Traditional Berber religion
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The traditional Berber religion or Berber mythology (Libyan religion)[1] is the sum of ancient and native set of beliefs and deities adhered to by the Berbers, this concerns the first beliefs of the Berbers, in North Africa. These predate the arrival in the Punic religion and the Abrahamic religions.[2] They are somewhat influenced by and have themselves influenced the beliefs of the other peoples of the region including but not limited to: Egyptians, Greeks, Romans, Punics.
Pantheon
[edit]Divinity | Divinity of | Cult Centers |
---|---|---|
Ammon (sometimes Baal Hammon) | Underworld | All of North Africa |
Tanit | War | Algeria, Tunisia, Libya. |
Gurzil | War | Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Morocco. |
Anzar | Sky | Algeria, Morocco. |
Africa | Fertility | Algeria, Tunisia, Libya. |
Atlas[4] | Mountains Endurance | Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Morocco. |
Nanna Tala[5][6] | Fertility | Algeria, Tunisia, Libya. |
Tafukt | Sun | Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Morocco. |
Ayyur | Moon | Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Morocco. |
Sinefere (Canapphari) | War | Algeria, Tunisia, Morocco. |
Fudina (Vihinam) | Childbirth | Algeria,Tunisia. |
Lilleo (de berbère Lilu "brillant", "propre") | Hygiene | Algeria,Tunisia. |
Macvrgvm (de berbère MKR "Mokran = grand") | War | Algeria, Tunisia, Libya. |
Draco | Serpents | Algeria,Tunisia. |
Tisianes/Titanes | Healing | Algeria, Tunisia, Libya. |
Settut [7] | Magic | Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Morocco. |
Worship of sun and the moon
[edit]According to Herodotus, all ancient Berbers worshipped the moon and sun (Tafukt in Tamazight) and sacrificed solely to them.[a] In Berber, the Moon (Ayyur in Tamazight) and the god of the Moon carry the same name in the language. Masinissa, the first king of Numidia, commonly paid tribute to the god of the sun Apollo in 179 B.C to his temple in Delos, the assumed birthplace of Apollo and his twin sister Artemis (the goddess of the moon), for which he received a golden crown from the inhabitants of the Greek island Delos.[b][9] Tullius Cicero (105–43 BCE) also reported the same cult in On the Republic (Scipio's Dream):
When I (Scipio) was introduced to him, the old man (Massinissa, king of Massyle) embraced me, shed tears, and then, looking up to heaven, exclaimed I thank thee, O supreme Sun, and you also, you other celestial beings, that before I departed from this life I behold in my kingdom, and in my palace, Publius Cornelius Scipio.[10]
Further authors such as Apuleius or Augustine of Hippo mention that sun worship continued into the first millennium and the seventh century Coptic saint Samuel the Confessor appears to have suffered from the sun-worshiping Berbers who tried unsuccessfully to force him to worship the sun.
There were some Latin inscriptions found in Northwest Africa dedicated to the sun-god. An example is the inscription found in Souk Ahras (the birthplace of Augustine; Thagaste in Algeria) written "Solo Deo Invicto".[11] The megalithic culture may have been part of a cult of the dead or of star-worship.
The cult of Amon
[edit]Since antiquity, the ancient Libyans (ancestors of Berbers) worshipped the god Ammon alongside the Ancient Egyptians[12] Ammon was a Libyan deity, whose sole oracle was situated in the Siwa oasis, some 500 km west of Memphis, the capital of ancient Egypt, Siwa Oasis, located in Western Egypt, there remained a solitary oracle of Amun near the Libyan Desert.[13] The fact that the site was hard to reach, must have contributed to the feeling that an oracle from Ammon was something special - and therefore reliable.[14] it was too far away and too isolated to be a real part of the Egyptian kingdom, but there may have been indirect control. The oasis was also called Ammon; they called god of the oracle "Ammon of Siwa, lord of good counsel". According to Herodotus and Pausanias, the cult had Berber origin and later spread to Egypt and then Greece, probably via the Greek colony of Cyrene.[15] Alexander the great preferred to visit the Libyan temple of Ammon in Siwa rather than the Egyptian temple of Amun in Thebes which shows clearly more than any other instance that the temple of Ammon in Siwa was primary and that of Thebes was secondary.[16]
The word Amun is morphologically related to the Amazigh word Aman (meaning water or waters) because it is plural and has no singular forms, the vowel at the beginning of the word is characteristic of both Amazigh language and Ancient Egyptian since both languages derive from the same Afro-Asiatic language group, some words that are derived from the root 'a m n' also include another Amazigh word, thammen (meaning honey) which is an important nutritional food for Amazigh people they often associate with their beliefs, a way of invoking honour to the deity Amun for his blessings upon them, the human group referred to as 'Amuniyyun' (Those who belong to Amun)[17][18][19]

The worship of Ammon was introduced into Greece at an early period, probably through the medium of the Greek colony in Cyrene, which must have formed a connection with the great oracle of Ammon in the Oasis soon after its establishment. Iarbas, a mythological king of Libya, was also considered a son of Ammon, the Libyan people's worship for ram was widespread in Libya, this is how we obtain the famous symbol for this deity in Ancient Egypt (The ram headed Sphynx or the Coriosphynx)[20]
Amon's wife Ament is also believed to have originated from Libya. She is the Egyptian mythology goddess of the underworld. Amentet (meaning the "Land of the Setting Sun" or "The West") is where the dead wait for Ra to arrive.[21]
In Berber beliefs, the sheep was a sacred animal to Amon. In the discussion of Athanase of Alexandria against the Gentiles, it is said that for the Libyan populations (Berbers), the god Amon is often named Amen and was venerated as a divinity. Iarbas, a mythological king of Numidia who sold Dido the land on which she founded Carthage,[22] was also considered a son of Ammon. Gurzil, a deity of war in berber mythology is also another son of Ammon.
