Showing posts with label dog mythology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dog mythology. Show all posts

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Interpretations of the Dog Husband Theme

The dog husband theme has been interpreted in different ways by researchers. I am referring here to the specific theme as mentioned in the last blog post rather than the more general motif of dog-men alone. The most common explanations for the dog husband theme are the following:


* The dog husband represents questions about the paternity of children -- a Freudian-like analysis.

* The dog husband represents a totemic male lineage, or the emblem of a particular ancestor, group, family, community, etc.

* The dog husband represents "the Other," in the sense of foreigners.

* The marriage of the dog husband to a chief's daughter, princess or goddess represents the division of classes or castes. Examples include the division of their progeny into two equal or unequal parts, each becoming associated with opposite poles in the social hierarchy. Often resorted to in Marxist interpretations of history and myth.

* The dog husband represents the existence of cannibalistic practices.

* Bestiality is represented.

* Dog and Woman represent the opposition of Earth and Heaven or vice a versa (or similar dual concepts).

* The close early relationship of humans and dogs is represented. Dogs are the only domesticated animal found in all human populations preceding the modern era.


My own interpretation is that the dog husband myth originally does represent the totemic ancestor of a chiefly/royal lineage that merged with the priestly function.

The dog was probably taken as the animal double of the founder of the lineage and then viewed as a totemic ancestor by his descendants. The original chiefly/royal status was conveyed to the dog husband through the woman ancestress who was a type of heiress princess and who was related by blood in some way to the dog-husband. The dog-man may represent a type of royal ritual priest associated with forests, and the two functions of ruler and priest are combined in the union.

Through the process of diffusion, the association of the dog with royalty combined with ideas of sacred regicide passed into the civilization of ancient China and India and even well beyond.

In China, for example, I have mentioned that Fu Hsi's name contains elements of the dog-man motif. Fu Hsi and Nu Gua have a son who is often described as a formless lump or dumpling resembling in many aspects the primordial dog-shaped Huntun/Hundun. According to Girardot, this child is in at least one version named "Huntun." Fu Hsi is known as the first legendary king, and Huntun is called the "Emperor of the Center."

Shang-Ti, the deity to whom the Shang, Qin and Han dynasties traced their houses was apparently a dog-shaped god of rice. The lei ritual of the Qin and Han dynasties involved offerings of dog flesh and rice in an apparent simulation of the division of Huntun into parts in order to create the world.

In the story of the marriage of the dog-man Panhu to the daughter of the Chinese emperor we probably see a mutation of the heiress princess motif.

In modern age India, royal dynasties are closely associate with Bhairava, a god that either appears with a dog vehicle (vahana) or as partly or completely in canine form himself. There are many indications that this dog connection has much more ancient roots.

In the Rajasuya tale of Sunahsepa in India, 50 sons of Visvamitra become dog-cooking forest tribes. The other 50 are priests with an original kingly lineage as Visvamitra is a king of the noble Kshatriya caste who becomes a brahmin priest. This is similar to Southeast Asian themes in which the primordial gourd or lump associated with the first couple, is divided into two equal or unequal parts, sometimes also split into two parts of 50 each, with the two groups corresponding to opposite sides of the social ladder.

Visvamitra adopts Sunahsepa as his eldest son -- the latter a brahmin who for a while acts as a royal sacrifice substitute and whose name means "dog's penis" or "dog's tail."

According to the Mahabharta, the World King (Cakravartin) Yudhishtira refuses to enter heaven without his pet dog upon which the dog reveals that it is really the god Dharma. Some traditions make this Dharma out to be the same god that is described as the father of Yudhishtira. Other versions identify the deity as Yama, the first king and model of kingship in Indian lore, who like Yudhishtira was also called Dharmaraja. Either way, the dog as Dharma here is very significant.

In the Asvamedha royal ritual, a black four-eyed dog is sacrificed at the start of the ceremony underneath the sacrificial horse. This is likely an allusion to Yama Dharmaraja's black four-eyed dog named Syama.

Yama and Bhairava are closely associated in Tantric theology and its quite possible that Bhairava originates from some conflation of the gods Siva/Rudra, Yama and the divine dog Syama (Rudra is also associated with dogs).

Opposition of the dog and woman's children by caste/class and kingly/priestly function is mythologized into the opposition of Earth and Sky. That's not so unusual in my scheme of thinking as I have suggested before that the Nusantao trading clans divided into two camps associated with the double mountain motif. In some variations of the dog husband theme, this duality is expressed in the sense that all male children of the union were dogs like the father and all female children women like the mother.

I don't see that the dog as "other" is central to the dog husband theme. David G. White and others have suggested that numerous peoples who hold this myth actually internalized views that civilized outsiders had of themselves as dogs. This seems unlikely for a number of reasons. First of all the geographical distribution of this theme rules out the possibility. Next, various streams of evidence suggest the diffusion of this theme predates the scenarios usually offered for this explanation.

Also, it seems unlikely that so many people would take a derogatory view of themselves from outsiders and adopt such views in their own origin stories. A more common reaction, of which there are many historical examples, would be to strongly reject the association, or at most to adopt it in the same way, i.e., to also negatively view foreigners as dogs. Furthermore, there are many examples of totem practices associated with these beliefs such as taboos on dog-eating or, on the other hand, ritual dog sacrifice and ritual consumption, that indicate a totem origin.

While some cultures have viewed outsiders as dogs or other animals/creatures, I would say it is much more frequent that both insiders and outsiders are viewed as animal types. Certainly this is the case in totemistic cultures. The fact that the vast majority of known cases where outsiders viewed certain peoples as dog-men actually coincided with the belief of those peoples in their own dog origin, suggests the latter were the original source.

Regards,
Paul Kekai Manansala
Sacramento

Related links


Dog as deity, ancestor and royal animal
Article: Dog reverence in Southeast Asia and Pacific
Deluge, Gourd, Dog Husband
Rajasuya , Sunahsepa and the Royal Dog
Single origin for domesticated dog in Southeast Asia and South China


References

Girardot, Norman. Myth and meaning in early Taoism, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1983.

Hopkins, Edward Washburn . "The Dog in the Rig-Veda," The American Journal of Philology, Vol. 15, No. 2 (1894), pp. 154-163

White, David Gordon. Myths of the Dog-Man, University of Chicago Press, 1991.

