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2.6: From Pantheism to Polytheism

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    299466
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    A number of crucial developments around 6,000 years ago led to revolutionary changes in society. The wheel was invented, and this led to a multitude of new developments. Now people were tilling the soil and domesticating animals, they were collecting herds and started plaiting and sewing.

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    The "Venus of Willendorf"

    While no one knows for certain when, where, or how it happened, polytheism, the belief in many gods began. Poly means "many." Just as a polygon has many sides, polytheism is the belief in many gods. Some scholars argue polytheism is the result of the number of growing cities and states that had developed in various parts of the world; people were traveling long distances, and there was some contact between these civilizations with the resultant exchange of ideas.

    Image a camel trader on a long journey who is given hospitality, food and lodging, by a family on his route. This family prays before meals and offers sacrifices to their deity. The camel trader likely would ask about this god, its powers, and effectiveness. He may even share his own god with the family. Then, he would continue to his destination, a nearby city full of other gods and goddesses. While bartering, our camel trader comes into contact with even more different deities, then he returns home, bringing these new gods and goddesses with him and weaving their worship into the existing patterns. Soon, the lines dividing worshipping these different gods and goddesses became blurred.

    For example, we know ancient Rome has its own pantheon of gods and goddesses, such as Jupiter, Apollo, and many others. When Rome conquered Egypt, the worship of Egyptian deities travelled back to Rome. Isis, the Egyptian goddess known for healing and for death rites, was incredibly popular, and the worship of Isis spread throughout the Roman Empire; soon Isis was worshipped from present day England to Afghanistan, as well as in Egypt.

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    The Egyptian god Horus has the head of a falcon and the body of a man.

    Another example of polytheism is Hinduism, the world's oldest, continuously practiced major religion. Some say there are 33 million Hindu deities! Each of the different Gods and Goddesses has a specific duty. Much like in our society, there are many different jobs.

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    Representations of Hindu Deities


    This page titled 2.6: From Pantheism to Polytheism is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Mark Knockemus via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.