PART 1 – Ch.VI.2

(The white Monastery with nine altars)

 

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VI.2. The Romanian legend about the divine origin of the White Monastery.

 

 

The Sun, the god of light, riding, emerges from the Gate of Day, and with his right hand stretched upfront,

 urges the solar horses to cross the universe.

Metope from the temple of Athena, from new Ilion. (After Duruy, Hist. d. Grecs, I. 27)

According to Ovid (Metam. II. 153), the names of the four horses were Pyroeis, Eous, Aethon and Phlegon,

and according to Isidori (Orig. lib. XVIII.36), they represented the four seasons.

 

A significant body of archaic Romanian legends exists about the foundation of the White Monastery. According to the contents of these legends, the miraculous White Monastery from the island of the Black Sea, had not been built by human hand. It had a divine origin, it was made by the Holy Sun. The legend says that the Powerful Sun, wanting to get married, “scoured the sky and the earth”, wandered on 9 horses, for 9 years “through the world and among the stars”, (or for 18 years on 18 horses – Alexici, Texts, I.p.51), but could not find any goddess fit for him, to be his “white” bride, except for his sister Iana Sandiana, or Ilena Cosindiana. (Hesiodus also presents the Moon – Selene, as the Sun’s – Helios sister / Theog. V.371). At the conclusion of this 9 years long journey, the Sun returns to Iana Sandiana, the “Lady of the flowers”, who dwelt on the shores of the Black Sea – in the island of the sea – in a green little glade, where there were 9 “argele”. In one of these, which was made of marble, covered with brass (Petrari village, Dambovita district) and paved on the floor, Iana, the Sun’s sister sat and wove. Her loom was of gilt silver and her shuttle was of gold (Parachioi village, Constanta district) [1].

 

[1. “Argea” means in Romanian language a rectangular room, half dug in the earth, in which the peasant women weave linen. The word is archaic. Ephor tells us that the Cimmerians (from the Tauric peninsula), had a sort of underground dwellings which they called argilla, which communicated to each other through a sort of low doors (Strabo, V.4.5). This same meaning, of semi-subterranean rooms with low doors, has the word “argea” in folk Romanian texts.

 

                        At the island of the seas,                     There’s a little “argeluta

                  At the mouths of the “argele”                   In which Iana weaves…

                  In that green little glade,                                 

                                                                  (Glambocata village, Dambovita district)

 

This “green little glade” corresponds to the Danube Delta. Valerius Flaccus says in Argonauticon, lib. VIII. 292: viridemque vident ante ostia Peucen.

 

                  Green little island in the sea,                But his sister, what was she saying?

                  Island of his Highness,                         Alas! Mighty Sun,

                  There are nine “argele”,                           Body without sins,

                  In the middle of them                              You, great one, do make me,

                  There’s a big marble “argea”,              Over the sea do make me,

                  In it who is weaving?                               Bridge do make me over the sea,

                  - Iana Ghiuzulena,                               At the end of the bridge

                  The Sun’s little sister                        White monastery

                 

(Coltea village, Braila district)

 

 

 

                  On that island of the sea                      With windows of glass,

                  The Sun rises,                                       With doors of wood,

                  Here in among the wattles                      Paved on the floor,

                  There are nine “argele”                            Weaves Iana in it,

                  There’s a small one,                             Sister of the Sun

                  Small and tiny one,                   

                                                                  (Tataresci village, Teleorman district)]

 

 

The Sun addresses his sister and tells her to finish her weaving and prepare for wedding, to be his bride. But Iana, bashful and pious, answers him who had ever seen and where had ever happened, sister to marry brother and brother to marry sister? Finally, seeing that she can’t evade his demands, she accepts with the condition that firstly he should make for her a metal bridge, or a wax bridge over the sea, or from the shore of the sea to the Island from where the sun emerges; and at the head of the bridge to make her a “white monastery”, with a wax priest, or a “wax church, with a priest, and everything else, of wax, and there to wed (Socet village, Teleorman district); or to make her two monasteries, at both heads of the bridge [2].

