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Ma (nwanyị)

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Nraranye nye chi nwanyị Ma na akara nke ụkwụ efu, narị afọ mbụ BC (National Museum na Warsaw).

M bụ chi nwanyị obodo na Cappadocia)" id="mwDA" rel="mw:WikiLink" title="Comana (Cappadocia)">Comana na Kapadoshia. Aha ya bụ Ma pụtara "Nne", ọ nwekwara aha "Invincible" na "Bringer of Victory".[1]

Akụkọ ihe mere eme

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A kọwaala Ma dị ka chi nwanyị nne, mana n'otu oge ahụ dị ka chi nwaanyị agha, dịka aha ya na aha ya na-egosi ha abụọ.[1]

E jikọtara ya na mgbanwe nke ogo mmadụ nke ụmụ nwoke na ụmụ nwanyị, a na-emekwa emume mmekọahụ dị nsọ n'oge ememme ya na-eme ugboro abụọ.[1]

A na-ahụkwa Ma dị ka chi nwanyị nke ọnwa, na-ejikọta ya na chi Anatolia ọnwa Mēn, na ụlọ arụsị nke a raara nye Mēn Pharnakou na Selene na Ameria, na nso Cabira, na Alaeze Pọntọs, bụ mgbalị iji mebie mmetụta nke mmetụta. chi ọnwa Ma of Comana.

E jikọtara Ma na ọtụtụ chi ndị ọzọ, na-egosi ọrụ ya. E jirila ya tụnyere Cybele na Bellona. Ndị Gris oge ochie jiri Ma tụnyere chi nwanyị Enyo na Atena Nicephorus.[2] Plutarch jiri ya tụnyere Semele na Athena.[1] A kpọbatara Ma ma na-efe ya ofufe na Masedonia tinyere chi ndị ọzọ si mba ọzọ.[3][4]

Ma-Enyo, a fusion n'etiti Anatolian chi nwanyị Ma na Greek chi nwanyị, Enyo, e weere na oké ọdịda anyanwụ Asia ọdịdị-chi, na ụlọ nsọ Comana na ama na oge ochie dị ka ebe ememe nke a, dị iche iche nke  chi okike, e ji oke egwu mee emume.

A na-akọwa Ma dị ka chi nwanyị Anatolian, na ofufe ya na-elekwasị anya n'ụlọ nsọ ya na Komana na Kapadoshia. Strabo kọwara ụlọ nsọ ya na Comana.[5]

  • Mah
  • Ụmụ nwoke (chi)

Ihe edeturu

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  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Jeroen Poblome: Exempli Gratia: Sagalassos, Marc Waelkens and Interdisciplinary ..., Volym 69
  2. Mørkholm (1991). Early Hellenistic Coinage from the Accession of Alexander to the Peace of Apamaea (336-188 B.C.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521395045. 
  3. Hecate - Enodia "Enodia’s name is accompanied by the definition “goddess”, thus showing that Enodia was a foreign deity who came to Macedonia, like Dea Syria, the Cappadocian goddess Ma, the Phrygian goddess Nemesis, and the Mother of the Gods."
  4. Ma "Her cult was also diffused in Macedonia, where it was introduced after the campaign of Alexander the Great and was disseminated relatively easily, perhaps because the goddess had many similarities with the Mother of the Gods, Artemis and various local deities."
  5. Strabo, Geography, 12.2.3

Ntụaka

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  • Yulia Ustinova, The Supreme Gods of the Bosporan Kingdom: Celestial Aphrodite and the Most High God (1999), p. 138.
  • Robin Lane Fox, Pagans and Christians (1988), peeji nke 536. 
  • George Perrot, 'Akụkọ nka na Phrygia, Lydia, Caria na Lycia (2007), peeji nke 30.[Ihe e dere n'ala ala peeji]