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Magi

Magi (/ˈm/; singular magus /ˈmɡəs/; from Latin magus, cf. Persian: مغ pronounced [moɣ]) are priests in Zoroastrianism and the earlier religions of the western Iranians. The earliest known use of the word magi is in the trilingual inscription written by Darius the Great, known as the Behistun Inscription. Old Persian texts, predating the Hellenistic period, refer to a magus as a Zurvanic, and presumably Zoroastrian, priest.

Zoroastrian priests (Magi) carrying barsoms. Statuettes from the Oxus Treasure of the Achaemenid Empire, 4th century BC

Pervasive throughout the Eastern Mediterranean and Western Asia until late antiquity and beyond, mágos (μάγος) was influenced by (and eventually displaced) Greek goēs (γόης), the older word for a practitioner of magic, to include astronomy/astrology, alchemy, and other forms of esoteric knowledge. This association was in turn the product of the Hellenistic fascination for Pseudo-Zoroaster, who was perceived by the Greeks to be the Chaldean founder of the Magi and inventor of both astrology and magic, a meaning that still survives in the modern-day words "magic" and "magician".

In the Gospel of Matthew, "μάγοι" (magoi) from the east do homage to Jesus, a child[1] and the transliterated plural "magi" entered English from Latin in this context around 1200 (this particular use is also commonly rendered in English as "kings" and more often in recent times as "wise men").[2] The singular "magus" appears considerably later, when it was borrowed from Old French in the late 14th century with the meaning magician.

Hereditary Zoroastrian priesthood has survived in India[3][4] and Iran. They are termed Herbad, Mobad (Magupat, i.e. chief of the Maga), and Dastur depending on the rank.

Iranian sources edit

 
Zoroastrian Magus carrying barsom from the Oxus Treasure of the Achaemenid Empire, 4th century BC

The term only appears twice in Iranian texts from before the 5th century BC, and only one of these can be dated with precision. This one instance occurs in the trilingual Behistun inscription of Darius the Great, and which can be dated to about 520 BC. In this trilingual text, certain rebels have magian as an attribute; in the Old Persian portion as maγu- (generally assumed to be a loan word from Median). The meaning of the term in this context is uncertain.[5]

The other instance appears in the texts of the Avesta, the sacred literature of Zoroastrianism. In this instance, which is in the Younger Avestan portion, the term appears in the hapax moghu.tbiš, meaning "hostile to the moghu", where moghu does not (as was previously thought) mean "magus", but rather "a member of the tribe"[6] or referred to a particular social class in the proto-Iranian language and then continued to do so in Avestan.[7]

An unrelated term, but previously assumed to be related, appears in the older Gathic Avestan language texts. This word, adjectival magavan meaning "possessing maga-", was once the premise that Avestan maga- and Median (i.e. Old Persian) magu- were coeval (and also that both these were cognates of Vedic Sanskrit magha-). While "in the Gathas the word seems to mean both the teaching of Zoroaster and the community that accepted that teaching", and it seems that Avestan maga- is related to Sanskrit magha-, "there is no reason to suppose that the western Iranian form magu (Magus) has exactly the same meaning"[8] as well. But it "may be, however", that Avestan moghu (which is not the same as Avestan maga-) "and Medean magu were the same word in origin, a common Iranian term for 'member of the tribe' having developed among the Medes the special sense of 'member of the (priestly) tribe', hence a priest."[6]cf[7]

Some examples of the use of magi in Persian poetry, are present in the poems of Hafez. There are two frequent terms used by him, first one is Peer-e Moghan (literally "the old man of the magi") and second one is Deyr-e Moghan (literally "the monastery of the magi").[9]

Greco-Roman sources edit

Classical Greek edit

The oldest surviving Greek reference to the magi – from Greek μάγος (mágos, plural: magoi) – might be from 6th century BC Heraclitus (apud Clemens Protrepticus 2.22.2[10]), who curses the magi for their "impious" rites and rituals.[11] A description of the rituals that Heraclitus refers to has not survived, and there is nothing to suggest that Heraclitus was referring to foreigners.

Better preserved are the descriptions of the mid-5th century BC Herodotus, who in his portrayal of the Iranian expatriates living in Asia Minor uses the term "magi" in two different senses. In the first sense (Histories 1.101[12]), Herodotus speaks of the magi as one of the tribes/peoples (ethnous) of the Medes. In another sense (1.132[13]), Herodotus uses the term "magi" to generically refer to a "sacerdotal caste", but "whose ethnic origin is never again so much as mentioned."[8] According to Robert Charles Zaehner, in other accounts, "we hear of Magi not only in Persia, Parthia, Bactria, Chorasmia, Aria, Media, and among the Sakas, but also in non-Iranian lands like Samaria, Ethiopia, and Egypt. Their influence was also widespread throughout Asia Minor. It is, therefore, quite likely that the sacerdotal caste of the Magi was distinct from the Median tribe of the same name."[8]