 

[2.              Go, go and make me,                             Proud bridge over the sea,

                        To stroll on it, when I please,                   Like nobody else has…

 

                                                            (Burada, Calatorie in Dobrogea, p.171)

 

 

 

                        Make me a wax bridge,                        But at the head of the bridge,

                        With the pillars of wax,                          Your Lordship do make me,

                        With the doors of wax,                           Two white monasteries

                        With the rafters of wax,

                                                           

(Tataresci village, Teleorman district)

 

 

 

                        Leaf of chicory,                                      The powerful Sun,

                        In the island of the sea                         But he does not rise,

                        Fast rises he,                                        But he goes to wed …

                       

                                                            (Teodorescu, Folk poems, p.410)

           

 

If you will make,                                     And a priest of wax,

Bridge over the seas,                              Churches of wax

 

                                    (Alexici, Texte, I. p.52)

 

 

 

The sun went away                                Then he returned,

Thinking and thinking                              To wed …

And made straight away                         At the white Monastery

What the moon wished for;                     With priest of wax ….

 

                                    (Communicated by S. Liuba, Maidan, Banat)

 

 

 

I would take you, as you say,                  A monastery,

If you were brave,                                   Place for remembrance,

And you managed, to complete,              Place for wedding,

Bridge on the black sea.                      And to please me also.

Of iron, of steel;                                     With iron stair,

At the head of the bridge                         High to the sky ….

 

                                    (Teodorescu, Poezii populare,, p.411)

                       

 

                       

 

Iana or Luna (TN – the Moon), one of the three

faces of Hecate, from Bruckenthal Museum of

Sibiu (Transilvania).

(From  Archaeol. – Epigr. Mitth. V.pl.1).

 

Hecate, as lunar divinity, represented in her triple form Diana, Luna and Proserpina (Festus, p.170).The type of Iana or Luna, which we reproduce here, forms the principal figure of triple faced Hecate, one of the most original statues discovered at Apulum, or at Salinae, in Transilvania.

 

Here Iana, or Luna, has a calm “soothingface and “tresses” fall on her shoulders, as she is also portrayed in our folk songs. Her costume appears as a remarkable woven or sewn work. From the waist up, the vestment shows the Sun’s bust between her breasts, and two other figures, each of which holds out a torch towards the Sun’s rays (Phosphorus and Hesperus). The upper part of her costume seems to be adorned with a necklace of coins, or with four rows of embroidered flowers, which symbolise the sky with the stars, or the glade with the flowers. From the waist down, her costume presents in four different sections, different scenes from the Moon’s mysteries and a “hora” (TN – dance in a circle) of goddesses. The crescent moon, as symbol of the divinity, is shown also on the back of the original statue, on the nape of the main figure (Arch. – Epigr. Mitth. V. 68).

Iana’s costume is described in the same way in one of our folk songs. She asks the Sun to make her bridal vestments before the wedding, and the costume to depict:

                       

The field with the flowers,                   The evening and morning stars.

                        The sky with the stars;                         The sun did not wait,

                        On the chest put me the sun                  The vestment he made  

                        On the back put me the moon,              As she wanted it …

                        And on the shoulders,                          

                                                                        (Coltea village, Braila district)

 

Iana’s figure, as represented by the triple statue of Hecate from Sibiu, has an original character. Everything shows us that the sculptor had tried to represent the image of the divinity venerated in Dacia, not according to the exotic models, but to the indigenous costume and traditions].

 

The “powerful and shining Sun” fulfils everything Iana asks for. The wax bridge and the White Monastery are built, and the wax priest too. He and his bride start crossing the wax bridge towards the white monastery from the island, in order to get married. But, while they pass, the wax bridge melts from the heat of the Sun’s rays (the villages Dracsanei and Tataresci, Teleorman district), and both fall and drown into the sea. But God pulled them out of the water, and put them on the sky, one in the east, the other in the west; to see one another, but to be for ever separated, to run for ever after each other, but never to meet [3].

 

[3. Some Romanian legends tell us that the Sun and the Moon might have drowned in the Danube / Dunare (Petrari village Dambovita district). We find remains of this folk tradition even in the ancient literature. According to Diodorus Siculus (III.57), the Sun, ‘Helios, was drowned by his brothers in the river called Eridan, and Luna, Selene, who had a special love for her brother, threw herself from the roof of the house, when hearing about his misfortune. Also at the mouths of the river called Eridan, fell and drowned Phaeton, the son of the Sun (Ibid. V. 23). According to Apollodorus (I. 9. 24.4), the Argonauts return from the Black Sea, to the Tyrrhenian Sea, on the river called Eridan. Geographically and etymologically, the river Eri-dan is one and the same with Dun-are; the two parts of the word being simply reversed.

