Howl at the Moon
#121
Posted 15 June 2012 - 05:31 PM
It might relevant to this discussion.
#122
Posted 16 June 2012 - 11:09 AM
Artemis, on 14 June 2012 - 07:19 PM, said:
Why not Brienne's? The crescent moon features in her house sigil and she dreams of "a quartered gown of blue and red, decorated with golden suns and silver crescent moons". A gown that she actually wore when she was 12-years-old.
#123
Posted 16 June 2012 - 08:45 PM
Dimadick, on 16 June 2012 - 11:09 AM, said:
There's moon imagery throughout the entire series and almost in every POV. It's one of the more important symbols in the books. Noticing that Bran and Arya's storylines had a lot of similarities, it could be possible that the other Stark children find themselves in situations that parallel one another. If you find anything interesting in Brienne's chapters, please let us know! I'm making my way through the books again on my re-read but I haven't gotten to Brienne's POVs yet.
#124
Posted 10 July 2012 - 11:12 AM
Edited by Ciazio, 10 July 2012 - 11:13 AM.
#125
Posted 10 July 2012 - 11:20 AM
#127
Posted 10 July 2012 - 11:44 AM
Well Bran Vras brings them in on the second post of the fourth page. But just add your own thoughts.
I´m just now have been thinking about rubies and sapphires, the stones that Symeon Star-Eyes used to replace his eyes. Do they mirror the red eyes of Melisandre and the blue star eyes of the Night´s King queen?
What might be interesting is the name hecatolite for moonstone which connects it to the afore mentioned moon godess (and crone) Hekate.
#128
Posted 10 July 2012 - 11:57 AM
#129
Posted 10 July 2012 - 12:24 PM
#130
Posted 10 July 2012 - 12:30 PM
#131
Posted 10 July 2012 - 12:34 PM
Lykos, on 10 July 2012 - 12:24 PM, said:
That's very intriguing and an excellent connection. I could have used your input in this thread. I thought it was curious that there has been so little speculation concerning the Mormont seat in Essos.
#132
Posted 10 July 2012 - 12:36 PM
ETA: Yes Alarum, I´ve seen the thread, but as I said I´m not finished collecting hints and also not sure what to make of the ones I have. It might be interesting for you to read the Areoh Hotah chapters and whatch for similarities in the description of him and Jorah Mormont´s looks.
Edited by Lykos, 10 July 2012 - 01:11 PM.
#133
Posted 11 July 2012 - 06:28 PM
#134
Posted 12 July 2012 - 05:28 AM
Lykos, on 10 July 2012 - 11:44 AM, said:
Well Bran Vras brings them in on the second post of the fourth page. But just add your own thoughts.
As said, I stopped reading at the end of the third page.... sorry.
My own thoughts have deep roots in the Heresy threads, as I can see this as a new piece of the connection between the powers of Ice, the CoTF, the Others, Bloodraven and the Starks.
#135
Posted 12 July 2012 - 05:55 PM
Ciazio, on 10 July 2012 - 11:12 AM, said:
YES! More color allegories to the North and Bloodraven! A few of us on page 6 of this thread actually comment on CotF-Bloodraven connections between some of the Stark children's POVs, and bring up a lot of indications of repetitve color combinations throughout the series. Your informative thoughts in your previous post have already been very refreshing so hopefully we'll see some more of you around this thread!
#136
Posted 16 October 2012 - 11:24 AM
I thought this line from her wiki page was interesting:
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She wore black and white which partially symbolized the bright and dark sides of the moon.
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Arya wanted to learn the bow and arrow. She did want a lion killing dog once and as for a deer she wanted to be like Wenda the Whitefawn once.
This matches Arya too:
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She was a vengeful, bloodthirsty goddess of the dead. She was unpredictable.
She's associated with three heads:
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It's also been theorized that Arya resembled both water and wood dancers.
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She's mainly shown with horses.
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She is sometimes identified with Selene:
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As well as Hecate:
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Her familiars were a she dog and a polecat. In addition to those two the weasel were also her sacred animals.
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The difference here is that Arya has a pack of wolves.
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http://www.theoi.com...ateGoddess.html
There is an Egyption god of the moon called:
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Nationality: Egyptian
Moon God
Amen's consort was Mut. Together they had a son, Khons or Khonsu the moon god. His name means "the wanderer." He may have been believed to be capable of flying.
Arya wanted to fly and I think she is like the Wandering Wolf who went to Essos.
Moon mythology:
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#137
Posted 16 October 2012 - 08:18 PM
#138
Posted 17 October 2012 - 07:06 AM
There is the triple headed Celtic trio and the stark women sort of fit. The Morrigan or banshee is now Cat although in Book 1 she was the mother now she is the crone/morrigan/hecate. Sansa is the maiden but I assume will becomer the mother and Arya staysa more like the Diana/Artemis.
I
n the legends Arianwen had two babies one of the sea and one of the sky (read Gilly's babe and Mances). One is associated with dark, the sea, the moon the other with the sky and is a warrior god.
#139
Posted 17 October 2012 - 08:13 AM
Lykos, on 16 October 2012 - 08:18 PM, said:
Ludd, on 17 October 2012 - 07:06 AM, said:
There is the triple headed Celtic trio and the stark women sort of fit. The Morrigan or banshee is now Cat although in Book 1 she was the mother now she is the crone/morrigan/hecate. Sansa is the maiden but I assume will becomer the mother and Arya staysa more like the Diana/Artemis.
I
n the legends Arianwen had two babies one of the sea and one of the sky (read Gilly's babe and Mances). One is associated with dark, the sea, the moon the other with the sky and is a warrior god.
