The
Two Babylons
Chapter
II Objects of Worship
Section II - Sub-Section II
The Child in Egypt
When we turn to Egypt we find
remarkable evidence of the same thing there also. Justin, as we have
already seen, says that "Ninus subdued all nations, as far as Lybia,"
and consequently Egypt. The statement of Diodorus Siculus is to the
same effect, Egypt being one of the countries that, according to him,
Ninus brought into subjection to himself. In exact accordance with
these historical statements, we find that the name of the third person
in the primeval triad of Egypt was Khons. But Khons, in Egyptian, comes
from a word that signifies "to chase." Therefore, the name of Khons,
the son of Maut, the goddess-mother, who was adorned in such a way as
to identify her with Rhea, the great goddess-mother of Chaldea, *
properly signifies "The Huntsman," or god of the chase.
* The distinguishing
decoration of Maut was the vulture head-dress. Now the name of Rhea, in
one of its meanings, signifies a vulture.
As Khons stands in the very
same relation to the Egyptian Maut as Ninus does to Rhea, how does this
title of "The Huntsman" identify the Egyptian god with Nimrod? Now this
very name Khons, brought into contact with the Roman mythology, not
only explains the meaning of a name in the Pantheon there, that
hitherto has stood greatly in need of explanation, but causes that
name, when explained, to reflect light back again on this Egyptian
divinity, and to strengthen the conclusion already arrived at. The name
to which I refer is the name of the Latin god Consus, who was in one
aspect identified with Neptune, but who was also regarded as "the god
of hidden counsels," or "the concealer of secrets," who was looked up
to as the patron of horsemanship, and was said to have produced the
horse. Who could be the "god of hidden counsels," or the "concealer of
secrets," but Saturn, the god of the "mysteries," and whose name as
used at Rome, signified "The hidden one"? The father of Khons, or
Ohonso (as he was also called), that is, Amoun, was, as we are told by
Plutarch, known as "The hidden God"; and as father and son in the same
triad have ordinarily a correspondence of character, this shows that
Khons also must have been known in the very same character of Saturn,
"The hidden one." If the Latin Consus, then, thus exactly agreed with
the Egyptian Khons, as the god of "mysteries," or "hidden counsels,"
can there be a doubt that Khons, the Huntsman, also agreed with the
same Roman divinity as the supposed producer of the horse? Who so
likely to get the credit of producing the horse as the great huntsman
of Babel, who no doubt enlisted it in the toils of the chase, and by
this means must have been signally aided in his conflicts with the wild
beasts of the forest? In this connection, let the reader call to mind
that fabulous creature, the Centaur, half-man, half-horse, that figures
so much in the mythology of Greece. That imaginary creation, as is
generally admitted, was intended to commemorate the man who first
taught the art of horsemanship. *
* In illustration of the
principle that led to the making of the image of the Centaur, the
following passage may be given from PRESCOTT'S Mexico,
as showing the feelings of the Mexicans on first seeing a man on
horseback: "He [Cortes] ordered his men [who were cavalry] to direct
their lances at the faces of their opponents, who, terrified at the
monstrous apparition--for they supposed the rider and the horse, which
they had never before seen, to be one and the same--were
seized with a panic."
But that creation was not the
offspring of Greek fancy. Here, as in many other things, the Greeks
have only borrowed from an earlier source. The Centaur is found on
coins struck in Babylonia, showing that the idea must have originally
come from that quarter. The Centaur is found in the Zodiac, the
antiquity of which goes up to a high period, and which had its origin
in Babylon. The Centaur was represented, as we are expressly assured by
Berosus, the Babylonian historian, in the temple of Babylon, and his
language would seem to show that so also it had been in primeval times.
The Greeks did themselves admit this antiquity and derivation of the
Centaur; for though Ixion was commonly represented as the father of the
Centaurs, yet they also acknowledge that the primitive Centaurus was
the same as Kronos, or Saturn, the father of the gods. *
* Scholiast in Lycophron,
BRYANT. The Scholiast says that Chiron was the son of "Centaurus, that
is, Kronos." If any one objects that, as Chiron is said to have lived
in the time of the Trojan war, this shows that his father Kronos could
not be the father of gods and men, Xenophon answers by saying "that
Kronos was the brother of Jupiter." De Venatione
But we have seen that Kronos
was the first King of Babylon, or Nimrod; consequently, the first
Centaur was the same. Now, the way in which the Centaur was represented
on the Babylonian coins, and in the Zodiac, viewed in this light, is
very striking. The Centaur was the same as the sign Sagittarius, or
"The Archer." If the founder of Babylon's glory was "The mighty
Hunter," whose name, even in the days of Moses, was a proverb--(Gen
10:9, "Wherefore, it is said, Even as Nimrod, the
mighty hunter before the Lord")--when we find the "Archer" with his bow
and arrow, in the symbol of the supreme Babylonian divinity, and the
"Archer," among the signs of the Zodiac that originated in Babylon, I
think we may safely conclude that this Man-horse or Horse-man Archer
primarily referred to him, and was intended to
perpetuate the memory at once of his fame as a huntsman and his skill
as a horse-breaker. (see
note below) 
Now, when we thus compare the
Egyptian Khons, the "Huntsman," with the Latin Consus, the god of
horse-races, who "produced the horse," and the Centaur of Babylon, to
whom was attributed the honour of being the author of horsemanship,
while we see how all the lines converge in Babylon, it will be very
clear, I think, whence the primitive Egyptian god Khons has been
derived.