 

In prehistoric geography the word ari has the meaning of river (TN – riu). So, we find Aris, river in Mesenia (Pausanias, IV. 31.2); Arar or Araris, tributary of Rhodan (Ammian, XV.11); Ararus, tributary of the Danube (Herodotus, IV.48); Arauris, river of Galia Narbonense (Mela, II. 5)].

 

The Romanian legend attributes therefore a divine origin to the White Monastery.

It was built by the sun god himself (or Apollo), as a memento, or monument, of his wedding with his sister Iana.

This precious prehistoric legend about the foundation of the Apollinic temple of the Hyperboreans by the god of the Sun himself, or Apollo, was known and renowned in the Greek lands until late, in Roman times.

The inhabitants of Delphi, according to Pausanias (lib.X.5.9), told that Apollo had sent to the Hyperboreans a church, which had been made by bees, from wax, and from the plant named poppy. (The bees were consecrated to Diana. The symbol of Diana of Ephesus was a bee (Pauly, Real-Encyclopadie, p.994). In an inscription found at Apulum, Diana bears the epithet “mellifica” (C I.L.III.No.1002).

 

So, this temple of the Hyperboreans was so ancient, that its beginnings had become mythical even in Greek times, and its magnificence and holiness were legendary even with the inhabitants of Delphi. This Romanian legend establishes with full certainty that the renowned temple of Apollo, or the Sun, of the Hyperboreans, which had shined with such glory in the prehistoric world, had been situated in an island of the Black Sea, near the mouths of the Danube.

 

Iana Sandiana, as the Romanian legends tell us, had her abode in a green little glade, on the shore, or in the island of the sea, and here she had her beautiful marble “argea”, in which she wove and sewed [4].

 

[4. Iana, this archaic Danubian divinity, also appears in Romanian folk legends with the name Ilena (Ileana, Helena). There was also a tradition in the Graeco – Roman antiquity that Elena (of Troy) was later to be found in Leuce Island, married with the hero Achilles, who led there an eternal, semi-divine life (Pausanias, III.19.11). And according to other Greek legends, Achilles’ wife in Leuce Island was Iphigenia, or Diana Taurica (Boeckhius, Pindari Opera, Tomus II.2.p.385). These were simple confusions with the very ancient legend, from the lower Danube, about the wedding of Iana or Ilena Cosindiana with the Sun and their common cult in the island from the mouths of the Danube].

 

Iana was considered as identical with Diana and Luna even during Roman antiquity.

Macrobius, one of the most distinguished researchers of the Latin archaic beliefs, tells us that Iana was one and the same with Diana (Saturn.I.c.9); and Varro adds that Iana, as a  divinity, represents Luna (R.R.I.c.37) [5].

 

[5. In some Romanian folk songs, which refer to this cycle, Iana is also called Ana and Dana. Ovid (Fast. III.v.657) mentions Ana, considered as divinity of the moon. And Dana appears in the following folk text:

                       

Down there and more down,                    He’s neither brother, nor cousin,

                        Sits Dana, white girl,                            But my young groom,

                        With the youth near her,                         God had sent him to me,

                        Down to the sea she looked ….               To make a monastery

                        Dana, Dana, white girl                          To call it divinity …

                        What is this youth to you ….

                                   

(Communicated by Gr. Craciunas, Ciubanca village in Transilvania)]

 

The Danube Delta, as a land in close vicinity with Leuce Island, had in prehistoric times, and even until Alexander the Great’s epoch, the character of a sacred land.

And here was the residence of Diana also, even according to the old Greek legends.

The erudite poet Pindar tells us in one of his beautiful odes, that Hercules, being sent by king Eurystheus to catch and bring him the deer with golden horns, which the nymph Taygeta had dedicated to Diana, had chased this fast animal from Arcadia, up to the Hyperboreans’ lands, in the country called Istria. Here he had arrived to the residence of Diana, Latona’s daughter, who had received him kindly (Olymp. III. 26-28).

This passage from Pindar’s work is of a particular importance to us, as he says, based on old religious traditions of antiquity, that Diana’s residence was in the Hyperborean country, in the land called Istria. This Istria must be understood especially as the region from the mouths of the Danube, which was known more to the Greek merchants, and where we later find an important city named Istria and Istros (Herodotus, II.33; Arrianus, 35).

 

And even in Roman times, Latona’s daughter was still revered in the Danube Delta, under the name of Diana regina (an inscription from 223ad found in the ruins of the Roman castle from Taita monastery, between Isaccea and Tulcea – C.I.L.III.No.7497). Finally, here too we have the island called Letea, from the name of Latona (Leto), and the port town called Selina (or Luna), which Hecateus also mentions.