As early as the 5th century BC, Greek magos had spawned mageia and magike to describe the activity of a magus, that is, it was his or her art and practice.[14] But almost from the outset the noun for the action and the noun for the actor parted company. Thereafter, mageia was used not for what actual magi did, but for something related to the word 'magic' in the modern sense, i.e. using supernatural means to achieve an effect in the natural world, or the appearance of achieving these effects through trickery or sleight of hand.[14] The early Greek texts typically have the pejorative meaning, which in turn influenced the meaning of magos to denote a conjurer and a charlatan.[15] Already in the mid-5th century BC, Herodotus identifies the magi as interpreters of omens and dreams (Histories 7.19, 7.37, 1.107, 1.108, 1.120, 1.128[16]).[17]

Other Greek sources from before the Hellenistic period include the gentleman-soldier Xenophon, who had first-hand experience at the Persian Achaemenid court. In his early 4th century BC Cyropaedia, Xenophon depicts the magians as authorities for all religious matters (8.3.11),[18] and imagines the magians to be responsible for the education of the emperor-to-be. Apuleius, a Numidian Platonist philosopher, describes magus to be considered as a "sage and philosopher-king" based on its Platonic notion.[19]

Roman period edit

 
Incised sarcophagus slab with the Adoration of the Magi from the Catacombs of Rome, 3rd century

Once the magi had been associated with "magic" – Greek magikos – it was but a natural progression that the Greeks' image of Zoroaster would metamorphose into a magician too.[20] The first century Pliny the Elder names "Zoroaster" as the inventor of magic (Natural History xxx.2.3), but a "principle of the division of labor appears to have spared Zoroaster most of the responsibility for introducing the dark arts to the Greek and Roman worlds. That dubious honor went to another fabulous magus, Ostanes, to whom most of the pseudepigraphic magical literature was attributed."[20] For Pliny, this magic was a "monstrous craft" that gave the Greeks not only a "lust" (aviditatem) for magic, but a downright "madness" (rabiem) for it, and Pliny supposed that Greek philosophers – among them Pythagoras, Empedocles, Democritus, and Plato – traveled abroad to study it, and then returned to teach it (xxx.2.8–10).

"Zoroaster" – or rather what the Greeks supposed him to be – was for the Hellenists the figurehead of the 'magi', and the founder of that order (or what the Greeks considered to be an order). He was further projected as the author of a vast compendium of "Zoroastrian" pseudepigrapha, composed in the main to discredit the texts of rivals. "The Greeks considered the best wisdom to be exotic wisdom" and "what better and more convenient authority than the distant – temporally and geographically – Zoroaster?"[20] The subject of these texts, the authenticity of which was rarely challenged, ranged from treatises on nature to ones on necromancy. But the bulk of these texts dealt with astronomical speculations and magical lore.

One factor for the association with astrology was Zoroaster's name, or rather, what the Greeks made of it. His name was identified at first with star-worshiping (astrothytes "star sacrificer") and, with the Zo-, even as the living star. Later, an even more elaborate mytho-etymology evolved: Zoroaster died by the living (zo-) flux (-ro-) of fire from the star (-astr-) which he himself had invoked, and even that the stars killed him in revenge for having been restrained by him.[21] The second, and "more serious"[21] factor for the association with astrology was the notion that Zoroaster was a Chaldean. The alternate Greek name for Zoroaster was Zaratas / Zaradas / Zaratos (cf. Agathias 2.23–5, Clement Stromata I.15), which – according to Bidez and Cumont – derived from a Semitic form of his name. The Suda's chapter on astronomia notes that the Babylonians learned their astrology from Zoroaster. Lucian of Samosata (Mennipus 6) decides to journey to Babylon "to ask one of the magi, Zoroaster's disciples and successors", for their opinion.

Christian tradition edit

 
Byzantine depiction of the Three Magi in a 6th-century mosaic at Basilica of Sant'Apollinare Nuovo
 
Conventional post-12th century depiction of the Biblical magi (Adoração dos Magos by Vicente Gil). Balthasar, the youngest magus, bears frankincense and represents Africa. To the left stands Caspar, middle-aged, bearing gold and representing Asia. On his knees is Melchior, oldest, bearing myrrh and representing Europe.

The word mágos (Greek) and its variants appear in both the Old and New Testaments.[22] Ordinarily this word is translated "magician" or "sorcerer" in the sense of illusionist or fortune-teller, and this is how it is translated in all of its occurrences (e.g. Acts 13:6) except for the Gospel of Matthew, where, depending on translation, it is rendered "wise man" (KJV, RSV) or left untranslated as Magi, typically with an explanatory note (NIV). However, early church fathers, such as St. Justin, Origen, St. Augustine and St. Jerome, did not make an exception for the Gospel, and translated the word in its ordinary sense, i.e. as "magician".[23] The Gospel of Matthew states that magi visited the infant Jesus to do him homage shortly after his birth (2:1–2:12). The gospel describes how magi from the east were notified of the birth of a king in Judaea by the appearance of his star. Upon their arrival in Jerusalem, they visited King Herod to determine the location of the king of the Jews's birthplace. Herod, disturbed, told them that he had not heard of the child, but informed them of a prophecy that the Messiah would be born in Bethlehem. He then asked the magi to inform him when they find the child so that he himself may also pay homage to the child. Guided by the Star of Bethlehem, the wise men found the child Jesus in a house. They paid homage to him, and presented him with "gifts of gold and of frankincense and of myrrh." (2.11) In a dream they are warned not to return to Herod, and therefore return to their homes by taking another route. Since its composition in the late 1st century, numerous apocryphal stories have embellished the gospel's account.[citation needed] Matthew 2:16 implies that Herod learned from the wise men that up to two years had passed since the birth, which is why all male children two years or younger were slaughtered.