Monday, September 24, 2007

Deluge, Gourd, Dog Husband

Around the Circumpacific region, we find a set of motifs, or a theme, that includes the Great Flood, a gourd-like boat that saves the primeval couple, the Dog Husband motif and the idea of the dog or the child of the union of dog and woman giving rise to different tribes, peoples, geographic features, natural phenomenon and the like.

I've created a chart listing many of these occurrences. The list is not meant to be comprehensive as I regularly encounter mythical themes hidden in some lost study buried in the available literature.

Some of the motifs occur much more frequently minus the dog theme, but I only include those with canine connections as they correspond to the direction of this blog. For example, the gourd boat and gourd birth motifs are found many more times throughout this region particularly in Southeast Asia without the dog motif.

Also, we do not find the dog motif linked as such with the theme listed below in the regions of the Far Pacific. There are examples in Papua New Guinea and among the Maori of New Zealand and also in the islands of the Bering Sea.

There are dog-man examples from Hawai`i where we find Kuilioloa, Kaupe and Poki. At least one example has Kuilioloa saving a woman and her children from a flood, but he does not marry the woman. I have not been able to find examples where Kuilioloa, Kaupe and Poki are said to have descendants although Poki is sometimes linked with the legendary chief Boki. In the Pomotu Islands of Eastern Polynesia, there is a myth of the first race of people having been turned into dogs. The dog husband motif is missing to my knowledge, but maybe it can be inferred.

My view is that all this indicates the dog husband motif was added on to a preexisting flood myth. Although I think this happened before the expansion into the Far Pacific the motif never penetrated into the Pacific voyage cultures as it did further West. At some point though it did venture northward along Nusantao trade routes and spread even into Far North cultures. In the Americas, the theme is concentrated along the Pacific Coast particularly in Alaska, the Aleutian Islands and the Pacific Northwest. However, it is found elsewhere especially among the Chippewa and related peoples and the Plains Indians.

The relationship of these Circumpacific myths to the widespread dog-man beliefs of Central Asia is unclear. However it does seem like the Circumpacific themes are related and result from a regional diffusion of which other evidence also exists. The complimentary evidence suggests the spread of this myth could have taken place starting in the Neolithic.


Key to Motifs

A -- Dog or Dog-Man Husband
B -- Dog and Woman as survivors of Deluge
C -- Dog and Woman survive deluge in gourd, bamboo, mortar, drum, hollow tree, etc.
D -- Woman who marries Dog is goddess, princess, chief's daughter
E -- Brother and Sister who survive flood (usually in gourd, bamboo, etc.) give birth to dog
F -- Primeval couple give birth to gourd, shapeless lump or dog-shaped lump
G -- Gourd, lump, dog, etc. becomes people, geographical locations, clans, etc. usually after being divided.
I -- Dog husband/child/messenger brings agriculture, rice after/during flood
J -- Dog husband/child/messenger brings fire after/during flood
K -- Dog and Woman as ancestors
L -- Weredog families, Weredog ancestor

List of Motifs by Location and Ethnic Group
Group Motifs
Sedang, Gie, Trieng, Kayong
(Mon-Khmer speakers, Laos)
A, B, K
(14 variants, Dang N. V.)
Mien (Yao)
(Hmong-Mien speakers, scattered through Southeast Asia)
A, B, D, F, G, I, K(43 variants, Dang N. V.)

Lump of flesh becomes Mien and other peoples

Mon-Khmer in southern Laos
A, B, K(30 variants, Dang N. V.)
Lolo
(Tibeto-Burmese speakers in Yunnan and Burma)
A, B, I, K
Cor, Hre
(Mon-Khmer groups in Vietnam)
A, B, K(5 variants, Dang N. V.)
Moro, Bukidnon
(Malayo-Polynesian speakers in southern Philippines)
A, B, C, D, K
Woman and dog survive flood in bamboo and become ancestors of Moros.
Igorot, Tinguian
(Malayo-Polynesian speakers in northern Philippines)
I, J
Sorsogon in Bikol region of northern Philippines G, K
Humanity originates from dog's tail.
Maori
(Malayo-Polynesian speakers in New Zealand)
A, D, K
Maui changes his brother-in-law, Owa, into a dog. Owa's wife Hina, in despair, jumps in the sea and floats around for many months before saved by her brothers. This may be an allusion to the deluge. Owa and Hina have a son, a dog named Pero who becomes the tutelary deity of dogs. Many Maori considered themselves descendants of Owa and Hina. Multiple variants of this story.
New Guinea A, J, KDog also said to discover fresh and/or sea water. Dog rescues people from flood. Many variants.
Dusun, Murut, Kadazan, Dayak
(Malayo-Polynesian speakers in northern Borneo and Sabah)
A, B, C, D, E, G, I, J, KMany variants among Dusun and Kadazan. Among Rungus, myth of dog bringing rice plants on tail during deluge with similar beliefs among Meo of Vietnam and in Chinese literature. Rituals involving removal of dog's tail found in Borneo, also "tail-less dog" motif is common in Bornean tattoo.
Nias, Aceh in Sumatra
(Malayo-Polynesian speakers)
A, B, D, KThe dog in this case is usually a red dog something also found not only in Java and Lombok but also in Siberia, Central Asia and even the Americas.
Taruko
(Formosan speakers in Taiwan)
A, D, K
Bisayan, Kapampangan, Tagalog and other lowlanders in Philippines (Malayo-Polynesian speakers) G, L
Belief in weredog families, lineages or whole communites, or of descent from the same is widespread with many variants among lowland Filipinos.
Java, Lombok
(Malayo-Polynesian speakers)
A, B, D, K
Many variants of the red dog theme can be found in the region both in folklore and traditional written literature.
Ainu in Japan A, B, D, K
Goddess comes on boat from sea to Ainu homeland, possibly allusion to flood. She is saved by a dog who leads her to freshwater and brings her food. She marries the dog and the children are ancestors of the Ainu.
Ancient China A, B, D, E, F, G, H, I, K
Most myths are attributed to southern region both within China i.e. the Man peoples, and those beyond China, i.e. Fusang or Dog Fief Country. The brother and sister, Fu Hsi and Nu Gua give birth to formless lump after the flood, at least in one instance called "Hundun" the name of the dog-shaped deity in other versions who is divided to make the world. The name of the dog ancestor Panhu contains the word for "gourd."
Eskimo, Koriak, Nivki, Chuckhi in Siberia A, G, K
Besisi, Jakun, Semang of Malaysia A(?), B(?), C(?), K(?)
The Jakun call the hole in the bamboo from which their ancestors arose the "Dog Hole in the Ancestral Bamboo." This may be related to a Semang word that means "dog bamboo." The Besisi believe their divine ancestor fell out of Heaven along with his dog.
Alaska and Aleutian Islands A, B(?), C(?), D, G(?), K
Flood may be alluded to when woman is thrown into sea by her father for marrying a dog. In some versions, the woman saves her children by sending them away in two boats. It is the woman's body i.e. her fingers that become whales, seals and whalebones when hacked by her father.
North and South America A, B, D, G, K
In some versions like that of the Huichol, a dog-woman survives the flood. Among the Aztecs, the dog deity Xolotl takes the bones of humans after the Great Flood to create a new man and woman to repopulate the Earth. In the Dogrib Indian version, the dog-man and woman give birth to bear pups. The skins of these children become Indian tribes. Among the Tlingit, Haida and Nootka the children of the dog and woman union become phenomenon like thunder and earthquakes.


