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Labrys (Greek:λάβρυς,romanized: lábrys) is, according toPlutarch (Quaestiones Graecae 2.302a), theLydian word for thedouble-bittedaxe. In Greek it was calledπέλεκυς (pélekys). The plural oflabrys islabryes (λάβρυες).

Etymology
editPlutarch relates that the wordlabrys was aLydian word for 'axe':Λυδοὶ γὰρ ‘λάβρυν’ τὸν πέλεκυν ὀνομάζουσι.[a][3] ("For Lydians name the double-edged axe 'Labrys'"). Many scholars includingArthur Evans assert that the wordlabyrinth is derived fromlabrys and thus implies 'house of the double axe'.[4] A priestly corporation inDelphi was namedLabyades; the original name was probablyLabryades, servants of the double axe. In theRoman era atPatrai andMessene, a goddessLaphria was worshipped, commonly identified withArtemis. Her name was said to be derived from the region around Delphi.[5][6]
InCrete the "double axe" is not a weapon, and it always accompanies female goddesses, not male gods, referring to the male bull god itself.[7]Robert S. P. Beekes regards the relation oflabyrinth withlabrys as speculative, and rather proposes a relation withlaura (λαύρα), 'narrow street', or to the Cariantheonym Dabraundos (Δαβραυνδος).[8]
It is also possible that the wordlabyrinth is derived from theEgyptian, meaning: "the temple at the entrance of the lake". TheEgyptian labyrinth nearLake Moeris is described byHerodotus andStrabo.[10] The inscription inLinear B, ontablet ΚΝ Gg 702, reads𐀅𐁆𐀪𐀵𐀍𐀡𐀴𐀛𐀊 (da-pu2-ri-to-jo-po-ti-ni-ja). The conventional reading isλαβυρίνθοιο πότνια (labyrinthoio potnia; 'mistress of the labyrinth'). According to some modern scholars it could read *δαφυρίνθοιο (*daphyrinthoio), or something similar, and hence be without a certain link with either theλάβρυς or the labyrinth.[11]
A link has also been posited with the double axe symbols atÇatalhöyük, dating to the Neolithic age.[12](p 161) InLabraunda inCaria, as well as in the coinage of theHecatomnid rulers of Caria, the double axe accompanies the storm godZeus Labraundos.Arthur Evans notes,
It seems natural to interpret names of Carian sanctuaries such as Labranda in the most literal sense as the place of the sacred labrys, which was the Lydian (or Carian) name for the Greekπέλεκυς [pelekys], or double-edged axe[13]
and
on Carian coins, indeed of quite late date, the labrys, set up on its long pillar-like handle, with two dependent fillets, has much the appearance of acult image.[13]
Minoan double axe
editIn ancientCrete, the double axe was an important sacred symbol of theMinoan religion.[14] In Crete the double axe only accompanies goddesses, never gods. It seems that it was the symbol of thearche of the creation (Mater-arche).[12](p 161) Small versions were used asvotive offerings and have been found in considerable numbers; theArkalochori Axe is a famous and rather larger example. Minoan double axes have also recently been found in the prehistoric town ofAkrotiri (Santorini Island) along with other objects of apparent religious significance.[15]
Ancient Thracian Odrysian Kingdom
editThe double axe apparently carried important symbolism the ancientThracianOdrysian kingdom related to theThracian religion and to royal power. It is argued that in ancient Thrace the double axe was an attribute ofZalmoxis. The double axe appears on coins from Thrace and is believed to be the symbol of the kings of the Odrysae, who believed they could trace their lineage to Zalmoxis.[16] A fresco from theThracian tomb near Aleksandrovo in south-east Bulgaria, dated toc. 4th c. BCE, depicts a large-size naked man wielding a double axe.
Double axes in the Near East
editIn theNear East and other parts of the region, eventually, axes of this sort often are wielded by male divinities and appear to become symbols of the thunderbolt, a symbol often found associated with the axe symbol.[17] InLabraunda ofCaria the double-axe accompanies the storm-godZeus Labraundos. Similar symbols have been found on plates ofLinear pottery culture inRomania.[12](p 162) The double-axe is associated with theHurrian god of sky and stormTeshub. HisHittite andLuwian name wasTarhun.[18] Both are depicted holding a triplethunderbolt in one hand and a double axe in the other hand. Similarly,Zeus throws his thunderbolt to bring a storm. Thelabrys, orpelekys, is the double axe Zeus uses to invoke storm and, the relatively modern Greek word for lightning is "star-axe" (ἀστροπελέκιastropeleki)[19] The worship of the double axe was kept up in the Greek island ofTenedos and in several cities in the south-west ofAsia Minor, and it appears in later historical times in the cult of the thunder god of Asia Minor (Zeus Labrayndeus).