In addition to the more famous story of Simon Magus found in chapter 8, the Book of Acts (13:6–11) also describes another magus who acted as an advisor of Sergius Paulus, the Roman proconsul at Paphos on the island of Cyprus. He was a Jew named Bar-Jesus (son of Jesus), or alternatively Elymas. (Another Cypriot magus named Atomos is referenced by Josephus, working at the court of Felix at Caesarea.)

One of the non-canonical Christian sources, the Syriac Infancy Gospel, provides, in its third chapter, a story of the wise men of the East which is very similar to much of the story in Matthew. This account cites Zoradascht (Zoroaster) as the source of the prophecy that motivated the wise men to seek the infant Jesus. [24]

Jewish tradition edit

In the Talmud, instances of dialogue between the Jewish sages and various magi are recorded. The Talmud depicts the Magi as sorcerers and in several descriptions, they are negatively described as obstructing Jewish religious practices.[25][26] Several references include the sages criticizing practices performed by various magi. One instance is a description of the Zoroastrian priests exhuming corpses for their burial practices which directly interfered with the Jewish burial rites.[27] Another instance is a sage forbidding learning from the magi.[28][29][30]

Islamic tradition edit

In Arabic, "Magians" (majus) is the term for Zoroastrians. The term is mentioned in the Quran, in sura 22 verse 17, where the "Magians" are mentioned alongside the Jews, the Sabians and the Christians in a list of religions who will be judged on the Day of Resurrection.

In the 1980s, Saddam Hussein's Ba'ath Party used the term majus during the Iran–Iraq War as a generalization of all modern-day Iranians. "By referring to the Iranians in these documents as majus, the security apparatus [implied] that the Iranians [were] not sincere Muslims, but rather covertly practice their pre-Islamic beliefs. Thus, in their eyes, Iraq's war took on the dimensions of not only a struggle for Arab nationalism, but also a campaign in the name of Islam."[31]

Indian tradition edit

 
Brihat Samhita of Varahamihira, 1279 CE palm leaf manuscript, Pratima lakshana, Sanskrit

In India, the Sakaldwipiya Brahmins are considered to be the descendants of the ten Maga (Sanskrit मग) priests who were invited to conduct worship of Mitra (Surya) at Mitravana (Multan), as described in the Samba Purana, Bhavishya Purana and the Mahabharata. Their original home was a region named as Sakadvipa. According to Varahamihira (c. 505 – c. 587), the statue of the Sun god (Mitra), is represented as wearing the "northern" (central Asian) dress, specifically with horse riding boots. Some Brahmin communities of India trace their descent from the Magas. Some classical astronomers and mathematicians of India such are Varahamihira are considered to be the descendants of the Magas.[32][33]

Varahamihira specifies that installation and consecration of the Sun images should be done by the Magas. Albiruni mentions that the priests of the Sun Temple at Multan were Magas. The Magas had colonies in a number of places in India, and were the priests at Konark, Martanda and other sun temples.[34]

Possible loan into Chinese edit

 
Chinese Bronzeware script for wu 巫 "shaman"

Victor H. Mair (1990) suggested that Chinese (巫 "shaman; witch, wizard; magician") may originate as a loanword from Old Persian *maguš "magician; magi". Mair reconstructs an Old Chinese *myag.[35] The reconstruction of Old Chinese forms is somewhat speculative. The velar final -g in Mair's *myag (巫) is evident in several Old Chinese reconstructions (Dong Tonghe's *mywag, Zhou Fagao's *mjwaγ, and Li Fanggui's *mjag), but not all (Bernhard Karlgren's *mywo and Axel Schuessler's *ma).

Mair adduces the discovery of two figurines with unmistakably Caucasoid or Europoid features dated to the 8th century BC, found in a 1980 excavation of a Zhou Dynasty palace in Fufeng County, Shaanxi Province. One of the figurines is marked on the top of its head with an incised graph.[citation needed]

