
audiobook
by Jacob Bryant
A. NEW SYSTEM; - OR, AN - ANALYSIS - OF - ANTIENT MYTHOLOGY:
Transcriber's note:
BY JACOB BRYANT, ESQ. - THE THIRD EDITION. IN SIX VOLUMES. - WITH A PORTRAIT AND SOME ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR; - A VINDICATION OF THE APAMEAN MEDAL; - Observations and Inquiries relating to various Parts of Antient History; - A COMPLETE INDEX, - AND FORTY-ONE PLATES, NEATLY ENGRAVED. - VOL. II. - LONDON:
TAR, TOR, TARIT.
TIT and TITH.
TAPH, TUPH, TAPHOS.
OB, OUB, PYTHO, - SIVE DE - OPHIOLATRIA.
RITES - OF - DAMATER, or CERES.
CAMPE and CAMPI.
ANTIENT HEROES.
A meticulous study of ancient myth offers listeners a chance to hear scholarship that peels back centuries of storytelling to reveal the original meanings behind familiar legends. Drawing on Greek, Hebrew, Egyptian and Roman sources, the author compares language, titles and symbols to show how early cultures understood concepts that later became fables. The work’s careful footnotes and transliteration notes invite the curious ear to follow each linguistic thread.
The opening sections focus on the term “Phoenix” and its older forms, tracing its evolution from an honorific title in Egyptian and Canaanite societies to a broader emblem of royalty and renewal. By linking the mythic bird to the revered palm tree, the discussion illuminates how ancient peoples associated the plant’s resilience with ideas of immortality and divine favor. Richly illustrated plates and a comprehensive index make this six‑volume series an engaging guide for anyone interested in the true roots of mythic imagery.
Language
en
Duration
~10 hours (597K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Dave Maddock, Keith Edkins and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2006-10-18
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1715–1804
An English scholar and mythographer, he spent much of his life tracing ancient legends back to a single sacred source. His books offered bold, wide-ranging theories that made him a distinctive voice in eighteenth-century antiquarian writing.
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