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Serpents, Spirals and Prayers

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This was put together by me. Hope it is enjoyed.

 

 

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Serpents, Spirals and Prayers - A Journey Through Symbolic Forms in

Jewelry

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Going through regular monthly cycles, the moon inevitably came to

be identified with femininity and the fact that it showered

soothing and comforting rays from an eminent position high above

in the sky ensured that our venerable ancient forefathers (and

mothers), ascribed the status of a goddess to this nocturnal

body. This is one reason why the early mainstream religions, with

their marked preference for the male of the species, found the

veneration towards what was a palpably feminine deity hard to

digest and hence came to associate such an inclination with an

aberration of the mind and it was not long before the word

'lunatic', with its lunar associations, came to brand such

devotion as insanity.

 

However, notwithstanding the injunctions to the contrary, the

moon as a symbol continued to fascinate humans. To observers on

the earth, it was the most changeable of all celestial phenomena.

In earlier times, the appearance of the new crescent was often

greeted with joy as a return of the moon from the dead. In

ancient Egypt, the sickle-shaped deity signified the goddess Isis

and any jewel fashioned in its likeness was believed to protect

infants. The crescent's association with babies derives from the

fact that it is itself the small, newborn moon. (It was always

the waxing moon, never the waning one.) Specifically, since it

appeared to give birth to itself, it was natural for the heavenly

body to become the patron deity of childbirth. Even when

submerged in the sea of night, the moon possesses the secret of a

new, evolving life. Similarly are all babies born into life out

of the dark waters of the womb.

 

To the skeptic the fact that the moon has no light of its own but

merely reflects the sun is an indication of the inferior status

of the former. It is left to the sacred text Prasna Upanishad to

bring things into perspective:

 

'The sun is the principle of life and the primeval waters are the

moon. And these waters are the source of all that is visible or

invisible. Hence the waters are the image of all things.' (Tr.

>From Sanskrit By Alain Danielou.) Thus does the moon reflect the

sun's light. Further, by analogy, it is the same archetypal waters

which fertilize the male seed floating in its infinite depths.

 

It is all the more auspicious to craft the crescent out in silver

as it is considered the moon's metal much as gold is associated

with the sun.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jet99.jpg

 

Then there is Shiva, the Hindu god of destruction, who adorns his

crest with the crescent, which both softens and sensualises his

appearance at the same time.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/bg22.jpg

 

In Islam too, the crescent is considered sacred since it was

Prophet Muhammad himself who proclaimed the lunar dating system,

replacing the earlier one based on a combination of the solar and

lunar calendars. The crescent motif, known as the hilal, has been

much used throughout the centuries in Islamic art and appears on

the flag of many nations thus inclined.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/flag.jpg

 

The stand-alone crescent is in a sense incomplete, without the

mating male element, represented by the sun. The two heavenly

bodies, juxtaposed in a number of imaginative ways, denote the

sacred marriage of the two underlying principles, which are the

building blocks of the universe. In the world's earliest book,

the Rig Veda, there is a hymn glorifying the union of Soma (moon)

with Surya (sun).

 

 

The Creative Tension in Chinese Thought

 

One night in China, the venerable sage Chang San Fang had a vivid

dream of a contest between two creatures, a snake and a crane.

The former came up from the earth, and the latter flew down from

a tree, and then began a struggle over a morsel of food. The

dream recurred, night after night, and yet neither creature was

ever wholly victorious. The contest was very evenly matched - an

example of opposites in dynamic harmony.

 

This active engagement of the two principles was given visual

form in an ingenious diagram known in Chinese as the Tai Chi Tu.

It is a perfect circle, divided into two equal parts by a

central, vertical S, which symbolically represents the coiled

dragon of Chinese mythology. In the white section, which is

associated with the hard, male principle (yang) is a black dot.

The latter signifies the presence of the softer feminine, known

as yin.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jdk86.jpg

 

The black region belongs to the yin and has the corresponding

white dot representing the male. This overlapping suggests that

nothing in the world is wholly yin or yang in itself, but each

contains the seed of the other. Also, one may be yang in relation

to something, but yin in relation to another. Hence, a

grandfather is yang to the grandmother, but perhaps yin to his

grandchildren (hopefully).

 

The incongruent dots, each occupying the sphere of its opposite

are a great spur to creative activity; inasmuch as a oyster gives

rise to a pearl when a foreign matter enters it, similarly does

the trace of the disparate element present in the two fields

become the root behind all creative impulse.

