Everything about Daeva totally explained
Daeva (
daēuua,
daāua,
daēva) is the
Avestan language term for a particular sort of supernatural entity with disagreeable characteristics.
In the
Gathas, the oldest texts of the
Zoroastrian canon, the
daevas are 'wrong gods' or 'false gods' or 'gods that are (to be) rejected'. This meaning is – subject to interpretation – perhaps also evident in the
Old Persian 'daiva inscription' of the 5th century BCE. In the Younger
Avesta, the
daevas are noxious creatures that promote chaos and disorder. In later tradition and folklore, the
dēws (Zoroastrian
Middle Persian;
New Persian divs) are personifications of every imaginable evil.
Origin and development
Etymology
Old Avestan daēuua or daēva derives from Old Iranian *daiva, which in turn derives from Indo-Iranian *devá- "god," reflecting Proto-Indo-European *deiu̯ó with the same meaning. For derivatives in a European context, see Tyr.
The Vedic Sanskrit cognate of Avestan daēuua is devá-, continuing in later Indic languages as dəv. Equivalents in Iranian languages include Old Persian daiva, Middle Persian dēw and New Persian dīv.
Problems of interpretation
While it's likely that the daevas were once the "national" gods of pre-Zoroastrian Iran, there's "no known Iranian dialect attests clearly and certainly the survival of a positive sense for [OldIranian] *daiva-." This "fundamental fact of Iranian linguistics" is "impossible" to reconcile with the testimony of the Gathas, where the daevas, though rejected, were still evidently gods that continued to have a following.
This essential contradiction has yet to be conclusively explained. Given the fragmentary and discontinuous information in the sources, it's an extremely difficult issue. In general, "rejection of the [daevas] is linked to Zoroaster's reform" and Gershevitch and others following Lommel consider the progression from "national" gods to demons to be attributable to the "genius of Zoroaster."
In comparison with Vedic usage
Although with some points of comparison such as shared etymology, Indic devá- is thematically different from Avestan daēva. In the RigVeda (10.124.3), the daevas are the "younger gods", in conflict with the asuras, the "older gods". There is no such division evident in the Zoroastrian texts.
In the later Vedic texts (not generally a source of comparison with Iranian texts), the conflict between the two groups of devas and asuras is a primary theme. This theme isn't attested in an Iranian context where conflict occurs between asha and druj, and the respective supporters on either side.
The Zoroastrian ahuras (etymologically related to the Vedic asuras) are only vaguely defined and only three in number. Similarly, the use of asura in the RigVeda is unsystematic and inconsistent and "it can hardly be said to confirm the existence of a category of gods opposed to the devas." Indeed, RigVedic deva is variously applied to most gods, including many of the asuras.
Moreover, the demonization of the asuras in India and the demonization of the daevas in Iran both took place "so late that the associated terms can't be considered a feature of Indo-Iranian religious dialectology." The view - popularized by Nyberg, Duchesne-Guillemin and Widengren of a prehistorical opposition of *asura/daiva involves "interminable and entirely conjectural discussions" on the status of various Indo-Iranian entities that in one culture are asuras/ahuras and in the other are devas/daevas (see examples in the Younger Avesta, below).
In scripture
In Zoroaster's revelation
In the
Gathas, the oldest texts of Zoroastrianism and believed to have been composed by
Zoroaster himself, the
daevas are not yet the demons that they'd become in later Zoroastrianism.
In these pre-historic texts, where the term occurs 19 times, the
daevas are a distinct category of "quite genuine gods, who had, however, been rejected." In
Yasna 32.3 and 46.1, the
daevas are still worshipped by the Iranian peoples.
Yasna 32.8 notes that some of the followers of Zoroaster had previously been followers of the
daevas.
In the Gathas, the poet censures the
daevas as being incapable of discerning truth (
asha-) from falsehood (
druj-). They are consequently in "error" (
aēnah-), which led them to have accepted the bad religion. Simultaneously, the Indo-Iranian legacy of the
daevas as beneficient gods is still evident in numerous expressions that appear in both Avestan and Vedic Sanskrit. Further, although the
daevas are described as being incapable of proper discernment, they're never identified with the
druj itself. The
daevas are never themselves
druj "false" or
dregvant "of the lie."
From such ambiguity it has been concluded that – at the time the Gathas were composed - "the process of rejection, negation, or demonization of these gods was only just beginning, but, as the evidence is full of gaps and ambiguities, this impression may be erroneous."
Although the
daevas are clearly identified
with evil (eg
Yasna 32.5), they're not identified
as evil. They deceive mankind and themselves but they're not
aka mainyu (
aka being the Avestan language word for "evil". Hence, 'aka mainyu' is the "evil spirit" or "evil mind" or "evil thought").