I believe this line in ACoK to be foreshadowing for Arya. She wanted to see seamonsters (krakens) which are of the sea and dragons which are of the sky.
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ETA: To add on more to black and white I remembered that there were other mythical figures who also had this parallel.
There's Hel. Nymeria was also called a bitch from the seventh hell and Arya spends more time with the dead than the living currently.
Nox. Arya thrives during the night. This is when she howls to the moon.
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When Arya sleeps at night she has her wolf dreams. She is an agent of death during the day as a FM.
Edited by ARYa_Nym, 17 October 2012 - 09:00 AM.
#140
Posted 18 October 2012 - 02:10 PM
ARYa_Nym, on 16 October 2012 - 11:24 AM, said:
You have already analyzed associations with Diana. But have you also considered one particular aspect of Artemis, the Greek version of this deity? She was associated with bringing sudden death, and illness. See: http://www.theoi.com...misGoddess.html
*"Zeus has made you [Artemis] a lion among women, and given you leave to kill any at your pleasure."
*"Artemis of the golden reigns (khrysenios) killed [Ladomeia] the daughter [of Bellerophontes] in anger."
*"Akhilleus (Achilles) released her [the mother of Andromakhe (Andromache)] again, accepting ransom beyond count, but Artemis of the showering arrows (iokheaira) struck her down in the halls of her father."
*"[Akhilleus to Agamemnon:] ‘I wish Artemis had killed her [Briseis] beside the ships with an arrow on that day when I destroyed Lyrnessos and took her.’"
*"[Odysseus to the ghost of his mother Antikleia (Anticlea):] ‘What doom of distressful death (ker) subdued you? Was it some long-continued sickness, or did the Artemis archeress (iokheaira) visit you with her gentle shafts and slay you?’"
*"I [Odysseus] saw . . . lovely Ariadne [in the underworld], that daughter of subtle Minos whom Theseus bore off from Krete towards the hill of sacred Athens; yet he had no joy of her, since, before that could be, she was slain by Artemis in the isle of Dia because of the witness of Dionysos."
*"There is an island calld Syros, above Ortygia . . . Famine never enters this land, nor again does any dread disease come upon poor mortal there. No; when these islanders grow old, Apollon of the silver bow visits them with his gentle shafts and brings death upon them, or Artemis visits them instead."
*"We sailed for six days, day and night; but when Zeus brought the seventh day also, Artemis with a shaft of hers struck the woman, and sent her - like a sea-swallow diving - to tumble below into the hold."
*"[Penelope laments her troubles:] ‘Would that now, at this very moment, Artemis the chaste (hagne) would grant me a death as gentle! Then I need no longer fret life away with an aching heart.’"
*"[Penelope] when she had her fill of weeping, the queen made especial prayer to Artemis: ‘Artemis, goddess queen (potna thea), daughter of Zeus, how glad should I be if here and now you would plant an arrow in my breast and take my life away all at once - or else if a whirlwind might snatch me up, carry me on through dusky pathways and cast me down at the issuing-place of backward-flowing Okeanos (Ocean) . . . In self-same fashion may the Olympians cause me to vanish from the world, or lese let Artemis slay me with her arrows, that so I may pass beneath cheerless earth with Odysseus himself in my heart's vision. May I never gladden the heart of a man less noble!’"
*"Dhaste (hagne) Artemis of the golden throne (khrysothronos) visited him [Orion] with her gentle shafts and slew him in Ortygia."
*"[Artemis] smote her [Koronis] down [with her arrows of plague]: and many a neighbour, too, suffered alike and was destroyed beside her; as when on the mountain from one small spark a raging fire leaps up, and lays in ruin all the widespread forest."
*"The people of Aigialea [Korinthos, Corinth] were smitten by a plague. The seers bade them propitiate Apollon and Artemis, they sent seven boys and seven maidens as suppliants to the river Sythas."
*"The wrath of Artemis began to destroy the inhabitants [of Patrai in Akhaia]; the earth yielded no harvest, and strange diseases occurred of an unusually fatal character. When they appealed to the oracle at Delphoi the Pythian priestess . . . [ordered] that every year a sacrifice should be made to the goddess of the fairest youth and the fairest maiden."
*"[Spartans] Astrabakos and Alopekos . . . when they found the image [of Artemis Orthia] straightway became insane. Secondly, the Spartan Limnatians, the Kynosourians, and the people of Mesoa and Pitane, while sacrificing to Artemis, fell to quarreling, which led also to bloodshed; many were killed at the altar and the rest died of disease. Whereat an oracle was delivered to them, that they should stain the altar with human blood."
*"[After the murder of Skephros, an Arkadian friend of Artemis and Apollon:] Tegeates and Maira sacrificed to Apollon and Artemis, but afterwards a severe famine fell on the land, and an oracle of Delphoi ordered a mourning for Skephros."
*"After a female bear appeared in it [the shrine of Artemis at Mounykhia in Attika] and was done away with by the Athenians a famine ensued, and the god prophesied the means of relieving the famine: someone had to sacrifice his daughter to the goddess [to compensate her for the death of her sacred bear]."
*"A wild she-bear [sacred to Artemis] used to come to the deme of Phlauidoi [Brauron] and spend time there . . . [until some men] speared the she-bear, and because of this a pestilential sickness fell upon the Athenians. When the Athenians consulted the oracle [the god] said that there would be a release from the evils if, as blood price for the she-bear that died, they compelled their virgins to play the bear."
Edited by Dimadick, 18 October 2012 - 02:10 PM.