 

 

Amulets, Talismans and the Like

 

Though in popular parlance, the terms amulet and talisman are

used interchangeably, there is a fine distinction between the

two. While the former wards off bad luck, a talisman is believed

to be an enhancer of good fortune. Amulets and talismans are two

sides of the same coin. One repels what is baneful while the

other impels on the beneficial. The employment of both rests on

the belief that the inherent quality of a thing can be

transmitted to human beings by contact.

 

The choice of objects used as amulets and talismans is determined

by several different criteria, at the root of which lies the

basis that " like affects like " . For example, parts of animals

exemplifying certain characteristics - hare for swiftness or bull

for strength; relics of holy or heroic persons, or even dust from

their graves, believed to be imbued with their charisma; models

of common objects to which a symbolic significance is attributed,

such as a miniature ladder representing the soul's ascent to

heaven.

 

The color of an object may also be decisive and a yellow stone

may be used against jaundice while a red one to relieve menstrual

disorders. Ubiquitous also are models of the male and female

genitalia, thought to increase the procreative ability and its

associated pleasures.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/lm33.jpg

 

It is not only material things that function as effective amulets

and talismans. In primitive thought, the name of a person was not

a mere verbal appellation but an essential component of his

being, that of a god or demon written on a slip or engraved on a

gem could therefore serve as a potential magical instrument.

Similarly, scrolls or scripts containing mantras or excerpts from

scriptures were (and still are) considered extremely powerful.

Such sacred written treasures naturally required equally

beautiful receptacles to hold them. Thus was born the unique box

container, the skilled craftsmanship of which was taken to

dazzling heights by the Tibetans, where it was called the 'gau'.

 

The gau is used widely throughout the western and eastern

sub-Himalayan area by tribes which follow Buddhism. The origin of

this container-pendant can be traced to the often inhospitable

environment of Tibet. Violent natural phenomena, such as seasonal

floods, hail, winds and sandstorms, affect the success of the

crops upon which the people's very existence depends. An ancient,

animistic Tibetan iconography shared by most people in this

region provides them with a means of coping with such natural

disasters. Elemental in this system is the belief that the

physical elements in the environment possess power attributed to

the presence of natural spirits, some benevolent (trinchhem-po)

and others malignant (sem ngem-po). The former must be

propitiated, and magical protection secured against the latter.

It is either of these two functions, which influences the choice

of the gau's contents.

 

The gau combines in itself form and function. Since it is a

container to hold and protect various charms placed within, it

consists of two basic parts that fit together, so that access to

its inner space is possible. Most generally the gau is made of

silver (nga), which is used for the visible front, and the

removable back half can be copper, brass, or silver itself.

 

In addition to being a functional object, the gau is also a

decorative one, often of considerable artistic merit - with the

flat surface ornamented with wire work, stamped units, and often,

turquoise and coral stones. The main space may be filled with

filigree (cha-ku le-ka) in scrolling and tendril patterns, that

symbolize the ever-flowing essence of nature.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jim52.jpg

 

In some cultures, the written word may directly serve as a

magical ornament. Among Muslims for instance, the most potent

amulet is believed to be a small and flat sheet, usually made of

gold or silver (or a gemstone), on which is inscribed a verse

from the sacred Quran. Looking like a tiny page from the sacred

book, it displays a special verse in Arabic script. Their

spiritual strength is derived not from the shape or design, but

rather the massive power that is invested in the holy words

inscribed on their surface. Craftsmen (and women) from

Afghanistan, create the finest examples in this genre,

embellishing their calligraphic plates with tedious arabesque and

other decorative patterns. The preferred materials for carving

out the sacred texts are lapis lazuli and carnelian, the latter

renowned for its special connection with Prophet Muhammad, who

reputedly adorned his finger with an inscribed ring of the same

stone.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jim93.jpg

 

 

The Story of The Evil Eye

 

Another ancient motif, which has amuletic connotations, is the

eye, encountered on many prehistoric walls and monuments. These

represent the providential vigilance of benevolent gods and

spirits, counteracting the evil eye of the malevolent demons.

This belief is particularly prevalent in the Arab world, where a

proverb goes: " the evil eye empties houses and fills tombs " .

 

According to a related Turkish legend, there was once a massive

rock by the sea, which even the force of a thousand men and a

load of dynamite couldn't move or crack. There was also a man in

the town, known to carry the evil eye (nazar). After much

persuasion, he was convinced to come to the rock. He took one

look at it and said, " My! What a huge rock " . No sooner had he

uttered the words than there was a rip, roar and crack and the

impossible boulder split into two.

