Minoan Genius

Two Minoan Genii performing a libation over an altar

The Minoan Genius is a fantastic mythological creature that was common in ancient Crete. It is portrayed sometimes with the head of a lion, or of hippopotamus, or of other animals. It played a role in various religious ceremonies.

It is often portrayed with water vessels, such as ewers, so it seems to play a role as libation bearer.

Mythological connections

The connections of this mythological beast seem to be with the griffin—a very widespread composite mythological beast—as well as with the Egyptian hippopotamus and crocodile goddess Taweret, from which it is believed to have derived.

According to Judith Weingarten, the earliest forms of the Minoan Genius derived from the Egyptian prototypes between approximately 1800 and 1700 BC.[1]

Later on, the Genius also became a deity in the Mycenaean world; its representations are found widely in continental Greece.[2]

See also

Notes

  1. Weingarten, J. 1991. The Transformation of Egyptian Taweret into the Minoan Genius: A Study in Cultural Transmission in the Middle Bronze Age. Partille, Paul Åström Förlag.
  2. P. Rehak, The ‘Genius’ in Late Bronze Age Glyptic: the Later Evolution of an Aegean Cult Figure (PDF file), in W. Müller (ed.), Sceaux Minoens et Mycéniens [CMS Beiheft 5] (Berlin 1995) 215-231

Bibliography

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