Diodorus Siculus mentions Ammon as the king of Libya who married Rhea (daughter of Uranus and sister of the Titans). According to him he fell in love with a "maiden of unusual beauty" Amaltheia with whom he fathered Dionysus. According to other stories, Dionysus was the son of Zeus.[23] The Egyptian version of Amun was often identified by the Greeks to be Zeus.
War Goddess Tanit
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The ancient cult of Neith (Ha-nit) (or Nit, or Tinnit) influenced the ancient Egyptians with their goddess Neith, and the Hellenes with their goddess Athena through the Berber cult of war,[24] and was an imported deity from Libya who was in wide worship in 600 BC [25] in Sais (Archaic name: Ha-Nit) by the Libyan population inhabiting Sais, a very famous temple of Neith was established in this city by the earliest local dynasty. Neith is the direct predecessor to Athena as follows:
Above the Kerameikos [in Athens] and the portico called the King's Portico is a temple of Hephaistos. I was not surprised that by it stands a statue of Athena, because I knew the story about Erikhthonios. But when I saw that the statue of Athena had blue eyes I found out that the legend about them is Libyan. For the Libyans have a saying that the Goddess is the daughter of Poseidon and Lake Tritonis, and for this reason has blue eyes like Poseidon.
The Libyan Amazons are without doubt part of this cult. Athena, imposed the Amazons of Libya in Troy and in Greece, the Libyan Amazons remained in the village of Tenæ at the south of Sfax and Cartenæ (Tenes).[27]
According to mythology, Athena was believed to have been born in Lake Tritonis in North Africa (modern-day Algeria and Tunisia), which is why she was given the epithet Tritogeneia.[28][29] In one version of the story she is the daughter of Poseidon and Tritonis, a Libyan lake nymph, and as the same source adds, after a disagreement with her father, she gave herself to Zeus, who made her his own daughter, which explains why both are considered gods of horses.[27]
In his dialogue Timaeus, the Greek philosopher Plato has Critias claim that Neith is the Egyptian name of Athena.[30] Some identified the Punic Tanit as the Middle Eastern goddesses like Anat[31] or Astarte but Steve A. Wiggins argued that "local associations should not be considered definitive" and that "we must not assert more than the evidence will allow".[32]
Gurzil
[edit]Gurzil, a new god appearing in later texts and worshipped by tribes such as the Austoriani outside the Roman frontiers of Libya, was considered the son of Amun and a cow.[33] He was considered a war god and was taken by the Berbers to their battles against the Byzantines. Corippus mentioned that the chiefs of the Laguata took their god Gurzil into battle against the Byzantines and Arabs. It is very likely that the sanctuary of Gurzil was located in Ghirza, in Libya, where remarkable reliefs show a noble Libyan receiving tribute while seated on a curule chair.[34] The temple was in use well into the sixth century.[35] He is presumed to be a god of the sun[36] or a god associated with battles.[37] He is usually identified with bulls.[38]
Atlas
[edit]Atlas is a Greek Titan commonly associated with the Atlas Mountains in North Africa and the borders of Ancient Libya.[c] Nonnus calls in Dionysiaca (13.333) both Athena and her matrilineal grandfather Atlas "Libyan".[28] Maximus of Tyre mentions the mountains as a deity of the Libyans.
To the people there [Libyans in the West] the Atlas is a sanctuary and an idol. […] It is at the same time the sanctuary, the god, the bond of oaths and the idol of the Libyans.