 

Indeed, the deep-seated fear of the harmful eye has meant that

wearing a rival eye - a protective symbol that can outstare the

evil one - has proved immensely popular over many centuries. One

such object is the blue eye from Turkey, known locally as nazar

boncuk, which is set into a variety of jewelry forms.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jew49.jpg

 

Another rebuff to the negative eye are the Tibetan gzi beads,

believed to be the droppings of the mythical bird Garuda as it

flies across the skies.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/us13.jpg

 

 

The Potential Power of the Spiral

 

The spiral is one of the oldest pagan symbols in existence. It

represents the perpetual motion of life, with the spring-like

coils suggesting latent power, presenting a picture of life as an

endless, evolutionary process bound within the cycles of time.

Although each loop of the spiral brings us back to the same

place, it takes us to a higher and more evolved level.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jhn61.jpg

 

Triple Spiral

 

This Celtic spiral represents the triple goddess of the three

ages of womanhood (maiden, mother and crone). It later came to

signify the holy trinity in Christianity, God the Father, Son and

Holy Spirit. This motif is also called the triskele.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jdx29.jpg

 

 

Beaded Prayers

 

The activity of using beads in spiritual practice is not a recent

or ancient phenomena but rather an archetypal one, as is borne

out by the fact that it is common to all traditions. When strung

together, these beads are used as a device to count recitations

of prayers or as an aid to meditation.

 

The etymology of the word 'bead' helps us to understand this

function, deriving as it does from the Sanskrit buddh, which

refers to self-realization (Buddha being one such realizer) and

from the Saxon verb bidden, to 'pray'.

 

The rosary however, is only one of the several ways to count

prayers. The earliest means involved summing on fingers or

shifting pebbles from one pile to another. These unwieldy methods

were replaced by tying knots on a cord and the string of prayer

beads probably evolved from this knotted thread. The Greek

Orthodox Church still employs such a knotted rosary known as the

kombologion.

 

The present Catholic rosary is believed to have been given by the

Virgin Mary to St. Dominic (1170-1221 AD), bidding him to teach

it to the faithful. The term rosary itself is loaded with

symbolic significance, one of its meaning being a necklace of

roses suggesting the stringing together of prayers in the form of

blossoms. Further, the red rose symbolizes Christ's blood and the

purity of the Virgin Mary. Also, collections of medieval prayers

and hymns were bound into books called rosaria (flower gardens).

Thus was the spiritual identity of roses extended to beads, which

came to signify a permanent garden of prayers.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/rosary.jpg

 

Since Catholics must say 150 prayers, their rosary is divided up

into 15 sets of 10 beads. Each set of ten is separated from the

next by a larger bead and, at one point in the circle, there will

be a special punctuation, probably in the form of a crucifix, to

mark the end of the cycle. For common use, there is a lesser

rosary of only 50 beads, in which each piece is worth three

prayers.

 

The credit of inventing the rosary goes to Brahmanical Hindus, as

early as 1500 BC. It came to be known as the mala, literally

meaning a 'garland of flowers.'

 

Often worn as a necklace in India, the rosary thereby became a

form of devotional jewelry. Today however, many prefer not to

display it as a personal adornment and wear it out of sight under

clothing. In fact, some place the rosary and the hand counting it

into a small, often embroidered bag, so as not to make a public

exhibit of their devotion.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/mala.jpg

 

The Hindu rosary has 50 beads, corresponding to the number of

characters in the Sanskrit language. The number may go up to 108

incorporating the nine planets in 12 zodiac houses. This is also

the number of dairymaids (gopis), who surrendered themselves to

Krishna. Here it is relevant to observe that no material is

regarded as too lowly or precious to form mala beads, just as any

soul is perfect enough to seek union with god.

 

The Buddhist mala too consists of 108 beads, echoing the number

of Brahmins present at the birth of Buddha. This is also the

number of earthly desires of ordinary mortals in the Japanese

Nichiren tradition. It is common to see Buddhists wearing their

rosaries either as a necklace or wrapped like a bracelet around

the left hand. Its constant presence makes the mala always

available for use in leisure time which is more often than not

devoted to its counting. Even when occupied with other routine

tasks, a Buddhist will commonly say his beads and will tend to

stick to one string throughout his life, its inevitable wear and

tear reminding him of the impermanence and transience of one's

own life.