In Yasna 32.4, the
daevas are revered by the
Usij, described as being a class of "false priests" - devoid of goodness of mind and heart - that are hostile to cattle and husbandry. (
Yasna 32.10-11, 44.20) Like the
daevas that they follow, "the
Usij are known throughout the seven regions of the earth as the offspring of "evil thought" (
aka mainyu), "lie" (
druj), and arrogance. (
Yasna 32.3)."
Yasna 30.6 suggests the
daeva-worshipping priests met often with Zoroaster to argue but fail to move him.
The Gathas only speak of the
daevas as a group. The hymns also don't mention the individual
daevas by name. Although the polemic against the
daevas is a major theme in the Gathas, in other older sections of the Avesta the
daevas are not mentioned at all.
In the Younger Avesta
In the Younger
Avesta, the
daevas are unambiguously hostile entities.
In contrast, the word
daevayasna- (literally "one who sacrifices to
daevas") denotes adherents of other religions and thus still preserves some semblance of the original meaning in that the
daeva- prefix still denotes "other" gods. In
Yasht 5.94 however, the
daevayasna- are those who sacrifice to
Anahita during the hours of darkness - for example the hours when the
daevas lurk about - and
daevayasna- appears then to be an epithet applied to those who deviate from accepted practice and/or harvested religious disapproval.
The
Vendidad – a contraction of
vi-daevo-dāta, "given against the
daevas" – is a collection of late Avestan texts deals almost exclusively with the
daevas, or rather, their various manifestations and ways to confound them.
Vi.daeva- "rejecting the
daevas" qualifies the faithful Zoroastrian with the same force as
mazdayasna- ('Mazda worshiper').
In
Vendidad 10.9 and 19.43, three divinities of the
Vedic pantheon follow
Angra Mainyu in a list of demons. Completely adapted to Iranian phonology, these are
Indra (Vedic
Indra), Sarva (Vedic
Sarva,
Shiva) and Nanghaithya (Vedic
Nasatya). The process by which these three came to appear in the Avesta is uncertain. Together with three other
daevas – Tauru, Zairi and Nasu - that don't have Vedic equivalents, the six oppose the six
Amesha Spentas.
Vendidad 19.1 and 19.44 have Angra Mainyu dwelling in the region of the
daevas, which the
Vendidad sets in the north and/or the nether world (
Vendidad 19.47,
Yasht 15.43), a world of darkness. In Vendidad 19.1 and 19.43-44, Angra Mainyu is the
daevanam daevo, "
daeva of
daevas" or chief of the
daevas. The superlative
daevo.taema is however assigned to the demon Paitisha ("opponent"). In an enumeration of the
daevas in Vendidad 1.43, Angra Mainyu appears first and Paitisha appears last. "Nowhere is Angra Mainyu said to be the creator of the
daevas or their father."
The
Vendidad is usually recited after nightfall since the last part of the day is considered to be the time of the demons. Because the
Vendidad is the means to disable them, this text is said to be effective only when recited between sunset and sunrise.
In inscriptions
Old Persian
daiva occurs twice in
Xerxes' daiva inscription (XPh, early 5th century BCE). This trilingual text also includes one reference to a
daivadana "house of the
daivas", generally interpreted to be a reference to a shrine or sanctuary.
In his inscription, Xerxes records that "by the favour of
Ahura Mazda I destroyed that establishment of the daivas and I proclaimed, 'The daivas thou shalt not worship!'" This statement has been interpreted one of two ways: Either the statement is an ideological one and
daivas were gods that were to be rejected, or the statement was politically motivated and
daivas were gods that were followed by (potential) enemies of the state.
In tradition and folklore
In Zoroastrian tradition
In the
Middle Persian texts of Zoroastrian tradition, the
dews are invariably rendered with the
Aramaic ideogram
ŠDYA or the more common plural
ŠDYAˀn that signified "demons" even in the singular.
Dews play a crucial role in the cosmogonic drama of the
Bundahishn, a Zoroastrian view of creation completed in the 12th century. In this text, the evil spirit
Ahriman (the middle Persian equivalent of Avestan
Angra Mainyu) creates his hordes of
dews to counter the creation of
Ormuzd (Avestan
Ahura Mazda). This notion is already alluded to in the
Vendidad (see Younger Avestan texts above), but only properly developed in the
Bundahishn. In particular, Ahriman is seen to create six
dews that in Zoroastrian tradition are the antitheses of the
Amahraspands (Avestan
Amesha Spentas).