Regards,
Paul Kekai Manansala
Sacramento

Related links


Dog as deity, ancestor and royal animal
Article: Dog reverence in Southeast Asia and Pacific
Interpretations of the Dog Husband Theme
Rajasuya , Sunahsepa and the Royal Dog
Single origin for domesticated dog in Southeast Asia and South China



References

Dang, N. V. "The Flood Myth and the Origin of Ethnic Groups in Southeast Asia," The Journal of American Folklore, Vol. 106, No. 421. (Summer, 1993), pp. 304-337.

Ho, Ting-jui. A Comparative Study of Myths and Legends of Formosan Aborigines, Orient Cultural Service, 1971.
Leach, Maria. God had a Dog: Folklore of the Dog, Rutgers University Press, 1961.

McHugh, Susan. Dog, Reaktion Books, 2004.

Realubit, Maria Lilia F. Bikols of the Philippines, A.M.S. Press, 1983.

Rutter, Owen. The Pagans of North Borneo,
Hutchinson & Co., Ltd, 1929.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Rajasuya , Sunahsepa and the Royal Dog

The Rajasuya ceremony was a sacred consecration of the king in Vedic and Hindu India similar to the Aswamedha horse sacrifice in that the ruler sought through the ritual to become a universal monarch like the god Varuna.

Baptism with water and the drinking of Soma beverage and wine were features of the ceremony along with the recitation of the story of Sunahsepa.


According to the Aitareya Brahmana, a commentary on the Vedas from which we get the Sunahsepa tale, King Hariscanda has 100 wives but no sons and is told by priests to ask Varuna for a son with the promise that he will sacrifice the boy after birth.

After his first and only son Rohita is born, the king postpones the sacrifice until the prince eventually refuses to cooperate and retreats to the forest. Led by the gods, Hariscanda's son wanders until he finds the starving brahmin Ajigarta who had three sons, Sunapuccha (dog's hindquarters), Sunahsepa (dog's phallus) and Sunalangula (dog's tail).

Rohita offers 100 cows for one of the sons to act as his replacement in the sacrifice, and the father Ajigarta agrees. The father wants to keep the eldest son, the mother wants the youngest, and both compromise on the middle son to replace the prince in the sacrifice in exchange for the cows.

The priest Visvamitra performs the Rajasuya rites for Harischandra.

However, Sunahsepa prays to Prajapati and other gods until finally Ushas, the Dawn, answers his prayers and loosens his bonds. King Harischandra is simultaneously cured of an ailment of dropsy.

Visvamitra then adopts Sunahsepa to be the eldest of his 100 sons to which the latter agrees. Fifty of Visvamitra's true sons refuse to accept Sunahsepa saying it would be akin to cooking dog. For this they are are condemned by their father to become dog-cooking forest tribes.


Ancient rite

Although the name "Rajasuya" is not used in the ancient Rgveda, the book does mention Sunahsepa with reference to his prayers while tied up prior to the sacrifice. The Rajasuya is mentioned in the Yajurveda, and the Aitareya Brahmana dedicates a book to the ceremony using Rgvedic mantras.

That this story is very old is indicated by the fact that it is told in an ancient gatha meter. Sunahsepa himself is said by tradition to be the author of 100 verses in the first book of the Rgveda. The Sunahsepa story and the description of the Rajasuya in the Aitareya Brahmana constitute a rare exposition in terms of scope for a Vedic ritual.

Also, the Sunahsepa story appears to refer to a more ancient ritual that formed the model for both the Rajasuya and Aswamedha ceremonies -- that of the sacred regicide or "sacrifice of the king."

Ritual sacrifice of the king was a practice present until very recently in Africa and Southeast Asia. Lord Raglan, who conducted a study of this ritual, believed that it had originated in Southeast or South Asia, and spread from that center: "My general theory...is that there arose, probably in southeast Asia, and at least 6000 years ago, a religion centering about the cult of a divine king who was periodically killed."

Raglan's theory on a unicentric origin to this practice is certainly open to question. I have suggested that regicide, in the form at least of a mock sacrifice, and linked specifically to a dog totem or dog lineage indeed originates from a Southeast Asian center.

Originally this was conceived, in my view, through the idea of the universe constructed in a pantheistic fashion from the body of the "creator" deity. At first, this deity was considered a divine parent or parents and involved parricide committed by the deities' children.

However, with the rise of a certain dominant clan in the Nusantao trading network, this concept was transferred to the son or "prince" rather than the parents. The lineage of this prince formed the foundation of a clan confederacy whose priest-king leaders claimed ancestry from a certain divine or celestial dog.

At some point the dog becomes the pantheistic deity, or at least partially so. We find throughout many areas of Southeast Asia and the circum-Pacific region the theme of the marriage of a dog with a goddess or princess. This motif sometimes just involves the marriage of someone from Heaven, of divine nature, with a mortal from Earth, and sometimes the sex of the divine and mortal characters is reversed. However, the dog is nearly always thought of as male.