Ancient Greece
editIn the context of the mythical Attic kingTheseus, the labyrinth ofGreek mythology is frequently associated with theMinoan palace ofKnossos. This is based on the reading of Linear Bda-pu2-ri-to-jo-po-ti-ni-ja as λαβυρίνθοιο πότνια ("mistress of the labyrinth").[b] It is uncertain, however, thatlabyrinth can be interpreted as "place of the double axes" and moreover that this should be Knossos; many more have been found, for example, at the Arkalachori Cave, where the famousArkalochori Axe was found.[original research?]
On Greek coins of the classical period (e.g. Pixodauros) a type of Zeus venerated atLabraunda inCaria that numismatists callZeus Labrandeus (Ζεὺς Λαβρανδεύς) stands with a sceptre upright in his left hand and the double-headed axe over his shoulder.[20]
Roman Crete
editInRoman Crete, the labrys was often associated with the mythologicalAmazons.[21]
Modern uses
editWeapon
editWhile double axes are common in modernhigh fantasy settings, in reality they were not commonly used in combat.[22]
Sport
editDouble-bit axes were common in North American forestry: One blade would be sharp and used for felling, whilst the other was a little blunter for limbing. As the forest workers (lumberjacks) were often away from civilization for long periods of time they needed a way to amuse themselves. Thus the sport of double-bit axe throwing was born. In recent decades the sport has been formalised with Swedish companyGränsfors Bruk writing the rules most widely accepted. There are now multiple clubs across Europe that throw double-bit. The sport of double-bit was formalised in the 1990s, whereashatchet throwing was formalised in 2006.[23]
Symbol
editReligion and spirituality
editThe labrys is sometimes used as a symbol ofHellenic polytheism.[citation needed] As a symbol of theneopaganGoddess movement, the labrys represents the memory of pre-patriarchal matristic societies.[c][25]
Political
editIn Greece, the labrys was employed as a symbol ofMetaxism.[26] During thetotalitarian period of the4th of August Regime (1936–1941), it represented the regime-sponsoredNational Organization of Youth (EON), as its leader,Ioannis Metaxas, believed it to be the first symbol of all Hellenic civilizations.[26]
The labrys symbol was also used prominently by theVichy France regime, being featured on the personal flag of Chief of StatePhilippe Pétain, on coins, and in various propaganda posters.[27]
In the 1960s the labrys was also used by the Italianneo-fascist andfar-right movementOrdine Nuovo, most prominently on their flag.[28]
Social movement
editInfeminist interpretations, the labrys is asymbol ofmatriarchy.[29][d][30]
Lesbian symbol
editIn the 1970s, the labrys was adopted by thelesbian community, as alesbian feminist symbol, representing strength and self-sufficiency.[31]The labryslesbian flag, created in 1999,[32] involves a labrys superimposed on an invertedblack triangle and set against aviolet background.
InKyrgyzstan, "Labrys" is an LGBT rights organization. The group's goal is to improve the quality of life for allLGBT individuals in their country as well as Central Asia.[33] Similarly, "Labrisz" is an association inHungary for lesbian and bisexual women.
Culture
editThe double axe is used by Cretan folklore preservation societies and associations both in Greece and abroad, on occasion with the spelling "lavrys" reflecting modern Greek pronunciation.[citation needed]
Film
editIn the 2025 film Lesbian Space Princess, the labrys is the "most powerful weapon known to lesbian kind" and the Straight White Maliens demand it as ransom, driving the plot. It serves as both a powerful weapon and a symbol of lesbian power, propelling Princess Saira's journey.[34]
See also
editNotes
edit- ^"Herakles, having slainHippolyte and taken her axe away from her with the rest of her arms, gave it toOmphale. The kings of Lydia who succeeded her carried this as one of their sacred insignia of office and passed it down from father to son until it was passed toCandaules, who disdained it and gave it to one of his companions to carry. WhenGyges rebelled and was making war upon Candaules, Arselis came with a force fromMylasa to assist Gyges; Arselis then slew Candaules and his companion and took the axe toCaria with the other spoils of war. And, having set up a statue of Zeus, Arselis put the axe in his hand and invoked the god,Labrandeus."[3]
- ^Cf. the parallel construction ofa-ta-na-po-ti-ni-ja, perhaps referring to the “Mistress of Athens”, i. e. Athena, on a different tablet (KN V 52) from Knossos.