Mair's suggestion is based on a proposal by Jao Tsung-I (1990), which connects the "cross potent" Bronzeware script glyph for wu 巫 with the same shape found in Neolithic West Asia, specifically a cross potent carved in the shoulder of a goddess figure of the Halaf period.[36]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ About a year and half old, not a newborn (Matthew 2:11)
  2. ^ Matthew 2 in Greek
  3. ^ The Origins of Zoroastrian Priesthood in India, Parsi Khabar, April 29, 2009
  4. ^ DASTUR FIROZE M. KOTWAL (July 1990), "A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE PARSI PRIESTHOOD", Indo-Iranian Journal, Vol. 33, No. 3, pp. 165-175.
  5. ^ Burkert, Walter (2007). Babylon, Memphis, Persepolis: Eastern Contexts of Greek Culture. Harvard University Press. pp. 108–109. ISBN 978-0-674-02399-4.
  6. ^ a b Boyce, Mary (1975), A History of Zoroastrianism, Vol. I, Leiden: Brill, pp. 10–11
  7. ^ a b Gershevitch, Ilya (1964). "Zoroaster's Own Contribution". Journal of Near Eastern Studies. 23 (1): 12–38. doi:10.1086/371754. S2CID 161954467., p. 36.
  8. ^ a b c Zaehner, Robert Charles (1961). The Dawn and Twilight of Zoroastrianism. New York: MacMillan. p. 163..
  9. ^ "پیر مغان حافظ كیست، دیرِ مغان حافظ كجاست؟". IRNA (in Persian). Retrieved 13 November 2022.
  10. ^ Butterworth, G W. (1919). Clement of Alexandria (Loeb Classical Library Volume 92 ed.). Cambridge, MA. Harvard Universrity Press.: Harvard University Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-674-99103-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  11. ^ Bremmer, Jan N.; Veenstra, Jan R. (2002). The Metamorphosis of Magic from Late Antiquity to the Early Modern Period. Peeters Publishers. p. 2. ISBN 978-90-429-1227-4.
  12. ^ Herodotus (1904). The Histories of Herodotus. D. Appleton. p. 41.
  13. ^ Herodotus (1904). The Histories of Herodotus. D. Appleton. p. 54.
  14. ^ a b Janowitz, Naomi (2002-09-11). Magic in the Roman World: Pagans, Jews and Christians. Routledge. p. 9. ISBN 978-1-134-63368-5.
  15. ^ Peters, Edward (1978). The Magician, the Witch, and the Law. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-8122-1101-6.
  16. ^ Herodotus (1904). The Histories of Herodotus. D. Appleton.
  17. ^ Bremmer, Jan (2008-04-30). Greek Religion and Culture, the Bible and the Ancient Near East. BRILL. p. 240. ISBN 978-90-474-3271-5.
  18. ^ Gera, Deborah Levine (1993). Xenophon's Cyropaedia: Style, Genre, and Literary Technique. Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-814477-9.
  19. ^ Too, Yun Lee (2010). The idea of the library in the ancient world. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 96. ISBN 9780199577804.
  20. ^ a b c Beck, Roger (2003). "Zoroaster, as perceived by the Greeks". Encyclopaedia Iranica. New York: iranica.com..
  21. ^ a b Beck, Roger (1991). "Thus Spake Not Zarathushtra: Zoroastrian Pseudepigrapha of the Graeco-Roman World". In Boyce, Mary; Grenet, Frantz (eds.). A History of Zoroastrianism. Handbuch der Orientalistik. Vol. 3. Leiden: Brill. pp. 491–565. Abteilung I, Band VIII, Abschnitt 1, p. 516
  22. ^ Gospel of Matthew2:1–12:9; Acts of the Apostles 8:9; 13:6,8; and the Septuagint of Daniel 1:20; 2:2, 2:10, 2:27; 4:4; 5:7, 5:11, 5:15).
  23. ^ Drum, W. (1910), "Magi", The Catholic Encyclopedia, New York: Robert Appleton Company
  24. ^ Hone, William (1890). "The Apocryphal Books of the New Testament". Archive.org. Gebbie & Co., Publishers, Philadelphia. Retrieved 20 October 2017.
  25. ^ Secunda, Shai (2014). The Iranian Talmud. University of Pennsylvania Press, Incorporated. ISBN 9780812245707.
  26. ^ Mokhtarian, Jason (2 November 2021). Rabbis, Sorcerers, Kings, and Priests. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520385726.
  27. ^ Secunda, Shai (16 June 2020). The Talmud's Red Fence. OUP Oxford. ISBN 9780192598882.
  28. ^ Secunda, S. (2016). " This, but Also That": Historical, Methodological, and Theoretical Reflections on Irano-Talmudica. Jewish Quarterly Review, 106(2), 233-241.
  29. ^ Secunda, S. (2005). Studying with a Magus/Like Giving a Tongue to a Wolf. Bulletin of the Asia Institute, 19, 151-157.
  30. ^ Secunda, S. (2012). Parva—a Magus. In Shoshannat Yaakov (pp. 391-402). Brill.
  31. ^ Al-Marashi, Ibrahim (2000). (PDF). Cambridge University: Centre of International Studies. p. 5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-04-11.
  32. ^ Puttaswamy, T. K. (2012). Mathematical Achievements of Pre-modern Indian Mathematicians. Newnes. p. 141. ISBN 978-0-12-397913-1.
  33. ^ Biswas, Dilip Kumar (September 1949). Law, Narendra Nath (ed.). "The Maga Ancestry of Varahamihira". The Indian Historical Quarterly. 25 (3): 175.
  34. ^ Chattopadhyaya, Sudhakar (June 1950). Law, Narendra Nath (ed.). "The Achaemenids and India". The Indian Historical Quarterly. 26 (2): 100–117.
  35. ^ Mair, Victor H. (1990). "Old Sinitic *Myag, Old Persian Maguš and English Magician". Early China. 15: 27. doi:10.1017/S0362502800004995. ISSN 0362-5028. JSTOR 23351579. S2CID 192107986 – via JSTOR.
  36. ^ Ming-pao yueh-kan 25.9 (September 1990). English translation: Questions on the Origin of Writing Raised by the 'Silk Road', Sino-Platonic Papers, 26 (September, 1991).

