| Min (sometimes incorrectly transcribed
as Chem) was a god and the patron
of traveling caravans, in Egyptian
mythology, known since the Predynastic
Period, and even worshipped by the
Scorpion King. Originally, Min was
the constellation Orion, which as
the most god-like constellation, put
Min in charge of the sky, consequently
in charge of thunder, and of rain,
since they fell from the sky. Subsequently,
Min was identified with Horus,
who was also a God of the raised arm
(a reference to the shape of Orion),
and usually depicted as such. |
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This identification as Horus survived until the Middle Kingdom,
when the two had begun to develop separate identities: Horus
as a solar deity (since the sun crosses the sky), Min as a
fertility deity (since rain makes the land fertile). In particular,
the rendering of Orion that was Min, was one that chose to
depict the 3 bright stars of Orion's belt as an erect phallus,
contributing to this separation. With his many different aspects,
Min was a popular god, but in later mythology was absorbed
into the more significant (at the time) god Amun, since Amun
was associated with the ram, viewed as a symbol of virility.
This association with virility lead to Amun-Min gaining the
epithet Kamutef, meaning Bull of his mother. As Amun-Min,
he was often found depicted on the walls of Karnak.
Min was associated by the Greeks with their god Pan, a fertility
god, whom the Greeks thought had invented masturbation, and
thus they named Akhmim, his main cult centre, as Panopolis
(meaning city of Pan). He was also associated strongly with
the city of Coptos. In both locations he was worshipped in
the form of a white bull (representing virility). Min was
worshiped right through Egyptian predynastic times up to Roman
times - a deity whose temples were built and rebuilt through
Egypt's entire history.
As a god of male sexual potency, he was honoured during the
coronation rites of the New Kingdom, when the Pharaoh was
expected to sow his seed --generally thought to have been
plant seeds, although there have been controversial suggestions
that the Pharoah was expected to demonstrate that he could
ejaculate-- and thus ensure the annual flooding of the Nile,
since the Pharoah was thought of as the manifestation of Ra
(or more accurately, Atum-Ra). At the beginning of the harvest
season, his image was taken out of the temple and brought
to the fields in the festival of the departure of Min, when
they blessed the harvest, and played games naked in his honour
-- the most important of these being the climbing of a huge
(tent) pole.
In Egyptian art, Min was depicted as wearing a crown with
feathers, and holding his penis erect in his left hand (a
masturbatory reference to fertility), whilst holding a flail
(referring to his authority, or rather that of the Pharoahs)
in his upward facing, and bent, right hand (cf. the constellation
of Orion). Around his forehead, Min wears a red ribbon that
trails to the ground, claimed by some to represent sexual
energy. The symbols of Min were the white bull, a barbed arrow,
and a bed of lettuce, that the Egyptians believed to be an
aphrodisiac, as Egyptian lettuce was tall, straight, and released
a milk-like substance when rubbed -- characteristics superficially
similar to the penis.
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A few Egyptologists think there
existed an Egyptian military ritual
wherein prisoners were raped or sodomised,
so as to ensure their subjugation.
This ritual also allegedly appeared
in the myth of the battle between
Set and Horus,
supposedly indicating that the rape
may have been considered to confirm
the subjugation of prisoners "legally"
or "theologically". Even
some war goddesses were depicted with
the body of Min (including the phallus),
and this also led to depictions, ostensibly
of Min, with the head of a lioness. |
Min was always depicted in an ithyphallic (with an erect
and uncovered phallus) style, and thus Christians routinely
defaced his monuments in temples they co-opted, and Victorian
Egyptologists would take only waist-up photographs of Min,
or otherwise find ways to cover his protruding manhood. However,
to the ancient Egyptians, Min was not a matter of scandal
- they had very relaxed standards of nudity: in their warm
climate, dancing girls, serving women, and farmers often worked
naked, and children did not wear any clothes until they came
of age.
In the 19th century, there was an erroneous transcription
of the Egyptian for Min as "khem", purely by coincidence.
Since this Khem was worshipped most significantly in Akhmim,
the separate identity of Khem was reinforced, Akhmim being
understood as simply a corruption of Khem. However, Akhmim
is a corruption, meaning Shrine of Min, via the demotic form
mn. The existence of a god named Khem, was later understood
as a faulty reading, but unfortunately it had already been
enshrined in books written by E. A. Wallis Budgenow
out of copyright and widely reprinted, and so this error
still finds a home among non-Egyptologists.
Nethertheless, since Khem (meaning black) was normally used
to described the fertile soils by the Nile, it was sometimes
used as an epithet for Min, as the god of fertility. Since
Khem was also an Egyptian name for Egypt (precisely because
it described the soil of the Nile valley), there is also an
association with Ham, who represented the forefather of the
north-east African nations including Egypt. Ham could plausibly
be a name derived from Khem (Egypt), or vice versa, via sound
change, due to the change in language between Egyptian and
Hebrew, corresponding to the well known phonological change
of /k/ into /kh/ into /x/ (voiceless velar fricative) into
/h/.
Min may have been mentioned in the Torah in the Book of Isaiah
65:11. "But you are those who forsake
the LORD, who forget My holy mountain,
who prepare a table for Gad, and who furnish
a drink offering for Meni". It is
also of note that Meni has, in this case,
also been translated as: 'God of Destiny'
and 'God of Fate' or simply 'Destiny'
or 'Fate'.
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According to Easton's Bible Dictionary:
"Isaiah 65:11, marg. (A.V.,
"that number;" RSV, "destiny"),
probably an idol which the captive
Israelites worshipped after the
example of the Babylonians. It may
have been a symbol of destiny."
More Commentary on Crosswalk. "Some
take ... Meni, which we translate
... a number, to be the proper names
of two of their idols, answering
to Mercury." Matthew Henry
Complete Commentary on the Whole
Bible.
There is a controversy concerning
the fact that Joseph Smith, the
founder of Mormonism once identified
a depiction of Min (including erect
penis ) as 'God' of the Church of
Latter Day Saints. This depiction
was included in the Mormon text
Pearl of Great Price
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