- ^"Women fought, as war leaders and in the ranks; women fought in troops, as regular soldiers; and the principal symbol of the Great Goddess, appearing widely throughout the Mediterranean and Asia Minor, was the double-headed battle axe orlabrys."[24]
- ^The forms taken by the labrys were classified by Caterina Mavriyannaki.
References
edit- ^"Votive double ax".Museum of Fine Arts Boston.
- ^MacGillivray, Joseph (2012). "The Minoan Double Axe Goddess and Her Astral Realm".Athanasia. The Earthly, the Celestial and the Underworld in the Mediterranean from the Late Bronze and Early Iron Age. N. Ch. Stampolidis, A. Kanta and A. Giannikouri (eds.). MEDITERRANEAN ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY.ISBN 978-960-7143-40-2.
- ^abPlutarch.Moralia [Greek Questions]. 45, 2.302a.
- ^The Oxford Classical Dictionary (4th ed.). Oxford, UK:Oxford University Press. 2012. p. 960.ISBN 978-0199545568.
- ^Sweeney, Emmet John (2009).Gods, Heroes and Tyrants: Greek chronology in chaos. Algora Publishing. p. 116.ISBN 9780875866826.
- ^Platon, Nicolas; de Tournay, Béatrice (18 May 2015).La Civilisation égéenne: Le Bronze récent et la civilisation mycénienne [Aegean Civilization: The late Bronze Age and the civilization of the Mycenaeans]. Albin Michel. p. iii.ISBN 9782226341075.
- ^Nilsson, vol. 1, p. 277.
- ^Beekes, Robert (2009).Etymological Dictionary of Greek. Boston, Massachusetts: Brill. p. 819.ISBN 978-9004174184.
- ^"Ex von Aulock Collection".Classical Numismatic Group (CNG). 2007. Retrieved31 January 2019.
- ^Tikkanen, Amy (14 October 2008)."Labyrinth".Encyclopædia Britannica.
- ^For an overview,see
Melena, José L.; Morpurgo Davies, A. (2014)."Mycenaean writing". In Duhoux, Y. (ed.).Companion to Linear B: Mycenaean Greek texts and their world. Bibliothèque des Cahiers de l'Institut de Linguistique de Louvain (BCILL 133). Vol. 3. p. 73 – via Academia.edu. - ^abcSchachermeyr, Fritz (1964).Die minoische Kultur des alten Kreta [The Minoan Culture of Ancient Crete] (in German). Stuttgart, Germany:Kohlhammer.OCLC 325167.
Abb. 85
- ^abEvans, A. (November 1900)."Mycenaean tree and pillar cult and its Mediterranean relations".Journal of Hellenic Studies. § XXI, page 108 ff – via Internet Archive (archive.org).
- ^Rutter, Jeremy (29 November 2017)."Minoan Religion". Archived fromthe original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved29 November 2017.
- ^"Μοναδικά νέα ευρήματα ανακαλύφθηκαν στο Ακρωτήρι Θήρας".Η Εφημερίδα των Συντακτών (in Greek). 30 January 2020. Retrieved24 July 2021.
- ^Francis, Jane E.; Kouremenos, Anna, eds. (2016).Roman Crete: New Perspectives (1st ed.). Oxford, England, United Kingdom:Oxbow Books. p. 46.ISBN 978-1785700958.
- ^"Minoan Religion".Dartmouth College. Archived fromthe original on 18 July 2012.
- ^"Tarhun".Encyclopædia Britannica. 20 July 1998.
- ^Nilsson, M. (1967).Die Geschichte der griechischen Religion [The History of Greek Religion] (in German). Vol. I. Munich, DE: C.F. Beck Verlag. p. 267 ff.
