The horse has the peculiarity of being associated with each of the three constituent elements (
air,
water and
fire) and the stars (
sun and
moon), appearing as their avatar or friend. Unlike the other three elements, which correspond to the etymology of the horse as an animal in motion, the earth appears far removed from its symbolism. The positive chtonian horse, capable of guiding its rider through
subterranean and infernal regions, is especially present in Central Asia, notably through the myth of
Tchal-Kouirouk. The horse appears "galloping like blood in the veins, springing from the bowels of the earth or the abysses of the sea". The bearer of life and death, it is linked to "destructive and triumphant fire" and "nourishing and asphyxiating water". Among "the horses of fire and light represented by the mystical quadriga", Carl Jung cites a particular motif, that of the signs of the planets and constellations. He adds that "the horses also represent the four elements".
Water (1857–1914). Of the four elements, water is the one most often associated with the horse, whether the animal is assimilated to an aquatic creature, linked to fairy-like beings such as
Japan's
kappa, or mounted by water deities. He may be born of water himself, or cause it to gush forth as he passes. This association can be as much about the positive and fertilizing aspects of water as about its dangerous aspects.
Origins of the water-horse association For Marc-André Wagner, this association dates back to Indo-European
prehistory. For
Ishida Eiichiro, its widespread use throughout
Eurasia, from the Mediterranean to Japan, may date back to an ancient fertility cult and the first agricultural societies, where the water animal was initially the
bull. The horse replaced the bull as its use expanded. Marlene Baum traces the first water-horse association back to the
Scandinavian peoples of the
Baltic and
North Seas, who also used
kenning as "wave horse" to designate the longest
Viking boats. This proximity could be due to a "symbolic agreement between two moving bodies", the horse enabling man to cross the waves thanks to its strength and understanding of the elements. Legend aside, popular imagination frequently associates horses with waves breaking on the shore. Traditionally, the tide at
Mont Saint-Michel is said to arrive "at the speed of a galloping horse", although in reality the horse's gallop is five times faster.
The water-revealing horse spring, born according to legend from a blow from
Pegasus' hoof. The most common myth is that of the horse revealing the water, such as Pegasus bringing forth the
Hippocrene spring, the dowsing horse of the god
Baldr according to Scandinavian folklore, Charlemagne's white horse digging a spring to quench the thirst of soldiers on campaign,
Bertrand Du Guesclin's mare discovering the waters of
La Roche-Posay, Virtues are sometimes associated with these waters born beneath the horse's hoof. The Hippocrene acquires the gift of changing whoever drinks from it into a poet, which symbolizes the image of a child drinking from the spring, an "awakening of impulsive and imaginative forces".
The water-born horse at the
National Maritime Museum. One of the oldest sources of legends associating water and horses can be found in the Rig-Veda, which gives birth to the horse from the ocean. In Greek mythology, the horse is the attribute of the Greek sea god
Poseidon, who is said to have created it with his trident.
Seahorses pull his chariot through the waves. The Celtic epic by
Giolla Deacar speaks of
palfrey born of the waves and coming from the
Sidh, capable of carrying six warriors underwater as well as in the air. According to
Raymond Bloch, this association, taken up in the Roman realm by
Neptune, is then found, in medieval times, in the character of the
pixie, following a
linguistic evolution in which Neptune becomes the
sea monster Neptunus, then the Neitun of the
Romance of Thebes, the Nuitun under the influence of the words "night" and "nuire", and finally the pixie. The memory of mythological horses, which are generally white and emerge from the sea, is present in medieval times, albeit in a very faded form: this is the case in the
Tydorel lai, where a mysterious knight emerges from his maritime kingdom on the back of a white mount. The association between the horse and the sea is very common in
Celtic countries (in France, for example, it's found mainly on the
Breton coast and in
Poitou, where the sea is called Grand'jument), which suggests that in France at least, its origins are Celtic. Water horses (
Kelpie,
Aughisky,
Bäckahäst...), often seen as fairy-like, are still mentioned in the folklore of many Western European countries. They share a strong affinity with the liquid element, as well as an irresistible beauty. Some are reputed to be extremely dangerous, seducing humans into riding them, then drowning or even devouring them. Their most common form is that of a beautiful
black,
white or
dapple-gray horse that looks lost and stands at the water's edge, quietly grazing. In Brittany, according to
Pierre Dubois, all fabulous horses "reign over the sea" and three mares, aspects of the waves, possess the power to regulate the tides, calm the swell and the waves. Another leads the fish. This symbolic association continues into modern times, as evidenced by films such as
White Mane (Crin-Blanc) and
Into the West (Le Cheval venu de la mer).