Mirroring the task of the Amesha Spentas through which Ahura Mazda realized creation, the six antitheses are the instrument through which Angra Mainyu creates all the horrors in the world. Further, the arch-
daevas of
Vendidad 10.9 and 19.43 are identified as the antithetical counterparts of
Ardawahisht (Avestan
Asha Vahishta),
Shahrevar (Avestan
Kshathra Vairya) and
Spendarmad (Avestan
Armaiti).
The six arch-demons are respectively
- Akoman of evil thought and equivalent to Avestan Akem Manah
- Indar that freezes the minds of the creatures from practicing righteousness
- Naonhaithya of discontent
- Saurva of oppression and desire
- Taurvi the destroyer
- Zauri who poisons plant creation
This assignment (Bundahishn XXVII.2ff) is slightly at odds with scripture, where the moral principles (that each Amesha Spenta represents) have other immoral principles that they're opposed to. This isn't however a complete breach, for while in the Gathas asha - the principle - is the diametric opposite of the abstract druj, in Zoroastrian tradition, it's Ardawahisht – the Amesha Spenta that's the hypostasis of asha – that's opposed to by Indra, who freezes the minds of creatures from practicing "righteousness" (asha).
Also mirroring Ormuzd's act of creation, for example the realization of the Amesha Spenta's by His "thought", is Ahriman's creation of the
dews through his "demonic essence." Other texts describe this event as being to Ahriman's detriment for his act of "creation" is actually an act of destruction: Ahriman is the very epitome (and hypostasis) of destruction, and hence he didn't "create" the demons, he realized them through destruction, and they then became that destruction. The consequence is that - as Ahriman and the
dews can only destruct - that'll ultimately destroy themselves (
Denkard 3). As the medieval texts also do for Ahriman, they question whether the
dews exist at all. Since "existence" is the domain of Ormuzd, and Ahriman and his
dews are anti-existence, it followed that Ahriman and his
dews couldn't possibly exist. One interpretation of the
Denkard proposes that the
dews were perceived to be non-existent physically (that is, they were considered non-ontological) but present psychologically. (see also:
Ahriman: In Zoroastrian tradition)
For a different set of texts, such as the
Shayest ne shayest and the
Book of Arda Wiraz, Ahriman and the
dews were utterly real, and are described as being potentially catastrophic. In such less philosophical representations, the
dews are hordes of devils with a range of individual powers ranging from the almost benign to the most malign. They collectively rush out at nightfall to do their worst, which includes every possible form of corruption at every possible level of human existence. Their destructiveness is evident not only in disease, pain, and grief but also in cosmic events such as falling stars and climatic events such as droughts, cyclones and earthquakes. They are sometimes described as having anthropomorphic properties such as faces and feet, or given animal-like properties such as claws and body hair. They may produce semen, and may even mate with humans as in the tale of
Jam and
Jamag (
Bundahishn 14B.1).
But with the exception of the
Book of Arda Wiraz, the
dewas are not generally described as a force to be feared. With fundamental optimism, the texts describe how the
dews may be kept in check, ranging from cursing them to the active participation in life through good thoughts, words and deeds. Many of the medieval texts develop ideas already expressed in the
Vendidad ("given against the demons").
A fire (cf.
Adur) is an effective weapon against the
dews, and keeping a hearth fire burning is a means to protect the home. The
dews are "particularly attracted by the organic productions of human beings, from excretion, reproduction, sex, and death." Prayer and other recitation of the liturgy - in particular the recitation of
Yasht 1 (so
Sad-dar 57) - is effective in keeping the demons at bay. Demons are attracted by chatter at mealtimes and when silence is broken a demon takes the place of the angel at one's side. According to
Shayest-ne-Shayest 9.8, eating at all after nightfall isn't advisable since the night is the time of demons. In the 9th century
Rivayats (65.14), the demons are described to issue out at night to wreak mayhem, but forced back into the underworld by the divine glory (
khvarenah) at sunrise.
The Zoroastrianism of the medieval texts is unambiguous with respect to which force is the superior. Evil can't create and is hence has a lower priority in the cosmic order (
asha). According to
Denkard 5.24.21a, the protection of the
yazatas is ultimately greater than the power of the demons. The
dews are agents ("procurers -
vashikano - of success") of
Ahriman (Avestan
Angra Mainyu) in the contests that will continue until the end of time, at which time the fiend will become invisible and (God's) creatures will become pure. (
Dadestan-i Denig 59)
But until the final renovation of the world, mankind "stands between the
yazads and the
dēws; the [
yazads] are immortal in essence and inseparable from their bodies (
mēnōg), men are immortal in essence but separable from their bodies (moving from
gētīg to
mēnōg condition), but
dēws are mortal in essence and inseparable from their bodies, which may be destroyed."