Khons, the son of the great
goddess-mother, seems to have been generally represented as a
full-grown god. The Babylonian divinity was also represented very
frequently in Egypt in the very same way as in the land of his
nativity--i.e., as a child in his mother's arms. *
* One of the symbols with
which Khons was represented, shows that even he was identified with the
child-god; "for," says Wilkinson, "at the side
of his head fell the plaited lock of Harpocrates, or childhood." 
This was the way in which
Osiris, "the son, the husband of his mother," was often exhibited, and
what we learn of this god, equally as in the case of Khons, shows that
in his original he was none other than Nimrod. It is admitted that the
secret system of Free Masonry was originally founded on the Mysteries
of the Egyptian Isis, the goddess-mother, or wife of Osiris. But what
could have led to the union of a Masonic body with these Mysteries, had
they not had particular reference to architecture, and had the god who
was worshipped in them not been celebrated for his success in
perfecting the arts of fortification and building? Now, if such were
the case, considering the relation in which, as we have already seen,
Egypt stood to Babylon, who would naturally be looked up to there as
the great patron of the Masonic art? The strong presumption is, that
Nimrod must have been the man. He was the first that gained fame in
this way. As the child of the Babylonian goddess-mother, he was
worshipped, as we have seen, in the character of Ala mahozim, "The god
of fortifications." Osiris, in like manner, the child of the Egyptian
Madonna, was equally celebrated as "the strong chief of the buildings."
This strong chief of the buildings was originally worshipped in Egypt
with every physical characteristic of Nimrod. I have already noticed
the fact that Nimrod, as the son of Cush, was a Negro. Now, there was a
tradition in Egypt, recorded by Plutarch, that "Osiris was black,"
which, in a land where the general complexion was dusky, must have
implied something more than ordinary in its darkness. Plutarch also
states that Horus, the son of Osiris, "was of a fair complexion," and
it was in this way, for the most part, that Osiris was represented. But
we have unequivocal evidence that Osiris, the son and husband of the
great goddess-queen of Egypt, was also represented as a veritable
Negro. In Wilkinson may be found a representation of him with the
unmistakable features of the genuine Cushite or Negro. Bunsen would
have it that this is a mere random importation from some of the
barbaric tribes; but the dress in which this Negro god is arrayed tells
a different tale. That dress directly connects him with Nimrod. This
Negro-featured Osiris is clothed from head to foot in a spotted
dress, the upper part being a leopard's skin, the under part also being
spotted to correspond with it. Now the name Nimrod * signifies "the
subduer of the leopard."
* "Nimr-rod"; from Nimr,
a "leopard," and rada or rad
"to subdue." According to invariable custom in Hebrew, when two
consonants come together as the two rs in Nimr-rod,
one of them is sunk. Thus Nin-neveh, "The habitation of Ninus," becomes
Nineveh. The name Nimrod is commonly derived from Mered, "to rebel";
but a difficulty has always been found in regard to this derivation, as
that would make the name Nimrod properly passive not "the rebel," but
"he who was rebelled against." There is no doubt that Nimrod was
a rebel, and that his rebellion was celebrated in ancient myths; but
his name in that character was not Nimrod, but Merodach, or, as among
the Romans, Mars, "the rebel"; or among the Oscans of Italy, Mamers
(SMITH), "The causer of rebellion." That the Roman Mars was really, in
his original, the Babylonian god, is evident from the name given to the
goddess, who was recognised sometimes as his "sister," and sometimes as
his "wife"--i.e., Bellona, which, in Chaldee, signifies, "The Lamenter
of Bel" (from Bel and onah, to
lament). The Egyptian Isis, the sister and wife of Osiris, is in like
manner represented, as we have seen, as "lamenting
her brother Osiris." (BUNSEN)
This name seems to imply, that
as Nimrod had gained fame by subduing the horse, and so making use of
it in the chase, so his fame as a huntsman rested mainly on this, that
he found out the art of making the leopard aid him in hunting the other
wild beasts. A particular kind of tame leopard is used in India at this
day for hunting; and of Bagajet I, the Mogul Emperor of India, it is
recorded that in his hunting establishment he had not only hounds of
various breeds, but leopards also, whose "collars were set with
jewels." Upon the words of the prophet Habakkuk 1:8, "swifter than
leopards," Kitto has the following remarks:--"The swiftness of the
leopard is proverbial in all countries where it is found. This,
conjoined with its other qualities, suggested the idea in the East of
partially training it, that it might be employed in hunting...Leopards
are now rarely kept for hunting in Western Asia, unless by kings and
governors; but they are more common in the eastern parts of Asia.
