axe from the
tholos tombs of
Messara in Crete
Plutarch relates that the word was a
Lydian word for 'axe': . A priestly corporation in
Delphi was named
Labyades; the original name was probably
Labryades, servants of the double axe. In the
Roman era at
Patrai and
Messene, a goddess
Laphria was worshipped, commonly identified with
Artemis. Her name was said to be derived from the region around Delphi. In
Crete the "double axe" is not a weapon, and it always accompanies female goddesses, not male gods, referring to the male bull god itself.
Robert S. P. Beekes regards the relation of
labyrinth with
labrys as speculative, and rather proposes a relation with (), 'narrow street', or to the Carian
theonym Dabraundos (). of
Caria,
Obv: Head of
Apollo, wearing laurel wreath, drapery at neck;
Rev: legend ("IDRIEOS"), Zeus Labraundos standing with labrys in his right hand, BCE It is also possible that the word
labyrinth is derived from the
Egyptian, meaning: "the temple at the entrance of the lake". The
Egyptian labyrinth near
Lake Moeris is described by
Herodotus and
Strabo. The inscription in on reads (). The conventional reading is (
labyrinthoio potnia; 'mistress of the labyrinth'). According to some modern scholars it could read * (*
daphyrinthoio), or something similar, and hence be without a certain link with either the or the labyrinth. A link has also been posited with the double axe symbols at
Çatalhöyük, dating to the Neolithic age. In
Labraunda in
Caria, as well as in the coinage of the
Hecatomnid rulers of Caria, the double axe accompanies the storm god
Zeus Labraundos.
Arthur Evans notes, and ==Minoan double axe==