, including the two figures, soon after discovery in 1903. Emily Bonney regards the figures as reflective of Syrian religion which had a brief impact on Crete, when "the elites at Knossos emulated Syrian iconography as an assertion of their access to exotic knowledge and control of trade." The figurines have also been interpreted as showing a
mistress of animals-type goddess and as a precursor to
Athena Parthenos, who is also associated with snakes. The
serpent is often symbolically associated with the renewal of life because it sheds its skin periodically. A similar belief existed in the ancient
Mesopotamians and
Semites, and appears also in
Hindu mythology. However,
Martin P. Nilsson noticed that in the Minoan religion the snake was the protector of the house, Within the Greek
Dionysiac cult it signified wisdom and was the symbol of fertility.
Hans Georg Wunderlich related the snake goddess with the
Phoenician
Astarte (
virgin daughter). She was the goddess of fertility and sexuality and her worship was connected with an orgiastic cult. Her temples were decorated with serpentine motifs. In a related Greek myth
Europa, who is sometimes identified with Astarte in ancient sources, was a Phoenician princess whom
Zeus abducted and carried to Crete. Evans tentatively linked the snake goddess with the Egyptian snake goddess
Wadjet but did not pursue this connection. Statuettes similar to the "snake goddess" type identified as "priest of Wadjet" and "magician" were found in Egypt. While the statuette's true function is somewhat unclear, her exposed and amplified breasts suggest that she is probably some sort of fertility figure. The figurines may illustrate the fashion of dress of Minoan women, however, it is also possible that bared breasts represented a sign of mourning.
Homer gives a literary description of this kind of mourning, and this was also observed by
Herodotus among Egyptian women. Although Linear A is not yet deciphered, Palmer relates tentatively the inscription
a-sa-sa-ra-me which seems to have accompanied goddesses, with the Hittite
išhaššara, which means "mistress". Emily Bonney argues that the goddess is not holding the snakes at all, and thus could not be seen as a "Snake Goddess". Instead, "she stands with arms raised, holding either end of what appears to be a long cord that hangs nearly to her feet". This fits well with the Syrian iconographic tradition of similar images as in the Figure 10 of her article. Citing
Nanno Marinatos, she argues that these images were meant to represent the goddess opening her skirt to display her sexuality. According to Bonney, : "In any case, HM 65 [Evans' famous reconstructed statuette] is not holding a snake, but a spirally-striped object that could not have been a snake, as Evans knew. ... [He] knew that snakes never have 'peppermint stripes'. Indeed the textured surface of the upper original portion of the 'serpent' seems to reflect the craftsman's intent to depict a twisted object such as a rope or cord." ==Sacral knot==