The Swastika
Definitions, Description & Origin
Page 15
Count
Goblet d, Alviella, following Ludwig Müller, Percy Gardner, S. Beal, Edward
Thomas, Max Müller, H. Gaidoz, and other authors, accepts their theory
that the Swastika was a symbolic representation of the sun or of a sun
god, and argues it fully. (1)
he starts with the proposition that most of the nations of the earth have
represented the sun by a circle, although some of them notably the Assyrians,
Hindus, Greeks, and Celts, have represented it by signs more or less cruciform.
Examining his fig. 2, wherein signs of the various people are set forth,
it is to be remarked that there is no similarity or apparent relationship
between the six symbols given, either with themselves or with the sun.
Only one of them, that of Assyria, pretends to be a circle; and it may
or may not stand for the sun. It has no exterior rays. All the rest are
crosses of different kinds. Each of the six symbols is represented as
being from a single nation of people. They are prehistoric or of high
antiquity, and most of them appear to have no other evidence of their
representation of the sun than is contained in the sign itself, so that
the first objection is to the premises, to wit, that while his symbols
may have some times represented the sun, it is far from certain that they
are used constantly or steadily as such. An objection is made to the theory
or hypothesis presented by Count d'Alviella (2)
that it is not the cross part of the Swastika which represents the sun,
but its bent arms, which show the revolving motion, by which he says is
evolved the tetraskelion or what in this paper is named the "Ogee
Swastika."
The author is more in
accord with Dr. Brinton and others that the Swastika is derived from the
cross and not from the wheel, that the bent arms do not represent rotary
or gyratory motion, and that it had no association with, or relation to
, the circle. This, if true, relieves the Swastika from all relation with
the circle as a symbol of the sun. Besides, it is not believed that the
symbol of the sun is one which required rotary or gyratory motion or was
represented by it, but, as will be explained, in speaking of the Assyrian
sun-god Shamash (. 789), it is rather by a circle with pointed rays extending
outward.
D'Alviella (3)
presents several figures in support of his contention. The first (a) is
on a fibula from Etrnria (fig. 190 of this paper). His explanation is
that the small circle of rays, bent at right angles, on the broad shield
of the pin, represents graphically the rotary movement of the sun and
that they bent arms in the Swastika on the same object are taken from
them. It seems curious that so momentous a subject as the existence of
a symbol of a great god, the god of light, heat, and thus of life, should
be made to depend upon an object of so small importance. This specimen
(fig. 190) is
a bifula or pin, one of the commonest objects of Etruscan, Greek, or Roman
dress. The decorations invoked are on the broad end, which has been flattened
to protect the point of the pin, where appears a semicircle of so-called
rays, the two Swastikas and two possible crosses. There is nothing about
this pin, nor indeed any of the other objects, to indicated any holy or
sacred character, nor that any of them were used in any ceremony having
relation to the sun, to any god, or to anything holy or sacred. His fig.
b is fig. 88 in this paper. It shows a quadrant of the sphere found
by Schliemann at Hissarlik. There is a slightly indefinite circle with
rays from the outside, which are bent and crooked in many directions.
The sphere is of terra cotta; The marks that have been made on it are
rough and ill formed. They were made by incision while the clay was soft
and were done in the rudest manner. There are dozens more marks upon the
same sphere, none of which seem to have received any consideration in
this regard. There is a Swastika upon the sphere, and it is the only mark
or sign upon the entire object that seems to have been made with care
or precision. His third figure (c) is taken from a reliquaire of
the thirteenth century A.D. It has a greater resemblance to the acanthus
plant than it has to any solar disk imaginable. The other two figures
(d and e) are tetraskelions or ogee Swastikas from ancient
coins.
D'Alviella's next argument
(4) is that the triskelion,
formed by the same process as the tetraskelion, is an "incontestable"
representation of solar movement.
ENDNOTES:
1. "La Migration des Symboles," chap. 2, pt. 3, p. 66. [Back]
2. Ibid., p. 67. H. Mis. 90, pt. 2-----50 [Back]
3. "La Migration des Symboles," p. 69. [Back]
4. Ibid., p. 71. [Back]
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