Magus – מילון אנגלי-אנגלי
Magus
n.
one of the Magi, one of the wise men who came from the East to worship the baby Jesus (Biblical)
magus
n.
Zoroastrian priest of ancient Media and Persia; magician, sorcerer
Magi
Magi (;
Latin plural of
magus;
magos;
Kurdish:m
ager,Old Persian:
maguš,
mogh;
English singular
magian,
mage,
magus,
magusian,
magusaean; ,
Turkish:
mecî) is a term, used since at least the 6th century BCE, to denote followers of
Zoroastrianism or
Zoroaster. The earliest known usage of the word Magi is in the trilingual inscription written by
Darius the Great, known as the
Behistun Inscription.
Old Persian texts, pre-dating the Hellenistic period, refer to a Magus as a
Zurvanic, and presumably Zoroastrian, priest.
magus
Noun
1. a magician or sorcerer of ancient times
(hypernym) sorcerer, magician, wizard, necromancer
2. a member of the Zoroastrian priesthood of the ancient Persians
(hypernym) priest, non-Christian priest
Magus (der)
nm.
magician, performer of magic tricks; sorcerer, wizard, whiz
Magi
Magi [plural of Old Persian
magus a wise man from the verbal root
meh great; cf Sanskrit
maha; cf Avestan
mogaha, Latin plural
magus, Greek
magos, Persian
mogh, Pahlavi
maga] An hereditary priesthood or sacerdotal caste in Media and Persia. Zoroaster, himself a member of the Society of the Magi, divides the initiates into three degrees according to their level of enlightenment: the highest were referred to as Khvateush (those enlightened with their own inner light or self-enlightened); the second were called Varezenem (those who practice); and the third, Airyamna (friends or Aryans). The ancient Parsis may be divided into three degrees of Magi: the Herbods or novitiates; the Mobeds or masters; and the Destur Mobeds or perfect masters -- the "
Dester Mobeds being identical with the Hierophants of the mysteries, as practised in Greece and Egypt" (TG 197).
Pliny mentions three schools of Magi: one founded at an unknown antiquity; a second established by Osthanes and Zoroaster; and a third by Moses and Jambres. "And all the knowledge possessed by these different schools, whether Magian, Egyptian, or Jewish, was derived from India, or rather from both sides of the Himalayas" (IU 2:361). According to Shahrestani (12th-century Islamic scholar) the Magi are divided into three sects: Gaeomarethians (Kayumarthians), Zarvanian (Zurvanian), and Zoroastrians. They all share the common belief that in this manifested universe the dualism of light and darkness is at work and that the final victory of the light is the day of resurrection.
to be continue "
Magi2 "