:''This article is about the
Zoroastrian yazata 'Mithra' (Miθra). For other divinities with related names, see the general article
Mitra.''
'Mithra' (
Avestan ''Miθra'', modern
Persian مهر ''Mihr'', ''Mehr'', ''Meher'') is an important deity or divine concept (
Yazata) in
Zoroastrianism and later
Iranian history and culture.
Mithra is descended, together with the
Vedic deity
Mitra, from a common proto-Indo-Iranian entity
★ ''
mitra'' (pronounced the same way as Mithra).
Etymology
The
proto-Indo-Iranian word
★ ''mitra-'' could mean either "covenant, contract, oath, or treaty", or "friend". A general meaning of "alliance" adequately explains both alternatives. The second sense tends to be emphasized in Indic sources, the first sense in
Iranian. The word is from a root ''mi-'' "to bind", with the "tool suffix" ''-tra-''. A contract is thus described as a "means of binding" .
The first extant record of Mitra/Mithra is in the inscribed peace treaty between
Hittites and the
Hurrian kingdom of the
Mitanni in the area southeast of
Lake Van, c.
1400 BCE. There Mitra/Mithra appears in the company of
Varuna,
Indra and the twin horsemen (
Ashwini Twins), the
Nasatyas, as the five beings invoked as witnesses and keepers of the pact, and all of whom the rulers of the Mitanni apparently worshipped. (Campbell, 1964 p 256).
In Zoroastrianism
The reforms of
Zoroaster retained the multitudes of pre-Zoroastrian divinities, reducing them in a complex hierarchy to "immortals" who, under the supremacy of the Creator
Ahura Mazda, were now either
''ahura''s or
''daeva''s. In this scheme, Mithra is a member of the ahuric triad, protectors of ''
asha'', the order of the universe. Mithra is additionally the protector of truth and justice and the source of cosmic light. In
Middle Persian Mithra came to be known as
Meher.
Mithra is not present in the
Gathas of
Zarathustra (Zoroaster) but appears in the younger
Yashts of the
Avesta (Campbell p 257). There, Mithra comes to the fore among the created beings. "I created him" Ahura Mazda declares to Zoroaster, "to be as worthy of sacrifice and as worthy of prayer as myself" (Campbell, ''loc. cit.''). In the Yashts, Mithra gains the title of "Judge of Souls" and is assigned the domain of human welfare (which he shares with the Creator). Mithra occupies an intermediate position in the Zoroastrian hierarchy as the greatest of the ''
yazata'', created by Ahura Mazda (Ormuzd in later Persian) to aid in the destruction of evil and the administration of the world. He is then the divine representative of the Creator on earth, and is directed to protect the righteous from the demonic forces of
Angra Mainyu (
Ahriman in later Persian).
As the protector of truth and the enemy of error, Mithra occupied an intermediate position in the Zoroastrian pantheon as the greatest of the ''yazatas'', the beings created by Ahuramazda to aid in the destruction of evil and the administration of the world. He was thus a divinity of the realms of air and light, and, by transfer to the moral realm, the manifestation of truth and loyalty. As the enemy of darkness and evil spirits, he protected souls, accompanying them to
paradise, and was thus a redeemer. Because light is accompanied by heat, he was the promoter of vegetation and increase; he rewarded the good with prosperity and annihilated the bad.
In Iranian (Arian) culture
While in older Zoroastrianism Mithra is seen as a creation of
Ahura Mazda, in later Persian culture, Mithra evolved to be an incarnation of Ahura Mazda
[1], and in his role as 'Judge of Souls' as the rewarder of good and annihilator of the bad. Mithra was seen as omniscient, undeceivable, infallible, eternally watchful, and never-resting.
Similarly, while in the ''Sirozeh'', Mithra is also referred to as ''Dae-pa-Meher'', or Creator of Meher, this separation between 'Meher' and the 'Creator of Meher' dissolves in later texts and the distinguishing characteristics of Mithra and Meher blend. Mithra, reincorporated as "Meher", thus also becomes the representative of truth and justice, and, by transfer to the physical realm, the divinity of air and light. As the enemy of darkness and evil spirits, he protected souls, a ''
psychopomp'' accompanying them to ''
paradise''. As heat accompanying light, Mithra became associated with growth and resultant prosperity.
Mithra worship spread first with the empire of the Persians throughout Asia Minor, then throughout the empire of
Alexander and his successors.
By at least the
3rd century BCE, Mithra was identified as the progeny of
Anahita, a mother-entity who is not mentioned in the
Gathas of the very early
Avesta texts, but is described in the fifth Yasht of the newer texts as "the wide-expanding and health-giving". The largest temple with a Mithraic connection is the
Seleucid temple at Kangavar in western Iran (c. 200 BC), which is dedicated to "Anahita, the Immaculate Virgin Mother of the Lord Mithras" though no historical evidence is found to support this.
The
Parthian princes of Armenia were hereditary priests of Mithra, and an entire district of this land was dedicated to
Anahita. Many temples were erected to Mithra in Armenia, which remained one of the last strongholds of the Mazdaist cult of Mithra until it became the first officially Christian kingdom.
Royal names incorporating Mithra's (e.g. "Mithradates") appear in the dynasties of Parthia, Armenia, and in Anatolia, in Pontus and Cappadocia.