 

The Muslim rosary is known as the tasbih, derived from the Arabic

root s-b-h, which means 'to glorify'. It consists of 99 pieces,

divided into three equal groups, usually by a bead (different

from the rest in shape and material) placed after the 33rd and

66th piece. These markers are considered equivalent to the round

mark (ayat) in the Quran text where a reader may occasionally

pause. The beginning (or the end) of the rosary is hung with

tassels. These are said to repel the evil eye, which specifically

dislikes such ornamental fringes. The number of the beads

represents the 99 beautiful names of God, Asma'u'llah (Quran,

Surah, vii 179). According to Muhammad, " Verily there are 99

names of God and whoever recites them shall enter into Paradise "

(Mishkat, Book cxi).

 

Often the rosary will have a 100th special piece representing the

ineffable name of God: Allah. However, theologians differ on

this, rejecting the idea that the essence of God the Creator

could be thus rendered into concrete terms.

 

Like the Christian one, the lesser version of the Muslim rosary

may contain 33 beads only, each equivalent to three prayers.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/tasbih.jpg

 

 

The Cross

 

Though the prophet Isaiah castigated women who wore charms

(3:20); nevertheless, the cross has developed into the principal

symbol of the Christian religion, recalling the crucifixion of

Jesus Christ and the redeeming benefits of his passion and death.

It is thus both a sign of Christ himself and the faith of the

Christians.

 

There are four basic types of iconographic representations of the

cross:

 

1). The crux quadrata, or Greek cross with four equal arms.

 

2). The crux immissa or Latin cross whose base stem is longer

than the other three arms.

 

3). The crux commissa, in the form of the Greek letter tau, and

sometimes called St. Anthony's cross.

 

4). The crux decussata, named from the Roman decussis or symbol

of the numeral 10, also known as St. Andrews cross.

 

Tradition favors the crux immissa as that on which Christ died,

but some believe it was the crux commissa.

 

The symbol of the cross however predates Christianity. Two of the

earliest forms are the Swastika from India and the ankh from

ancient Egypt.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/cross.jpg

 

The cross was not the symbol of choice for the early church, for

whom the crucifixion presented a problem. It had to convince

unbelievers of what would have seemed a bizarre claim, that its

god was a victim of this foul, and then still very current, form

of punishment. Historically, crucifixion was not a punishment

meted out by the Jewish authorities, whose preferred method of

execution was stoning; it was imported into Palestine by the

Romans, and so was an instrument of imperialism and subjugation.

Secondly, it was used in particular on slaves found guilty of a

crime. Therefore, it was humiliating for Jesus the Jew to die

like a slave on the Roman cross.

 

It was only over time that Christians began to think through the

implications and meanings of the crucifixion, and to glorify the

cross. It seems though that Jesus always understood the cross'

positive significance. He had predicted his death by such means

and compared himself to the bronze snake that Moses erected

during the Exodus ('Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the

desert, so the Son of Man must be lifted up, that everyone who

believes in him may have eternal life', John 3:14-15). The

purpose of the snake was to cure people from poisoning. God had

sent a plague of snakes to the Israelites but he also provided a

cure, which was effected by looking at the bronze snake. Poison

is a Christian symbol for sin, and Jesus' words suggest a direct

analogy between the power of the bronze snake to cure poisoning

and his own potential to do the same for sin.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/bronzesnake.jpg

 

The cross is also a cosmic symbol, with its vertical and

horizontal lines spanning the universe. According to Rutherford:

'The cross of Christ on which he was extended, points, in the

length of it, to heaven and earth, reconciling them together; and

in the breadth of it, to former and following ages, as being

equally salvation to both.'

 

A beautiful thing about the cross is that its center of gravity

is not at its exact center, but upwards where the stake and the

crossbeam meet. In simple terms it symbolizes the tendency to

remove the center of man and his faith from the earth and to

" elevate " it into the spiritual sphere.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jim90.jpg

 

 

The Serpent - Friend or Foe?

 

For many, the serpent is an enemy to be feared and avoided at all

costs. Its venom makes it a villain. However, in several parts of

the world, this slithering reptile, with its peculiar and swift

locomotion, is viewed as a sacred protective power. Snake amulets

were being worn at least 3,000 years ago and still are today. How

can this contradiction be explained?

 

The answer lies in the serpent's ability to renew itself by

shedding its skin. When the ancients observed this, they may have

imagined them to be immortal. One day, they would see a snake

with a dull, damaged skin and eyes glazed over. The next morning,

the same creature would be smooth and glistening, with eyes once

again clear and penetrating. It appeared as if the snake was

capable of rejuvenating itself, much like the moon and thus it

was concluded that it held the secret to eternal life.

