By JASON
JEFFREY
Far
north, somewhere near the icy regions of the North Pole, legend speaks
of an ancient and mostly forgotten civilisation. Mythical in character,
the Hyperborean civilisation is said to have flourished in the northern
most region of planet Earth at a time when the area was suitable for
human habitation.
According to certain esoteric systems and spiritual traditions,
Hyperborea was the terrestrial and celestial beginning of
civilisation.
The home of original Man. Some theories postulate Hyperborea was the
original Garden of Eden, the point where the earthly and heavenly
planes meet. And it is said Man transgressed Divine Law in this Golden
Age civilisation, the ultimate price being his banishment to the outside
world. Man ventured into other regions of Earth, establishing new
civilisations, bringing to an end this great and glorious Golden Age.
The Golden Age is central to manifold ancient traditions and myths.
Significantly, the Golden Age appears most frequent in the traditions
of cultures stretching from India to Northern Europe the area
directly beneath the Polar regions. Joscelyn Godwin, in Arktos, The
Polar Myth in Science, Symbolism and Nazi Survival, says:
The
memory or imagination of a Golden Age seems to be a particularity
of the cultures that cover the area from India to Northern Europe
But in the ancient Middle East there is an obvious relic of the Golden
Age in Genesis, as the Garden of Eden where humanity walked with the
gods before the Fall. The Egyptians spoke of past epochs ruled by
god-kings. Babylonian mythology
had a scheme of three ages,
each lasting while the vernal [Spring] equinox precessed through four
signs of the zodiac; the first of these, under the dominion of Anu,
as a Golden Age, ended by the Flood. The Iranian Avesta texts tell
of the thousand-year Golden Reign of Yima, the first man and the first
king, under whose rule cold and heat, old age, death and sickness
were unknown.1
The most fully developed theory of this kind, and probably the oldest
one, is the Hindu doctrine of the Four Yugas. The four ages in this
system are the Krita or Satya Yuga (four units), Treta Yuga (three),
Dvapara Yuga (two), and Kali Yuga (one), the whole tenfold period
making up one Mayayuga. The Kritayuga corresponds to the Golden Age,
the Kali Yuga to the current period of time.
Every description of the Golden Age period relates how the gods
walked with men in a perfect and harmonious environment balanced between
the terrestrial and celestial. Humanity suffered no sickness and no
aging in this timeless paradise. After the Fall, man fell
into Time and suffering, forfeiting the gift of immortality.
Madame Blavatsky, the founder of Theosophical Society, claimed the
second root race originated in Hyperborea, before the
later races of Lemuria and Atlantis. The Russian metaphysician Alexandre
Dugin says that it was the home of the solar people, connected
to what is now northern Russia. Solar people, Alexandre
Dugin explains, are a cultural-spiritual type who are
creative, energetic and spiritual. They are the opposite of lunar
people, a psycho-spiritual type who are materialistic, conservative
and wary of change.
The ancient Greeks had a legend of Hyperborea, a land of perpetual
sun beyond the north wind. Hecataeus (circa 500 BC) says
that the holy place of the Hyperboreans, which was built after
the pattern of the spheres, lay in the regions beyond
the land of the Celts on an island in the ocean.
According to popular accounts, the God Apollos temple at Delphi
was founded by individuals from Hyperborea. The Greek lyric poet Alcaeus
(600 BC) sang of the actual or mystical journey of Apollo to the land
of the Hyperboreans:
O King Apollo, son of great Zeus, whom thy father did furnish forth
at thy birth with golden headband and lyre of shell, and giving thee
moreover a swan-drawn chariot to drive, would have thee go to Delphi
But nevertheless, once mounted, thou badest thy swans fly to the land
of the Hyperboreans.
The wearing of a star-embroidered robe by the King and Ruler
of the World the heavenly sphere serving as a symbol
of the earthly one is a custom that can be traced to the
Hyperboreans.
Embroidered in gold on blue silk were the figures of the sun, moon
and stars. Such robes were worn by the kings of Ancient Rome and Julius
Ceasar, as well as Augustus and the Roman Emperors.
Earthenware statuettes found in a grave in Yugoslavia show the Hyperborean
Apollo in a chariot drawn by swans. The god wears, on his neck
and breast, yellow figures of the sun and stars; on his head is a
rayed crown with a headband that has a zigzag pattern. His robe, which
reaches to the ground, is dark blue with yellow designs.