External links edit

  • Lendering, Jona (2006), Magians, Amsterdam: livius.org.
  • "Magi from the East" at Gates of Nineveh

magi, other, uses, disambiguation, magus, redirects, here, other, uses, magus, disambiguation, singular, magus, from, latin, magus, persian, مغ, pronounced, moɣ, priests, zoroastrianism, earlier, religions, western, iranians, earliest, known, word, magi, trili. For other uses see Magi disambiguation Magus redirects here For other uses see Magus disambiguation Magi ˈ m eɪ dʒ aɪ singular magus ˈ m eɪ ɡ e s from Latin magus cf Persian مغ pronounced moɣ are priests in Zoroastrianism and the earlier religions of the western Iranians The earliest known use of the word magi is in the trilingual inscription written by Darius the Great known as the Behistun Inscription Old Persian texts predating the Hellenistic period refer to a magus as a Zurvanic and presumably Zoroastrian priest Zoroastrian priests Magi carrying barsoms Statuettes from the Oxus Treasure of the Achaemenid Empire 4th century BCPervasive throughout the Eastern Mediterranean and Western Asia until late antiquity and beyond magos magos was influenced by and eventually displaced Greek goes gohs the older word for a practitioner of magic to include astronomy astrology alchemy and other forms of esoteric knowledge This association was in turn the product of the Hellenistic fascination for Pseudo Zoroaster who was perceived by the Greeks to be the Chaldean founder of the Magi and inventor of both astrology and magic a meaning that still survives in the modern day words magic and magician In the Gospel of Matthew magoi magoi from the east do homage to Jesus a child 1 and the transliterated plural magi entered English from Latin in this context around 1200 this particular use is also commonly rendered in English as kings and more often in recent times as wise men 2 The singular magus appears considerably later when it was borrowed from Old French in the late 14th century with the meaning magician Hereditary Zoroastrian priesthood has survived in India 3 4 and Iran They are termed Herbad Mobad Magupat i e chief of the Maga and Dastur depending on the rank Contents 1 Iranian sources 2 Greco Roman sources 2 1 Classical Greek 2 2 Roman period 3 Christian tradition 4 Jewish tradition 5 Islamic tradition 6 Indian tradition 7 Possible loan into Chinese 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksIranian sources edit nbsp Zoroastrian Magus carrying barsom from the Oxus Treasure of the Achaemenid Empire 4th century BCThe term only appears twice in Iranian texts from before the 5th century BC and only one of these can be dated with precision This one instance occurs in the trilingual Behistun inscription of Darius the Great and which can be dated to about 520 BC In this trilingual text certain rebels have magian as an attribute in the Old Persian portion as magu generally assumed to be a loan word from Median The meaning of the term in this context is uncertain 5 The other instance appears in the texts of the Avesta the sacred literature of Zoroastrianism In this instance which is in the Younger Avestan portion the term appears in the hapax moghu tbis meaning hostile to the moghu where moghu does not as was previously thought mean magus but rather a member of the tribe 6 or referred to a particular social class in the proto Iranian language and then continued to do so in Avestan 7 An unrelated term but previously assumed to be related appears in the older Gathic Avestan language texts This word adjectival magavan meaning possessing maga was once the premise that Avestan maga and Median i e Old Persian magu were coeval and also that both these were cognates of Vedic Sanskrit magha While in the Gathas the word seems to mean both the teaching of Zoroaster and the community that accepted that teaching and it seems that Avestan maga is related to Sanskrit magha there is no reason to suppose that the western Iranian form magu Magus has exactly the same meaning 8 as well But it may be however that Avestan moghu which is not the same as Avestan maga and Medean magu were the same word in origin a common Iranian term for member of the tribe having developed among the Medes the special sense of member of the priestly tribe hence a priest 6 cf 7 Some examples of the use of magi in Persian poetry are present in the poems of Hafez There are two frequent terms used by him first one is Peer e Moghan literally the old man of the magi and second one is Deyr e Moghan literally the monastery of the magi 9 Greco Roman sources editClassical Greek edit The oldest surviving Greek reference to the magi from Greek magos magos plural magoi might be from 6th century BC Heraclitus apud Clemens Protrepticus 2 22 2 10 who curses the magi for their impious rites and rituals 11 A description of the rituals that Heraclitus refers to has not survived and there is nothing to suggest that Heraclitus was referring to foreigners Better preserved are the descriptions of the mid 5th century BC Herodotus who in his portrayal of the Iranian expatriates living in Asia Minor uses the term magi in two different senses In the first sense Histories 1 101 12 Herodotus speaks of the magi as one of the tribes peoples ethnous of the Medes In another sense 