The name 'Mên' has been on my mind for awhile. It's really short and that makes it difficult to make much sense out of. One thought that I had was that it was part of a longer name that, at some point, got shortened, but I'm not sure about that. I looked into definitions to see what I could find.
In ancient texts, the Greek word
μήν (men) is just a word grammatically used as an
asseverated particle, which is a function word that gives another word an affirmative or positive meaning. It's a particle that always 'looks forward', never 'looking backward'. In this case, it has a definition of 'verily, truly'.
At the same time, this word has the definition of month/moon.
The 'same' word spelled
μής (mes) is part of
βουλεύω (take council, deliberate) and
μήδομαι (to be minded, intend). Etymonline says the PIE root meaning of '
men (1)' is 'to think' evidenced from other languages with meanings like mind, thought, spirit, sage, seer, prophet, idea, to believe, madness, remembrance, etc.
Again, the 'same' word spelled
μείς (meís) carries the same definition of month and moon
but seems specific to a crescent moon and a specific time of the month. It also mentions the 1-2 century Latin god
Lunus (Luna) which is the Greek
Μήνη (Mēnē) which means the same as the moon goddess Selene (Σελήνη). The lower case version is
μήνη (mēnē) and has two definitions. The first is
moon but with the personified allusion as a goddess (see Homer's
Hymn 32 to Selene). The second (spelled:
μῆνις (mē̂nis)) means '
wrath', usually '
of the gods' but also '
of Achilles' and also '
revengeful temper of the people'. I find it interesting that Menelaus' name (translated as '
abiding-men')
can also be translated as '
wrath of the people' (
μένος (menos) 'vigor, rage, power', and
λαός (laos) 'people').
Menelaus, brother of Agamemnon, was the king of Sparta and ruled Lacedaemon (southwest Spain). Herodotus writes in
book 2, chapter 118-119 this account of Menelaus' journey to recover Helen from Troy only to find she and his stolen gold was in Egypt.
Enough, then, of Homer and the Cyprian poems. But, when I asked the priests whether the Greek account of what happened at Troy were idle or not, they gave me the following answer, saying that they had inquired and knew from Menelaus himself.[2] After the rape of Helen, a great force of Greeks came to the Trojan land on Menelaus' behalf. After disembarking and disposing their forces, they sent messengers to Ilion, one of whom was Menelaus himself.[3] When these were let inside the city walls, they demanded the restitution of Helen and of the property which Alexandrus had stolen from Menelaus and carried off, and they demanded reparation for the wrongs; but the Trojans gave the same testimony then and later, sworn and unsworn: that they did not have Helen or the property claimed, but all of that was in Egypt, and they could not justly make reparation for what Proteus the Egyptian had.[4] But the Greeks, thinking that the Trojans were mocking them, laid siege to the city, until they took it; but there was no Helen there when they breached the wall, but they heard the same account as before; so, crediting the original testimony, they sent Menelaus himself to Proteus.
Menelaus then went to Egypt and up the river to Memphis; there, relating the truth of the matter, he met with great hospitality and got back Helen, who had not been harmed, and also all his wealth, besides.[2] Yet, although getting this, Menelaus was guilty of injustice toward the Egyptians. For adverse weather detained him when he tried to sail away; after this continued for some time, he carried out something impious,[3] taking two native children and sacrificing them. When it became known that he had done this, he fled with his ships straight to Libya, hated and hunted; and where he went from there, the Egyptians could not say.
Along with Menelaus, there's another name that stood out for me. Menes (Narmer) of Egypt (the northern France version) who is credited to have unified upper and lower Egypt.
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology has this to say about
Menes:
Menes (
Μένης). This is the most usual form of the name, which, however,
we also find written as Menas, Menis, Meinis, Men, Min, and Mein (Μηνις, Μηνις, Μεῖνις, Μῆν, Μιν̂, μεῖν). Menes was the first king of Egypt, according to the traditions of the Egyptians themselves. Herodotus records of him that he built Memphis on a piece of ground which he had rescued from the river by turning it from its former course, and erected therein a magnificent temple to Hephaestus (.Pthah). (Comp.
