미트라스 (Korean Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "미트라스" in Korean language version.

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archive.org

  • Ulansey, David (1991). 《Origins of the Mithraic Mysteries》. New York: Oxford UP. 90쪽. ISBN 0-19-506788-6. It is therefore highly likely that it was in the context of Mithridates' alliance with the Cilician pirates that there arose the synchretistic link between Perseus and Mithra which led to the name Mithras (a Greek form of the name Mithra) being given to the god of the new cult. 
  • Ulansey, David (1991). 《Origins of the Mithraic Mysteries》. New York: Oxford UP. 8쪽. ISBN 0-19-506788-6. Cumont's... argument was straightforward and may be summarized succinctly: the name of the god of the cult, Mithras, is the Latin (and Greek) form of the name of an ancient Iranian god, Mithra; in addition, the Romans believed that their cult was connected with Persia (as the Romans called Iran); therefore we may assume that Roman Mithraism is nothing other than the Iranian cult of Mithra transplanted into the Roman Empire. 
  • Ulansey, David (1991). 《Origins of the Mithraic Mysteries》. New York: Oxford UP. 94쪽. ISBN 0-19-506788-6. the intimate alliance between the pirates and Mithridates Eupator, named after Mithra and mythically descended from Perseus, led to the pirates adopting the name Mithras for the new god. 
  • Beck, Roger (2006). 《The Religion of the Mithras cult in the Roman empire》. Great Britain: Oxford University Press. 21쪽. Often, the mithraeum was embellished elsewhere with secondary exemplars of the tauroctony, and there also seem to have been small portable versions, perhaps for private devotion. 
  • Beck, Roger (2007). 《The Religion of the Mithras Cult in the Roman Empire》. London: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0199216134. , p. 27-28.

books.google.com

  • Michael Speidel (1980). 《Mithras-Orion: Greek hero and Roman army god》. Brill. 1–쪽. ISBN 9789004060555. India's sacred literature refers to him since the hymns of the Rig Veda. But it was in Iran where Mithras rose to the greatest prominence: rebounding after the reforms of Zarathustra, Mithras became one of the great gods of the Achaemenian emperors and to this very day he is worshipped in India and Iran by Parsees and Zarathustrians. 
  • Turcan, Robert (1996). 《The cults of the Roman Empire》. Wiley-Blackwell. 196–쪽. ISBN 9780631200475. 2011년 3월 19일에 확인함. The name Mithras comes from a root "mei-" (which implies the idea of exchange), accompanied by an instrumental suffix. It was therefore a means of exchange, the 'contract' which rules human relations and is the basis of social life. In Sanskrit, "mitra" means 'friend' or 'friendship', like "mihr" in Persian. In Zend, "mithra" means precisely the 'contract', which eventually became deified following the same procedure as "Venus", the 'charm' for the Romans. We find him invoked with Varuna in an agreement concluded c. 1380 BC between the king of the Hittites, Subbiluliuma, and the king of Mitanni, Mativaza....It is the earliest evidence of Mithras in Asia Minor. 
  • Klauck, Hans-Josef; McNeil, Bria (2003년 12월). 《The religious context of early Christianity: a guide to Graeco-Roman religions》. T & T Clark Ltd. 146–쪽. ISBN 9780567089434. 2011년 4월 9일에 확인함. 
  • Vermaseren, M. J. 〈The miraculous Birth of Mithras〉. László Gerevich. 《Studia Archaeologica》. Brill. 93–109쪽. 2011년 4월 10일에 확인함. 
  • Vermaseren, M. J. László Gerevich, 편집. 《Studia Archaeologica》. Brill. 108쪽. 2011년 4월 10일에 확인함. 

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books.google.co.in

  • Hopfe, Lewis M.; Richardson, Henry Neil (1994년 9월). 〈Archaeological Indications on the Origins of Roman Mithraism〉. Lewis M. Hopfe. 《Uncovering ancient stones: essays in memory of H. Neil Richardson》. Eisenbrauns. 150–쪽. ISBN 9780931464737. 2011년 3월 19일에 확인함. All theories of the origin of Mithraism acknowledge a connection, however vague, to the Mithra/Mitra figure of ancient Aryan religion. 
  • Boyce, Mary; Grenet, Frantz (1975). 《Zoroastrianism under Macedonian and Roman rule, Part 1》. Brill. 468, 469쪽. ISBN 9004092714. 2011년 3월 16일에 확인함. The theory that the complex iconography of the characteristic monuments (of which the oldest belong to the second century A.C.) could be interpreted by direct reference to Iranian religion is now widely rejected; and recent studies have tended greatly to reduce what appears to be the actual Iranian content of this "self consciously 'Persian' religion", at least in the form which it attained under the Roman empire. Nevertheless, as the name Mithras alone shows, this content was of some importance; and the Persian affiliation of the Mysteries is acknowledged in the earliest literary reference to them. 

google.co.uk

books.google.co.uk

  • David Ulansey, 《The origins of the Mithraic mysteries》, p. 6:
    "Although the iconography of the cult varied a great deal from temple to temple, there is one element of the cult's iconography which was present in essentially the same form in every mithraeum and which, moreover, was clearly of the utmost importance to the cult's ideology; namely the so-called tauroctony, or bull-slaying scene, in which the god Mithras, accompanied by a series of other figures, is depicted in the act of killing the bull."

