Boga domu zaniepokoiłeś. Obudził się kursarikkum. Relacje pomiędzy kultem domowym a kultem państwowym na Wschodzie starożytnym
Data
2010
Autorzy
Tytuł czasopisma
ISSN czasopisma
Tytuł tomu
Wydawca
Wydawnictwo KUL
Abstrakt
The aim of this article is to discuss the role of so-called private religion in the life of the Ancient Near Eastern peoples. The most important question in this matter is the origins and basic form of this kind of religion, especially its cult and private gods. These gods seem to be remains of the tribal life, where the cult of ancestors as well as protective deities was regarded the most important for the survival of family, society and tribe. There is a high probability that the state religion had originated from the private religion of those families, which later became royal, so their religion also turned into official religion of their states. We can also assume that, independently from existing different forms of private religion, “common religion” was growing up within developing societies, especially sedentists and farmers. By common religion we should understand all forms of the cults of natural powers, which are essential for those societies. The questions mentioned at the end of this article are the phenomenons of replacing private religion by official gods in the last centuries of Ancient Near Eastern civilizations and an absolute unique phenomenon of the Israeli’s religion, which, unlike all the others, has developed into monotheism.
Opis
Słowa kluczowe
bóstwa, bogowie, kult, kult domowy, kult państwowy, kult oficjalny, kult prywatny, starożytność, Wschód, starożytny Wschód, religia, źródła historyczne, deities, gods, cult, domestic worship, state worship, official worship, private worship, antiquity, East, ancient East, religion, historical sources
Cytowanie
Scripta Biblica et Orientalia, 2010, T. 2, s. s. 37-48.
Licencja
Attribution 3.0 Poland