PART
2 – Ch.XIV.9
(KION OURANOU. The Sky Column on
in
the country of the Hyperboreans)
XIV.
9. The Sky Column from the Carpathians on the funerary monuments of Carthage.
The ancient
inhabitants of
The city of
The ancient name of
the citadel was Byrsa, and more
correctly Byrsan [1].
[1. This name appears as Byrsan,
in the accusative, with Strabo (lib.
XVII. 3. 14), and in the analogous form of Byrsam
with Virgil (Aen.
Even beginning with the times of
Eschyl, the ancients tried to reproduce in their writings the personal and
geographical names of the Barbarians, so that they would correspond to the
original form on one hand and to the grammatical laws of the language in which
they wrote on the other].
This name belongs
to the Pelasgian idiom from the lower Istru.
Barsa or Birsa
is the name of a significant river in the history of the Romanian people. It
springs in the mountains near Bucegi,
crosses a large part of the expansive plain of Brasov, which takes after this
river the name of tera Barsei (TN –
country of Barsa), and the inhabitants of this region are called Barsani.
Even the name of
Three village on
the
None of these
localities is situated near any navigable river, so we have no reason to
suppose that they could have once been commercial colonies founded by the
Carthagenese.
The numerous
population of
The sky column as
symbol of the future life is represented also on the funerary monuments of
One of these old
monuments is a funerary stela discovered in the ruins of the city destroyed by the
Romans. On its upper part is shown a column in the shape of a stunted pyramid.
(Other similar stelae can be seen at Perrot
et Chipiez, Phenicie-Chypre, p.458, 460). In the middle is figured
Prometheus holding at his chest the clay figure of the man created by him; and
on both sides of the column are represented the rising sun and the setting sun,
in the Pelasgian style from the Carpathians (Hampel, A bronzkor emlekei Magyarhonban, I, 1886, p. LXXIV,
LXXXVIII).
This religious
symbol of

Funerary stela from
Carthage,
showing on the upper part the Sky Column
in the shape of a stunted pyramid.
(From Perrot et Chipiez, Histoire de l’art,
Tome III. p. 53)
This stunted pyramid
presents in its forms a very characteristic similarity with the shape of the
principal column from the Carpathians and also with the emblem of
Another funerary
stela from

Funerary stela from
(From Perrot et Chipiez, Histoire de l’art,
Tome III. p. 79)
We see here an
ancient religious symbol and not a human shape rudimentary sculpted.
It is the shape of
a Pelasgian column, of a stunted pyramid on which the sky is supported,
symbolized by a horizontal line with bent ends, exactly as shown on the
funerary monuments of
[2. See also the sun boat figured in the Egyptian
paintings and drawings at Maspero, Egypte
et Chaldee, p. 161. 196. 197. 139, and the boat of the moon at p. 93. Similar
versions of this symbol of the sky are represented on the rocks from
Iasili-Kaia/Cappadocia and on the monument from Eflatunbunar/ Lycaonia, see Perrot et Chipiez, Hist. de l’art,T.IV.
639, 645, 731).
We find the globe as symbol of the universe also on the funerary columns of
Varro wrote
(Pliny, lib. XXXVI. 19. 7) that on
the Mausoleum of Porsenna, near the
town Clusium, were set five pyramids, four at the corners and one at the
middle, each having on top a globe of copper. The Sky Column, as we have seen,
was represented also on the Etruscan tombs from Axia, which indicates that
these tribes had dwelt in the region of the Carpathians near the lower
The principle of
immortality dominated the religion of the Hyperboreans from Istru, the religion
of the Pelasgians from Greece, Egypt, Etruria, Sicily, Carthage and we can say
of the Pelasgian tribes of Asia Minor as well [3].
[3. The ancient Carthagenese venerated Saturn,
as Diodorus Siculus tells us (IV.
66. 5; XIV. 77. 5), and sacrificed after the Greek rite, meaning of the Pelasgians from the eastern parts of
The Sky Column in the shape of a slightly conical pillar, with a
quasi-Doric capital, supported by a lion on both sides, is also figured on a
rock tomb in the prehistoric necropolis of Ayazinn in ancient Phrygia (Perrot et Chipiez, Histoire de l’art, Tome V. p.111)].
The divine region, where the souls of the deceased
migrated, in order to purify and renew themselves, was the mysterious region of
the Hyperboreans from the Carpathians, and the symbol of immortality of all the
Pelasgians was the one and the same column of the sky from near the Istru, from
the heights which in Roman theology had the name of Cardines mundi.
Two grand columns
mark the origins of the Romanian people. One is the Sky Column from the SE arch
or the Carpathians and the other is the Column from the forum of Trajan.
Out of these two
famous monuments of antiquity, the most glorious is without doubt the column
which dominates even today the Carpathians, majestic symbol of the national and
religious unity of all the Pelasgians.