1 132 13 Herodotus uses the term magi to generically refer to a sacerdotal caste but whose ethnic origin is never again so much as mentioned 8 According to Robert Charles Zaehner in other accounts we hear of Magi not only in Persia Parthia Bactria Chorasmia Aria Media and among the Sakas but also in non Iranian lands like Samaria Ethiopia and Egypt Their influence was also widespread throughout Asia Minor It is therefore quite likely that the sacerdotal caste of the Magi was distinct from the Median tribe of the same name 8 As early as the 5th century BC Greek magos had spawned mageia and magike to describe the activity of a magus that is it was his or her art and practice 14 But almost from the outset the noun for the action and the noun for the actor parted company Thereafter mageia was used not for what actual magi did but for something related to the word magic in the modern sense i e using supernatural means to achieve an effect in the natural world or the appearance of achieving these effects through trickery or sleight of hand 14 The early Greek texts typically have the pejorative meaning which in turn influenced the meaning of magos to denote a conjurer and a charlatan 15 Already in the mid 5th century BC Herodotus identifies the magi as interpreters of omens and dreams Histories 7 19 7 37 1 107 1 108 1 120 1 128 16 17 Other Greek sources from before the Hellenistic period include the gentleman soldier Xenophon who had first hand experience at the Persian Achaemenid court In his early 4th century BC Cyropaedia Xenophon depicts the magians as authorities for all religious matters 8 3 11 18 and imagines the magians to be responsible for the education of the emperor to be Apuleius a Numidian Platonist philosopher describes magus to be considered as a sage and philosopher king based on its Platonic notion 19 Roman period edit nbsp Incised sarcophagus slab with the Adoration of the Magi from the Catacombs of Rome 3rd centuryOnce the magi had been associated with magic Greek magikos it was but a natural progression that the Greeks image of Zoroaster would metamorphose into a magician too 20 The first century Pliny the Elder names Zoroaster as the inventor of magic Natural History xxx 2 3 but a principle of the division of labor appears to have spared Zoroaster most of the responsibility for introducing the dark arts to the Greek and Roman worlds That dubious honor went to another fabulous magus Ostanes to whom most of the pseudepigraphic magical literature was attributed 20 For Pliny this magic was a monstrous craft that gave the Greeks not only a lust aviditatem for magic but a downright madness rabiem for it and Pliny supposed that Greek philosophers among them Pythagoras Empedocles Democritus and Plato traveled abroad to study it and then returned to teach it xxx 2 8 10 Zoroaster or rather what the Greeks supposed him to be was for the Hellenists the figurehead of the magi and the founder of that order or what the Greeks considered to be an order He was further projected as the author of a vast compendium of Zoroastrian pseudepigrapha composed in the main to discredit the texts of rivals The Greeks considered the best wisdom to be exotic wisdom and what better and more convenient authority than the distant temporally and geographically Zoroaster 20 The subject of these texts the authenticity of which was rarely challenged ranged from treatises on nature to ones on necromancy But the bulk of these texts dealt with astronomical speculations and magical lore One factor for the association with astrology was Zoroaster s name or rather what the Greeks made of it His name was identified at first with star worshiping astrothytes star sacrificer and with the Zo even as the living star Later an even more elaborate mytho etymology evolved Zoroaster died by the living zo flux ro of fire from the star astr which he himself had invoked and even that the stars killed him in revenge for having been restrained by him 21 The second and more serious 21 factor for the association with astrology was the notion that Zoroaster was a Chaldean The alternate Greek name for Zoroaster was Zaratas Zaradas Zaratos cf Agathias 2 23 5 Clement Stromata I 15 which according to Bidez and Cumont derived from a Semitic form of his name The Suda s chapter on astronomia notes that the Babylonians learned their astrology from Zoroaster Lucian of Samosata Mennipus 6 decides to journey to Babylon to ask one of the magi Zoroaster s disciples and successors for their opinion Christian tradition editMain article Biblical Magi nbsp Byzantine depiction of the Three Magi in a 6th century mosaic at Basilica of Sant Apollinare Nuovo nbsp Conventional post 12th century depiction of the Biblical magi Adoracao dos Magos by Vicente Gil Balthasar the youngest magus bears frankincense and represents Africa To the left stands Caspar middle aged bearing gold and representing Asia On his knees is Melchior oldest bearing myrrh and representing Europe The word magos Greek and its variants appear in both the Old and New Testaments 22 Ordinarily this word is translated magician or sorcerer in the sense of illusionist or fortune teller and this is how it is translated in all of its occurrences e g Acts 13 6 except for the Gospel of