In some of the latter type of myths in the southern Philippines and Borneo, we hear that the child of the Sky-Earth marriage is eventually divided in half when the couple separates or argues. One half becomes a new mortal being, while the other half is used to create different celestial phenomenon, animals, diseases, etc.

Although in these myths, the male is not viewed as a dog or dog-man, in one series found among the Manobo and Bagobo of Mindanao, the male hero Lumabat is accompanied by dogs in his visit to the goddess. It appears at some point, the themes of the dog-man and the division of the body diverged.

Widespread myths and folktales in Insular Southeast Asia of the "half-one," a person with a body divided in half usually in a vertical fashion, may derive from an original theme of the divided body of the half-divine, half-human son. In some cases of the half-one theme, we also see the opposition of Sky and Earth.

In China, the "Celestial Dog" was linked with the falling of meteors , the sighting of comets and other ominous or prophetic celestial phenomenon. We also find that the Celestial Dog appears in human form, having descended from heaven, as a type of were-dog, beliefs that have correspondence to those found in Southeast Asian lore.

What appears to have happened is that older beliefs of the formation of the cosmos from the parts of a divine parent or parents were partially and sometimes wholly combined with beliefs about the royal son of the dog lineage. The prince was seen as a type of the pantheistic deity, and his sacrifice, probably originally a mock sacrifice, brought about the regeneration needed for the new season of crop-growing, livestock-raising, fishing, etc.

Archaeological trail

I have suggested previously in this blog that the spread of the dog lineage theme coincided with the expansion of what could be called the Pre- or Proto-Lungshanoid culture along with the latter fully-formed Lungshanoid or Lungshanoid-like cultures of coastal East and Southeast Asia.

Chinese traditional histories date the activities of the Dongyi "Eastern Yi" peoples along the coasts to the Lungshanoid period. Fu Shi is sometimes said to be a founder of the Dongyi confederation in eastern China. His name indicates a type of "dog-man" theme with the sacrifice motif also present. Fu Hsi is first mentioned either in the I Ching or by Chuang Tzu, depending on how one dates the references in the I Ching.

Shell mound cultures sites, which I have suggested represented types of Nusantao forward teams of explorers living in semi-nomadic boat communities, pop up at great distances from Southeast Asia at this time. These sites often have some or many aspects related to the Lungshanoid-type cultural complex.

During this period, the practice of ritual regicide in combination with the dog lineage motif probably spread widely morphing into different forms along the way.

The story of Sunahsepa apparently relates the substitution of the brahmin for the king's first-born son -- the crown prince in societies that practice male primogeniture. We can speculate whether these ideas along with submerged practices among the royal dynasties of India not found in the literature contributed to the latter Tantric development of royal brahmanicide.

In royal brahmancide that involves Bhairava, who often has the form of a dog, the deity represents the king, and the slaying of the brahmin can be seen as a form of Indra, the Vedic king of the god's, decapitation of his priest Vishvarupa. Only the idea of the brahmin as substitute is missing, possibly submerged as the regicide ideology faded.

That Sunahsepa and his brothers are named after body parts of a dog recalls the Panhu-like concept of the cosmic canine. We also see in the royal Aswamedha and Purusamedha sacrifices that the corpse is divided and the parts recapitulated in simulation of the division of the Cosmic Purusa, whose body parts were used to create the cosmos in Vedic literature. As noted earlier in this blog, the Aswamedha ceremony itself starts with a ritual that can be taken as representing the transference of the dog ritual to the horse (and probably earlier, the water buffalo).

Eventually in Vedic practice at least, the brahmin substitute for the king's first-born son was itself replaced with the simple telling of the rescue of Sunahsepa, a metaphor for the freeing of the brahmin from human sacrifice rituals.

Regards,
Paul Kekai Manansala
Sacramento


Related links

Dog as deity, ancestor and royal animal
Article: Dog reverence in Southeast Asia and Pacific
Interpretations of the Dog Husband Theme
Deluge, Gourd, Dog Husband
Single origin for domesticated dog in Southeast Asia and South China

References

Lord Raglan. "Reply to Bascom," Journal of American Folklore 70(1957), 359-60.

MacDonald, Charles. "Earth and Sky in Philippine and Indonesian Mythology," Philippine Studies (1992) V. 40, 2nd Qtr, 141-152.

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Article: Dog reverence in Southeast Asia and Pacific

The first dog remains confidently dated in Southeast Asia go back 14,000 years, but the identification is not that firm. Otherwise, clearly-identified and dated remains go back to 9000 BP. In China, the oldest confident dates go back to 9,500 BP.

Maria Isabel Ongpin excavated four successive layers at Lemery, Batangas in the Philippines including a Neolithic level (8000 BCE-4000 BCE) with dog and horse bones.

These are the oldest remains of both animals in Insular Southeast Asia (ISEA) during the present Holocene period. Interestingly, this site is associated with obsidian microliths.

Obsidian sources in ISEA have been elusive and obsidian found at Bukit Tengkorak in southeastern Sabah (Borneo), and dated to the 5th millennium BCE, is believed to come from the far-off New Hebrides in Melanesia. This indicates long distance trade, the same trade that plausibly could account for the horse and dog bones at Lemery.

Recent research has shown that the dingo of Australia is a species of domesticated dog gone wild again. Some think that the dingo was brought to Australia during the Pleistocene although others assert it was the Proto-Austronesians or Austronesians who transferred the canine species. Either way, it indicates the dog's wild ancestors must have been domesticated much earlier than the dingo's arrival. With this in mind, LV Hayes has reconstructed a Proto-Austric word for "dog" in *asu and *atsu.

As the dog and dingo descend from the wolf, it is likely that either the Chinese Wolf, Canis lupus chanco, or the Indian Wolf, Canis lupus pallipes, is involved. Canis lupus chanco, can be found as far south as Yunnan, while the Indian Wolf ranges eastward to West Bengal and Orissa.

It would seem that one of these species being well-adapted to warmer, humid climates would give rise to the dingo. Dingo-like dogs can be found throughout mainland and insular Southeast Asia, as well as Australia, Papua New Guinea and other parts of Oceania.

Sacred Dogs

In the earliest layers at Non Nok Tha in Thailand, radiocarbon dated to 5000 BCE - 4500 BCE, a full dog skeleton is found at the feet of a buried child with pig leg and jaw bones on the child's chest. This indicates a ritual significance to these animals.

