by Sean Jobst
25 January 2023
[Including an analysis of the Feathered Serpent, Donar against the World Serpent, Mayan links to the Southeast US, comparative Native American and Germanic Mythology, and the Gnostic Myth of Sophia, the Aeons, and Healing the Gender Rift]
Last Autumn, I took three hiking expeditions to a local site called Morton Hill (2,064 feet / 629 meters). Spread across 80 acres (323,748 square meters), it contains the cultural legacy of the indigenous Abehka, a nation of the Creek Confederacy, surviving within the landscape long after the Trail of Tears. The initial archaeologist's survey in 2009 identified "41 stone walls, six stone mounds, two boulder caches, one possible historical stacked wall feature, two wall tips, and two springhead arches."(1) "Over the next two years more limestone-made stone features were found. Most of the stone mounds are oval or oblong rock pile cairns ranging from 3 to 7 feet in height and up to 17 feet in diameter. The walls are generally 3 to 9 feet wide and 3 feet in height. Their lengths are from 26 to nearly 600 feet. The archaeologists determined that at least some of the stone features were prehistoric and similar to Native American-attributed stone mounds and structures found elsewhere."(2)
My travels helped me to grow through many experiences, but events of 2020 halting those international travels drew me inward into a greater appreciation for my own region, the southern foothills of Appalachia. I studied more about the indigenous Creek (Muskokee) people of Alabama and Georgia and visited the Etowah (Etula) and Ocmulgee mounds. While reconnecting with my own European heritage, including a spiritual awareness through folk traditions, archaeological and linguistic evidence, I endorse similar efforts by a group of scholars named the People of One Fire to reclaim the suppressed heritage of this region. These include the incredible work of Richard Thornton, a Georgia Creek-Uchee historian and architect who documents how extensively the Southeast was melting-pot of the Mayans and other cultures, seen on mound structures and petroglyphs, toponyms, and tribal names.
I was unaware of any of this back in 2009 and 2010 when, as an activist-minded college student, I was involved in local protests to preserve mounds that were ultimately destroyed for Consumerism. My motive then was simple decency and justice, but now I recognize there was something primal that knew my tribal ancestors - for everyone is descendant of a tribe at some point in history - had similar mounds. For my tribes these were sacred sites of ancestor veneration and reincarnation.(3) Only with my spiritual journey these last four years have I also learned mounds are on every continent, their meanings and symbolism, and just how ancient they are, challenging dogmas about linear history. Awakening to animism meant connecting to my local landscape and its spiritual vibrancy, including greater respect for the original inhabitants of this region. So it was with all this in mind that I hiked Morton Hill and found many mounds scattered throughout these forests....
Image from a carved whelk shell emerging from an intertwined serpent. Engraving by artist Herb Roe from the original Spiro artifact. |
"As Above, So Below. As Within, So Without." |
We can view these Serpent symbols - including the Morton Hill effigy - in context of the Path of Souls. The mound builders held that in addition to the life-soul connected to the physical body, there is a second free-soul that leaves the post-mortem body. This soul journeyed west over a body of water(8) on the eve of Winter Solstice. The soul then waited until early morning when Orion's Nebula (below the three belt stars of Orion) was about to descend below the horizon, at which point the soul "leaped" into this portal on to the Milky Way. Eventually the soul reached the Cygnus constellation, personified as a large raptor bird that served as "judge" or "mediator" for the soul. If the tests were passed, then the soul was allowed to make its final journey out of the sky into the realm of the dead.(9)
The soul journey is also portrayed on the Moundville Rattlesnake Disc, showing a hand (reversible downward or upward) with an eye in the center and surrounded by two intertwined rattlesnakes. Its been interpreted as a North Star cosmogram with perfect alignment laid out on a Summer Solstice star map. The middle finger is aligned perfectly with the iris, north towards Polaris in an exact 60-degree angle to allegorize the Solstice sunrise. The eye is 9-degrees off-center, matching the exact position from Polaris between 1100 and 1450 CE. The eye represents the North Star in the center, aligned with the thumb (Little Dipper). The eye is an ogee symbolic of portals to the spirit world, the conduit of spiritual energies and an esoteric knowledge about perception - our minds have an active role in what we see and manifest.(10) It could be deflecting the "evil eye" in an example of sympathetic magic. The way the snakes are intertwined replicate the counter-clockwise movement of Cassiopeia and the Big Dipper around the North Star. The snakes are aligned to the two brightest stars, Vega and Capella.
Moundville Rattlesnake Disc |
Moundville feathered serpent |
Image from a Spiro gorget showing feathered serpents rotating as a primal worldwide motif allegorical of movements around the North Star. |
Applying what we know about Mississippian sites to the west and Creek sites to the east, its possible the Morton Hill effigy was also connected to Path of Soul rituals. The ritual occurred in winter, when Scorpius was invisible below the horizon, as it was believed the Feathered Serpent would snatch the soul down into the Underworld. The Underworld itself should not be viewed negatively like an Abrahamic "hell" but simply not part of the celestial Path of Souls. These Feathered or Horned Serpents have tails resembling corn. As Scorpius is visible most in summer, I propose a possible correspondence to the Creek Green Corn festival (poskita), whose days varied from village to village but started when the corn crop ripened, around the full moon that followed the Summer Solstice.