Matthew where depending on translation it is rendered wise man KJV RSV or left untranslated as Magi typically with an explanatory note NIV However early church fathers such as St Justin Origen St Augustine and St Jerome did not make an exception for the Gospel and translated the word in its ordinary sense i e as magician 23 The Gospel of Matthew states that magi visited the infant Jesus to do him homage shortly after his birth 2 1 2 12 The gospel describes how magi from the east were notified of the birth of a king in Judaea by the appearance of his star Upon their arrival in Jerusalem they visited King Herod to determine the location of the king of the Jews s birthplace Herod disturbed told them that he had not heard of the child but informed them of a prophecy that the Messiah would be born in Bethlehem He then asked the magi to inform him when they find the child so that he himself may also pay homage to the child Guided by the Star of Bethlehem the wise men found the child Jesus in a house They paid homage to him and presented him with gifts of gold and of frankincense and of myrrh 2 11 In a dream they are warned not to return to Herod and therefore return to their homes by taking another route Since its composition in the late 1st century numerous apocryphal stories have embellished the gospel s account citation needed Matthew 2 16 implies that Herod learned from the wise men that up to two years had passed since the birth which is why all male children two years or younger were slaughtered In addition to the more famous story of Simon Magus found in chapter 8 the Book of Acts 13 6 11 also describes another magus who acted as an advisor of Sergius Paulus the Roman proconsul at Paphos on the island of Cyprus He was a Jew named Bar Jesus son of Jesus or alternatively Elymas Another Cypriot magus named Atomos is referenced by Josephus working at the court of Felix at Caesarea One of the non canonical Christian sources the Syriac Infancy Gospel provides in its third chapter a story of the wise men of the East which is very similar to much of the story in Matthew This account cites Zoradascht Zoroaster as the source of the prophecy that motivated the wise men to seek the infant Jesus 24 Jewish tradition editIn the Talmud instances of dialogue between the Jewish sages and various magi are recorded The Talmud depicts the Magi as sorcerers and in several descriptions they are negatively described as obstructing Jewish religious practices 25 26 Several references include the sages criticizing practices performed by various magi One instance is a description of the Zoroastrian priests exhuming corpses for their burial practices which directly interfered with the Jewish burial rites 27 Another instance is a sage forbidding learning from the magi 28 29 30 Islamic tradition editMain article Majus In Arabic Magians majus is the term for Zoroastrians The term is mentioned in the Quran in sura 22 verse 17 where the Magians are mentioned alongside the Jews the Sabians and the Christians in a list of religions who will be judged on the Day of Resurrection In the 1980s Saddam Hussein s Ba ath Party used the term majus during the Iran Iraq War as a generalization of all modern day Iranians By referring to the Iranians in these documents as majus the security apparatus implied that the Iranians were not sincere Muslims but rather covertly practice their pre Islamic beliefs Thus in their eyes Iraq s war took on the dimensions of not only a struggle for Arab nationalism but also a campaign in the name of Islam 31 Indian tradition edit nbsp Brihat Samhita of Varahamihira 1279 CE palm leaf manuscript Pratima lakshana SanskritIn India the Sakaldwipiya Brahmins are considered to be the descendants of the ten Maga Sanskrit मग priests who were invited to conduct worship of Mitra Surya at Mitravana Multan as described in the Samba Purana Bhavishya Purana and the Mahabharata Their original home was a region named as Sakadvipa According to Varahamihira c 505 c 587 the statue of the Sun god Mitra is represented as wearing the northern central Asian dress specifically with horse riding boots Some Brahmin communities of India trace their descent from the Magas Some classical astronomers and mathematicians of India such are Varahamihira are considered to be the descendants of the Magas 32 33 Varahamihira specifies that installation and consecration of the Sun images should be done by the Magas Albiruni mentions that the priests of the Sun Temple at Multan were Magas The Magas had colonies in a number of places in India and were the priests at Konark Martanda and other sun temples 34 Possible loan into Chinese editMain article Wu shaman Etymologies nbsp Chinese Bronzeware script for wu 巫 shaman Victor H Mair 1990 suggested that Chinese wu 巫 shaman witch wizard magician may originate as a loanword from Old Persian magus magician magi Mair reconstructs an Old Chinese myag 35 The reconstruction of Old Chinese forms is somewhat speculative The velar final g in Mair s myag 巫 is evident in several Old Chinese reconstructions Dong Tonghe s mywag Zhou Fagao s mjwag and Li Fanggui s mjag but not all Bernhard Karlgren s mywo and Axel Schuessler s ma Mair adduces the discovery of two figurines with unmistakably Caucasoid or