 

The world traditions are replete with positive references to the

serpent. According to the Celtic druids, the world originated

from an egg that came from the mouth of a snake; in some Gnostic

writings there is the notion that the first human beings crawled

on the ground like snakes; the Ngala tribe of central Congo

believes that the moon once lived on earth as a python; and then,

there is the well-known saying of Jesus: " Be wise as serpents "

(Matthew 10:16).

 

 

Some Unique Images of the Viper

 

The double serpent (or dragon) - one with a head at each end -

can simultaneously symbolize both the sun and the moon.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jif65.jpg

 

When depicted with three-and-a-half coils, the snake represents

the inherent potential energy which lies coiled at base of our

spine (kundalini).

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jg71sm.jpg

 

The Indian snake goddess Manasa is even today invoked against

snakebite.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/wb64.jpg

 

The dragon shares the cosmic stage with the serpent. According to

a legend, when the Chinese monster Kung Kung battled with the

emperor Yao and tore a hole in the sky, it was a dragon who

replaced the cavity, causing daylight when it opened its eyes and

night with their closure. When this great sky dragon inhaled, it

brought forth summer, and by exhalation, winter.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jij42.jpg

 

The Egyptians regarded the lizard as a benevolent spirit, keeping

watch over the house or hearth. Indeed this diminutive reptile,

that basks in on the stone walls of houses or gardens in

Mediterranean countries, drinking in the sunshine and snapping up

little insects, has become a familiar, protective creature and a

symbol of domestic happiness.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jhm07.jpg

 

 

The Chinese Journey to Paradise

 

If one visits the Chinese market in Singapore and asks for a

lucky charm, the amulet that is most likely to be offered will be

a simple, circular, flat disc with a hole in the center. It is

none other than the ubiquitous donut. This is the Chinese symbol

of heaven known as the Pi (or Bi) disc. One tomb dating from the

fourth millennium BC contained no fewer than 24 such rings, which

had been placed there to ensure the deceased's ascent to heaven.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/qn39.jpg

 

It seems strange to envisage paradise shaped like a circle with a

hole in the middle, rather something like Nestlé's Polo mint. The

orifice at the center is said to signify the 'path of

transcendence', which leads to eternal bliss. In other words, the

thread that passes through such a bead, recreates in a sense the

journey to heaven.

 

 

The Power of Sikh Unity

 

A follower of the Sikh religion feels unprotected without a

symbolic bodyguard in the form of the metal bangle called the

kara. This religious bracelet, worn permanently by both sexes on

the right wrist, must be made of iron or steel. It is forbidden

to fashion it from either gold or silver.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/kara.jpg

 

Officially, the function of the kara is to act as a visible

symbol of power and unity. The material represents the strength

while the circular shape signifies the essential oneness of the

Sikh faith.

 

 

The Butterfly and the Moth

 

The latter is irretrievably attracted to a flame, and the moth

that immolates itself at the lighted candle is one of the

favorite images of Sufism. It is a metaphor for the soul losing

itself in the divine fire.

 

The life cycle of the butterfly presents a perfect analogy for

immortality:

 

a). The crawling caterpillar signifies the ordinary life of

mortals, preoccupied with fulfilling our trivial needs.

 

b). The next stage, the dark chrysalis (cocoon), represents death.

 

c). The butterfly symbolizes rebirth and a new beginning in life,

with the soul fluttering free of material concerns and restrictions.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jin01.jpg

 

These three stages also serve as a microcosm for the biography of

Jesus Christ - life, death and resurrection.

 

 

The Stabilizing Dragonfly

 

They are fantastic and confident flyers, darting like light,

twisting, turning, changing direction, even going backwards as

the need arises. They are inhabitants of two realms - starting

with aquatic bodies, and moving to the air with maturity, but

nonetheless staying close to water. Thus, the motif of the

dragonfly is believed to endow on the wearer a relative stability

deriving from a sense of rootedness, and mental control and

clarity as against emotional and impulsive excitability.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jib39.jpg

 

 

The Peacock - The Transformed Beauty of Venom

 

The magnificently endowed peacock has posed and strutted in the

gardens of kings and emperors during biblical times and before

and has attracted attention throughout the world ever since. When

he raises the feathered train high above his back, rattles his

quills, and emits raucous, harsh screams, he is unsurpassed in

drama and beauty. Although this display is part of the peacock's

courtship ritual (small wonder that peacocks have harems of two

to five hens), he will not hesitate to repeat the performance for

attentive humans.