Collapse
of Hyperborea
One of the most popular theories for the collapse of Hyperborea
was a physical inclination (catastrophe) of the Earths axis.
Mans transgression of Divine Law caused a shift in the metaphysical
balance, the effect of which was catastrophic on the Earth plane.
Julius Evola, the noted Italian metaphysician, explains that at this
point the first cycle of history closed, and that of the second, the
Atlantean, began:
The
memory of this Arctic seat is the patrimony of the traditions of many
people, in the form either of real geographic allusions, or of symbols
of its function and original significance, often transferred to a
super-historical significance, or else applied to other centres that
may be considered as copies of the original one
Above all, one
will notice the interplay of the Arctic theme with the Atlantic theme
It is known that the astrophysical phenomenon of the inclination of
the earths axis causes a change of climate from one epoch to
another. Moreover, as tradition tells, this inclination took place
at a given moment, and in fact through the alignment of a physical
and a metaphysical fact, as if a disorder in nature were reflecting
a certain situation of a spiritual order
At any rate, it was
only at a certain moment that ice and eternal night descended on the
polar region. Then, with the enforced emigration from that seat, the
first cycle closed and the second opened, initiating the second great
era, the Atlantean Cycle.2
The memory of a Golden Age, although rendered in an archetypal or
mythological form, serves a super-historical purpose. This is why
the remembrance of the ancient civilisation of Atlantis is sometimes
enmeshed with that of Hyperborea. We cannot expect to prove
the physical existence of these civilisations. All myths are known
to have a historical basis. Transmitted primarily by oral tradition,
they are wrapped in a catchy and simple tale that ensures their survival
and transmittal down through the ages. Myth serves an extremely vital
function a recollection of our beginnings, a knowledge of where
we are heading, and what we are supposed to do. It is only now in
the Kali Yuga that we have disconnected from tradition, losing the
ability to correctly interpret and understand myths with historical
kernels of truth.
Hyperborea
Revived
The legend of Hyperborea revived during the 18th and 19th centuries
when a flurry of books were published dealing with the idea that civilisation
had first appeared not in the Middle East, but somewhere else.
The popular theory of the day postulated that the so-called Aryans
(Europeans) were superior and more intelligent than Semites (Middle
East peoples). Therefore, logically, civilisation could not have originated
in the Middle East and Hebrew was probably not the first language.
The Frenchmen of the Enlightenment were in no doubt that Eden
was situated on higher ground. The Germans similarly, who were looking
for their Aufklarung, also sought to be free of a history tied to
the Mediterranean and Middle East regions. British and German scholars
studied ancient Indian (Vedic) civilisation and leant the Sanskrit
language. Many believed Sanskrit the original language of the Aryans.
With new sources of knowledge from ancient Egypt, Chaldea, China and
India, researchers were treading on dangerous ground as far as questioning
Mans origins. Biblical history was still strictly upheld and
moving too far from this historical boundary could have you silenced.
Writers such as Jean-Sylvain Bailly (1736-1793), the Rev. Dr. William
Warren (1800s), Bal Gangadhar Tilak (1856-1929) and H.S. Spencer (1900s),
developed out theories, often borrowing from earlier sources, attempting
to prove mans origins in the Polar region.
Tilaks book Arctic Home (published 1903) begins by stating
the well known fact that warm weather remains in the Arctic regions,
which shows the climate was far different during the interglacial
period. According to Tilak, scientists do concede the existence, in
the past, of a warm circumpolar continent, and the circumstances there
would not have been nearly unfavourable as imagined.
Tilak was convinced the ancient Indian Vedic texts point unmistakably
to a realm of the gods where the sun rises and sets once
a year, showing that their writers could understand the astronomical
conditions at the North Pole.
Tilak, who had a perfect mastery of Vedic language, placed the original
Arctic home existing around circa 10,000 BC, just prior to its destruction
and the beginning of the last Ice Age.
His book had little impact in the West but was popular in India. When
the learned Zoroastrian H.S. Spencer wrote his book The Aryan Ecliptic
Cycle (1965), a development of Tilaks work, he was able
to obtain endorsements from Sir S. Radhakrishna, then President of
India. As well as from dignitaries of the Theosophical Society in
Adyar and the Sri Aurobindo Ashram in Pondichary.