In an interpretation of the ancient sources, he is seen as the first king Mauretania which was popularized by Gerardus Mercator who coined the term "atlas" based on Atlas of Mauretania .[42]
Triton
[edit]Herodotus claims that Poseidon originated from Libya. The Libyans at Lake Tritonis also worshiped Triton according to him. Triton might have been a more local deity[43] or be related to Poseidon.[36] He was also linked to Tritonis, the mother of Athena, as a potential female counterpart.[44]
Other deities
[edit]Corippus mentions Sinifere described to be a god of war worshiped by the Eastern Libyans[36] but might have been a "tribal god".[45] Mastiman (or Autiman) was also mentioned by him and was also identified as god of war[36] and was later associated with Mercury.[46] Other divinities also include:
Divinity Name | Divinity of | Cult Centers |
---|---|---|
Abbadir | (Alternatve name to Baal Hammon) | Manliana |
Aenon | ? | Avedda (Henchir Bedd) Medjez El Bab |
Avislava (berbère AWL) | Fertility | Bavares, Pomaria (Tlemcen), Ain Khial, Volubilis |
Avzivs | Genus | Aumale (Sour el-Ghozlan) |
Bacax | Caves | Constantine (Montagnes Taya and Chettaba), Guelma |
Baldir/Baliddir | Agriculture of harvest (Threshing floor) | Sigus,Bir Tlelsa, Guelaat bou Sba, Cirta |
Bonchor | Wars of Defence | Vaga |
Boccuri | Similar to the name of the Amazigh Pharao Tanis that the Greeks call Bocchoris | Vaga |
Canapphari (Sinefere) | War | Tripoli |
Slug | ? | Madauros (Africa Proconsularis) |
Cillenus | Messages | Timgad |
Damio | Agriculture | Madauros (Africa Proconsularis), Thugga |
Draco | Serpents | Caesarea, Cirta, Ain Guellaa (Thignica), Numluli (Africa Proconsularis), Aquae Flavianae |
Fudina | Childbirth | Henchir Ramdan (Africa Proconsularis) |
Gda | Caves | Phua (Numidie), Constantine (Chettaba Montagne) |
Haos | ? | Ksiba |
Iemsal | Linked to Hiempsal I | Tiklat (Mauretania Caesarensis) |
Ieru (Ayyur) | Moon (Ayyur), Caves (Linked to other deities called Gda and Bacax) | Guechguech (Numidie) |
Iesdan | ? | Magifa (Ksar el-boum) |
Ingirozoglezim | Genus | Vanisnesi (Hassnaoua) |
Iocolon | Genus | Naraggara (Sidi Youssef (Kerkennah)) |
Iuba | Son of Jupiter | Vanisnesi (Hassnaoua) |
Irsiti | Depiction of Herakles | Aïn Reggada (Algérie) |
Ivnam | Dioscures, Chevaux (Divinity of horseriding) | Vaga |
Maevii | ? | Tébessa |
Macvrtam/Vacurtum (De berbère MKRD) | Chevaux (Divinity of Horseriding) | Henchir Ramdan |
Masgav | ? | Dougga, Altava |
Masi | Massinissa made into divinity | Abizar |
Masiden | ? | Magifa (Ksar el Boum) |
Masiddice | ? | Magifa (Ksar el Boum) |
Mastiman | Related to Pluto | Tripoli |
Mathamodis | Priestess | Mascula (Khenchla) |
Matilam | Deity of sacrifice of mutton | Vaga |
Midmanim | ? | Caesarea |
Monna (nom berbère Monn) | ? | Tignica |
Montivs | Mountain Deity | Timgad |
Motmanio | Related to Mercury | Lambaesis |
Sesase | Genus | Thuburnica |
Suggan | Deity of a specific mountain in southern Numidia (Mons Suggarem) | Magifa (Ksar el Boum), Chlef |
Thililua | Femenine form of Lilleo | Magifa (Ksar el Boum) |
Tisianes | Divinity of herbal incantations and healing | - |
Vacurtum (Macurtum) | Horses (Divinity of Horseriding) | Vaga |
Vanammon | Alternative of 'Ammon' | Golas |
Varriccala | Pluto | Thabarca |
Varsis (Sima) | ? | Vaga |
Varsissima | Female deity of War | Vaga |
Vihinam | Childbirth | Vaga |
Festivals
[edit]Festival of Thafsuth
[edit]In Algeria, a yearly festival for the god of the sun Tafukt and his wife Africa the goddess of Fertility and earth is still in practice to this day, the festival commonly known in Chaoui as "Chaw Rbiaa or Thafsuth (Tamazight for Spring)" is celebrated all across Algeria all the way south to Tamanrasset where it is known as Tafsit[48] it is celebrated with horse-riding in the north and camel riding in the south, picnics in nature along with preparations of food including couscous, flat bread 'Aghrum or Kesra' and dates cookies called Tamina '(In Tamazight: ⵟⴰⵎⵢⵏⴰ or in Algerian arabic: طمينة الغرس) and is also known as Rfiss', both Aghrum and Tamina are made in the shape of the sun to symbolize the god and also the famous cookies of Makrout and Mbardja which are made in diamond shape symbolizing Beauty, lightness, agility [d][49] Fertility [e],[50] Protection against the evil eye [f].[51] the festival is widely celebrated by giving children baskets called Tola'a "In tamazight : ⵟⵓⵍⴰⵄⴰ" filled with these foods and candy and other trinkets and the food variety involved in the festival represent the most commonly known national berber traditional dishes of Algeria.
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Chaw Rbiaa basket 'Tola'a' with flat bread (Mbessa) for Thafsuth festival given to children.
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Makroudh cookie in the diamond shape symbolizing fertility.
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Mbardja in the diamond shape for fertility and fortune.
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Aghrum 'ⴰⵖⵔⵓⵎ' in the shape of a sun prepared during Thafsuth to symbolize the god of the sun.
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Tamina (Rfiss) date cookies shaped with rugged edges to represent the sun.
Yannayer
[edit]Like most Mediterranean civilizations, Berber populations celebrate the arrival of new seasons and thus mark the agricultural calendar. Among the main festivals is Yennayer, the Berber New Year, which is still celebrated today by Berber populations on January 12 or 14 of each year, which corresponds to January 1 of the Julian calendar.