Orosius relates that one was sent by the king of Portugal to the Pope,
which excited great astonishment by the way in which it overtook, and
the facility with which it killed, deer and wild boars. Le Bruyn
mentions a leopard kept by the Pasha who governed Gaza, and the other
territories of the ancient Philistines, and which he frequently
employed in hunting jackals. But it is in India that the cheetah,
or hunting leopard, is most frequently employed, and is seen in the
perfection of his power." This custom of taming the leopard, and
pressing it into the service of man in this way, is traced up to the
earliest times of primitive antiquity. In the works of Sir William
Jones, we find it stated from the Persian legends, that Hoshang, the
father of Tahmurs, who built Babylon, was the "first who bred dogs and
leopards for hunting." As Tahmurs, who built Babylon, could be none
other than Nimrod, this legend only attributes to his father what, as
his name imports, he got the fame of doing himself. Now, as the classic
god bearing the lion's skin is recognised by that sign as Hercules, the
slayer of the Nemean lion, so in like manner, the god clothed in the
leopard's skin would naturally be marked out as Nimrod, the
"leopard-subduer." That this leopard skin, as appertaining to the
Egyptian god, was no occasional thing, we have clearest evidence.
Wilkinson tells us, that on all high occasions when the Egyptian high
priest was called to officiate, it was indispensable that he should do
so wearing, as his robe of office, the leopard's skin. As it is a
universal principle in all idolatries that the high priest wears the
insignia of the god he serves, this indicates the importance which the
spotted skin must have had attached to it as a symbol of the god
himself. The ordinary way in which the favourite Egyptian divinity
Osiris was mystically represented was under the
form of a young bull or calf--the calf Apis--from which the golden calf
of the Israelites was borrowed. There was a reason why that calf should
not commonly appear in the appropriate symbols of the god he
represented, for that calf represented the divinity in the character of
Saturn, "The HIDDEN one," "Apis" being only another name for Saturn. *
* The name of Apis in
Egyptian is Hepi or Hapi, which is evidently from the Chaldee "Hap,"
"to cover." In Egyptian Hap signifies "to conceal." (BUNSEN)
The cow of Athor, however, the
female divinity corresponding to Apis, is well known as a "spotted
cow," (WILKINSON) and it is singular that the Druids of Britain also
worshipped "a spotted cow" (DAVIES'S Druids). Rare
though it be, however, to find an instance of the deified calf or young
bull represented with the spots, there is evidence still in existence,
that even it was sometimes so represented. When we
find that Osiris, the grand god of Egypt, under different forms, was
thus arrayed in a leopard's skin or spotted dress, and that the
leopard-skin dress was so indispensable a part of the sacred robes of
his high priest, we may be sure that there was a deep meaning in such a
costume. And what could that meaning be, but just to identify Osiris
with the Babylonian god, who was celebrated as the "Leopard-tamer," and
who was worshipped even as he was, as Ninus, the CHILD in his mother's
arms?
Note
Meaning of the Name
Centaurus
The ordinary classical
derivation of this name gives little satisfaction; for, even though it
could be derived from words that signify "Bull-killers" (and the
derivation itself is but lame), such a meaning casts no light at all on
the history of the Centaurs. Take it as a Chaldee word, and it will be
seen at once that the whole history of the primitive Kentaurus entirely
agrees with the history of Nimrod, with whom we have already identified
him. Kentaurus is evidently derived from Kehn, "a priest," and Tor, "to
go round." "Kehn-Tor," therefore, is "Priest of the revolver," that is,
of the sun, which, to appearance, makes a daily revolution round the
earth. The name for a priest, as written, is just Khn, and the vowel is
supplied according to the different dialects of those who pronounce it,
so as to make it either Kohn, Kahn, or Kehn. Tor, "the revolver," as
applied to the sun, is evidently just another name for the Greek Zen or
Zan applied to Jupiter, as identified with the sun, which signifies the
"Encircler" or "Encompasser,"--the very word from which comes our own
word "Sun," which, in Anglo-Saxon, was Sunna (MALLET, Glossary),
and of which we find distinct traces in Egypt in the term snnuVocab.), as applied to the sun's orbit.
