belief concerning the rainbow. The complex diversity of rainbow myth is far-reaching; its inherent similarities are also. Whether as a bridge to the heavens, a messenger to the gods, divine archer’s bow, or mystic intangible entity, the rainbow persists as a multifaceted lesson. Because while any particular idea (i.e. the rainbow) can be perceived in one way to one person – someone else can picture that idea in a very different way. And while we may not be able to fully explain the workings of the world or the purpose of life—we cannot avoid exposing our deepest hopes and fears in the search for truth."Throughout the inhabited world, in all times and under every circumstance, the myths of man have flourished; and they have been the living inspiration of whatever else may have appeared out of the activities of the human body and mind...Myth is the secret opening through which the inexhaustible energies of the cosmos pour into human cultural manifestation."
umerian mythology
Not all peoples have regarded the rainbow’s power as solely benevolent. A rather ambiguous perception of the rainbow strikes a vein in all world culture, through its entire storied past.
"
The Epic of Gilgamesh ", who was an ancientSumer ian king (ca.3000 BC ), is our first detailed written evidence of human civilization. In a Victorian translation of a Gilgamesh variant,Leonidas Le Cenci Hamilton 'sEpic of Ishtar and Izdubar ,King Izdubar sees "a mass of colors like the rainbow’s hues" that are "linked to divine sanction for war." Later in the epic, Izdubar sees the "glistening colors of the rainbow rise" in thefountain of life next to Elam’sTree of Immortality .The Sumerian farmer god
Ninurta defendsSumer with a bow and arrow, and wore a crown described as a rainbow.Norse mythology
The most celebrated rainbow bridge in
Western mythology isBifrost , which connects Earth withAsgard , home of the Norse gods. Bifrost can only be used by gods and those who are killed in battle. It is eventually shattered under the weight of war - theRagnarok (German Götterdammerung). 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 myth.Another theory, first coined by amateur etymologist Christopher Houmann, is that, in view of the common history of Indo-European peoples, the symbolic meaning of Asgård at the end of the rainbow might be connected to ancient knowledge of
chakras and their colors.Greek mythology
"In the Greek pantheon, the antiquity of Iris is as great as her importance is small." The daughter of first-generation gods
Electra andThaumas , Iris dresses in rainbow colors. As messenger of the gods, she flies on golden wings. Iris appears in nine of the twenty-four books of Homer'sThe Iliad , always speeding with the winds, delivering news.Consistent with the rest of Greek myth, Iris's swiftly delivered messages were rarely of peace or good fortune. One job of Iris was to fill a golden jug with holy water for
Zeus , who made misbehaving gods take a most binding oath on this holy water. Another duty of Iris was to sever cheese by cutting their holes out. However, like many Greek gods, Iris is continually being redefined. The rainbow eventually became solely a mode of transportation for Iris, who proves to be as elusive and unpredictable (yet unforgettable) as the rainbow itself.Australian aboriginal mythology
In Australian Aboriginal mythology, the rainbow snake is the Creator (
Kurreah ,Andrenjinyi ,Yingarna ,Ngalyod and others) in the Dreaming, which is the infinite period of time that "began with the world's creation and that has no end. People, animals, and Eternal Beings like the Rainbow Serpent are all part of the Dreaming, and everyday life is affected by the Dreaming's immortals," in almost every Australian Aborigine tribe. In these tribes, of which there are over 50, actual rainbows are gigantic, often malevolent, serpents who inhabit the sky or ground. This snake has different names in different tribes, and has both different and similar traits from tribe to tribe.The theme consistent with most Australian tribes is that the
Rainbow Serpent is the creator of the world and all beings. During thedry season , the Rainbow Serpent retreats to deep waterholes. Another common theme among all aboriginal tribes is that the Rainbow Serpent has no gender. And while the Rainbow Serpent can give fertility by creating rain, it can also let loose blindness and disease. "The Aboriginal Rainbow is humanity, because it causes the 'energy' and the 'breath' that gives people life."Ngalyod, first-born son of
Yingarna , who is the Rainbow Serpent creator of theKunwinjku in westernArnhem Land in Australia -- sucks up water during the dry season and spits it out as rain during the wet season. Like Iris, Ngalyod helps to ensure fertility with rains, but he can destroy as well as nurture. Yingarna, the creator of the Kunwinjku people, is "nominally female" andandrogynous like her son Ngalyod. She possesses cunningly ambivalent form; as she combines elements ofsnake ,fish ,crocodile ,catfish ,emu , andkangaroo . TheEstonia n Rainbow Serpent, like the Aborigines' Ngalyod, sucks up water and spits rain, and also has a confused identity – it possesses an ox's head on its serpent body.Jewish mythology
According to the Biblical account, after
Noah saved the animals from the Great Flood, a rainbow appeared. As the flood had killed all other living beings, the rainbow came to symbolize God's promise that he would never send another flood to destroy all of the earth and that never again would all living things be killed in the waters of a flood.Medieval versions of the story ofNoah's Ark merge the celestial and earthly bows, and further turn the rainbow around to its existing arch. The existing rainbow is a weapon God turned towards himself as a symbol of His token of his covenant with the Earth.Other mythologies
* The rainbow as the heavenly archer's bow also dominates ancient Hindu mythology.
Indra , the Hindu god of thunder and war, uses the rainbow to shoot arrows oflightning - killing theAsura Vrta , a primordial demon-serpent.
* The creation of theNavajo people involved "a pair of rainbows crossed likerafter s at thezenith of a proto-world so small that the 'heads and feet of the rainbows almost touched the men's heads'".
* In a Chinese folktale,Hsienpo andYingt’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.
* TheSumu ofHonduras andNicaragua "may simply 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.
* TheFang ofGabon (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." 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."
* ForKarens of Burma, the rainbow is considered as a painted and dangerous demon that eats children.
*Izanami andIzanagi , the male and female creators of the world in Japanese myth, "descended on the Floating Bridge of Heaven to create land from the ocean ofchaos ." In many texts this bridge is known as a rainbow.
* In ancestral times inJapan , rainbows were often viewed as omens of bad luck because they representedsnakes .
* A belief of southernGabon is that our human ancestors arrived here by descending on the rainbow.
*Shaman s among Siberia'sBuryats speak of ascending to the sky-spirit world by way of the rainbow.
* In mythology of ancientSlavs , 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 godPerun .
* InBulgaria n legends, it is said that if you walk beneath a rainbow, you will change genders: if a man, you'll begin to think like a woman, and if a woman, you'll begin to think like a man. While most people in the capital don't believe in the superstition, some of them tease each other and joke around. They might also say "The sun is shining, the rain is falling, a bear is getting married"(roughly translated-in the original verse, the last part rhymes).See also
*
Mythology
*Rainbow References
*Chapter 1, "The Rainbow Bridge: Rainbows in Art, Myth, and Science", Raymond L. Lee and Alistair B. Fraser, Penn State Press, 2001.
External links
* [http://www.rainbowlight.net/myth.htm RainbowLight.net]
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