The Enarei were affiliated with an
orgiastic cult of two closely related goddesses:
Artimpasa and the Scythians' ancestral
Snake-Legged Goddess. The forms of the goddesses the Enarei served were strongly influenced by Near Eastern fertility goddesses. Thus the rites of the Enarei
combined indigenous Scythian religious practices of a
shamanistic nature, which were themselves related to those of
indigenous Siberian peoples, as well as ones imported from Levantine religions.
Rituals Some modern scholars believe the Enarei served largely similar purposes in the cult of Artimpasa as priests of other genders. There is limited written evidence, but a wider body of archaeological evidence, that depicts the Enarei's roles in rituals and the more general role of the cult. One ornamental panel from the 3rd or 4th century B.C. shows an Enarei priest serving wine for a holy communion alongside the chief priestess of the goddess. The Enarei likely also led Scythian funeral rituals. After the mummification and burial of the deceased, involved priests ritually cleansed themselves with the vapour of
cannabis, in a shamanic ritual. Herodotus described this as a tent-based cleansing that would cause the priests to howl with laughter. Funerary practices are also attested archaeologically in
Saka tombs from Siberia, which contained
tripods,
braziers, pelts, and charcoal containing remains of cannabis leaves and fruits. A pot from one of the
Pazyryk burials contained cannabis fruits, as well as a copper censer used to burn cannabis. Although this documentary and archaeological evidence does not explicitly link Enarei to these rituals, it confirms the involvement of at least some priests in the cult of Artimpasa. Cannabis was likely used for both communal and funerary or
psychopompic rituals, making these priests among the earliest spiritual practitioners to have used cannabis to achieve
altered states of consciousness.
Divination The Enarei also acted as seers, performing a unique role in the cult. They practiced a particular form of divination which used the inner bark of the
linden tree, unlike the methods of traditional Scythian soothsayers which used
willow withies. The Enarei divined by cutting the inner linden bark into three pieces, and plaiting and unplaiting these pieces around their fingers to obtain answers. For Scythians in Russia, linden then became a symbol for the
third gender, or for people who are feminine-presenting and born male. The Enarei were especially consulted when the king of the Scythians was ill, which was itself believed by the Scythians to be caused by a false oath being sworn upon the king's hearth. Once the Enarei had identified the suspect who had sworn the false oath, the said suspect would claim to be innocent. If the Enarei maintained the accusation, six more soothsayers were consulted, and if they upheld the original accusation, the suspect was executed by being beheaded. If the additional soothsayers declared the suspect was innocent, the process of consulting more soothsayers was repeated. If the soothsayers all found the accused to be guilty, the culprit was executed through beheading, and his property was divided among the Enarei who had found him guilty. However, if the larger number of soothsayers still declared the suspect to be innocent, the initial accusers were executed. The accusing soothsayers were put into an oxen-pulled wagon filled with brushwood which was set on fire. The wagon was then pulled by the oxen, who eventually also burned along with the wagon and the disgraced soothsayers. The sons of these Enarei were also all killed, but their daughters were spared.
Regalia The Enarei may have worn additional regalia such as
drums used in shamanic rituals and antlered headdresses similar to those found in
Saka horse burials and those worn in more recent times by
Siberian shamans. The Enarei used sceptres capped with ornate pole tops, often including
rattles, as symbols of authority. These have been discovered throughout the steppe from
Mongolia to the
Great Hungarian Plain. The oldest of these date from the 8th century BC, from
Tuva and the
Minusinsk Basin, and are topped by a
stag or
ibex standing with its feet together as if perched on a rocky eminence. More recent pole tops are more elaborate in design, such as one found in the , which is in the shape of a goddess with her hands on her hips. Another one from the same kurgan takes the shape of a griffin in a frame from which two bells hang, and a third from that same kurgan splits into three branches, each topped by a bird of prey holding a bell in its beak. The rattling and tinkling of the sceptres' bells invited the audience to the impending rites. ==Sex==