Kukulkan effigy at the base of one of the Chichen Itza pyramids in the Yucatan. I see parallels with the Morton Hill serpent effigy. |
Zuni petroglyphs of the serpentine Kokopelli, with other symbols common to megalithic structures worldwide. |
The path between the Yucatan and Southeast United States is too short for there not to have been trade and cultural links. |
Footnotes and Sources:
(1) Harry Holstein, "A Preliminary archaeological investigation of the Morton Hill Stone Structure Complex, 1CA671, Calhoun County, Alabama," Jacksonville State University, Archaeological Resource Library, Research Series #5, March 2010, p. 1.
(2) Gregory L. Little, Native American Mounds in Alabama: An Illustrated Guide to Public Sites, Memphis: Archetype Books, 2017, p. 31.
(3) Self-discoveries I expressed in articles about mounds in Swabia, their connection to the Goddess Holle, and the importance of mounds within Celtic and Iberian folk-traditions. The linguistic, folkloric, mythological, academic, and experiential evidence demonstrates the connection of mounds and stone circles to ancestors, reincarnation, and celestial events.
(4) Little, op. cit., p. 32.
(5) This was also common across the Atlantic, with processions carrying stones to European mounds in remembrance of ancestors. As noted by Portuguese archaeologist and researcher Arith Härger, in ancient Iberian processions people would remove a stone from mountaintop grave mounds, journey back to where their procession began, and then return to the mound in a symbolic journey to the Underworld and back into reincarnation. They also commemorated ancestors with stylized stones honoring a Solar Mother Goddess.
(6) George Stiggins, Creek Indian History: A Historical Narrative of the Genealogy, Traditions and Downfall of the Ispocoga Or Creek Indian Tribe of Indians by One of the Tribe, Birmingham: Birmingham Public Library Press, 1989, pp. 139, 141.
(7) Louis Le Clerc Milfort, Mémoires, ou coup-d'oeil rapide sur mes voyages en Louisiane, et mon séjour dans la nation Creeke, trans. and ed. Ben C. McCary, Savannah: The Beehive Press, 1972, p. 236; John R. Swanton, Early History of the Creek Indians and Their Neighbors, Washington, D.C.: Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin, no. 73, 1922, p. 192; and Albert James Pickett, History of Alabama and Incidentally of Georgia and Mississippi, from the Earliest Period, Birmingham: Webb Book Co., 1900, p. 78.
(8) A parallel shared with Celtic traditions, with Finisterre in Iberia and the "Western Sea" in Gaelic lore as western liminal places between land and the Otherworld. Mounds and bodies of water were generally viewed as portals into the Otherworld.
(9) Gregory Little, Path of Souls: The Native American Death Journey, Memphis: Archetype Books, 2014.
(10) In native European spirituality, the Moon "mind" reflects the light of the Sun "soul". It was understood our soul is so transcendent we work with it through our mind which reflects it. Much evil has resulted from the confusion of mind with intellect, and assumptions that every thought comes from us rather than implanted from elsewhere or conditioned by others. Although spiritual beings in their own right given our Animistic worldview, the "dwarves" and "elves" were also understood as allegories of different parts of our psyche. These were not the later caricatures they were made into which distorted the actual ways our Ancestors viewed our traditions.
(11) This is only a contradiction to those still holding on to Abrahamic dualistic baggage they seek to transpose upon Paganism. Our Ancestors knew that something could be an Archetype with multiple layers of meaning and be a "literal" Being at the same time. All tribal and folk faiths are Animistic - they knew that all things have Spirit and Consciousness. This obviously includes those spiritual energies and realities that can also be related to as Archetypes.
(12) Sergio Magaña, Caves of Power: Ancient Energy Techniques for Healing, Rejuvenation and Manifestation, Carlsbad, CA: Hay House, 2016, pp. 24, 186-187.
(13) Linda Schele and David Freidel, A Forest of Kings: The Untold Story of the Ancient Maya, New York: William Morrow, 1990, pp. 68, 395.
(14) Gregory L. Little, John Van Auken, and Lora Little, Ancient South America: Recent Evidence Supporting Edgar Cayce's Story of Atlantis and Mu, Memphis: Eagle Wing Books, 2002, p. 96, citing Edgar Cayce Reading 1298-1.
(15) Swami Sivananda, Kundalini Yoga, Tehri-Garhwal, Uttar Pradesh: Divine Life Society, 1994, p. 34.
(16) This description of Kundalini I summarize from the work of Michael William Denney (ThunderWizard), whose teachings I recommend especially on Energy Work and reclaiming an indigenous Germanic shaman tradition.
(17) John Lamb Lash, Not In His Image: Gnostic Vision, Sacred Ecology, and the Future of Belief, 15th Anniversary Edition, White River Junction, VT: Chelsea Green Publishing, 2021, p. 396.
(18) Swami Satyananta Saraswati, Kundalini Tantra, Yoga Publications Trust, 2002.
(19) For the observations and quotes in this paragraph, I am indebted to an article by John Lamb Lash, "Kundalini and the Alien Force: Gnostic and Tantric Practices of Sacred Sexuality," Metahistory.org.
(22) Marija Gimbutas, The Goddesses and Gods of Old Europe, 7000 to 3500 BC: Myths, Legends and Cult Images, London: Thames and Hudson, 1974.
(23) Carl Jung, Collected Works Vol. 14: Mysterium Coniunctionis, New York: Bollingen Foundation, 1963.
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