Horse sacrifice in the water Horse sacrifice in water seems to have been practiced by many Indo-European peoples. The Persians performed this type of sacrifice in honor of the goddess Anahita, and the Russians drowned a stolen horse in the
river Oka, as a seasonal offering to the "Great Father", the water genie. Particularly in Africa, it assists deities. This is the case among the
Ewes, where the mount of the rain god is seen as a
shooting star. The Kwore,
Bambara initiates, know a ritual for calling down rain, in which they ride a wooden horse symbolizing the winged mounts of their genies fighting against those who would prevent regenerative water from falling from the sky. In
ancient Nordic religion,
valkyries ride cloud horses whose manes bring dew to the valleys and hail to the forests. In
Lower Austria, the appearance of a giant on a white horse heralds the arrival of rain.
Air Horses of the wind An archaic conception gives the wind hippomorphic traits, and the alliance of horse and wind is often born of a common quality: speed. Carl Jung speaks of the wind's speed in the sense of intensity, "i.e. the tertium comparationis is still the symbol of libido. ... the wind a wild and lustful chaser of girls". He adds that centaurs are also wind gods. illustrating the epic mythological image of the wind fertilizing mares.
Winged horses on a drawing by Mary Hamilton Frye, 1914. As its name suggests, the
winged horse has a pair of wings, generally
feathered and inspired by those of birds, which enable it to fly through the air. Its earliest representations date back to the proto-
Hittite period in the 19th century BC. It's possible that this myth later spread to the
Assyrians, then to Asia Minor and Greece. It can be found in regions as varied as China, Italy, Africa and even North America after its colonization by Europeans. It combines the usual symbolism of the horse with that of the bird, lightness and elevation. The winged horse is associated with spiritual elevation and victory over evil. The origin of the
iconography and traditions that mention it is probably the ecstasy of the shaman who ascends to heaven on a winged creature, usually a bird. In all shamanic practices, the man who undertakes a spiritual journey is assisted by an "animal who has not forgotten how to acquire wings", failing which he cannot ascend. Like the Bambara's winged horse, Pegasus is linked to notions of imagination, speed and immortality. it would seem that several peoples imagined and then represented the sun on a chariot to signify its movement. Most mythological accounts testify to an evolution in this association. Initially assimilated to a horse, often white, the sun is anthropomorphized to become a divinity of which the horse is an attribute. The solar horse is the animal of phallic worship, fertility and reproduction. The oldest attestation of the solar horse is found in the Ashvamedha sacrificial ritual in India, which includes a hymn from the Rig-Veda, saying that the gods "fashioned the horse from the substance of the sun". Indra's steeds have "eyes as bright as the sun". They harness themselves to their golden-yoked chariot, their speed beyond thought. The name of the Indian horse,
asha, is closely linked to the penetrating light that embodies
dharma and knowledge. The
ashvins, divine horse-headed twins born of these animals, are linked to the cycle of day and night.
Ratnasambhava, symbol of the sun, is represented on horseback. but there are few relevant links to any equine solar cults. In Greek mythology,
Apollo replaces
Helios and his chariot harnessed to the sun's horses, as well as among the Greeks in
Laconia and
Rhodes. Thunder horses" are characterized by their noisy gallop, a sound "isomorphic to the leonine roar". Carl Jung also notes this analogy between the horse and lightning, and cites the case of a hysterical woman terrorized by thunderstorms, who saw a huge black horse fly up to the sky every time lightning struck. Mythology also knows of lightning-horse associations, notably with the
Hindu god
Yama. Finally, the horse's thigh was reputed to deflect lightning "according to the principle
similia similibus". == The importance of appearance ==