Death customs
[edit]Funerary practices
[edit]The tombs of the early people and their ancestors indicate that the Berbers and their ancestors (the Capsians and Ibero-Mauresians) believed in an afterlife. The prehistoric people of northwest Africa buried bodies in little holes. When they realized that bodies buried in unsecured holes were dug up by wild animals, they began to bury them in deeper ones. Later, they buried the dead in caves, tumuli, tombs in rocks, mounds, and other types of tombs.[52]
Unlike the majority of mainland Berbers, the Guanche Berbers mummified their dead. Additionally, in 1958 University of Rome Professor Fabrizio Mori (1925–2010) discovered a Libyan mummy in Uan Muhuggiag around 5,500 years old—roughly a thousand years older than any known Ancient Egyptian mummy.[53][54]
Megalithic culture
[edit]
Archaeological research on prehistoric tombs in the Maghreb shows that the bodies of the dead were painted with ochre. While this practice was known to the Iberomaurusians, this culture seems to have been primarily a Capsian industry. The dead were also sometimes buried with shells of ostrich eggs, jewelry, and weapons. Bodies were usually buried in a fetal position.[52] in North Africa in 13,000 BC lived the Ibero-mauresian man, archaeologists have traced their origins to the Caspian culture, a North African civilization that dates back more than 10,000 years.[citation needed]
It is a culture that dominated in North Africa, between 13,000 BC and the foundation of Numidia, several sub-cultures emerged and evolved and all of which were called Megalithic cultures, the word Megalithic describes an era where ancient monuments built before the invention of early writing in 3,200 BC.[citation needed] Megalithic Tombs (also called Dolmens), were monuments built as burial sites for ancient Berbers, megaliths are huge tombs underground to bury the dead and they come in several shapes.[citation needed]
There exists more than 32,000 Dolmens across Algeria, including for instance the slopes of Djebel Mazela in Bounouara, the site of the necropolis of Sigus (which includes dolmens, menhirs and cromlechs), as well as the important necropolis of Djelfa. The region with the highest concentration of Dolmens is Roknia where over 3,000 megalithic monuments in the necropolis stretch over several kilometers (in comparison, there are more than 4,000 on the whole of France).[55] They are present in large numbers in eastern Algeria and Tunisia and are characterized by their quadrangular plan.

The monument of Msoura is one of the best-known megalithic monuments in north-west Africa. It is composed of a circle of megaliths surrounding a tumulus, the highest of which is over 5 meters (16 ft). According to legend, it is the sepulchre of the Libyan king Anti (known by the Greeks as the giant Antaeus, an opponent of Heracles).[56] The tomb was venerated by Berbers who went for pilgrimage to the ancient prehistoric monument.[citation needed]Another megalithic monument was discovered in 1926 to the south of Casablanca. The monument was engraved with funerary inscriptions in the Berber script known as Tifinagh.[57]
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Dolmen in Bechar from 6,000 BC, Algeria with a burial chamber built inside the hill.
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Dolmen in Aïn Séfra, Algeria dating back to 7,100 BC.
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Dolmen found in Boghar region of Medea in central Algeria from 5,600 BC.
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Dolmen Discovered in Roknia from 10,000 BC.
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Dolmen in Tassili sépulture dating back to 12,000 BC.
Ancient Berber tombs
[edit]
After the development of architecture in North Africa in early history improvement from the dolmens began to be heavily considered by ancient Berbers, more regular and improved designs of tombs were invented known as Bazinas. The term bazina comes from the Berber word meaning mound.[58] The bazinas are built of dry stone. Their upper part is often domed or truncated cone.
Access to the burial chamber is invisible. The deceased is buried on the ground and covered by a projecting funerary structure.[59] Bazinas are found in the vicinity of Chellala and Tamda, in Algeria and in the north-west of Tunisia, for example in Balta Bou Aouène, near Bou Salem, as well as in the Meknes region of Morocco with the Gour bazina.[60]
These tombs evolved from primitive structures to much more elaborate ones, such as the pyramidal tombs spread throughout Northern Africa. The honor of being buried in such a tomb appears to have been reserved for those who were most important to their communities.
These pyramid tombs have attracted the attention of some scholars, such as Mohamed Chafik who wrote a book discussing the history of several of the tombs that have survived into modern times. He tried to relate the pyramidal Berber tombs with the great Egyptian pyramids on the basis of the etymological and historical data.[61] The best known Berber pyramids are the 19-meter (62 ft) pre-Roman Numidian pyramid of the Medracen and the 30-meter (98 ft) ancient Mauretanian pyramid.[61] The Numidian pyramid in Tipaza is also known as Kbour-er-Roumia or Tomb of Juba and Sypax, mistranslated by the French colonists as Tomb of the Christian Woman.[61] The Tomb holds the graves of King Juba II and Queen Cleopatra Selene II, the rulers of Mauretania.
Cult of the dead
[edit]One of the distinguishing characteristics of the Berber religion in antiquity was the veneration of the dead, who seem to have been believed to exercise control over soil fertility and possibly over the future.[62] Pomponius Mela also reported that the Augilae (Modern Awjila in Libya) considered the spirits of their ancestors to be deities. They swore by them and consulted them. After making requests, they slept in their tombs to await responses in dreams.[62]
Herodotus (484 BCE–425 BCE) noted the same practice among the Nasamones, who inhabited the deserts around Siwa and Augila. He wrote:
"They swear by the people among themselves who are reported to have been the most lawful and brave, by these, I say, laying hands upon their tombs; and they divine by visiting the sepulchral mounds of their ancestors and lying down to sleep upon them after having prayed; and whatsoever thing the person sees in their dream, this they accept."[63]
The Berbers worshiped their rulers, too.[64] The tombs of the Numidian rulers are among the most notable monuments left by the Classical Berbers. But Gabriel Camps debates whether this is done for worship or for mere love and appreciation of the contributions of the rulers.[65]
The veneration (not worship) of saints which exists among the modern Berbers in the form of Maraboutism—which is widespread in northwest Africa—may or may not contain traces of prior beliefs or customs concerning the dead.[citation needed]
Cultural exchange
[edit]Libyan-Egyptian beliefs
[edit]The Ancient Egyptians were the neighbors of the Berbers, as such traces of the worship of ancient Egyptian deities by the Berbers was found, and it has been theorized that both cultures shared at least some of these gods:
The cult Isis and Set by the Berbers was reported by Herodotus when saying:
Thus from Egypt to the Tritonian lake, the Libyans are nomads that eat meat and drink milk; for the same reason as the Egyptians too profess,f they will not touch the flesh of cows; and they rear no swine. The women of Cyrene too deem it wrong to eat cows' flesh, because of the Isis of Egypt; nay, they even honour her with fasts and p391 festivals; and the Barcaean women refuse to eat swine too as well as cows.
