The Danubians led Nordics into mother worship, fostering a tradition of cremation and cultural advancement. [1] During the age in Crete, the mother cult of the descendants of Cain reached its peak in popularity through the worship of Eve as the “great mother.”. [2] The Danubians, influenced by Crete missionaries and Andonite sailors, practiced mother worship and cremated their dead in stone huts. [3]
The Hellenic Greeks found the Mediterranean world largely dominated by the mother cult, but they imposed their man-god Dyaus-Zeus as head of the Greek pantheon, on the brink of achieving true monotheism. [4]
The priests of the mother cult set the example by submitting to castration, teaching the virtue of physical suffering embraced by Hebrews, Hindus, and Buddhists. [5]