Non Nok Tha and Phu Wiang also show evidence of butchering of dogs although it cannot be said whether this involved dog sacrifice.

Later at Ban Chiang, radiocarbon dated to start around 3600 BCE, we also see this continued use of the dog in burials, and at Nong Nor in central Thailand during the third millennium BCE, dog skulls were interred together with humans.

At roughly the same time as Non Nok Tha, male burials of the Dawenkou culture of Shandong in eastern China are also found together with dog remains.

After this period, dog images turn up frequently on bronze weapons of the Dongson culture, and later we find a child-dog burial at Santa Ana, Philippines during the Sung dynasty period.

The limited archaeological evidence, however, masks widespread significance of the dog in the region of Southeast Asia, and spreading into the Pacific. Indeed, there is evidence of a strong circum-Pacific distribution of dog ancestry myths. Such myths for example, are more strongly concentrated on or near the Pacific coast of the Western hemisphere than elsewhere in the Americas.

Dog ancestry

In the Southeast Asia/Pacific region, myths of dog ancestry can be found throughout South China and Indochina, in Burma, among the Nagas of Assam, in the Nicobar and Andaman islands, Java, Sumatra, Borneo, the Philippines, Celebes, Hainan, Taiwan, New Guinea and New Zealand.

Dog-man myths are spread out as far as Hawai'i.

Chungshee Hsien Liu asserted that the dog ancestry myths in South China were of "proto-Malay" origin. S.I. Rudenko analyzed these beliefs and linked them with early Austronesian or Proto-Austronesian core myths of a people's descent from a goddess that married a dog.

From these core beliefs, different regional branches developed divergent themes and motifs.

Chinese traditions tell of a "Dog Fief" or "Dog Altar/Tumulus" country known as Quan-feng-kuo somewhere in the ocean off Kuai-chi on China's southeast coast. The earliest mention of Quan-feng-kuo in the Shanhaijing says that is the same as a place known as Dog Jung Country (Quan-jung-kuo) in the region of Shanxi and Shaanxi.

However, in his commentary on the Shanhaijing, Guo Pu says that the authors have confused the sounds of feng and jung, and that the Dog Fief/Altar Country is really somewhere off the Southeastern Sea.

Probably Guo Pu is thinking that another place mentioned in the Shanhaijing, the same location as the Fusang Tree is identifiable with Quan-feng-kuo. It is mentioned that in this area is the mountain Yeh-yao-kiun-ti, upon which the Fusang Tree stood, and also where the corpse of the god She-pi was located. The latter god is described as having a human face, with large dog ears and an animal body. He has two green serpents as ear onraments.

It was here that Di Jun, the father of the Ten Suns, became friends with "two birds" who ruled "two sacrificial mounds" that later became associated with the rites of Di Jun (Shun).

She-pi reminds us of the deity known as Hundun mentioned by Zhuang-zi, the earliest form of the pantheistic deity in China. The name Hundun contains the water radical and refers to something rolling or bobbing about in the water. It is related to the word wonton "dumpling." Zhuang-zi's relation places Hundun in the central, possibly equatorial, ocean where he is visited by the gods of the northern and southern seas. They are said to accidently kill Hundun when attempting to create orifices for the deity, which had no eyes, ears or other openings.

Hundun is a form of the cosmic egg, calabash, gourd, etc. floating on the ocean or connected with a great flood that is found in numerous myths especially in southern Asia and the Pacific.

In latter myths of Pangu, that god is said to spring from the corpse of Hundun, which was shaped like a dog. As noted before, the name Pangu is interchangeable with that of Panhu, the dog ancestor of the southern barbarian peoples in China. The "hu" character in Panhu's name means "gourd," thus strengthening the connection with Hundun, the cosmic gourd/egg/calabash. A seventh-century text says that when Panhu died his family was led to the corpse by the sound of crows, which might allude to the sun birds of Fusang. During the funeral, a piercing ritual is mentioned that recalls the piercing of Hundun by the gods of the northern and southern seas.

We have also seen that the name of the Dongyi leader Fu Hsi of Shandong, has characters indicating the dog-man theme combined with that of "sacrifice" or "sacrificer." This sage instituted the feng or mound/tumulus sacrifice at Mount Tai with Heaven facing to the South in the mound ritual. Here we can see a possible relationship with the feng of Quan-feng-kuo the Dog Altar Country, or the Dog Tumulus Country. Thus, the act of facing toward the south during the feng sacrifce at Mount Tai may equate to facing toward the Dog Feng Country.

Quite notable here is the lei sacrifice of the Qin and Han periods in which dog's flesh and rice are offered in a ritual involving a dismembered Shang-ti. The latter god is now fused with Tien, the god of Heaven always followed by his companion the Dog of Heaven, and in the ritual his dismembered body is regenerated. The dismemberment here recalls the disintegration of Hundun and/or Pangu, bringing about the creation of the world.

It was Di Jun who is said to have originated the lei sacrifice to Shang-ti, which we can connect also with the two sacrificial mounds mentioned by the Shanhaijing as located on the Fusang Tree mountain.

Also with reference to rice, we know that the dog ancestor Panhu was credited with the spread of rice agriculture, and this would agree with the south-to-north movement of rice agriculture from tropical Asia along the eastern coast of China with the Lungshanoid-Dongyi culture.

Although the Lungshanoid did not apparently practice dog burial like the Dawenkou before them, the Shang dynasty returned to this ritual. The oldest royal tomb in China, that of Shang Queen Fu Hao, contains ceremonial dog burials.

Kingdom of Women

The first mention of a kingdom of women in the Southeastern Sea occurs in the Huainanzi. Guo Pu, the Shanhaijing commentator, states that Panhu and his wife swam to a land across the sea and their progeny flourished there. Whenever a male is born in that kingdom, Guo Pu says, it is a dog, and every female is born as a woman.

Here starts a long series of Asian legends about a land of women and dog-men.

The account of the Buddhist monk Hui-Shen, despite its geographical divergence with other texts, states that the land of Fusang was inhabited by women "like those of China," and men with "human bodies, but dog's heads and barking voice."

In the many legends of the Kingdom of Women we often hear that they are impregnated by the wind or by bathing in a well or river. The wind theme brings us back to the name of the East Wind in the Dahuangjing which is "Jun," the same name as the progenitor of the Ten Suns in the Fusang Tree myth.