The Hebrew Zon or Zawon, to "encircle," from which these words come, in
Chaldee becomes Don or Dawon, and thus we penetrate the meaning of the
name given by the Boeotians to the "Mighty hunter,"
Orion. That name was Kandaon, as appears from the following words of
the Scholiast on Lycophron, quoted in BRYANT: "Orion, whom the
Boeotians call also Kandaon." Kahn-daon, then, and Kehn-tor, were just
different names for the same office--the one meaning "Priest of the
Encircler," the other, "Priest of the revolver"--titles evidently
equivalent to that of Bol-kahn, or "Priest of Baal, or the Sun," which,
there can be no doubt, was the distinguishing title of Nimrod. As the
title of Centaurus thus exactly agrees with the known position of
Nimrod, so the history of the father of the Centaurs does the same. We
have seen already that, though Ixion was, by the Greeks, made the
father of that mythical race, even they themselves admitted that the
Centaurs had a much higher origin, and consequently that Ixion, which
seems to be a Grecian name, had taken the place of an earlier name,
according to that propensity particularly noticed by Salverte, which
has often led mankind "to apply to personages known in one time and one
country, myths which they have borrowed from another country and an
earlier epoch" (Des Sciences). Let this only be
admitted to be the case here--let only the name of Ixion be removed,
and it will be seen that all that is said of the father of the
Centaurs, or Horsemen-archers, applies exactly to Nimrod, as
represented by the different myths that refer to the first progenitor
of these Centaurs. First, then, Centaurus is represented as having been
taken up to heaven (DYMOCK "Ixion"), that is, as having been highly
exalted through special favour of heaven; then, in that state of
exaltation, he is said to have fallen in love with Nephele, who passed
under the name of Juno, the "Queen of Heaven." The story here is
intentionally confused, to mystify the vulgar, and the order of events
seems changed, which can easily be accounted for. As Nephele in Greek
signifies "a cloud," so the offspring of Centaurus are said to have
been produced by a "cloud." But Nephele, in the language of the country
where the fable was originally framed, signified "A fallen woman," and
it is from that "fallen woman," therefore, that the Centaurs are really
said to have sprung. Now, the story of Nimrod, as Ninus, is, that he
fell in love with Semiramis when she was another man's wife, and took
her for his own wife, whereby she became doubly fallen--fallen as a
woman *-- and fallen from the primitive faith in which she must have
been brought up; and it is well known that this "fallen woman" was,
under the name of Juno, or the Dove, after her death, worshipped among
the Babylonians.
(BUNSEN'S
* Nephele was used, even in
Greece, as the name of a woman, the degraded wife
of Athamas being so called. (SMITH'S Class. Dict.,
"Athamas")
Centaurus, for his presumption
and pride, was smitten with lightning by the supreme God, and cast down
to hell (DYMOCK, "Ixion"). This, then, is just another version of the
story of Phaethon, Aesculapius, and Orpheus, who were all smitten in
like manner and for a similar cause. In the infernal world, the father
of the Centaurs is represented as tied by serpents to a wheel which
perpetually revolves, and thus makes his punishment eternal (DYMOCK).
In the serpents there is evidently reference to one of the two emblems
of the fire-worship of Nimrod. If he introduced the
worship of the serpent, as I have endeavoured to show, there was
poetical justice in making the serpent an instrument of his punishment.
Then the revolving wheel very clearly points to the name Centaurus
itself, as denoting the "Priest of the revolving sun." To the worship
of the sun in the character of the "Revolver," there was a very
distinct allusion not only in the circle which, among the Pagans, was
the emblem of the sun-god, and the blazing wheel with which he was so
frequently represented (WILSON'S Parsi Religion),
but in the
circular dances of the Bacchanalians. Hence the phrase,
"Bassaridum
rotatorwheeling Evan of the
Bacchantes" (STATIUS,
Sylv.). Hence, also, the circular dances of the Druids as
referred to in the following quotation from a Druidic song: "Ruddy was
the sea beach whilst the
circular revolution was performed by the attendants and the
white bands in graceful extravagance" (DAVIES'S Druids).
That this circular dance among the Pagan idolaters really had reference
to the circuit of the sun, we find from the distinct statement of
Lucian in his treatise On Dancing, where, speaking
of the circular dance of the ancient Eastern nations, he says, with
express reference to the sun-god, "it consisted in a dance imitating
this god." We see then, here, a very specific reason for the circular
dance of the Bacchae, and for the ever-revolving wheel of the great
Centaurus in the infernal regions.
Evan"--"The
The Two Babylons: Contents
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