A deep significance was attached to numbers
in hoary antiquity. There was not a people with anything like
philosophy, but gave great prominence to numbers in their application
to religious observances, the establishment of festival days,
symbols, dogmas, and even the geographical distribution of empires.
The mysterious numerical system of Pythagoras was nothing novel
when it appeared far earlier than 600 years B.C.
The occult meaning of figures and their combinations entered into
the meditations of the sages of every people; and the day is not
far off when, compelled by the eternal cyclic rotation of events,
our now sceptical unbelieving West will have to admit that in
that regular periodicity of ever recurring events there is something
more than a mere blind chance. Already our Western savants
begin to notice it. Of late, they have pricked up their ears
and begun speculating upon cycles, numbers and all that which,
but a few years ago, they had relegated to oblivion in the old
closets of memory, never to be unlocked but for the purpose of
grinning at the uncouth and idiotic superstitions of our unscientific
fore-fathers.
As one of such novelties, the old, and matter-of-fact German journal
Die Gegenwart has a serious and learned article upon "the
significance of the number seven" introduced to the readers
as a "Culture-historical Essay." After quoting from
it a few extracts, we will have something to add to it perhaps.
The author says:
The number seven was considered sacred not only by all
the cultured nations of antiquity and the East, but was held in
the greatest reverence even by the later nations of the West.
The astronomical origin of this number is established beyond any
doubt. Man, feeling himself time out of mind dependent upon the
heavenly powers, ever and everywhere made earth subject to heaven.
The largest and brightest of the luminaries thus became in his
sight the most important and highest of powers; such were the
planets which the whole antiquity numbered as seven. In
course of time these were transformed into seven deities.
The Egyptians had seven original and higher gods; the Phnicians
seven kabiris; the Persians, seven sacred horses
of Mithra; the Parsees, seven angels opposed by seven
demons, and seven celestial abodes paralleled by
seven lower regions. To represent the more clearly this idea
in its concrete form, the seven gods were often represented
as one seven-headed deity. The whole heaven was subjected
to the seven planets; hence, in nearly all the religious
systems we find seven heavens.
The beliefs in the sapta loka of the Brahminical religion
has remained faithful to the archaic philosophy; and who knows but
the idea itself was originated in Aryavarta, this cradle of all
philosophies and mother of all subsequent religions! If the Egyptian
dogma of the metempsychosis or the transmigration of soul
taught that there were seven states of purification and
progressive perfection, it is also true that the Buddhists took
from the Aryans of India, not from Egypt, their idea of seven
stages of progressive development of the disembodied soul,
allegorized by the seven stories and umbrellas, gradually
diminishing towards the top on their pagodas.
In the mysterious worship of Mithra there were "seven
gates," seven altars, seven mysteries.
The priests of many Oriental nations were sub-divided into seven
degrees; seven steps led to the altars and in the temples
burnt candles in seven-branched candlesticks. Several of the Masonic
Lodges have, to this day, seven and fourteen steps.
The seven planetary spheres served as a model for state
divisions and organizations. China was divided into seven provinces;
ancient Persia into seven satrapies. According to the Arabian
legend seven angels cool the sun with ice and snow, lest
it should burn the earth to cinders; and seven thousand angels
wind up and set the sun in motion every morning. The two oldest
rivers of the East the Ganges and the Nile had each seven
mouths. The East had in the antiquity seven principal
rivers (the Nile, the Tigris, the Euphrates, the Oxus, the Yaksart,
the Arax and the Indus); seven famous treasures; seven
cities full of gold; seven marvels of the world, &c.
Equally did the number seven play a prominent part in the
architecture of temples and palaces. The famous pagoda of Churingham
is surrounded by seven square walls, painted in seven
different colours, and in the middle of each wall is a seven
storied pyramid; just as in the antediluvian days the temple
of Borsippa, now the Birs-Nimrud, had seven stages, symbolical
of the seven concentric cycles of the seven spheres,
each built of tiles and metals to correspond with the colour of
the ruling planet of the sphere typified.
These are all "remnants of paganism" we are told traces
"of the superstitions of old, which, like the owls and bats
in a dark subterranean, flew away to return no more before the
glorious light of Christianity" a statement but too easy
of refutation. If the author of the article in question has collected
hundreds of instances to show that not only the Christians of
old but even the modern Christians have preserved the number seven,
and as sacredly as it ever was before, there might be found
in reality thousands. To begin with the astronomical and
religious calculation of old of the pagan Romans, who divided
the week into seven days, and held the seventh day
as the most sacred, the Sol or Sunday of Jupiter, and to
which all the Christian nations especially the Protestants make
puja to this day. If, perchance, we are answered that it
is not from the pagan Romans but from the monotheistic Jews that
we have it, then why is not the Saturday or the real "Sabbath"
kept instead of the Sunday, or Sol's day?
If in the "Rámáyana" seven yards
are mentioned in the residences of the Indian kings; and seven
gates generally led to the famous temples and cities of old,
then why should the Frieslanders have in the tenth century of
the Christian era strictly adhered to the number seven in
dividing their provinces, and insisted upon paying seven
"pfennigs" of contribution? The Holy Roman
and Christian Empire has seven Kurfursts or Electors. The
Hungarians emigrated under the leadership of seven dukes
and founded seven towns, now called Semigradyá
(now Transylvania). If pagan Rome was built on seven hills,
Constantinople had seven names By-sance, Antonia, New
Rome, the town of Constantine, The Separator of the World's Parts,
The Treasure of Islam, Stamboul and was also called the city
on the seven Hills, and the city of the seven Towers
as an adjunct to others. With the Mussulmans "it was besieged
seven times and taken after seven weeks by the seventh
of the Osman Sultans." In the ideas of the Eastern peoples,
the seven planetary spheres are represented by the seven
rings worn by the women on seven parts of the body the
head, the neck, the hands, the feet, in the ears, in the nose,
around the waist and these seven rings or circles are
presented to this time by the Eastern suitors to their brides;
the beauty of the woman consisting in the Persian songs of seven
charms.
