The Covenant of Salt / As Based on the Significance and Symbolism of Salt in Primitive Thought

AS BASED ON THE SIGNIFICANCE AND SYMBOLISM OF SALT IN PRIMITIVE THOUGHT
BY H. CLAY TRUMBULL
Author of The Blood Covenant, The Threshold Covenant, Kadesh-barnea, Studies in Oriental Social Life, etc.
NEW YORK CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS 1899
Copyright, 1899 By H. CLAY TRUMBULL

In 1884 I issued a volume on The Blood Covenant: A Primitive Rite and its Bearings on Scripture. Later I was led to attempt, and to announce as in preparation, another volume in the field of primitive covenants, including a treatment of The Name Covenant, The Covenant of Salt, and The Threshold Covenant. In 1896, I issued a separate volume on The Threshold Covenant, that subject having grown into such prominence in my studies as to justify its treatment by itself. These two works, The Blood Covenant and The Threshold Covenant, have been welcomed by scholars on both sides of the ocean to an extent beyond my expectations, and in view of this I venture to submit some further researches in the field of primitive thought and customs.
Before the issuing of my second volume, I had prepared the main portion of this present work on The Covenant of Salt, but since then I have been led to revise it, and to conform it more fully to my latest conclusion as to the practical identity of all covenants. It is in this form that I present it, as a fresh contribution to the study of archeology and of anthropology.
As I have come to see it, as a result of my researches, the very idea of a covenant in primitive thought is a union of being, or of persons, in a common life, with the approval of God, or of the gods. This was primarily a sharing of blood, which is life, between two persons, through a rite which had the sanction of him who is the source of all life. In this sense blood brotherhood and the threshold covenant are but different forms of one and the same covenant . The blood of animals shared in a common sacrifice is counted as the blood which makes two one in a sacred covenant. Wine as the blood of the grape stands for the blood which is the life of all flesh; hence the sharing of wine stands for the sharing of blood or life. So, again, salt represents blood, or life, and the covenant of salt is simply another form of the one blood covenant. This is the main point of this new monograph. So far as I know, this truth has not before been recognized or formulated.

H. Clay Trumbull
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Язык

Английский

Год издания

2014-07-07

Темы

Salt; Covenants

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