In the Vedas
Vedic Mitra is the patron divinity of honesty, friendship, contracts and meetings. He is a prominent deity of the
Rigveda distinguished by a relationship to
Varuna, the protector of ''
ṛtá''. Together with Varuna, he counted among the
Adityas, a group of
solar deities. They are the supreme keepers of order and gods of the
law.
Varuna and
Mitra are the gods of the
oath, often twinned or identified as 'Mitra-Varuna' (a
dvandva compound).
In the
Vedic hymns, Mitra is often invoked together with
Varuna, so that the two are combined in a
dvandva as 'Mitra-Varuna'. Varuna is lord of the cosmic rhythm of the celestial spheres, while Mitra brings forth the light at dawn, which was covered by Varuna. Mitra together with Varuna is the most prominent
Asura, and the chief of the
Adityas, in the
Rigveda. It should be noted, however, that Mitra and Varuna are also addressed as
Devas in
Rigveda (e.g.,
RV 7.60.12), and in the only hymn dedicated to Mitra, he is referred to as a
Deva (''mitrasya...devasya'') in
RV 3.59.6.
The pairing with Varuna, a god unknown in Iranian religion, is very strong already in the Rigveda, which has few hymns where Mitra is mentioned without Varuna.
RV 3.59 is the only hymn dedicated to Mitra exclusively, where he is lauded as a god of order and stability and as a giver of laws (2b, ''vrata''), the sustainer of mankind (6a, ''carani-dhrt'', literally "of cultivators", said also of
Indra in 3.37.4c) and of all gods (8c, ''
devān vishvān'').
:3.59.1 ''Mitra, when speaking, stirreth men to labour: Mitra sustaineth both the earth and heaven.''
:''Mitra beholdeth men with eyes that close not. To Mitra bring, with holy oil, oblation.'' (trans. Griffith)
Rigvedic hymns to Mitra-Varuna are
RV 1.136, 137, 151-153,
RV 5.62-72,
RV 6.67,
RV 7.60-66,
RV 8.25 and
RV 10.132.
Where Mitra appears not paired with Varuna, it is often for the purpose of comparison, where other gods are lauded as being "like Mitra", without the hymn being addressed to Mitra himself (
Indra 1.129.10, 10.22.1-2 etc.;
Agni 1.38.13 etc.;
Soma 1.91.3;
Vishnu 1.156.1).
In the
Shatapatha Brahmana, Mitravaruna is analyzed as "the Counsel and the Power" — Mitra being the priesthood, Varuna the royal power. As
Joseph Campbell remarked, "Both are said to have a thousand eyes. Both are active foreground aspects of the light or solar force at play in time. Both renew the world by their deed."
The fact that Indra and Mitra are references to the same god/diety is brought about by some good examples in:
1. Book: ''Über den Ursprung der Religion oder: Warum Indra mit dem Dreirad zur Hochzeit fuhr'' by Harald Strohm.
In Manichaeism
Persian and Parthian-speaking
Manichaeans used the name of Mithra current in their time (''Mihryazd'', i.e. Mithra-yazata) for two different Manichaean angels.
# The first, called ''Mihryazd'' by the Persians, was the "The Living Spirit" (Aramaic ''), a savior-figure who rescues the "First Man" from the demonic Darkness into which he had plunged.
# The second, known as ''Mihr'' or ''Mihr yazd'' among the Parthians, is "The Messenger" (Aramaic ''īzgaddā''), likewise a savior figure, but one concerned with setting up the structures to liberate the Light lost when the First Man had been defeated.
Remains

Coin of
Hermaeus, with Mithra, wearing a radiated phrygian cap.

Coin of
Hermaeus, with seated Zeus-Mithra.
The calendar instituted by the
Achaemenid dynasty (c.
648–
330 BCE), the first
Persian empire, was based on the Egyptian solar calendar, which had months of the year and days of the month dedicated to their divinities. The Achaemenids replaced these with divinities from the Zoroastrian faith, and the fifteenth day of each month was consecrated to Mithra ("Dae-pa-Meher"). The sixteenth day of each month and one month of the year were consecrated to
Meher, whose identity blends with that of Mithra in later Persian culture. These calendarial dedications are still present in the
religious calendar of the Zoroastrians. The month that was consecrated to Meher in pre-Islamic times was revived as the name of the seventh month of the year in the official
national calendar of Iran of 1925.
The festivities in the week following the
winter solstice (after which the days grow longer), today called
Shab-e Yalda in
Iran, are a remnant of the culture which celebrated the birth of the divinity of light on that day. Yalda literally means "The birth of sun".
Prior to the fall of the
Sassanid empire in
651 CE, after which Zoroastrianism and Mazdaism were supplanted by Islam, Mithraic temples could be found throughout the empire. The extant remains mentioned by David Fingrut, 1993 include:
★ a temple at
Khuzestan
★ a few columns still standing at the temple of Khorheh in central Iran near present-day
Mahallat
★ at excavated
Nisa in
Turkmenistan (later renamed Mithradatkirt)
★ at Hatra in upper
Mesopotamia.
Notes
1. Mithra
References
★
An Introduction to Ancient Iranian Religion, , William, Malandra, University of Minnesota Press, 1983, ISBN 0-8166-1115-7
External links
★
Iconography of Mithra (PDF-article)
★
Mithra and its association with archeological polar star
See also
★
Mitra (Vedic)
★
Maitreya (Buddhist)
★
Mithras
★
Mithraism
★
Zoroastrianism