- ^Jewitt, Llewellynn Frederick William (1890).English Coins and Tokens. Swan Sonnenschein & Company.
- ^Francis, Jane E.; Kouremenos, Anna, eds. (2016)."Chapter 5. The double axe (λάβρυς) in Roman Crete and beyond: the iconography of a multi-faceted symbol".Roman Crete: New Perspectives (1st ed.). Oxford, UK / Havertown, PA:Oxbow Books. pp. 43–57.ISBN 978-1-78570-095-8.
- ^"Axes: Hephaestus's labrys".Sword Temple. 17 March 2020. Archived fromthe original on 23 September 2020. Retrieved21 September 2020.
- ^"Yxanvändning" [Axe Throwing].Gränsfors Bruks AB. Sweden. 2 February 2019.
- ^Miles, Rosalind (1989)."The Great Goddess".The Women's History of the World. Topsfield, MA: Salem House. p. 33.ISBN 0-88162-348-2.
- ^Keller, Mara (1988)."Eleusinian Mysteries"(PDF).Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion.4 (1): 42. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 8 September 2015. Retrieved21 June 2016.
- ^abMarkessinis, Andreas (22 August 2006)."The labrys / pelekys: The symbol of thundergod Zeus and of the EON".Metaxas Project. Retrieved31 August 2014.
- ^Karlsgodt, Elizabeth (2011).Defending National Treasures: French art and heritage under Vichy. Stanford University Press. pp. 126–128.ISBN 978-0804770187.
- ^Giannuli, Aldo; Rosati, Elia (5 October 2017).Storia di Ordine Nuovo: La Piú Pericolosa Organizzazione Neo-Fascista Degli Anni Settanta [History of Ordine Nuovo: The most dangerous neo-fascist organization of the seventies] (in Italian). Milan, IT: Mimesis Edizioni.ISBN 978-8857538433.
- ^Mavriyannaki, Caterina (1983). "La double hache dans le monde hellénique à l'âge de bronze" [The Double Axe in the Hellenic World at the Bronze Age].Revue Archéologique. Nouvelle Série, Fasc. 2 (in French) (2):195–228.JSTOR 41737054.
- ^Biedermann, Hans (1992).Dictionary of Symbolism: Cultural icons and the meanings behind them [Knaurs Lexikon der Symbole]. New York, NY:Facts on File. p. 24.ISBN 0-8160-2593-2.
- ^Lesbian symbol:
Zimmerman, Bonnie, ed. (2000)."Symbols, Christy Stevens".Lesbian Histories and Cultures: An Encyclopedia (1st ed.).Garland Publishing. p. 748.ISBN 0-8153-1920-7. - ^Bendix, Trish (8 September 2015)."Why don't lesbians have a pride flag of our own?".AfterEllen. Archived fromthe original on 9 September 2015. Retrieved24 June 2020.
- ^"Labrys".Labrys Kyrgyzstan. 2004–2014. Archived fromthe original on 22 May 2013. Retrieved11 May 2016.
- ^Hobbs, Emma Hough; Varghese, Leela (27 October 2024),Lesbian Space Princess (Animation, Comedy, Fantasy), Shabana Azeez, Mark Samual Bonanno, Gemma Chua-Tran, We Made A Thing Studios, retrieved19 February 2025
Further reading
edit- Cooper, J.C., ed. (1978).An Illustrated Encyclopaedia of Traditional Symbols (1st ed.). London:Thames & Hudson.ISBN 978-0-500-01201-7.
- Cuhulain, Kerr (2004)."Symbols (G-N)".Pagan Protection Center. The Witches' Voice. Archived fromthe original on 8 May 2005.
- Enszer, Julie (26 June 2017)."My labrys, my self".Argot Magazine. Archived fromthe original on 31 July 2018. Retrieved31 July 2018.
- "Hellenic nativistic collective LABRYS".Hellēnismôs. 2015. Archived fromthe original on 11 July 2018.
- Rapp, Linda (2003)."Symbols"(PDF).glbtq.com.
- "Λατρευτική Κοινότητα ΛΑΒΡΥΣ" [Worship community LAVRYS].labrys.gr (in Greek).
External links
edit- "Labrys".Oxford Reference.Oxford University Press.
- "Labrys".Ancient-Symbols.com.