The Serpent and its Priest
By Codex Regius
()
About this ebook
1850 years ago, when scientific thinking was on decline and religious fundamentalism winning over, Alexandros, a little quack, turned himself into high priest and guru of the demonic Glycon, a puppet on strings that he had made into a god to deceive the masses and relieve them of their money.
The report, written by Lucian of Samosata who exposed the deceiver with analytic deduction, is the oldest preserved essay on the war, still undecided, between scepticism and superstition.
A new annotated translation of the old report on the frauds and illusions that Alexandros’ epigones are still applying even today.
The book that inspired the "Romanike" series of historical novels!
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Book preview
The Serpent and its Priest - Codex Regius
Codex Regius
The serpent and its priest
How to turn a puppet into a god
Codex Regius
The serpent
and its priest
How to turn a puppet into a god
Wiesbaden/Ljubljana 2015
© 2015 Codex Regius
All rights reserved.
Authors: Codex Regius Cover, layout, images: Codex Regius
Contact: [email protected]
E-Book ISBN: 978-3-95926-451-8
GD Publishing Ltd. & Co KG, Berlin
E-Book Distribution: XinXii
www.xinxii.com
Hat Ihnen das E-Book gefallen, so empfehlen Sie Ihren Freunden den Download eines persönlichen Exemplars auf XinXii.com. Ein großes Dankeschön, dass Sie die Arbeit des Autors respektieren!
Contents
Introduction
He always saw the greater thing
Advent of the serpent
From illusionist to pseudomancer
Glycon vs. Epicur
A decent and respectable person
Atheists out! Christians out! And most of all: Epicureans out!
Of Glycon and Sacerdos
Faults and failures
Nocturnal oracles
Lucian vs. Glycon
Murder on the high sea
The pseudomancer‘s afterlife
Afterword
References
Introduction
In parts of Europe it is said about Lucian of Samosata that his name was familiar even to students who did not receive humanistic education¹. Unfortunately it is not like that in all corners of the world. Widespread knowledge is hampered by the fact that modern academic translations of individual works by Lucian are unaffordable while popular editions may be so outdated that they have become hard to swallow. Worse, the more explicit passages may either be missing completely or prissily watered down.
Yet Lucian is anything but a dusty classic: He is much more worthy of public attention. The man from Samosata is a fleet-footed humorist - a Dave Allen of the Roman Empire. Moreover, he looks like an early representative of scientific thinking and seems to have passed Enlightenment already in this early period. Being a born sceptic examining and rationally explaining divine (or, as we might say: paranormal) phenomena, he is much closer to the modern reader than many Christian apologists of his age. In this respect he feels almost like a precursor of James Randi, that former stage magician who had committed himself to uncovering the frauds behind allegedly supernatural phenomena.
In a way, Lucian was a cultural outsider in the world of the 2nd century A. D. It is typical for the tolerant environment of his age that he was nevertheless acquainted with nobility, called provincial governors his friends and received from them armed escorts on request - to Romans, a personal history of immigration was not much of a concern. For Lucian’s mother tongue was neither Greek nor Latin: He was a Syrian from the kingdom of Commagene that had long ago ceased to exist and worn away into the outskirts of an outer province of the Roman Empire. (Today even its name is forgotten. Tourists may find Commagenian legacy mainly at three places: the royal mausoleum on the summit of Nemrud Dagh, the Philopappus Monument in Athens and the Colossi of Memnon near Thebes where a princess of Commagene left several graffiti. However, the best known son of the former royal city of Samosata is Lucian.)
It may have been this special situation which allowed him to perceive and judge the weaknesses of his Roman environment from the outside. Lucian further subscribed to a philosophical school that traced its origins back to Democrit of Abdera. Physics students know him as the man who invented and defended the term ‘atom’, but he also strikes with a world view that was so advanced that his far more famous colleague Aristotle meant an immense step backward from this. According to Democrit, the universe originated from a whirling cloud of atoms and empty space - and not only a single universe: He was the first scholar to postulate that there might be other universes (his word for stellar systems), including such that had several suns and planets that might be either dead or animated. The later-born scholar Epicurus, whom Lucian preferably refers to, developed this view further and relocated the gods from the peak of Mount Olympus into an interdimensional space, the metacosmos, which is positioned between Democrit’s micro-universes.
His school proceeded on dangerous ground with that claim. The Epicureans, who named themselves after their founder, were sometimes considered blasphemers and even accused of atheism. This had to be avoided at all costs because such an accusation meant treason in an environment that had no statutory separation between church/temple and state. Socrates’ doom was vividly in the mind of philosophers. The Epicureans therefore assured that they did not question the existence of gods as such but claimed these deities were so remote that praying and sacrificing to them was utterly pointless.
Lucian himself was lucky to be born in a period when even the emperor himself dared to doubt his own state religion. That allowed him to apply high and low Olympians, dead celebrities or spirits of nature in many of his short stories - often no longer than a few pages - who act like characters in bucolic comedy plays and bicker about theological and philosophical positions that Lucian considered absurd. Their arguments apply even today: When in one story, a gangster stands before the judge of the dead in the underworld and denies responsibility for his deeds because divine providence had forced him to pursue a criminal career, then the reader may just expect him to refer to the hardships of his severe childhood, too. Unlike Seneca’s often irritatingly stupid tale of the ‘Pumpkinification of Emperor Claudius’, such punch lines render Lucian’s humour so timeless.
The essay which he had titled ‘Alexandros or: The Pseudomancer’, also known as ‘The False Prophet’, deviates from his favourite pattern. It pretends to be a letter to one not unambiguously identifiable historical character called Celsus, of