In addition to the six arch-demons (see above) that oppose the six Amesha Spentas, numerous other figures appear in scripture and tradition. According to
Bundahishn XXVII.12, the six arch-demons have cooperators (
hamkars), arranged in a hierarchy (not further specified) similar to that of the
yazatas. These are "
dews [...] created by the sins that creatures commit." (
Bundahishn XXVII.51)
Akatash of perversity (for example Gbd XXVII)
Anashtih "strife" (for example Chidag Andarz i Poryotkeshan 38)
Anast that utters falsehood (for example Gbd XXVII)
Apaush and Spenjaghra who cause drought (for example Gbd XXVII)
Araska of vengeance (for example Gbd XXVII)
Ashmogh of heresy (Avestan Ashemaogha)
Az of avarice and greed (for example Gbd XXVII)
Buht of idolatry (for example Gbd XXVII)
Bushasp of sloth (Avestan Bushyasta) (for example Gbd XXVII)
diwzhat (Av. daebaaman), the deceiver, the hypocrite
Eshm of wrath (Avestan Aeshma) (for example Gbd XXVII)
Freptar of distraction and deception (for example Gbd XXVII)
Jeh the whore (Avestan Jahi)
Mitokht (also Mithaokhta) of scepticism and falsehood (for example Gbd XXVII)
Nang of disgrace and dishonor (for example Dadestan-i Denig 53)
Nas or Nasa (Avestan Nasu) of pollution and contamination (for example GBd XXVII)
Niyaz causes want (for example Gbd XXVII)
Pinih of stinginess and who hoards but doesn't enjoy its hoard (for example Gbd XXVII)
Rashk (Avestan Areshko) "envy" (for example Denkard 9.30.4)
Sij who causes destruction (for example Gbd XXVII)
Sitoj that denies doctrine (for example Dadestan-i Denig 53)
Spazg of slander (for example Gbd XXVII)
Spuzgar, the negligent (for example Andarz-i Khosru-i-Kavatan)
Taromaiti of scorn (for example Gbd XXVII)
Varun of unnatural lust (for example Gbd XXVII)
Other entities include:
Aghash of the evil eye (for example Gbd XXVII)
Astwihad of death (Av. Asto-widhatu) (for example Gbd XXVII)
Azi Dahak (Avestan Azi Dahaka), a serpent-like monster king.
Cheshma who opposes the clouds and causes earthquakes and whirlwinds (for example Gbd XXVII)
Kunda, the steed that carries sorcerers (for example Gbd XXVII)
Uta who brings about sickness through food and water (for example Gbd XXVII)
Vizaresh that fights for the souls of the dead (for example Gbd XXVII)
The most destructive of these are Astiwihad, the demon of death that casts the noose of mortality around men's necks at birth, and Az, who most capable of destroying the "innate wisdom" of man. Az is thus the cause of heresy and blinds the righteous man from being able to discern the truth and falsehood.
In the Shahnameh
A list of ten demons is provided in the Shahnameh: Besides the afore-mentioned Az "greed", Kashm "wrath" (MP: Aeshma), Nang "dishonor," Niaz "want," and Rashk "envy", the epic poem includes Kin "vengeance", Nammam "tell-tale", Do-ruy "two-face", napak-din "heresy", and (not explicitly named) ungratefulness.
Some of the entities that in the Middle Persian texts are demons, are in the Shahnameh attributes of demons. So for instance, varuna "backwards" or "inside out", reflecting that they tend to do the opposite of what they're asked to do. Although Ferdowsi generally portrays divs as being distinct from humans, the poet also uses the word to denote "evil people."
One of the more popular stories from the Shahnameh is that of Rostam and the Dīv-e Sapīd, the "white demon" of Mazandaran, who blinds Rostam's men but who are then cured with the blood of the demon's gall.
In popular culture
In Final Fantasy X-2, a daeva is a demon-like enemy.
The game features a demon with powerful servants he refers to as daevas.
In Supernatural (TV series) Sam and Dean encounter a daeva when Meg summons one to kill them both.
In the Prince of Persia series, Kaileena is thought to be a daeva because she's abilities to read the timeline of fate, turn people into monsters, etc.
In The Redemption of Althalus (by David and Leigh Eddings), Daeva is an evil god, brother to Deiwos and Dweia.
In, from the new World of Darkness role-playing game line, the daevas are a clan of sensually decadent vampires.
In, the RPG from Reflexive Entertainment (and Black Isle) where the Daeva were presented as vampire-like demons, who each were one of the seven mortal sinsFurther Information
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