Diod. 1.50; Wess.
ad loc.)
Diodorus tells us that he introduced into Egypt the worship of the gods and the practice of sacrifices, as well as a more elegant and luxurious style of living. As the author of this latter innovation, his memory was dishonoured many generations afterwards by king Tnephachthus, the father of Bocchoris; and Plutarch mentions a pillar at Thebes in Egypt, on which was inscribed an imprecation against Menes, as the introducer of luxury. There is a legend also, preserved by Diodorus, which relates (in defiance of chronology, unless Mendes is to be substituted for Menas), that he was saved from drowning in the lake of Moeris by a crocodile, in gratitude for which he established the worship of the animal, and built a city near the lake called the City of Crocodiles, erecting there a pyramid to serve as his own tomb. That he was a conqueror, like other founders of kingdoms, we learn from an extract from Manetho preserved by Eusebius. By Marsham and others he has been identified with the Mizraim of Scripture. According to some accounts he was killed by a hippopotamus. (
Hdt. 2.4,
99;
Diod. 1.43,
45,
89; Wess.
ad loc.; Plut.
De Is. et Osir. 8; Perizon.
Orig. Aegypt. 100.5; Shuckford's
Connection, bk. iv.; Bunsen,
Aegyptens Stelle in der Weltgeschichte, vol. ii. pp. 38-45.)
The name
Min comes from Herodotus,
2.4.2:
[2] Furthermore, the Egyptians (they said) first used the names of twelve gods (which the Greeks afterwards borrowed from them); and it was they who first assigned to the several gods their altars and images and temples, and first carved figures on stone. Most of this they showed me in fact to be the case. The first human king of Egypt, they said, was Min.
And in
2.99.2 onwards:
[2] The priests told me that Min was the first king of Egypt, and that first he separated Memphis from the Nile by a dam.
The mention or the City of Crocodiles gets into the Labyrinth that Laura writes about
here (full article starts
here). There is also the
Minotaur and king
Minos of Crete. There is also the
Maenads, which, returning to Etymonline, says they are a "priestess of Bacchus," literally "madwoman" from stem of
mainesthai "to rage, go mad," from PIE
*mnyo-,
suffixed form of root *men- (1) "to think". On
the last page of the article, Laura talks about these wild dancers much more then here.
Laura
writes:
As a side note, we would like to draw attention to the fact that Daedalus, the “great architect,” was connected to a king named Minos. Another king named Menes was alleged to be the great unifier of Egypt, builder of the great city of Memphis, and a famous temple of Hephaestus there.
Discovering a great architect connected, even indirectly, to a great unifier of two kingdoms and builder of a great Temple on the one side, and connected to another king with a similar name, and builder of a great labyrinth which is connected to a "power in the center," - the Minotaur, keeping in mind the legends of the building of Stonehenge, the "cloisters of Ambrius" where the god danced all night in the center around 3100 BC, certainly raises certain questions.
As a side note, Min was an Egyptian fertility god akin to the Greek Priapus (who also wore the Phrygian cap). But more interesting was a reference to a group of mercenaries or pirates known as the 'Sons of Min' that I ran into a while ago. The problem is that I can't find that reference anymore. I only know it exists because I remember thinking at the time, "Ok, now I have two pirate groups that start with 'Sons of': the Sons of Mamers (Mamertines) and now the Sons of Min." But until I can find it again, it's pretty much nothing, but I thought I'd add this anyway.
On p.258 of SHotW, Laura writes:
Worship of the moon is recorded in the oldest literatures of Egypt, Babylonia, India and China- and is still practiced today in various parts of the world, particularly among certain African and Native American groups. The expersts will tell us that Moon worship is founded on the belief that the phases of the moon and the growth and decline of plant, animal, and human life are related. in some societies food was laid out at night to absorb the rays of the moon, which were thought to have power to cure disease and prolong life. Among the Baganda of central Africa it was customary for a mother to bathe her newborn child child by the light of the first full moon. The moon has also been associated with wisdom and justice, as in the worship of the Egyptian god Thoth and the Mesopotamian god Sin. The moon has also been the basis for many amorus legends and some superstitions (madmen were once considered to be moonstruck, hence the term lunatic). ...
