Changes

Jump to navigation Jump to search
1,241 bytes added ,  08:00, 20 February 2022
no edit summary
Line 3: Line 3:  
|person=No
 
|person=No
 
|origin={{tip|Lat}}
 
|origin={{tip|Lat}}
|description={{etg-source|TG}}.
+
|description=The handled cross,'''T; '''whereas the tau is '''T''', in this form, and the oldest Egyptian cross or the ''tat ''is thus +. The ''crux ansata ''was the symbol of immortality, but the ''tat''‐cross was that of spirit‐matter and had the significance of a sexual emblem. The ''crux ansata ''was the foremost symbol in the Egyptian Masonry instituted by Count Cagliostro; and Masons must have indeed forgotten the primitive significance of their highest symbols, if some of their authorities still insist that the ''crux ansata ''is only a combination of the ''cteis ''(or yoni) and ''phallus ''(or ''lingham''). Far from this. The handle or ''ansa ''had a double significance, but never a phallic one; as an attribute of Isis it was the mundane circle; as symbol of law on the breast of a mummy it was that of immortality, of an endless and beginningless eternity, that which descends upon and grows out of the plane of material nature, the horizontal feminine line, surmounting the vertical male line—the fructifying male principle in nature or spirit. Without the handle the ''crux ansata ''became the ''tau '''''T''', which, left by itself, is an androgyne symbol, and becomes purely phallic or sexual only when it takes the shape Ê {{etg-source|TG}}.
 
}}
 
}}
trusted
3,455

edits

Navigation menu