Spencers approach commenced not with the Vedic but the Zoroastrian
scriptures, going further than Tilak in tracing the progress of the
Aryans from the North to their new homes, and the schisms
that beset them on the way.
Spencers Aryans made their presence felt after they
travelled far and wide. They moulded the religions and cultures of
Egypt, Sumeria, Babylon, and of the Semites, hitherto worshippers
of feminine lunar deities.
However, the search for a terrestrial Hyperborea by many
researchers and the movement of an original race has been
extremely difficult and presumptuous. Proving human habitation possible
at the North Pole somewhere between 8000 and 10,000 BC is no mean
feat, particularly if you were living in the 18th century. The numerous
theories posited offering contradictory or tendentious evidence
has served only to discredit the whole notion of Hyperborea. The same
could be said of theories attempting to prove the existence of the
lost continent of Atlantis. The drive to prove the actuality
of a terrestrial Hyperborea has overshadowed its occult and symbolic
importance.
The
Spiritual Pole
In the quest to discover the physical location of
Hyperborea,
most writers overlooked the possibility that the mythology served
a special symbolic and spiritual purpose. What if the truth behind
the legend was esoteric, and not exoteric as some even today still
maintain?
Many traditions speak of a supreme spiritual centre or supreme
country. The supreme country that does not necessarily
lay at a specific earthly point, but exists in a primordial state,
unaffected by terrestrial cataclysms.
The supreme country, commonly regarded as polar
in orientation, symbolically is always represented as being at the
Axis of the world and in most cases is referred
to as a Sacred Mountain. Rene Guenon in his book The
Lord of the World says:
Almost
every tradition has its name for this mountain, such as the Hindu
Meru, the Persian Alborj, and the Montsalvat of Western Grail legend.
There is also the Arab mountain Qaf and the Greek Olympus, which has
in many ways the same significance. This consists of a region that,
like the Terrestrial Paradise, has become inaccessible to ordinary
humanity, and that is beyond the reach of those cataclysms which upset
the human world at the end of certain cyclic periods. This region
is the authentic supreme country which, according to certain
Vedic and Avestan texts, was originally sited towards the North Pole,
even in the literal sense of the word. Although it may change its
localisation according to the different phases of human history, it
still remains polar in a symbolic sense because essentially it represents
the fixed axis around which everything revolves.3
The Vedic texts say the supreme country is known as
Paradesha,
also called the Heart of the World. It is the word from
which the Chaldeans formed Pardes, and Westerners Paradise.
There is notably another name for it probably even older than
Paradesha.
This name is Tula, called by the Greeks Thule. Common to regions from
Russia to Central America, Tula represented the primordial state from
which spiritual power emanated.
It is known that the Mexican Tula owes its origin to the Toltecs who
came, it is said, from Aztlan, the land in the middle of the
water, which is evidently Atlantis. They brought the name Tula
from their country of origin and gave it to a centre which consequently
must have replaced, to a certain extent, that of the lost continent.
On the other hand, the Atlantean Tula must be distinguished from the
Hyperborean Tula, which latter represents the first and supreme centre
.4
In this case Tula representing a centre of spiritual
authority does not remain fixed in a geographical location.
Guenon states that the Atlantean cycle, successor to the Hyperborean
cycle, is associated with Tula. The Atlantean Tula is an image of
the original primordial state situated in a northern or Polar location.
As world cycles progress onward, the supreme seat of spiritual power
regresses further and further into hiding and obscurity. This, of
course, is deliberate and predictable as humanity descends into the
end of the age (Kali Yuga), progressively enmeshing itself in the
material plane until the reversal of established world order is imposed.
It should be emphasised here that Tula, or the centre of spiritual
authority, constitutes the fixed point known symbolically to all traditions
as the pole or axis around which the world rotates. Metaphysically
speaking, the world rotates around this seat of power even if its
not geographically North or South.
In the Buddhist tradition Chakravarti literally means
He who makes the wheel turn, which is to say the one who,
being at the centre of all things, directs all movement without himself
participating, or who is, to use Aristotles words, the unmoving
mover.
The turning of the world, the Pole and axis, combine to
depict a wheel in the Celtic, Chaldean and Hindu traditions. Such
is the true significance of the swastika, seen worldwide from the
Far East to the Far West, which is intrinsically the sign of
the Pole.