The cult and severe religion of Diana or Luna, a pious and unmarried virgin, had its origin, as Herodotus himself acknowledges, with the Hyperborean people, near the Black Sea.

In every place where Apollo was venerated, Diana also, as a divinity of the Moon, had her temples and sacrifices, and Latona too [6].

 

[6. The origin of the name Pontos for the Black Sea.

 

The tradition about the Sun’s bridge on the Black Sea, or on the Danube (according to other Romanian legends), hides incontestably some important historical elements.

The ancient Greek legends also mentioned that the Sun had a golden boat (Pherecydis, Fragm.33; Apollodorus, lib.I.5.10.5), in which he returned at night on the Ocean (Danube and the Black Sea) to his residence in the island.

The Egyptians had the same tradition. According to their beliefs, the Sun’s barque was on the divine river Nun, Dunare, as we shall see in the chapter about the primitive divinities of the Egyptians.

The highest minister of the religious cult of the Romans was called pontifex, namely, bridge maker, and according to Varro (L.L.V.83) and Plutarch (Numa, c.9), the building and restoration of bridges were also included in the duties of the old Roman pontiffs. Therefore the name of pontifex was based on some antique traditions and uses of the Latin priesthood. In fact, the old religion of the Latins was Apollinic. Ianus as a divinity, represented the cult of the Sun. Similarly, the feasts called Latinae feriae, celebrated every year at Alba Longa, present in everything the same character of the Apollinic ritual and institutions, as do the haecatombs or feasts of the Hyperboreans (Pelasgians) from the Istru, and the great festivities of Delos, common to all the insular Pelasgians.

 

The Romanian tradition about the pod (TN – bridge) built by the Sun on the Black Sea (or on the Danube), throws an unexpected light on the origin of the name Pontos, given to the Black Sea in ante-Hellenistic times. The Black Sea was called Pontos especially by the Greeks, but why, and which was the fundamental meaning of this word, no author could tell.

But this name, Pontos, given to the Black Sea, had in fact become ancient even in the times of Homer and Hesiodus.

In the modern historical literature, some writers have expressed the opinion, that the name Pontos probably derives from the archaic name pons (punte or pod / TN - bridge), which might have existed in prehistoric times at the straits between Asia Minor and Europe. But from a historical point of view, the origin of this archaic name is not pons, but ponto(onis). In the ancient language of the populations of Pelasgian origin, which were spread from the Black Sea to the Atlantic Ocean, the word ponto still had during the Roman epoch the meaning of boat (TN – barca), or floating bridge on a river (Cesar, B. civ. III. 29: pontones, quod est genus navium; Apulejus: et si vado non poterunt, pontonibus transibunt; Papinianus: flumen, in quo pontonibus trajiciatur. In Greek: pontogefira, bridge of boats. Cf. Diefenbach, Origines, p.402).

The Sun’s bridge on the Black Sea or on the Danube, mentioned by the Romanian legends, which appears in Greek traditions as a boat on the Ocean from the north of Thrace, and in Egyptian legends as a barque on the river Nun, was therefore called ponto even during the first period of Pelasgian domination at the Danube and the Black Sea. In that remote prehistoric epoch, the communication on the Black Sea and the Lower Istru appears as a particular privilege of the temple of Apollo the Hyperborean, from the island near the mouths of the Danube. According to the Greek legends, Hercules, wanting to come to the Hyperboreans from the south-western lands of Asia Minor, had crossed the sea in the Sun’s boat (Apollodorus, Lib.II. 5.11.11).

The lower part of the Danube (or of Eri-dan), near the delta, had the geographical name Pad-os (Diodorus, lib.V.23.3), meaning Pod (TN – bridge) even during the Roman epoch. And Iornandes, who was probably born in Lower Moesia, tells us that Thamiris, the queen of the Getae, after a battle she had with king Cyr, crossed to Scythia Minor, and there, at the place called podul Moesiei (pons Moesiae), she founded the town called Thamiris, where she was afterwards venerated (De reb. Get. C. 10. Ed. Didot p.431).

 The fact that the name Pontos was given not only to the Black Sea, but also to a part of the north-eastern shores of Asia Minor (Pontus region), where took place the communication across the sea, between Scythia and the higher regions of the Euphrates, fully confirms that the origin of this geographical term of Pontos can be traced back to the name given in prehistoric antiquity to the stations where people embarked on the boats called ponto (Rom. pod)].

 

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