iranica.com

  • J. R. Hinnells, "The Iconography of Cautes and Cautopates: the Data," Journal of Mithraic Studies 1, 1976, pp. 36-67. See also William W. Malandra, Cautes and Cautopates[깨진 링크(과거 내용 찾기)], an Encyclopedia Iranica article

iranicaonline.org

  • Schmidt, Hans-Peter (2006). 〈Mithra i: Mithra in Old Indian and Mithra in Old Iranian〉. 《Encyclopaedia Iranica》. New York: iranica.com.  (accessed April 2011)

irisnoir.com

  • Mazur, Zeke. “Harmonious Opposition (PART I): Pythagorean Themes of Cosmogonic Mediation in the Roman Mysteries of Mithras” (PDF). 2011년 11월 21일에 원본 문서 (PDF)에서 보존된 문서. 2011년 6월 14일에 확인함. The god’s right leg, appearing on the left as one faces the tauroctony, is nearly always straight as it pins the bull’s hoof to the ground, while his left leg, which is usually resting on the back or flank of the bull, is bent at the knee with his foot often partially obscured beneath the folds of his tunic. Anyone familiar with the cult’s iconography will immediately recognize this awkward and possibly unnatural posture as a typical or even essential aspect of the tauroctony. The remarkable consistency of this particular feature is underscored by comparison with the subtle variability of others.. 

isvroma.it

  • Näsström, Britt-Marie. “The sacrifi ces of Mithras” (PDF). 2011년 4월 4일에 확인함. He is wearing a Phrygian cap and a wind-filled cloak, and, most remarkable of all, his head is turned in the other direction as if he would not look at his own deed. Still, this sacrifice is a guarantee of salvation for the participants. 

sacred-texts.com

tufts.edu

perseus.tufts.edu

web.archive.org

  • Mazur, Zeke. “Harmonious Opposition (PART I): Pythagorean Themes of Cosmogonic Mediation in the Roman Mysteries of Mithras” (PDF). 2011년 11월 21일에 원본 문서 (PDF)에서 보존된 문서. 2011년 6월 14일에 확인함. The god’s right leg, appearing on the left as one faces the tauroctony, is nearly always straight as it pins the bull’s hoof to the ground, while his left leg, which is usually resting on the back or flank of the bull, is bent at the knee with his foot often partially obscured beneath the folds of his tunic. Anyone familiar with the cult’s iconography will immediately recognize this awkward and possibly unnatural posture as a typical or even essential aspect of the tauroctony. The remarkable consistency of this particular feature is underscored by comparison with the subtle variability of others.. 
  • J. R. Hinnells, "The Iconography of Cautes and Cautopates: the Data," Journal of Mithraic Studies 1, 1976, pp. 36-67. See also William W. Malandra, Cautes and Cautopates[깨진 링크(과거 내용 찾기)], an Encyclopedia Iranica article
  • L'Ecole Initiative: Alison Griffith, 1996. "Mithraism" Archived 2004년 4월 27일 - 웨이백 머신

wikipedia.org

en.wikipedia.org

  • Ulansey, David (1991). 《Origins of the Mithraic Mysteries》. New York: Oxford UP. 8쪽. ISBN 0-19-506788-6. Cumont's... argument was straightforward and may be summarized succinctly: the name of the god of the cult, Mithras, is the Latin (and Greek) form of the name of an ancient Iranian god, Mithra; in addition, the Romans believed that their cult was connected with Persia (as the Romans called Iran); therefore we may assume that Roman Mithraism is nothing other than the Iranian cult of Mithra transplanted into the Roman Empire. 
  • Hinnells, John R. (1990). 〈Introduction: the questions asked and to be asked〉. Hinnells, John R. 《Studies in Mithraism》. Rome: L'Erma di Bretschneider. 11쪽. The god is unique in being worshipped in four distinct religions: Hinduism (as Mitra), in Iranian Zoroastrianism and Manicheism (as Mithra), and in the Roman Empire (as Mithras). 
  • Näsström, Britt-Marie. “The sacrifi ces of Mithras” (PDF). 2011년 4월 4일에 확인함. He is wearing a Phrygian cap and a wind-filled cloak, and, most remarkable of all, his head is turned in the other direction as if he would not look at his own deed. Still, this sacrifice is a guarantee of salvation for the participants. 
  • Bjørnebye, Jonas (2007). 〈The Mithraic icon in fourth century Rome:The composition of the Mithraic cult icon〉. 《Hic locus est felix, sanctus, piusque benignus: The cult of Mithras in fourth century Rome,Dissertation for the degree of philosophiae doctor (PhD)》. The figure of Mithras himself is usually attired in an oriental costume of Phrygian cap, tunica manicata (a long-sleeved tunic), anaxyrides (eastern style trousers), and a cape, though in some cases, he is depicted heroically nude or even, in a unique example from Ostia, in what seems to be a Greek chiton. Like the general trend in Graeco-Roman art, most if not all tauroctony scenes, regardless of the medium they were executed in, were painted, and the different items of Mithras’ clothing was usually colored in either blue or red, often, as in the painting at Marino, with most of the costume in red with only the inside of the cape being blue and star-speckled. The bull was often white, sometimes wearing the dorsuale, the Roman sacrificial band in reds or browns, while the torchbearers could be depicted in a variety of colors with reds and greens being the most common.