From my diary

I’m mainly busy with the Mithras site at the moment.

I’ve been working through a list of new finds since 1960 made by John W. Brandt, together with a list by Szabo Csaba.  In each case I do a web search for pictures or sites.  I did the Riegel Mithraeum on Friday night.  It’s slow, but useful.

I wish I could find a picture of the curious sword found at Riegel.  This had a semi-circle in the middle of the blade, as wide as a man’s neck.  If put on, it would look as if a sword had been driven through the neck.  Undoubtedly it featured in some initiation ceremony.

Today I collected a curious volume from the library – Al. N. Oikonomides, Mithraic art: a search for unpublished and unidentified monuments.  It’s only a little book, with monochrome photos of a few such.  But it’s still very interesting, if not very scholarly.  It’s basically a set of random notes typed up.

The Origen volume has come back from the typesetter with the latest set of corrections, and I have now produced a proof copy for the translator, and another for me.  I think that I will allow one set of corrections from this, and then go to print.  Somewhere there has to be an end to this task.  The typesetter, Simon Hartshorne, has been very good about this indeed, but I am embarassed to trespass on his generosity much more.

I’m probably doing some other things as well: just can’t think of them tonight!

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6 thoughts on “From my diary

  1. Please keep up the great work Roger. I can’t believe what you keep finding. You should have been a detective.

  2. PS, my translation of the picture caption:
    Cult sword, Badisches Landesmuseum, from Riegel am Kaiserstuhl, Mithraeum, probably 2nd-3rd Century AD, bronze

    This one-of-a-kind ‘theater sword’ was probably used at “mystery plays”, perhaps initiation rites with ritual killings that took place in the Mithras cult. It could be placed around the abdomen of a participant so it simulated a deadly sword injury.

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