— Herodotus, The Histories[66]
Those Libu did not eat the flesh of swine, because it was associated with Set, while they did not eat the cattle's flesh, because it was associated with Isis.[67]
The most remarkable common god of the Berbers and the Egyptians was Amun and Amunet.[68] These deities are hard to attribute to only one pantheon, he and she were two of the greatest ancient Berber deities.[69] They were honored by the Ancient Greeks in Cyrenaica, and was united with the Phoenician god Baal and goddess Anat due to Libyan influence.[61] Early depictions of rams and ewes (related possibly to an early form of the cult of these deities) across North Africa have been dated to between 9600 BCE and 7500 BCE.
The most famous temple of Amun and Amunet in Ancient Libya was the augural temple at Siwa Oasis in Egypt, an oasis still inhabited by Berbers.
The Egyptians considered some Egyptian deities to have had a Libyan origin, such as Neith who has been considered by Egyptians to have emigrated from Libya to establish her temple at Sais in the Nile Delta. Some people also believe links between the way Egyptians depicted certain deities and the way they depicted Libyan people exist, such is the case for Ament.
Osiris was also among the Egyptian deities who were venerated in Libya and Dr. E. A. Wallis Budge (in addition to a few other scholars) believed that Osiris was originally a Libyan god saying of him that "Everything which the texts of all periods recorded concerning him goes to show that he was an indigenous god of Northern Africa (modern day Libya), and that his home and origin were possibly Libyan."[70]
Phoenician-Berber beliefs
[edit]The Phoenicians were originally a Semitic people who inhabited the coast of modern Lebanon, and later came as refugees to Tunisia. The Phoenicians of Lebanon were seafarers and they founded Carthage in 814 BCE. They later gave birth to the so-called Punic culture, which had its roots in the Berber and Phoenician cultures. Some[who?] scholars distinguish the relationships between the Phoenicians and the Berbers in two phases:
When Phoenicians settled in Northwest Africa, they stayed in the coastal regions to avoid wars with the Berbers. They maintained their deities which they brought from their homeland. Therefore, early Carthaginians had two important Phoenician deities, Baal and Anat.
Carthage began to ally with the Berber tribes after the Battle of Himera (480 BCE), in which the Carthaginians were defeated by the Greeks. In addition to political changes, the Carthaginians imported some of the Berber deities.
Baal and Anat were the primary deities worshipped in Carthage. Depictions of these deities are found in several sites across Northern Africa. Also, the goddess Tanit and god Baal Hammon were worshipped, As Ammon is a local berber deity,[71] so is Tannit, which she represents the matriarchal aspect of Numidian society,[72] whom the Egyptians identify as Neith and the Greeks identify as Athena.[71] The names themselves, Baal Hammon and Tanit, have Berber linguistic structure. Some scholars[who?] believe that the Egyptian goddess Neith and Egyptian god Khnum were similar to the Libyan goddess Tanit and the Libyan god Baal Hammon. There are also Massyle and Phoenician names that apparently [?] contain roots from the god Baal, such as Adherbal and Hannibal and names also derived from Anat. It was proposed that the Punic god Baal Hammon is a syncretic association with Amon the god of ancient Libya[73] and the Phoenician deity Baal.
Greek-Libyan beliefs
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (June 2023) |
The ancient Greeks established colonies in Cyrenaica. The Greeks influenced the eastern Libya pantheon, but they were also influenced by Libyan culture and beliefs. Generally, the Libyan-Greek relationships can be divided into two different periods. In the first period, the Greeks had peaceful relationships with the Libyans. Later, there were wars between them. These social relationships were mirrored in their beliefs.
The first notable appearance of Libyan influence on the Cyrenaican-Greek beliefs is the name Cyrenaica itself. This name was originally the name of a legendary Thessalian woman warrior and queen who was known as Cyrene, ruled Thessaly in Greece and later Cyrene in Libya. Cyrene was, according to the legend, a courageous huntress woman and queen who hunted and ate lions and all other animals. She gave her name to the city Cyrene in Libya. The emigrating Greeks made her their protector besides their Greek god Apollo.[74]
The Greeks of Cyrenaica also adopted some Berber customs. Herodotus (Book IV 120) reported that the Libyans taught the Greeks how to yoke four horses to a chariot (the Romans used these Libyan chariots later, after they were taught to do so by the Greeks). The Cyrenaican Greeks built temples for the Libyan deities Amun and Amunet who they identified with Zeus and Hera[failed verification], respectively.[75] Some of them continued worshipping Amun and Amunet themselves. Amun and Amunet's cult was so widespread among the Greeks that even Alexander III of Macedonia decided to be declared as the son of Amun and Amunet in the Siwan temple of Amun and Amunet by its Libyan priests and was declared so.[61]
Some ancient Greek historians such as Herodotus mentioned that some Greek deities were of Libyan origin. As such, Athena was supposed to have been born in Lake Tritonis where she was originally honored by the Libyans. Herodotus wrote that the Aegis and the clothes of Athena were typical for Libyan women.
