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By Michelle Snyder
Prehistoric survival required knowledge of approximate astronomy, largely based on knowledge of the location of north; at one time true north was not the North Star, but Cygnus, the swan constellation in the Milky Way. This constellation is at the root of many bird mythologies, carried through time with oral tradition, mythologies, and childrens stories like Mother Goose. The importance of this knowledge was preserved in symbol and in tradition feathered cloaks, bird goddesses, and fairies wings are a few symbolic remnants.
It is the location of the Northern Cross, Deneb is its brightest star. During the Paleolithic Era, 12,500 BC, mythologies and oral tradition began to symbolize the human condition. Stories about storks bringing babies, swans nurturing and comforting babies, and taking their young souls to heaven if they died, represented the importance of these animals in the life sustaining cycles of the time. These stories connected birds with true North Cygnus the Swan. Eider Ducks did comfort babies with warm down, and geese both comforted and protected young ones – with down feathers, and by eating dangerous snakes. By 9000 BC, during the Allerd, mother swans appear, anthropomorphic creatures created to symbolize the nurturing and protecting of little ones by nature and mothers. During the Boreal, 7000 BC, the mother-swans became human mothers with beautiful wings; these zoomorphic creatures became goddess-like in their cultural role. By 5000 BC, swan-mothers also comforted, protected, and escorted the souls of dead, brave young men to heaven.
By 450 AD, during the Hun wars (pledged destruction of all Romans/Germans from Iberia to the Urals, ending in Bohemia), these swan-ladies became Valkyries, beautiful war-like loyal women at the battlefield, fighting alongside the men, taking the souls of dead soldiers to heaven. Valkyries are associated with the bright rays of the sun – the Fire of the Valkyries; this ties them to the Sun-Child. Golden-haired women, with dazzling white arms and armor; they accompanied the brave fighters on the battlefield, riding swift horses or wolves during conflicts and wars. During more peaceful times, Valkyries became family-oriented beings who married, had babies, and nurtured the good.
These golden haired ladies of the battle became legendary warriors, with swords and spears, and could decide the course of a battle, escorting heroes to Valhalla over Bitfrost (the rainbow). The heroes received mead (ambrosia) and were dressed in shining robes which are associated with clouds. Over time Valkyries became the ones to decide who was slain. Nymphs from Wotans (Odins) palace, messengers of the gods, and war-leaders, these beautiful women incited heroes to battle by their love and bravery, guided the soldiers, and tended to the wounded and the souls of the dead. They became known as Odins Warriors of Asgard (now lake Azov, north of the Black Sea), and are often compared with the more recent Amazon women, although by reputation Valkyries were less cruel.
(During wars, women and girls were captured and taken to breeding facilities called bitch-barns. The males were either killed or castrated and enslaved; the young boys were sometimes sacrificed to Moloch. The captive women revolted, uniting together to form a militia of fighting women. They rescued those they could. Over time they gained the reputation of strength; rumored to be cruel to their enemies, they became a powerful matriarchal culture. The origin of the word lesbian is from Lesbos – their home).
During centuries when the Church was struggling to gain power and unite straggling, diverse religious beliefs, many symbols and mythologies of prior millennia were changed, eliminated, or adopted for Christian mythology. Harpies appear about 300 AD, a result of the hatred of Valkyries by the Christian culture and, along with Pandoras Box, they became purveyors of fear and evil. The beautiful brave Valkyries of the battlefield became the fearsome Harpies winged, evil monsters with the bodies of birds, the heads of women, sharp claws, and a foul smell, who tormented souls with spite. The name harpie means snatcher, and they supplied the Underworld with souls of those who died before their time. Harpies – storm goddesses – were robbers and spoilers raging over battlefields, carrying off weak and wounded, and stealing children. Originally imaged as beautiful, winged goddesses (Valkyries), they became monsters half-birds, half-females. Angels became, in Christian mythology, what the Valkyries were for the goddess cultures. Winged and now male, angels are messengers of the gods, protectors of the innocent, escorting the souls of the righteous to heaven. One scripture does mention females with wings: Then lifted I up mine eyes, and looked, and, behold, there came out two women, and the wind was in their wings; for they had wings like the wings of a stork: and they lifted up the ephah between the earth and the heaven. Zechariah 5:9. There is an interesting connection here between storks, women, wind, and Odins Valkyries. In some mythologies Valkyries maintain their ancient honor and duties.
About the Author: Michelle Snyder, MPhil, speaker, author, columnist, blogger. Her post-graduate degree at the University of Wales is in decoding ancient symbols, and believes they are the key to lost civilizations. She is co-owner of White Knight Studio with her husband Jay.
whiteknightstudio.com/
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