Pangu of Chinese mythology would equate to the Purusa or Prajapati of Indian belief. In each case we have a primordial deity who dies or is sacrificed and the dismembered body parts become hills, rivers, humans, animals, etc. i.e. the world.

While Pangu is linked with the dog in Chinese tradition, Indians equated Prajapati with the horse. The Asvamedha sacrifice, in which the horse is dismembered, is frequently compared to the cosmic sacrifice and disintegration of Purusa/Prajapati. The horse and horse-headed men/gods in India then are comparable to dogs and dog-headed men/gods in China.

If Pangu/Panhu can be linked with the Fusang Tree and the Ten Suns, then there is another point of comparison as the Vedic horse-headed deities, the Asvins, are the sons of the Sun. The Sun is even said to have taken the form of a horse in begetting the Maga people of Sakadvipa in the Milky Ocean.

The horse form is particularly associated with the East in Indian myth. The submarine horse's head is found in eastern oceans, and Visnu's form in the East is equine:


In Bhadrasva [eastern quarter] Lord Visnu is present in horse-headed form, O brahmin; in Ketumala [western quarter] as a boar, and in Bharata [India] he has the form of a tortoise; as Govinda in fish form Janardana is present among the Kurus [northern quarter].

-- Visnu Purana 2.2.50-1


The oldest sources, the Puranas and Varahamihira place Asvamukhadesa, or the Land of Horse-faced People in the Eastern Quarter, although a few latter sources place the land in the Himalayas or elsewhere.

The Asvamedha horse sacrifice appears to have originated from an earlier water buffalo sacrifice indicated in Harappan and Akkadian seal artifacts, but both may find their source in an earlier dog ritual.

At the beginning of the Asvamedha ceremony, the horse is led into a pond for ritual bathing, and a dog is also brought and forced to swim in the water at which time it is killed. The horse is envisioned in the Vedas as originating in the water or sea, and the swimming dog may allude to the canine's earlier position in the ritual.

A black "four-eyed" dog is used, which reminds us of the four-eyed dogs of Yama. The first horse used in an Asvamedha sacrifice was characterized as 'Yama's horse,' seemingly an allusion to a dog (or a buffalo). The sacrifical dog is also called in the Taitiriya Brahmana, the 'fraternal enemy' indicating some kinship between the dog and horse that eventually resulted in confrontation and the ascendancy of the latter in the brahminized system.

Dog rituals and magic

Chinese ethnologist Ling Shun-sheng found many comparable instances of dog sacrifice in the Pacific and in China.

In ancient Hawai'i, as in ancient China, the dog was associated with the male gender. Dog flesh was generally kapu (taboo) for women in Hawai'i, where it was classified as a male species. In the Dawenkou culture, dogs appear mainly in male burials, just as spindle whorls are associated with female burials.

Ancient Hawaiians often chose a puppy to raise together with a child, both suckled by the mother of the child. If the dog died, the child wore the teeth of the dog to protect against evil, if the child died first, the dog was sacrificed and buried with the child as a protector in the afterlife.

The use of dog teeth as protective (apotropaic) amulets usually worn as necklaces is attested to in numerous Pacific and Southeast Asian cultures. Such necklaces are particularly worn by children to protect against evil, sickness and ghosts.

Dog's teeth also served as a sort of currency and was especially used for bride-price purposes. In the Solomon Islands, for example, dog's teeth were the gold standard with one dog tooth equivalent to five dolphin teeth according to one source.

In the Philippines, a type of sorcerer-priest known as Asuang, Osuang, Aswang, etc. existed in pre-Hispanic times. The name of the sorcerer-priest is apparently derived from the native word asu "dog." Some have suggested it is a contraction of asu-asuan "one with dog characteristics" or "one with a dog-double."

The Asuang are often said to be able to change at will into animals, bats and birds, but most commonly dogs. Although "asuang" among Christianized Filipinos now denotes a type of witch, the early commentators usually describe the Asuang as male sorcerers. Jagor et al. and other sources state that the Asuang are found in Asuang families, probably indicating that the sorcerer-priethood was once hereditary with the priests having the 'blood of the asuang' or the 'blood of the asu.'

These sorcerers were closely connected with the tictic bird, which acted as a spy, helper and friend. The Asuang are also linked with the afterlife where they are said to dwell with the spirits of the ancestors. In some areas, the Asuang were propitiated to protect the ancestral spirits.

Children of Tala

In the Kapampangan legend of Tala as preserved by Mike Pangilinan, the culture hero-god can be seen as the progenitor of the dog-line, as I have suggested using local sources.

Dog messengers of the supreme god are found also in other regional myths. The barking of the dog Kimat in the form of thunder is said to relay the messages of the supreme Tinguian deity Kadaklan to the people. Kadaklan is also said to send Kimat in the form of lightning to strike evildoers.

One myth tells of how Kadaklan sends a spirit, almost certainly Kimat, to a woman for instruction on how to grow the rice plant. This mirrors the legend of Tala bringing rice agriculture to the people after a great flood.

An Igorot myth states that the god Lumauig sends his dog, or his dog and his deer, to bring fire to a boy and girl who have survived the great world flood.

These myths relate to a widespread Southeast Asian theme linking a dog with the great flood and the bringing of rice-planting and other cultural items.

In Bicol to the south of the Pampanga region, a local version of the dueling volcanoes myth pits the deity Gugurang of the Mayon volcano against his brother Asuang, the god of Mount Molinao, in the latter's attempt to steal Gugurang's volcanic fire.

Tala, the son of the rooster of Pinatubo and the serpent of Arayat, marries Mingan, whose name alludes to the newly-discovered rice agriculture, and begets the lineage of the dog -- the asu-asuan.

Regards,
Paul Kekai Manansala
Sacramento

Related links


Dog as deity, ancestor and royal animal
Deluge, Gourd, Dog Husband
Interpretations of the Dog Husband Theme
Rajasuya , Sunahsepa and the Royal Dog
Single origin for domesticated dog in Southeast Asia and South China


References


Doniger, Wendy. Textual Sources for the Study of Hinduism, University of Chicago Press, 1990, p. 15.

Isabel Ongpin, Maria. Bone recoveries from the Obsidian Non Geometric Microlith Cultural Level, Lemery Archaeological Site, Manila: Ateneo de Manila University, 1981.