Herodotus also stated that Poseidon (an important Greek water god) was adopted from the Libyans by the Greeks. He emphasized that no other people worshipped Poseidon from early times apart from the Libyans who spread his cult:
about this god the Hellenes learnt from the Libyans, for no people except the Libyans have had the name of Poseidon from the first and have paid honour to this god always.
— Herodotus[76]
Some other Greek deities were related to Libya. The goddess Lamia was believed to have originated in Libya, like Medusa and the Gorgons. The Greeks seem also to have met the god Triton in Libya. The modern day Berbers may have believed that the Hesperides were situated in modern Morocco.[citation needed] The Hesperides were believed to be the daughters of Atlas, a god who is associated with the Atlas Mountains by Herodotus. The Atlas Mountain were worshipped by the Berbers and the Canary Islands represented the daughters of Atlas.

The Greeks and the Libyans began to break their harmony in the period of Battus II of Cyrene (583-560 BC). Battus II began secretly to invite other Greek groups to Libya, Tunisia and East Algeria. The Libyans and Massyle considered that as a danger that had to be stopped. The Berbers began to fight against the Greeks, sometimes in alliance with the Egyptians and other times with the Carthaginians. Nevertheless, the Greeks were the victors. Some historians[which?] believe that the myth of Antaeus and Heracles was a reflection of those wars between the Libyans and Greeks.
Roman-Berber beliefs
[edit]The Romans allied firstly with the Massyli against Carthage during the Second Punic War. The campaigns of their king Masinissa against Carthage led to the eventual destruction Carthage in 146 BCE and the annexation of the remaining Punic realm as the Province of Africa by the Romans. But later, they also annexed Numidia to the Roman Empire in 25 BC and the neighboring kingdom of Mauretania in 44 AD.
The Berber pantheon also contained multiple deities, known by the Romans as the Dii Mauri (lit. the Moorish gods), represented on reliefs and also the subject of dedications.[77] During the Roman period, Saturn and Ops were the focus of an important cult, subsuming that of Baal Hammon and Tanit, two deities of Punic origin.[citation needed]
According to Pliny the Elder,[full citation needed] the Libyans honored the war goddess Ifri, who was considered to be the protector of her worshipers (and seemed to have been an influential goddess in North Africa) and depicted her on the Berber coins. This goddess was represented in diverse ways on Numidian coins from the first century BCE. When the Romans conquered Northern Africa, she appeared in sculpture and on the coins of the Roman states in North Africa.
The Roman pantheon seems to have been adopted generally, although the cult of Saturn and Ops, as mentioned above, was perhaps the most important.
The Romans displayed great tolerance to the Berber religious cults, which explains the Berber's receptiveness of the Roman civilisation. As such, after Christianity had become the official religion of the Roman Empire, North Africa was one of the most heavily Christianised areas.[78] By the seventh century, most of North Africa's population in the urban centres and coastal plains had been Christian for a long time and paganism had vanished from prominence, except among the Berber tribes.[79]
Notes
[edit]- ^ "They begin with the ears of the animal, which they cut off and throw over their house: this done, they kill the animal by twisting the neck. They sacrifice it to the Sun and Moon, but not to any other deities. This worship is common to all the Libyans."[8]
- ^ A statue of Masinissa was set up in Delos in honour of him as well as an inscription dedicated to him in Delos by a native from Rhodes. His sons too had statues of them erected on the island of Delos and the King of Bithynia, Nicomedes, had also dedicated a statue to Masinissa.
- ^ "away by the boundary of Libya my father still suffers hardship, old Atlas with chafing shoulders bowed, upholding the seven-zoned vault of the sky."[39]
- ^ Aspects of the Berber god of the Mountain Atlas 'Mountain Region in North Africa'
- ^ symbolizes the belly and uterus of the woman, the double hooked diamond represents birth
- ^ The set of diamonds then represents the eye, attentive and vigilant: an amulet against the evil eye
References
[edit]- ^ Collectif (2015-07-08). Espaces d'échanges en Méditerranée: Antiquité et Moyen Âge (in French). Presses universitaires de Rennes. ISBN 978-2-7535-3155-0.
- ^ Ouachour, Fatima (2006), Clément, François; Tolan, John; Wilgaux, Jérôme (eds.), "L'espace cultuel comme passeur culturel en Afrique du Nord ancienne", Spaces of exchange in the Mediterranean: Antiquity and the Middle Ages, Histoire (in French), Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, pp. 187–195, ISBN 978-2-7535-3155-0, retrieved 2025-03-17
- ^ Camps, G. (1995-04-01). "Dieux africains et Dii Mauri". Encyclopédie berbère (in French) (15): 2321–2340. doi:10.4000/encyclopedieberbere.2258. ISSN 1015-7344.
- ^ Maximus of Tyre, ibid: "It is at the same time the sanctuary, the god, the bond of oaths and the idol of the Libyans."