 

According to a Greek legend, the peacock was sacred to the

goddess Hera. She directed Argus, the creature with 100 eyes, to

spy on a rival. When Argus was slain, Hera placed his eyes on the

tail of her favorite bird. However, the earliest mention of

peacocks in Western Literature is in the play The Birds, written

by Aristophanes in 414 BC.

 

In Hinduism, the peacock is the vehicle of the god of war

Karttikeya, and in Buddhism that of Amitabha - one of the five

Dhyani Buddhas. It is said to be capable of swallowing vipers

without coming to harm itself. In fact, the peacock is believed

to derive its rich plumage from the poison of the snakes on which

it feeds. This symbolism, of being open even to poison, and

transmuting it into beauty, gives us a feeling of the purifying

and transforming power of this fascinating bird. For us ordinary

mortals, it is a reminder that perhaps even our darkest and most

venomous aspects are capable of reformation.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jha01.jpg

 

 

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References and Further Reading:

===========================================

 

Alun-Jones Deborah and John Ayton: Charming - The Magic of Charm

Jewelry: London, 2005.

 

Andrews, Tamra. A Dictionary of Nature Myths: Oxford, 2000.

 

Beer, Robert. The Encyclopedia of Tibetan Symbols and Motifs:

Boston, 1999.

 

Bontekoe, Ron and Eliot Deutsch. A Companion to World

Philosophies: Oxford, 1999.

 

Cashford, Jules. The Moon Myth and Magic: London, 2003.

 

Chebel Malek and Laziz Hamani. Symbols of Islam: Paris, 1997.

 

Colin, Didier. Dictionary of Symbols, Myths and Legends: London,

2000.

 

Cooper, J.C. An Illustrated Encyclopedia of Traditional Symbols:

London, 1999.

 

Danielou, Alain. The Myths and Gods of India: Vermont, 1991.

 

Dubin, Lois Sherr. The History of Beads (Concise Edition):

London, 1995.

 

Fontana, David. The Secret Language of Symbols: London, 1997.

 

Gideons International. The Holy Bible: Tennessee, 1978.

 

Henry, Gray and Susannah Marriott. Beads of Faith: London, 2002.

 

Huxley, Francis. The Eye - The Seer and the Seen: London, 1990.

 

Jones, Lindsay (ed). Encyclopedia of Religion (Previously Edited

by Mircea Eliade) 15 volumes: MI, 2005.

 

Leaman, Oliver. Eastern Philosophy Key Readings: New Delhi, 2004.

 

Leaman, Oliver. Key Concepts in Eastern Philosophy: New Delhi,

2004.

 

Morris, Desmond. Bodyguards Protective Amulets and Charms:

Boston, 1999.

 

Nissenson, Marilyn and Susan Jones. Snake Charm: New York, 1995.

 

Purce, Jill. The Mystic Spiral (Journey of the Soul): London,

1997.

 

Taylor, Richard. How to Read a Church: London, 2003.

 

Tresidder, Jack. The Hutchinson Dictionary of Symbols: Oxford,

1997.

 

Untracht, Oppi. Traditional Jewelry of India: London, 1997.

 

---------------------------

 

The illustrations along with the text can be read at the

HTML version of the article:

http://www.exoticindia.com/article/symbolicjewelry/

 

---------------------------

This article was send as a newsletter from the website:

http://www.exoticindia.com

 

Nitin G.

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Namaste,

 

Thanks for appreciating.

 

Warmly,

 

Nitin G.

http://www.exoticindia.com

 

 

maiden marrion <kassandra62002 wrote:

hi

yes i think is great!

 

sanjulag wrote:

This was put together by me. Hope it is enjoyed.

 

 

===================================================

Serpents, Spirals and Prayers - A Journey Through Symbolic Forms in

Jewelry

===================================================

 

Going through regular monthly cycles, the moon inevitably came to

be identified with femininity and the fact that it showered

soothing and comforting rays from an eminent position high above

in the sky ensured that our venerable ancient forefathers (and

mothers), ascribed the status of a goddess to this nocturnal

body. This is one reason why the early mainstream religions, with

their marked preference for the male of the species, found the

veneration towards what was a palpably feminine deity hard to

digest and hence came to associate such an inclination with an

aberration of the mind and it was not long before the word

'lunatic', with its lunar associations, came to brand such

devotion as insanity.

 

 

Click here to donate to the Hurricane Katrina relief effort.

 

 

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