Descent to the underworld
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The descent to the underworld is a mytheme of comparative mythology present from the religions of the Ancient Near East and continued into Christianity. The myth involves the death of a youthful god (a life-death-rebirth deity), mourned and then recovered from the underworld by his or her consort, lover or mother.
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[edit] Katabasis
One meaning of katabasis is the epic convention of the hero's trip into the underworld.[1] In Greek mythology, for example, Orpheus enters the underworld in order to bring Eurydice back to the world of the living.
Most katabases take place in a supernatural underworld, such as Hades or Hell — as in Nekyia, the 11th book of the Odyssey, which describes the descent of Odysseus to the underworld. However, katabasis can also refer to a journey through other dystopic areas, such as what Odysseus encounters on his 20-year journey back from Troy to Ithaca. Pilar Serrano[1] allows the term katabasis to encompass brief or chronic stays in the underworld, including those of Lazarus and Castor and Pollux.
[edit] Mythological characters
Mythological characters who make visits to the underworld include:
- Egyptian Osiris (see also Egyptian Book of the Dead)
- Adonis/Tammuz is mourned and then recovered by his consort/mother Aphrodite/Inanna/Ishtar
- The god Dionysus, to rescue Semele from Hades[2]
- Heracles, for his twelfth labor, on which occasion he also rescued Theseus
- The god Hermes, to rescue Persephone from Hades
- Orpheus, to rescue Eurydice from Hades
- Persephone and Demeter
- Psyche
- Enkidu, in a tablet of the Epic of Gilgamesh usually considered a later addition to the tale
- Gilgamesh descends to the underworld to meet Utnapishtim in a quest for immortality.
- Inanna descends to the underworld with gifts to pass through the seven gates of the underworld.
- The biblical story of Joseph is paralleled to the myth in Panbabylonism, notably in Thomas Mann's Joseph and His Brothers.
- Mary's mourning of Jesus (pietà) and the latter's Harrowing of Hell
- Dante, in the The Divine Comedy: Inferno
- Baldr
- Lemminkäinen's rescue from Tuonela by his mother.
- Helreið Brynhildar.
- Other
- Japanese mythology: Izanagi and Izanami in Yomi
- Mayan mythology: Itzamna and Ix Chel
- Mahayana Buddhism: the bodhisattva Kuan Yin's descent into a hell-like region after taking on the bad karma of her executioner in pity.
- Vedic religion: Ushas (dawn) is liberated from the Vala by Indra; Emperor Yudhisthira descends into Naraka
- Welsh mythology: Pwyll's descent into Annwn in the Welsh Mabinogion
- Ohlone mythology (Native American): Kaknu fights Body of Stone.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b Pilar González Serrano, "Catábasis y resurrección". Espacio, Tiempo y Forma, Serie II: Historia Antigua. Volume 12, pp. 129–179. Madrid, 1999.
- ^ Robert Graves. The Greek Myths, 27. k, which cites Pausanias' Description of Greece 2.31.2.
[edit] Further Reading
- Walter Burkert, Homo necans.
- Janda, M., Eleusis, das indogermanische Erbe der Mysterien (1998).
- Rachel Falconer, Hell in Contemporary Literature: Western Descent Narratives since 1945, (Edinburgh University Press, 2005/07)