The earliest mention of the substitute king ritual is from the
Chronicle of Early Kings and mentions a (likely fabricated) story from the reign of king
Erra-Immitti of
Isin(1860-1837 BC): "King Erra-imitti had the gardener Illil-bani seated on his throne as a substitute statue and placed his royal tiara upon his head. Erra-imitti died in his palace while swallowing hot porridge. Illil-bani who was sitting on the throne did not leave it, and was accepted as the king."
Herodotus seems to mention—in very general terms—the ritual in his
Histories: "Xerxes then, being very greatly disturbed by fear of the vision, started up from his bed and sent a messenger to summon Artabanos; to whom when he came Xerxes spoke thus: "Artabanos, at the first I was not discreet, when I spoke to thee foolish words on account of thy good counsel; but after no long time I changed my mind and perceived that I ought to do these things which thou didst suggest to me. I am not able however to do them, although I desire it; for indeed, now that I have turned about and changed my mind, a dream appears haunting me and by no means approving that I should do so; and just now it has left me even with a threat. If therefore it is God who sends it to me, and it is his absolute will and pleasure that an army should go against Hellas, this same dream will fly to thee also, laying upon thee a charge such as it has laid upon me; and it occurs to my mind that this might happen thus, namely if thou shouldst take all my attire and put it on, and then seat thyself on my throne, and after that lie down to sleep in my bed." "Having thus said Artabanos, expecting that he would prove that Xerxes was speaking folly, did that which was commanded him; and having put on the garments of Xerxes and seated himself in the royal throne, he afterwards went to bed: and when he had fallen asleep, the same dream came to him which used to come to Xerxes, and standing over Artabanos spoke these words: "Art thou indeed he who endeavours to dissuade Xerxes from making a march against Hellas, pretending to have a care of him? However, neither in the future nor now at the present shalt thou escape unpunished for trying to turn away that which is destined to come to pass: and as for Xerxes, that which he must suffer if he disobeys, hath been shown already to the man himself." - (Herodotus, Histories Book 7, chapters 15 & 17)
Plutarch (d. 150 AD), in chapters 73-74 of his work
Lives, describes that
Alexander the Great was recommended to perform the ritual by "Chaldean diviners" in an attempt to ward off the illness which would later kill him.
Suetonius (d. 150 AD), in book 5 chapter 29 of his work
The Twelve Caesars, describes an event in the time of
Claudius where the empress
Messalina was made to marry her lover
Gaius Silius whereafter they both were executed. Suetonius states that the marriage contract was signed by Claudius himself in order to "avert and turn upon another the danger which was inferred from certain portents to threaten the emperor himself." It has been suggested by scholar
C. J. Gadd that this could be a muddled account of a sort of substitute king ritual with Silius fulfilling the role of substitute. In his work The History of Persia,
John Malcolm describes a substitute king ritual being performed in the year 1591 AD by the
Safavid Shah
Abbas the Great: "While engaged in preventing the inroads of the Usbegs...[Abbas the Great] was suddenly called from all considerations of foreign or domestic policy, by a prediction of his astrologers; who, from the aspect of the heavenly bodies, had discovered that a most serious danger impended over the sovereign of Persia. Abbas was not exempt from the superstition of the age in which he lived, and he did not hesitate to adopt the strange expedient by which his counsellors proposed to avert the dreaded omen. He abdicated the throne; and a person of the name of Yusoofee, whom Persian authors take care to tell us was an unbeliever (probably a Christian), was crowned; and for three days, if we are to believe these historians [Zubd-ul-Tuarikh] he enjoyed not only the name and state, but the power of the king. The cruel farce ended as was to be expected. Yusoofee was put to death; the decree of the stars was fulfilled by this sacrifice; and Abbas, who reascended his throne in a most propitious hour, was promised by his astrologers a long and glorious reign. -(John Malcolm, The History of Persia, p. 346) A tale from the
One Thousand and One Nights, the story of Abu-l-Hasan, or the Sleeper Awakened, though concluding happily, is very likely inspired by the substitute king ritual. == References ==