- ^ "Nanna Tala and the Wonderful Spring of Water". Oxford Reference. doi:10.1093/oi/authority.20110803100222333. Retrieved 2025-02-11.
- ^ Scheub, Harold (2000). A dictionary of African mythology. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-989119-1.
{{cite book}}
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requires|url=
(help) - ^ Plantade, N. (2010-12-29). "Magie". Encyclopédie berbère (in French) (30): 4487–4501. doi:10.4000/encyclopedieberbere.410. ISSN 1015-7344.
- ^ Herodotus, Histories, book IV, 168–198.
- ^ Itineraria Phoenicia - Edward Lipiński
- ^ M. Tullius Cicero (105-43 BCE): from On the Republic (Scipio's Dream).
- ^ James Hastings, The Encyclopedia of Religion & Ethics, 1926, 4e partie, p. 508.
- ^ Liens entre l'Encyclopédie berbère, la préhistoire récente et la protohistoire en Afrique septentrionale (PDF) (in French). Centre de Recherche Berbère..
- ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece x.13 § 3
- ^ Livius. "Ammon (Deity)". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2025-01-11.
- ^ Recherches sur la religion des berbères, René Basset. Revue de l'histoire des religions, René Dussaud & Paul Alphandéry (PDF).
- ^ Classen, C. J. (1959). "The Libyan God Ammon in Greece before 331 B.C." Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 8 (3): 349–355. ISSN 0018-2311.
- ^ Wainwright, G. A. (2011-06-09). The Sky-Religion in Egypt: Its Antiquity and Effects. Cambridge University Press. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-521-23751-2.
- ^ Sadiqi, Fatima (2024-08-22). Women and the Codification of the Amazigh Language. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-6669-1772-7.
- ^ Wainwright, Gerald Averay (1938). The Sky-religion in Egypt: Its Antiquity and Effects. CUP Archive. p. 109.
- ^ Sadiqi, Fatima (2024-08-22). Women and the Codification of the Amazigh Language. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-6669-1772-7.
- ^ Coulter, Charles Russell; Turner, Patricia (2013-07-04). Encyclopedia of Ancient Deities. Routledge. p. 44. ISBN 978-1-135-96390-3.
- ^ "Dido | Queen of Carthage, Trojan War, Aeneas | Britannica". 6 September 2024.
- ^ Diodorus Siculus 3.68 and 3.74.
- ^ Camps, G. (1989-01-01). "Athéna". Encyclopédie berbère (in French) (7): 1011–1013. doi:10.4000/encyclopedieberbere.1211. ISSN 1015-7344. Retrieved 2023-07-11.
- ^ Mark, Joshua J. "Neith". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2024-09-15.
- ^ "Pausanias and His Description of Greece", Pausanias and Other Greek Sketches, Cambridge University Press, pp. 1–159, 2012-06-28, doi:10.1017/cbo9781139207669.002, ISBN 978-1-108-04751-7, retrieved 2024-08-04
- ^ a b Revue africaine: journal des travaux de la Société Historique Algérienne (in French). 1887. Retrieved 2023-07-11.
- ^ a b "DIONYSIACA BOOK 13, TRANSLATED BY W. H. D. ROUSE".
- ^ "Herodotus, The Histories, Book 4, chapter 180". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 2024-07-26.
They celebrate a yearly festival of Athena, where their maidens are separated into two bands and fight each other with stones and sticks, thus (they say) honoring in the way of their ancestors that native goddess whom we call Athena","As for Athena, they say that she was daughter of Poseidon and the Tritonian lake!
- ^ "Plato, Timaeus, section 21e". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 2024-09-16.
- ^ Richard J. Clifford (August 1990). "Phoenician Religion". Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (279): 62. doi:10.2307/1357208. JSTOR 1357208.
- ^ Wiggins, Steve (2007). A reassessment of Asherah: with further considerations of the goddess. Piscataway, NJ: Gorgias Press. p. 233. ISBN 978-1-59333-717-9. OCLC 171049273.
- ^ Camps, Gabriel (1999). "Gurzil". In Camps, Gabriel (ed.). Encyclopédie berbère. Vol. 21 | Gland – Hadjarien. Aix-en-Provence: Edisud. pp. 3258–3259. doi:10.4000/encyclopedieberbere.1824. ISBN 2744900974.
- ^ O. Brogan and D. Smith, 1984, Ghirza: a Libyan Settlement in the Roman Period. Tripoli.
- ^ Brett & Fentress 1996, p. 66.
- ^ a b c d Swei 2012, p. 38.
- ^ Riedlberger, Peter (2010). Gorippus Iohannis VIII (in German). Peter Riedlberger. p. 302. ISBN 978-90-6980-157-5.
- ^ Mattingly, David J. (2003-09-02). Tripolitania. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-78282-5.
- ^ "Nonnus, Dionysiaca (3.325)". topostext.org. Retrieved 2024-08-01.
- ^ Otto Schönberger; Eva Schönberger (2001). "2. Ob man Göttern als Standbilder setzen soll". Philosophische Vorträge (in German). Königshausen & Neumann. p. 28. ISBN 9783826020902.
Den Menschen dort [Libyer im Westen] ist der Atlas Heiligtum und Götterbild.
- ^ J. Desanges (1989). "Atlas". Encyclopédie berbère (in French). 7 (7): 4. doi:10.4000/encyclopedieberbere.1213. ISBN 2-85744-443-5.
