The Narrative History of Cybele Cult
How the Great Mother Conquered the Ancient World
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Gesprochen von:
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Greg Buotte
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Dakikon Publishing
Über diesen Titel
Before temples and official rituals, there were places people avoided after sunset.
In the hills of ancient Anatolia, long before Rome ruled the Mediterranean, villagers gathered around stones they believed were alive. They were not there to recite prayers. They came because something unsettled them, and gathering together made it bearable. Drums carried across the valleys. Some people swayed, some watched, some stayed at the edge. A presence was felt before anyone gave it a name.
Later it would be called Cybele.
This book follows the Great Mother through the lives of ordinary people. Shepherds, travelers, priests, curious neighbors, and cautious Roman officials all meet the same force in different ways. What begins as a place becomes a habit. The habit becomes a ritual. The ritual becomes part of the state. And the state never feels completely comfortable with it.
You will walk through mountain shrines in Phrygia, hear the rites of Attis, witness the uneasy arrival of a foreign goddess in Rome, and watch public festivals that both attracted and disturbed the crowds. Over time the fear softens, but it never fully disappears.
This is not a catalogue of myths.
It is a story about how people live beside the unknown.
Written in a calm narrative style, the book does not lecture or argue. It stays close to human experience and lets the past unfold slowly. You do not just learn what happened. You feel why it stayed with them.
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