Bull-jumping is frequently shown in Minoan art, and probably formed a part of ritual activity. The strength and potency of bulls lay behind their religious importance to the Minoans. In fact, the bull is a potent religious symbol to all the Indo-European peoples.
The bulls in Minoan Crete were most likely a variety of the European wild bull: the aurochs. This creature was hunted to extinction by the late Middle Ages, but in 1920 two brothers, Heinz and Lutz Heck set out to "re-create" the aurochs by back-breeding domestic cattle with aurochs-like qualities. The photo below shows the result.
Cattle actually have two mentions in the rune poems of Northern Europe. The first rune in all the ancient alphabets was fehu, meaning cattle, wealth and fertility. Fehu forms the root of the modern word fee in English. These were the domestic cattle: the basis for the economy. The second was uruz, literally "aurochs": strength, virility and protection. This is the wild, the untamed, the primal bull.
But back to Minoan Crete: bull-jumping was not a blood-sport. It did not involve killing or injuring the bull, but was a test of both courage and agility, with (no doubt) extra "points" awarded for grace. A bull would be taunted to run at a jumper (or a line of jumpers) and when it was close enough, the jumper would grab the bull's horns and either vault onto the bull's back or vault over the bull in a somersault and land on his or her feet on the other side of the bull. The difficulty of this vaulting is eloquently demonstrated in a Minoan vase: when you grab hold of a charging bull's horns, it jerks its head up violently — that's how bulls attack with their horns, sometimes swinging their entire heads from side to side as well. The vaulter must catch the horns, gauge the movement and then use the horn's momentum to gracefully mount or vault the bull.
So, travel back in time with me - imagine the following scene playing out before your eyes. You're in a darkened arena, lit by the waning sun and torchlight. A prayer is offered, songs are sung, and then the bulls and jumpers come forth, to the adulation of the crowd. Let the games begin!
Truely it is said: the more things change, the more they remain the same.
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