Europoid features dated to the 8th century BC found in a 1980 excavation of a Zhou Dynasty palace in Fufeng County Shaanxi Province One of the figurines is marked on the top of its head with an incised graph citation needed Mair s suggestion is based on a proposal by Jao Tsung I 1990 which connects the cross potent Bronzeware script glyph for wu 巫 with the same shape found in Neolithic West Asia specifically a cross potent carved in the shoulder of a goddess figure of the Halaf period 36 See also editAnachitis stone of necessity stone used to call up spirits from water used by Magi in antiquity Epiphany holiday a Christian holiday on January 6 marking the epiphany of the infant Jesus to the Magi Fire templeReferences edit About a year and half old not a newborn Matthew 2 11 Matthew 2 in Greek The Origins of Zoroastrian Priesthood in India Parsi Khabar April 29 2009 DASTUR FIROZE M KOTWAL July 1990 A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE PARSI PRIESTHOOD Indo Iranian Journal Vol 33 No 3 pp 165 175 Burkert Walter 2007 Babylon Memphis Persepolis Eastern Contexts of Greek Culture Harvard University Press pp 108 109 ISBN 978 0 674 02399 4 a b Boyce Mary 1975 A History of Zoroastrianism Vol I Leiden Brill pp 10 11 a b Gershevitch Ilya 1964 Zoroaster s Own Contribution Journal of Near Eastern Studies 23 1 12 38 doi 10 1086 371754 S2CID 161954467 p 36 a b c Zaehner Robert Charles 1961 The Dawn and Twilight of Zoroastrianism New York MacMillan p 163 پیر مغان حافظ كیست دیر مغان حافظ كجاست IRNA in Persian Retrieved 13 November 2022 Butterworth G W 1919 Clement of Alexandria Loeb Classical Library Volume 92 ed Cambridge MA Harvard Universrity Press Harvard University Press p 45 ISBN 978 0 674 99103 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Bremmer Jan N Veenstra Jan R 2002 The Metamorphosis of Magic from Late Antiquity to the Early Modern Period Peeters Publishers p 2 ISBN 978 90 429 1227 4 Herodotus 1904 The Histories of Herodotus D Appleton p 41 Herodotus 1904 The Histories of Herodotus D Appleton p 54 a b Janowitz Naomi 2002 09 11 Magic in the Roman World Pagans Jews and Christians Routledge p 9 ISBN 978 1 134 63368 5 Peters Edward 1978 The Magician the Witch and the Law University of Pennsylvania Press p 1 ISBN 978 0 8122 1101 6 Herodotus 1904 The Histories of Herodotus D Appleton Bremmer Jan 2008 04 30 Greek Religion and Culture the Bible and the Ancient Near East BRILL p 240 ISBN 978 90 474 3271 5 Gera Deborah Levine 1993 Xenophon s Cyropaedia Style Genre and Literary Technique Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 814477 9 Too Yun Lee 2010 The idea of the library in the ancient world Oxford Oxford University Press p 96 ISBN 9780199577804 a b c Beck Roger 2003 Zoroaster as perceived by the Greeks Encyclopaedia Iranica New York iranica com a b Beck Roger 1991 Thus Spake Not Zarathushtra Zoroastrian Pseudepigrapha of the Graeco Roman World In Boyce Mary Grenet Frantz eds A History of Zoroastrianism Handbuch der Orientalistik Vol 3 Leiden Brill pp 491 565 Abteilung I Band VIII Abschnitt 1 p 516 Gospel of Matthew2 1 12 9 Acts of the Apostles 8 9 13 6 8 and the Septuagint of Daniel 1 20 2 2 2 10 2 27 4 4 5 7 5 11 5 15 Drum W 1910 Magi The Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Hone William 1890 The Apocryphal Books of the New Testament Archive org Gebbie amp Co Publishers Philadelphia Retrieved 20 October 2017 Secunda Shai 2014 The Iranian Talmud University of Pennsylvania Press Incorporated ISBN 9780812245707 Mokhtarian Jason 2 November 2021 Rabbis Sorcerers Kings and Priests University of California Press ISBN 9780520385726 Secunda Shai 16 June 2020 The Talmud s Red Fence OUP Oxford ISBN 9780192598882 Secunda S 2016 This but Also That Historical Methodological and Theoretical Reflections on Irano Talmudica Jewish Quarterly Review 106 2 233 241 Secunda S 2005 Studying with a Magus Like Giving a Tongue to a Wolf Bulletin of the Asia Institute 19 151 157 Secunda S 2012 Parva a Magus In Shoshannat Yaakov pp 391 402 Brill Al Marashi Ibrahim 2000 The Mindset of Iraq s Security Apparatus PDF Cambridge University Centre of International Studies p 5 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 04 11 Puttaswamy T K 2012 Mathematical Achievements of Pre modern Indian Mathematicians Newnes p 141 ISBN 978 0 12 397913 1 Biswas Dilip Kumar September 1949 Law Narendra Nath ed The Maga Ancestry of Varahamihira The Indian Historical Quarterly 25 3 175 Chattopadhyaya Sudhakar June 1950 Law Narendra Nath ed The Achaemenids and India The Indian Historical Quarterly 26 2 100 117 Mair Victor H 1990 Old Sinitic Myag Old Persian Magus and English Magician Early China 15 27 doi 10 1017 S0362502800004995 ISSN 0362 5028 JSTOR 23351579 S2CID 192107986 via JSTOR Ming pao yueh kan 25 9 September 1990 English translation Questions on the Origin of Writing Raised by the Silk Road Sino Platonic Papers 26 September 1991 External links editLendering Jona 2006 Magians Amsterdam livius org Magi from the East at Gates of Nineveh The Magi in Medieval Mosaics Sculptures Tympanums and Art Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Magi amp oldid 1180291298, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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