C'est à la fois le sanctuaire, le dieu, le lien des serments et l'idole des Libyens
- ^ Rabasa, José (1993). Inventing America: Spanish Historiography and the Formation of Eurocentrism. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 180. ISBN 9780806125398. Retrieved 6 October 2019.
- ^ Bates 1914, pp. 185f.
- ^ Bates 1914, p. 186.
- ^ Bates 1914, p. 184.
- ^ Bates 1914, p. 185.
- ^ Article ([[Special:EditPage/{{{1}}}|edit]] | [[Talk:{{{1}}}|talk]] | [[Special:PageHistory/{{{1}}}|history]] | [[Special:ProtectPage/{{{1}}}|protect]] | [[Special:DeletePage/{{{1}}}|delete]] | [{{fullurl:Special:WhatLinksHere/{{{1}}}|limit=999}} links] | [{{fullurl:{{{1}}}|action=watch}} watch] | logs | views)
- ^ "La préservation du patrimoine gastronomique Algérien, levier pour le dévelopement du tourisme durable Résumé :". scholar.googleusercontent.com. Retrieved 2024-09-27.
- ^ "Au fil d'un langage pluriel". Aïn Atlas. Retrieved 2024-09-27.
- ^ "Le motif et le signe dans l'artisanat berbère | Le magazine Tribaliste" (in French). Retrieved 2024-09-27.
- ^ "Do you know the meaning of the diamond?". Casa Amar. Retrieved 2024-09-27.
- ^ a b Ouachi, Moustapha. “The Berbers and the death.” El-Haraka
- ^ "Wan Muhuggiag". Retrieved 16 November 2015.
- ^ Hooke, Chris (Director) (2003). The mystery of the Black Mummy (Motion picture). Libya, USA: Magellan TV. Archived from the original on 2020-04-01. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
- ^ Post, The Casbah (2019-09-04). "Quelle commune d'Algérie abrite des milliers de dolmens ?". The Casbah Post (in French). Retrieved 2024-09-16.
- ^ Tertre de M'zora Archived 2004-06-24 at the Wayback Machine (in French)
- ^ . “The Berbers and rocks.”
- ^ Pierre Roffo, Monuments funéraires pré-islamiques de l'Âge du Fer d'Algérie, Bulletin de la Société préhistorique de France, 1937, tome 34, n° 11, p.501-506
- ^ Bazina en dôme
- ^ Institut National du Patrimoine (2012). "Carte Nationale des sites archéologiques et monuments Historiques" (PDF) (in French). Retrieved 17 January 2023.
- ^ a b c d e Tawalt, Libyan Massyle Site Archived 2007-01-02 at the Wayback Machine (in Arabic), Chafik, Mohammed. Revue Tifinagh. Elements lexicaux Berberes pouvant apporter un eclairage dans la recherche des origines prehistoriques des pyramides].
- ^ a b Brett & Fentress 1996, p. 35.
- ^ Herodotus, Histories, Book 4, 170
- ^ James Hastings, Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics Part 4 - p. 512
- ^ Camps, Gabriel (1979). "Les Numides et la civilisation punique". Antiquités africaines (in French). 14 (1): 43–53. doi:10.3406/antaf.1979.1016. ISSN 0066-4871.
- ^ Hdt. IV, 186
- ^ "Women and the Transmission of Libyan Culture", Women's Influence on Classical Civilization, Routledge, pp. 139–149, 2004-07-31, doi:10.4324/9780203209653-13, ISBN 978-0-203-20965-3, retrieved 2023-08-14
- ^ William Shaler (1824). Communication on the language, manners, and customs of the Berbers or Brebers of Africa, in a series of letters to P.S. Duponceau, read before the Amer. phil. soc. and publ. in the new ser. of their transactions. pp. 18–.
- ^ H. Basset, Les influences puniques chez les Berbères, pp 367-368
- ^ Cited by Lewis Spence in Ancient Egyptian Myths and Legends; p. 64
- ^ a b Livius. "Ammon (Deity)". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2024-07-26.
- ^ Camps, G. (1989-01-01). "Athéna". Encyclopédie berbère (in French) (7): 1011–1013. doi:10.4000/encyclopedieberbere.1211. ISSN 1015-7344.
- ^ S. G. F. Brandon, Dictionary of Comparative Religion, 1970, Littlehampton, 978-0297000440
- ^ K. Freeman Greek city state- N.Y. 1983, p. 210.
- ^ Oric Bates, The Eastern Libyans.
- ^ Herodotus (2.50, 4.188)
- ^ Elizabeth Fentress, 1978, 'Di Mauri and Dii Patrii' Latomus 37, 2-16
- ^ Entelis, John P. (8 January 2016). Algeria: The Revolution Institutionalized. Routledge. pp. 9–10. ISBN 978-1-317-36098-8. Retrieved 25 September 2024.
- ^ Kaegi, Walter E. (4 November 2010). Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-521-19677-2. Retrieved 16 September 2024.
Sources
[edit]- Bates, Oric (1914). The eastern Libyans. Macmillan Publishers.
- Brett, Michael; Fentress, Elizabeth (1996). The Berbers. Blackwell Publishing. Retrieved 25 September 2024.
- Swei, Abdullaziz Saeed (July 2012). "Religion in Old Libya" (PDF). Veritas. 3 (3): 37–41.
External links
[edit]- Recherches sur la religion des Berberes by René Basset (in French)