Bronze statue of Isis-Venus, 1st-2nd century CE |
When (some) Romans first came to worship
Isis in the first century BCE they embraced a religion that was even older than
Christianity now is to us, for Isis had been worshipped in Egypt since the mid
2000s BCE. In neighbouring Greece she had been attracting worshippers since the
4th century BCE. Five-hundred years later, during the peak of the
Roman empire, she was worshipped from as far west as England to as far east as
Afghanistan; Tacitus even claimed she was worshipped as far north as Germania. She
must have seemed exotically alluring to Romans in the same way that Indian
spirituality captures the imagination of many Westerners today. Beyond the
enticing mysteries of the orient the success of Isiacism was at least
partly attributable to its ability to meet the needs of the increasingly diverse
and cosmopolitan societies of the Roman empire. As a Goddess who subsumed the
numerous other Gods of different regions Isis was able to achieve universal appeal
– her cult was not restricted to Egyptians, but was embraced by people of all
kinds of ethnic backgrounds. Likewise, Isis was revered by the educated elite
as well as slaves, and by women as well as (or perhaps even more than) men.
Lucius Apuleius, an intellectual from Roman
Numidia, reverently described a vision of the Goddess in his Metamorphoses (more commonly known as The Golden Ass):
“… she had a full head of hair which hung down, gradually curling as it spread loosely and flowed gently over her divine neck. Her lofty head was encircled by a garland interwoven with diverse blossoms, at the centre of which above her brow was a flat disk resembling a mirror, or rather the orb of the moon, which emitted a glittering light. The crown was held in place by coils of rearing snakes on right and left, and it was adorned above with waving ears of corn. She wore a multicoloured dress woven from fine linen, one part of which shone radiantly white, a second glowed yellow with saffron blossom, and a third blazed rosy red. But what riveted my eyes above all else was her jet-black cloak, which gleamed with a dark sheen as it enveloped her … Stars glittered here and there along its woven border and on its flat surface, and in their midst a full moon exhaled fiery flames. Wherever the hem of that magnificent cloak billowed out, a garland composed of every flower and every fruit was inseparably attached to it … In her right hand she carried a bronze rattle … when she shook the rattle vigorously three times with her arm, the rods gave out a shrill sound. From her left hand dangled a boat-shaped vessel, on the handle of which was the figure of a serpent … Her feet, divinely white, were shod of sandals fashioned from the leaves of the palm of victory … She breathed forth the fertile fragrance of Arabia [likely frankincense] as she deigned to address me in words divine: ‘Here I am, Lucius, roused by your prayers. I am the mother of the world of nature, mistress of all the elements, first-born in the realm of time. I am the loftiest of deities, queen of departed spirits, foremost of heavenly dwellers, the single embodiment of all Gods and Goddesses. I order with my nod the luminous heights of heaven, the healthy sea breezes, the sad silences of the infernal dwellers. The whole world worships this single godhead under a variety of shapes and liturgies and titles. In one land the Phrygians, first born of men, hail me as the Pessinnuntian mother of the Gods; elsewhere the native dwellers of Attica call me Cecropian Minerva; in other climes the wave-tossed Cypriots name me Paphian Venus; the Cretan archers, Dictynna Diana; the trilingual Sicilians, Ortygian Proserpina; the Eleusians, the ancients Goddess Ceres; some call me Juno, others Bellona, others Hecate, and others still Rhamnusia. But the peoples [of Ethiopia and Egypt] … worship me with the liturgy that is my own, and call me by my true name, which is Queen Isis.
… set aside your grief, for through my providence your day of salvation is now dawning … Your future life will be blessed … and when you have lived out your life’s span and you journey to the realm of the dead … you will constantly adore me, for I shall be gracious to you. You will dwell in the Elysian fields … [Apuleius, The Golden Ass at 219-222].”