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  • Hey there, I'm Mike Rugnetta! This is Crash Course Mythology and today

  • We're going to talk about the dying god, a specific archetype of god that might seem counterintuitive,

  • considering lots of the myths we've already talked about feature gods who are immortal.

  • The dying god trope, though, is one found in many regions throughout the world, but especially in the Greco-Hellenistic Roman World, which includes Egypt.

  • Don't worry, though! Thoth is fine, he's just more like a death secretary. Alright, let's go.

  • *Crash Course Intro*

  • The dying god is, you guessed it, a god who dies and is often but not always reborn.

  • Sometimes gods die for the benefit of their people, in which case,

  • they're a savior as we discussed in a previous episode. Other times,

  • the god is reborn actually or symbolically. So these stories also have

  • something in common with the myths that represent regeneration or seasonal rebirth.

  • In the west, the most well-known story of a dying god is, of course, the Crucifixion and Resurrection of Jesus.

  • We're not going to get into that one here because it's a widely studied story that y'all are likely familiar with.

  • Instead, let's start with an iconic dying god from Ancient Greece.

  • The Story of Adonis.

  • Nowadays, calling some dude an Adonis is shorthand for saying that he is super hot.

  • But, originally, Adonis was the Greco-Roman Version of a semitic God, sometimes Identified with Osiris.

  • In Semitic languages like Hebrew, Adonis's Name is Adonai or Lord.

  • So Adonis's significance goes way beyond killer abs.

  • In some versions of the Adonis's story, his mother was a virgin.

  • In others, he's the result of incest between his mother and her father, the King.

  • Still, other versions claim that Adonis may have been born out of a myrrh tree.

  • So, for those of you keeping track at home, we've had

  • several brain baby, a thigh baby, one stone baby and now our first tree birth.

  • Probably the best known version of the Adonis myth comes from Ovid's

  • metamorphoses which details Venus's mad love for the beautiful young god.

  • However, we can't give Adonis all the credit.

  • Venus only fell for him after one of Cupid's arrows grazed her breast.

  • She leaves Olympus to chase Adonis around the wood.

  • She warned him not to be too risky in his hunting, but as you can probably guess,

  • Adonis does not listen. He's killed by a boar that gore him in the groin,

  • Ouch.

  • When she finds him dying, Venus is distraught.

  • Brutal.

  • Venus, history's first black metal lyricist.

  • She, then, sprinkles nectar on Adonis's blood and it transforms into a red anemone flower.

  • This flower is born, lives, dies and is reborn again - each year - like flowers do,

  • so it's a symbolic reminder of the cyclical nature of the seasons and perhaps, our grief.

  • Thoth - you get all misty-eyed or is it just allergies?

  • Seeing the same flower die every year might be kind of sad, but in another way, it's a hopeful symbol,

  • for the idea that maybe death isn't final after all.

  • Now, let's turn to one of the most famous dying gods, our friend Odin,

  • who hanged himself from the World Tree - Yggdrasil - as a sacrifice in order to gain the Knowledge of Runes.

  • He doesn't really die in most versions of the myth, but he does suffer.

  • Both from hanging and from being pierced in the side with a sword.

  • Note the parallels with the death of Jesus here #dyinggods

  • There's also Balder, a Norse god, who actually does die.

  • Like Adonis, Balder is often described as beautiful and beloved by all the gods

  • Except, of course, for Loki, who as I may have mentioned is: the worst.

  • Loki was jealous of Balder's popularity and schemed to have him killed

  • by the one thing that he was vulnerable to: you're not going to guess what it is

  • It's mistletoe.

  • So think of that at the next office Christmas Party, hm?

  • His mother, Frigg, had gotten every substance on Earth to swear not to bring harm to Balder,

  • except from mistletoe,

  • because she thought that it didn't matter.

  • Loki crafted a dart from mistletoe and got the blind god,

  • Hodr, to throw it at Balder while everyone else was having fun throwing stuff at him

  • because he's invulnerable.

  • Norse gods sure do know how to party.

  • Balder dies and goes down to single hockey stick, Hell, the place.

  • His mother asks for volunteers to try to bring him back and

  • Balder's brother, Hermod steps up, saddles up and rides down to hell.

  • Hel, the person who minds Hell, the place, isn't particularly moved.

  • But as underworld gods are often want to do she decides to make a deal.

  • She says that if everyone on Earth will weep for Balder and she'll let him return.

  • Turns out, Balder was so beloved that everyone and everything on Earth did weep for him,

  • Except for one giantess named Thokk who says,

  • Harsh, Thokk. What Balder ever do to you? Jeez.