Liu, Chungshee Hsien. "The Dog-Ancestor Story of the Aboriginal Tribes of Southern China," Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 62:361-368, 1932.

Raisor, Michelle Jeanette. Determining the antiquity of dog origins, http://txspace.tamu.edu/bitstream/1969.1/1214/1/etd-tamu-2003C-ANTH-Raisor-2.pdf, 2004.

Service, Robert F. "Pacific Archaeology: Rock Chemistry Traces Ancient Traders," Science 20 December 1996:Vol. 274. no. 5295, pp. 2012 - 2013.

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Tala (Glossary)

Tala is the name for the Morning Star, the planet Venus, in various languages of the Philippines.

In Kapampangan myth, Tala descends to earth sent by his grandfather the Sun to save the world from the great flood. He is born in human form and brings the gift of rice agriculture among other things.

Venus coming to earth as a human savior is rather a common theme. In Irian Jaya to the south, Papuan nationalists emblazon the Morning Star on their flag based on a local legend of the descent of Tala as bringer of good.

Dissecting the Kapampangan myth, I have suggested that Tala is associated with a epoch-making volcanic eruption involving the two peaks Pinatubo and Arayat. After this eruption, there is a political change in which one clan network emerges as victorious over another.

Probably due to the eruption itself, and the resulting clan warfare, both clans are dispersed broadly throughout the Nusantao maritime trade network. This dispersion actually acts in their favor and they gain control over vast reaches of this network. Both groups constantly fight over control over important trading routes and their conflict is coded in the mythology of this region and beyond.

Of these clan networks, one establishes itself in the region dominated by the sacred volcanoes. In doing so, it actually displaces the former ruling clan network, which becomes its main adversary.

That clans of the sacred mountain trace the descent of their priest-king lineage to Tala, the culture-bearing prince associated with the Morning Star and whose totemic symbol is the dog.

The idea of the celestial descent of a dog or dog-man is preserved near by in the Tinguian myth of Kimat, the lightning dog, who is sent by the Supreme sky god Kadlakan. Lightning is a common symbol of the descent of heavenly bodies to earth.

Tala may have been the name for a local Nusantao trading prince who helped transmit the knowledge of rice agriculture over vast expanses of the trade network. Whatver the case he is credited with bringing rice culture to the local area.

In many regional mythologies, we find the theme of a dog coming at the time of a great flood bringing knowledge of rice farming.

As the Nusantao greatly expanded their network geographically around this time (4th millennium BCE), I have suggested that these motifs spread also into other cultures.

For example, the dog is associated with Venus in many cultures spread from ancient Egypt to ancient Mesoamerica.

Furthermore the dog is closely linked with royal lineage in most of the same cultures. In Egypt, J. Griffiths suggests that the word anpu from which we get the name of the dog-god Anubis, means both "dog" and "king's son."

During the Pyramid Era, the king was said to have the body of Atum and the face of Anubis. When the king died and united with Ra, the sun god, he was said to take Anubis/Anpu with him on his neck.

In biblical literature, the Morning Star symbolizes both the princes Lucifer, expelled from heaven, and the Messiah.

Among the Dayak, the god-ancestor Mahatala may be related in some sense to Tala of Kapampangan myth. Mahatala actually refers in this case to the hornbill creator god who unites with the female watersnake, Jata. The union of the bird and dragon clans.

Tala is rather the son of the male rooster and the female dawn serpent.

Jata is linked with the Mountain of Gold, while Mahatala with the Mountain of Diamonds.

In comparison, Manalastas, the father of Tala, comes from the Mountain of the Moon, Pinatubo, while Munag Sumalâ, Tala's mother, hails from Arayat, the mount of her father, the sun god Apung Sinukuan.

Dayaks believe that Mahatala created the Sun and Moon from clay, the same clay later used to fashion sacred Dayak jars.

Alternatively, among the Ngaju of Borneo, Mahatala represents the Sun and the sacred spear, while Jata is the Moon and the sacred cloth.

After the union of the two, Mahatala is enthroned on the primeval mountain which is supported on the back of Jata. In the Kapampangan version, Tala, the prince arising from the union of dragon and bird clans, takes the throne over the holy mountains which rest on the back of the great dragon Apung Iru.

Regards,
Paul Kekai Manansala
Sacramento

Friday, January 20, 2006

Dog Star (Glossary)

The dog star has through the ages been associated with Sirius and/or less frequently the planet Venus.

The name of Sirius probably is derived from the Egyptian word seir meaning "prince," and related also to Hebrew sar. Another possibility is that the word comes from the Greek form for Osiris, the Egyptian god of the underworld.

The star is the brightest in the heavens and was called Kasista "Leader" by the ancient Akkadians. The Persians knew it likewise as Tistar "Chieftain" or Zeeb "Leader."

It was pictured in cultures throughout the world as a dog or wolf situated in the southern sky and associated with the hot or "dog days" of summer.

Sirius is also often connected with the image of a hunter. Among the Sumerians, Ninurta, the hunter, and husband of the dog goddess Bau (Gula), was linked with Sirius, while his wife had Venus associations. Later, when Inanna absorbs Bau's attributes she is likewise viewed as a huntress with links both to Venus and Sirius.

In Greek myth, Sirius formed the head of the hunter Orion's dog, the constellation Canis Major. According to Monier-Williams, the dog star was known among Hindus as Lubdhaka and Mrgavyadha both meaning "hunter" and referring to the god Siva or Rudra.

Another association of Sirius connects the star with the Milky Way, known often as the "Way of Souls" or the "Way of the Dog/Wolf." In this sense, Sirius is viewed as one or more dogs or wolves guarding the path taken by departed souls.

In ancient Egypt, the heliacal rising of Sirius was central to the yearly calendar. Sirius and Orion are personified respectively by the deities Sopdet and Sah, who are in turn manifestations of Isis and Osiris. Sopdet and Sah beget Sopdu, who is the manifestation of Horus, the son of Isis and Osiris, and the patron deity of Egyptian royalty. Sopdet is sometimes portrayed as a large dog, or as riding side-saddle on a dog (during the Roman period).