The seven planets ever remaining at an equal distance from
each other, and rotating in the same path, hence, the idea suggested
by this motion, of the eternal harmony of the universe. In this
connection the number seven became especially sacred with
them, and ever preserved its importance with the astrologers.
The Pythagoreans considered the figure seven as the image
and model of the divine order and harmony in nature. It was the
number containing twice the sacred number three or the
"triad," to which the "one" or the divine
monad was added: 3 + 1 + 3. As the harmony of nature sounds
on the key-board of space, between the seven planets, so
the harmony of audible sound takes place on a smaller plan within
the musical scale of the ever-recurring seven tones. Hence,
seven pipes in the syrinx of the god Pan (or Nature), their
gradually diminishing proportion of shape representing the distance
between the planets and between the latter and the earth and,
the seven-stringed lyre of Apollo. Consisting of
a union between the number three (the symbol of the divine
triad with all and every people, Christians as well as pagans)
and of four (the symbol of the cosmic forces or elements),
the number seven points out symbolically to the union of
the Deity with the universe; this Pythagorean idea was applied
by the Christians (especially during the Middle Ages) who largely
used the number seven in the symbolism of their sacred
architecture. So, for instance, the famous Cathedral of Cologne
and the Dominican Church at Regensburg display this number in
the smallest architectural details.
No less an importance has this mystical number in the world of
intellect and philosophy. Greece had seven sages, the Christian
Middle Ages seven free arts (grammar, rhetoric, dialectics,
arithmetic, geometry, music, astronomy). The Mahometan Sheikh-ul-Islam
calls in for every important meeting seven "ulems."
In the Middle Ages an oath had to be taken before seven witnesses,
and the one, to whom it was administered, was sprinkled seven
times with blood. The processions around the temples went
seven times, and the devotees had to kneel seven times
before uttering a vow. The Mahometan pilgrims turn round Kaaba
seven times, at their arrival. The sacred vessels were
made of gold and silver purified seven times. The localities
of the old German tribunals were designated by seven trees,
under which were placed seven "Schoffers" (judges)
who required seven witnesses. The criminal was threatened
with a seven-fold punishment and a seven-fold purification
was required as a seven-fold reward was promised to the virtuous.
Every one knows the great importance placed in the West on the
seventh son of a seventh son. All the mythic personages
are generally endowed with seven sons. In Germany, the
king and now the emperor cannot refuse to stand as god-father
to a seventh son, if he be even a beggar. In the East in
making up for a quarrel or signing a treaty of peace, the rulers
exchange either seven or forty-nine (7 X 7) presents.
To attempt to cite all the things included in this mystical number
would require a library. We will close by quoting but a few more
from the region of the demoniacal. According to authorities in
those matters the Christian clergy of old a contract with the
devil had to contain seven paragraphs, was concluded for
seven years and signed by the contractor seven times;
all the magical drinks prepared with the help of the enemy of
man consisted of seven herbs; that lottery ticket wins,
which is drawn out by a seven-year old child. Legendary
wars lasted seven years, seven months and seven
days; and the combatant heroes number seven, seventy, seven
hundred, seven thousand and seventy thousand. The princesses
in the fairy tales remained seven years under a spell,
and the boots of the famous cat the Marquis de Carabas were
seven leagued. The ancients divided the human frame into
seven parts; the head, the chest, the stomach, two hands
and two feet; and man's life was divided into seven periods.
A baby begins teething in the seventh month; a child begins
to sit after fourteen months (2 X 7); begins to walk after
twenty-one months (3 X 7); to speak after twenty-eight
months (4 X 7); leaves off sucking after thirty-five months
(5 X 7); at fourteen years (2 X 7) he begins to finally
form himself; at twenty-one (3 X 7) he ceases growing.
The average height of a man, before mankind degenerated, was seven
feet; hence the old Western laws ordering the garden walls
to be seven feet high. The education of the boys began
with the Spartans and the old Persians at the age of seven.
And in the Christian religions with the Roman Catholics and
the Greeks the child is not held responsible for any crime till
he is seven, and it is the proper age for him to go to
confession.
If the Hindus will think of their Manu and recall what the old
Shastras contain, beyond doubt they will find the origin of all
this symbolism. Nowhere did the number seven play so prominent
a part as with the old Aryas in India. We have but to think of
the seven sages the Sapta Rishis; the Sapta
Loka the seven worlds; the Sapta Pura the
seven holy cities; the Sapta Dvipa--the seven
holy islands; the Sapta Samudra--the seven holy
seas; the Sapta Parvatta the seven holy mountains;
the Sapta Arania--the seven deserts; the Sapta
Vriksha--the seven sacred trees; and so on, to see
the probability of the hypothesis. The Aryas never borrowed
anything, nor did the Brahmans, who were too proud and exclusive
for that. Whence, then, the mystery and sacredness of the number
seven?
Theosophist, June, 1880
H. P. Blavatsky
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