  • So Balder doesn't come back from the dead all because of Thokk.

  • Though, if you ask the other gods, they'll point out something very interesting,

  • isn't Loki, who's the worst, a shapeshifter

  • And have you ever seen him and Thokk in the same room? Just Saying.

  • These are the reasons Loki Is the worst.

  • Far from being a bittersweet reminder of life's impermanence,

  • Balder's death foreshadows Ragnarok, the literal Death and Rebirth of everything.

  • More on that in a few episodes.

  • (If the world doesn't end)

  • The story of the Corn Mother, a great goddess from native American Mythology is one where the dying god,

  • specifically makes sacrifices in order to bring salvation to her people.

  • Thought Bubble, this one's a little grisly but we think he can handle it.

  • The first mother was born from a drop of dew during the time when the All-Maker was creating all sorts of things.

  • She was a beautiful young woman who upon being born proclaimed,

  • All-Maker certainly loved her and together they bore the first people.

  • Following All-Maker's instructions, the people learned to hunt.

  • In time, they became so good at it that they exhausted all the game on the Earth.

  • Then, the people began to starve and this made the first mother very sad because

  • she had made the people and now couldn't do anything to help.

  • Her husband didn't want to see the first mother so sad and asked

  • what he could do to stop her weeping.

  • The first mother replied with the only thing he could do:

  • Kill her.

  • Her husband refused at first but eventually

  • he relented and asked the first mother, how he should do it,

  • first mother told him that when the sun was at its highest point,

  • he should kill her and have two of her sons dragged her by the hair

  • over the barren Earth until all the flesh had been scraped from her body, then

  • they were to take her bones and bury them and wait seven months before returning.

  • At this time, their mother's flesh would feed the people. The husband and son did what the first mother said and waited

  • sadly for seven months to return to the place where first mother's flesh had been stripped from her bone.

  • There they found plants with tassels of hair, silky like the first mother's and sweet fruit that they could eat.

  • This was corn and as the first mother promised, it fed the people. From then on,

  • her sacrifice being repeated and renewed every seven months.

  • Thank you, Thought Bubble.

  • After the discovery of corn, the people of Earth went back to the place where they'd

  • buried her bones and they found another plant with sacred leaves,

  • that when burned would clear their minds and help them with their prayers.

  • This was tobacco.

  • So, thanks? Yeah that one's a lot more tricky, just ask...

  • Well we're gonna get to trickster gods in the next episode.

  • So, the first mother now called the Corn Mother

  • saved the native American people from starvation. There's an amazing blend of archetypes in this story.

  • Obviously, there's the Earth Mother who gave birth to humanity, and cares for them.

  • Like human mothers, she weeps at her helplessness when her children suffer and she's willing to sacrifice anything,

  • including her body so that her children will survive.

  • In this sacrifice, she also plays the role of the savior which is more typically a role performed by male gods in myths.

  • The Corn Mother is also a culture hero, her sacrifice transforms a hunting people into an agricultural people,

  • though many native Americans in North America pursued both hunting and agriculture simultaneously

  • as means of subsistence.

  • The Corn Mother here by providing an alternative form of food enabled the animals to recover, providing game for the people.

  • And in addition to providing food, the Corn Mother gave the people tobacco which became an important part

  • of their religious ritual and other practices. Many of the dying god stories involve cycles,

  • whether it's Adonis and the annual flower or the corn Mother and the annual harvest,

  • these stories remind us that birth is often twinned with death,

  • which may make the latter inevitability easier to accept,

  • and the Corn Mother story adds an extra layer in reminding us that motherly sacrifices enable all life.

  • We've seen the idea of god sacrificing themselves as the foundation of Creation before,

  • Tongu's body became the Earth's, the body and bones of Amir became the Earth's and the Mountains, and his skull became the sky

  • Gaia gave birth to the mountains of the oceans. It's not surprising that throughout most of human history,

  • when child birth was much more likely to end in the mother's death, that we find stories

  • where gods sacrificed themselves so that humans can live.

  • Thanks for watching. We'll see you next time.

  • Check out our Crash Course Mythology Thoth tote Bag and Poster Available now at dftba.com

  • Crash Course mythology is filmed in the Chad and Stacey Emigholz Studio in Indianapolis, Indiana

  • and introduced with the help of all of these very nice people, our animation team is Thought Cafe.

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  • Thanks for watching, and

  • hey, Balder does not appreciate your jokes.

Hey there, I'm Mike Rugnetta! This is Crash Course Mythology and today

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