The interesting points are that the rays of the moon were anciently thought to have the power to cure disease and prolong life and confer wisdom. These are motifs of both the Holy Grail and the Philosopher's Stone. ...
On p. 178, Laura writes this little bit on Narmer (Menes):
Indeed, the worship of the goddess, is the older form of worship in Egypt. But all of that came to an end, probably with the conquest of Narmer, the building of the temple to Hephaestus, the demoting of the goddess and the Moon calendar, and the instituting of the Solar worship and the solar calendar of 365 days.
The last name that caught my attention was Menestheus who was the king of Athens (present day Cherbourg) who fought on the side of the Achaeans against Troy. There was also a
youth of the same name from Sounion who was sacrificed to the Minotaur in the Labyrinth on Crete. There was also two men named
Menesthius, one who was a Myrmidonion leader, and the other who was a man killed by Paris in the Trojan War.
An interesting, though much later, translation I found was in
Old Norse where '
men' means
necklace (
mani-kold = necklace-gold [-> marigold!]),
treasures,
jewels. There are some other clever phrases given as examples such as: "
men jarðar, earth’s necklace =
the sea; men Karmtar, island necklace = [an island in]
the sea; lyngva men, necklace of the bush = a serpent [in a bush]
; men storðar, the earth’s men = the world serpent" (sounds like Oroboros)
. Also, in
Old English, '
mene' translates as "
1: necklace; collar, 2: ornament, jewel". A different word in Old English that also came up was '
mennen, mennenu' which means '
handmaiden, slave'. I went back to Old Norse and looked up 'slave' and found one of the words was "
Man (B): A bondman, prob. originally of prisoners of war who were sold as slaves (Irish in the west, Finns and slaves in the east)". This word also (Man (II)) refers to a maid, a bondwoman, who would usually become a mistress of the master. There is also "
man-sal: a ‘man-sale,’ slave trade, slave-selling".
The Latin name for this deity "Mên" is
Mensis (moon/month). But the cognate word (if I'm reading this correctly)
mēnsus (from the parent
mētior ("measure")) has many declensions, another of which is
mēnsa, with its main definition being 'table' (and is where we get the word 'mesa', an isolated flat-topped ridge or hill, from). It also means 'alter', specifically the flat-topped surface, or 'sacrificial table'. There were probably many uses for mēnsa but I thought this example was interesting: "A stand or platform on which slaves were exposed for sale: “
servus de mensā paratus,” App. M. 8, p. 213; id. Mag. 17, p. 285, 15." It made me think of the singular description I mentioned earlier for Mên as the 'god of slaves’.
When it comes to a necklace, there are many types worn around the neck, but in this case I thought about the torque and the slave collar.
On
this page, Laura quotes from
this article about Cernunnos, a horned god (which makes me think of the crescent moon as 'horns coming out' of Mên's shoulders, which also makes me think of the Persian 'Zahhak the Snake Shoulder'):
One of the earliest representations of a Horned God in a purely Celtic context is a rock carving from Val Camonica in northern Italy. The God is portrayed standing upright wearing a long garment and carrying a torc, the collar-shaped necklace of divine authority.
On the
Slavery wiki, it mentions this:
Slavery predates written records and has existed in many cultures. Slavery is rare among hunter-gatherer populations because it requires economic surpluses and a substantial population density. ... slavery became widespread only with the invention of agriculture during the Neolithic Revolution about 11,000 years ago.
The explanation for slavery being rare in hunter-gatherer populations because of a lack of economic surplus and population density felt weak. I wondered if there was no slavery because of this found also on p. 258:
Suppose a civilization existed that did not need cities, agriculture, wheels or writing? That is not to say they did not produce goods en masse, nor that they did not produce food for large groups, or that they did not travel over vast distances or record their exploits. But, suppose they did not do it in the way we would expect? Suppose the STONES DID IT ALL?