When the Sun and Moon conjoined at the start of the Egyptian New Year a festival known as the "sacred marriage" was celebrated. This may relate to the Pyramid Texts which state that Pharaoh unites with Isis in a form of hieros gamos bringing forth Horus-Sopdu. In another passage, the royal-divine union is said to beget the Morning Star, and thus may connect Venus with Horus.

Among the Sumerians, the sacred marriage took place between the priest-king and Inanna, the latter probably represented by the Lukur priestess, who was in turn linked with the daughters of dog-headed Bau. Inanna again has as her planet Venus and Sirius as one of her fixed stars. The king during this ritual stands for Dumuzi, the husband of Inanna, and every year near the rising of Sirius in the summer, the Kelabim or dog priests of Dumuzi (Tammuz) held rites for the god.

Adonis had similar rites, and Carl Kerenyi believes that the orgia festivals celebrated in honor of Dionysos were also linked with the Sirius cycle.

Further to the east we find numerous myths of the marriage of a dog to a goddess or queen in the totemic histories of numerous peoples. Especially in Central Asia, South China, Southeast Asia and the Pacific the concept of part-dog or wolf ancestry is prevalent. From Assam in the West to Mongolia in the North and Java in the South, eastward to New Guinea and other Pacific isles in Oceania and northward again to the Ryukus and Bering Sea, the sacred dog-human marriage motif is found.

David Gordon White in Myths of the Dog-Man discusses the motif found among the Chinese, Hmong-Mien and Southeast Asian peoples of a heavenly dog who comes to earth following catastrophic floods bringing the gift of rice agriculture. These resemble closely the Kapampangan tales of Tala who rescues the flooded inhabitants of Central Luzon by teaching them riziculture. White mentions a "tradition, dating from the Shang dynasty, that connects a dog with the ancient rice god Shang-ti, and a Ch'in and Han period sacrifice called the lei (a term for which the Chinese characters are "dog," "rice," and "head") that involved the offerings of dog's flesh and rice, by which a dismembered Shang-ti was ritually reintegrated and resurrected."

Shang-ti becomes associated with T'ien (Heaven) during the Zhou (Chou) dynasty and the Shih-chi states that the god in the form of the "Ti-Dog" was the ancestor of the Hou Chih and T'ai peoples.

Although Sirius (known as the Heavenly Wolf in China) is not mentioned in these legends, the idea of a heavenly dog coming after the summer floods indeed could represent a link with the dog Star. The heliacal rising of Sirius during the summer heralds the flooding season in the monsoon climate region. The descent of Sirius or Venus from Heaven in the form of a dog bringing agriculture and uniting in divine marriage all fit in the Sirius myth pattern. The flooding of the Nile after the rising of Sirius was essential to good harvests in ancient Egypt.

The image of Phan Hu descending from Heaven and swimming across the flooded earth with a rice plant in his mouth, to later marry the Chinese emperor's daughter and father the Yao people is an ideal form of the Eastern myth.

While various explanations have been given for the canine attributes bestowed to the star Sirius, the link with a culture-bearing ancestor is the one proposed here. In this sense, the heliacal rising of Sirius would herald the advent of the canine hero linked in this case with the cataclysmic eruption of the cosmic mountain.

In ancient symbology, this involved the Sun and Moon, not simply conjunct as in the Egyptian New Year festival, but in solar eclipse represented by the Crescent Sun. Venus in inferior conjunction or transit is represented as a star in the center or next to the Crescent Sun. These celestial bodies should be placed above or emerging from a mountain, hill, mound, stupa, triangle, pyramid, person's head or some other symbol of the cosmic axis.

In some cases, one can also see to the left of these symbols another star or stellar symbol that should be taken as representing Sirius. Left in this case means to the south as ideally the celestial configuration should be in the West, the direction of Pinatubo.

Regards,
Paul Kekai Manansala
Sacramento

References

Kerenyi, Carl. Dionysos: Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life, Princeton University Press, 1996.

McGahey, Robert. The Orphic Moment: Shaman to Poet-Thinker in Plato, Nietzsche, and Mallarme, SUNY Press, 1994.

Sasaki, Chris. Constellations: Stars & Stories, Sterling Publishing Company, Inc., 2003, p. 32ff.

Shaw, Ian. The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, Oxford University Press, 2002.

White, David Gordon. Myths of the Dog-Man, University of Chicago Press, 1991.

Wednesday, December 15, 2004

The Dog Lineage

The union of the dragon/serpent and bird clans appears to have been sealed by an actual marriage between two leading families in these clans. The event is symbolized in the partnership of Manalastas and Munag Sumalâ, and that of Fu Hsi and Nu Gua.

The new lineage formed by this marriage is represented by Tala, the planet Venus, the Morning Star. Tala marries the mountain maid Mingan and their progeny hold sway in the council of the traditional confederacy of clans.

The emblem of the new lineage is either a hybrid of dragon/serpent and bird, or a dog.

The marriage of Tala and Mingan is found in the form of the widespread regional myth of the marriage of a dog with an ancestral goddess. The myth was propagated in various cultures probably representing the union of those cultures with this clan confederacy. Researchers Chungshee Hsien Liu and Alexy Okladnikov believe these dog-goddess marriage myths are of Austronesian or of insular Southeast Asian origin.

These myths may also relate to the widespread association of the planet Venus, or the deity representing that planet with dogs and/or wolves. The Sumerian goddess Innana (Babylonian Ishtar) was associated with Venus and dogs. She was also linked with Sirius, a star associated in many cultures with dogs or wolves. In China, Sirius is known as Lang Hsing "the Wolf Star."

The two volcanoes of the legend become sacred to the traditional clan confederacy. Even the soil, or rather the rich mixed volcanic clay, is thought of as possessing special magical qualities. The mixture of the complimentary deposits from the Yin mountain and the Yang mountain contain the spark that prolongs life or even grants immortality in legend.

From this volcanic clay are formed pots to hold water, wine and other beverages which when properly aged become nothing less than an elixir of life. These jars eventually become a highly valued item of trade.

We will see how the dog lineage extends its range far and wide in the establishment of the traditional confederacy of clans. However, the materialist camp sees the challenge of the new leadership and reacts promptly. This grouping of clans consists of many of the same totems as the traditionalists. In fact, the leading groups from both clans come from the same location -- the land of the dueling volcanoes.

The materalists though are expelled. They are the fallen angels.

Regards,
Paul Kekai Manansala
Sacramento