The
Pole and Mystical Enlightenment
It is in medieval Iran that we find extant literature on the Spiritual
Pole and the experience of mystical ascent to it. The Iranian Sufis,
drawing not only on Islam but on the Mazdean, Manichean, Hermetic,
Gnostic and Platonic traditions, blended a sacred knowledge said to
be scientific, mystical and philosophically practical.
Esoterically
the Persian theosophers situated their Orient neither
to the East, nor to the South, wither they faced in prayer towards
the Kaba. The Orient sought by the mystic, the Orient
that cannot be located on our maps, is in the direction of the north,
beyond the north. [The Man of Light in Iranian Sufism by Henry
Corbin, 1978] About this Pole reigns a perpetual Darkness, says the
Recital of Hayy ibn Yaqzan, one of the visionary recitals of Avicenna
(Ibn Sina). Each year the rising sun shines upon it at a fixed
time. He who confronts that Darkness and does not hesitate to plunge
into to it for fear of difficulties will come to a vast space, boundless
and filled with light. [Ibid] This Darkness, says Corbin, is
the ignorance of the natural man. To pass through it is a terrifying
and painful experience, for it ruins and destroys all the patencies
and norms on which the natural man lived and depended
[Ibid] But it must be faced consciously before one can acquire the
saving gnosis of the light beyond.
The Darkness around the Pole, annually pierced by the suns rays,
is at once terrestrial and symbolic. On the one hand, this is the
situation at the North Pole, where there are six months of night and
six of day. It is characteristic of esoteric tradition that the same
image is valid on two or more levels. But as Corbin and Guenon never
tired of pointing out, the symbolic level is not a fanciful construct
on the basis of hard terrestrial fact: it is quite the other way round.
In the present case, the mystical experience of penetrating the Darkness
at the Pole is the fundamental reality and the authentic experience
of the individual. The fact that the set-up of the material world
reflects the celestial geography is what is contingent. In brief,
in this teaching as in Platonism, it is the supersensible realm that
is real, and the material realm that is a shadow of it.5
The seeker, through deep meditation on spiritual matters, succeeds
in entering a world of mystical experience, and makes a pilgrimage
to Hyperborea that can not be discovered from maps. Aristeas, the
Greek poet, in shamanic rapture, is said to have travelled to Hyperborea
while possessed by Apollo. Mystical soul-travel to Hyperborea
is common in ancient Greek literature.
The journey to this Pole is sometimes illustrated as the ascent of
a column of light, extending from the depths of hell to the lucid
paradise in the cosmic North.
As previously mentioned, the Pole is also a Mountain, called Mount
Qaf in Islamic tradition, whose ascent, like Dantes climbing
of the Mountain of Purgatory, represents the pilgrims progress through
spiritual states.
Guenon, in Lord of the World, explains the idea evoking
the representation under discussion is essentially one of stability,
that is itself a characteristic of the Pole. The Mountain, referred
to as an Island, remains imm-ovable amidst the ceaseless
agitation of the waves, a disturbance that reflects that of the external
world. Accordingly, it is necessary to cross the sea of passions
in order to reach the Mount of Salvation, the Sanctuary
of Peace.
Our search for Hyperborea is our desire to return to Paradesha or
Paradise the primordial spring of Mans original existence.
The importance of knowing the terrestrial location of a lost civilisation
at the northern regions is thus overshadowed by its symbolic relevance.
To seek Hyperborea is to quest for spiritual enlightenment. The Mountain,
the Island, the immovable Rock, fixed in a Polar orientation, relays
a symbolic repres-entation of our search for Ultimate Reality. Its
immovability anchors us to this important task.
Footnotes:
1. Arktos, The Polar Myth in Science, Symbolism and Nazi Survival
by Joscelyn Godwin, p. 16.
2. Quoted in Arktos, The Polar Myth in Science, Symbolism and Nazi
Survival, p. 58-9, original source Revolt Against the Modern World
by Julius Evola, 1951.
3. The Lord of the World by Rene Guenon, p. 50.
4. Ibid, p. 56
5. Arktos, The Polar Myth in Science, Symbolism and Nazi Survival
by Joscelyn Godwin, p. 167-8.
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