The Nite Hoods unique shape seems to resemble a Phrygian cap (a type of cap popular in ancient Phrygia, or modern-day Turkey, distinguished by the peak, which rests pointing forward over the forehead). It shows up on the heads of French Revolutionaries as an emblem of “fraternity, equality, and liberty”.
The Liberty Cap was always red- red like the color of blood, the sun, and life, and red, like the cap worn by the god Mithras…
So here is where it gets interesting. Mithras was the sun god or god of light, born on December 25th. The ancients recognized the sun making an annual descent southward until December 21 or 22, the winter solstice, when it stops moving southerly for three days and then starts to move northward again. During this time, Mithras is said to die, lie in a cave for three days and rise again on December 25. In some areas, the calendar originally began in the constellation of Virgo, and the sun would therefore be “born of a Virgin.”
Also, before Mithra(the sun) died he celebrated a feast with his twelve disciples represented by the twelve signs of the zodiac. For hundreds of years before Christ, people worshiped the sun. In the north as winter approached, the people, fearing that the sun had forsaken them offered sacrifices and prayed for the return of the sun. It always seemed to work because the sun god relented and the days started to get longer. Hence the solstice celebration.
We often hear about how many of the traditions, rites and symbols of modern day Christian holidays have their roots in paganism. These pagan holidays and the worship of their gods (many with mother and son deities), became a much looked forward to time in the Roman Empire because they were so much fun. A time when slaves, commoners and dignitaries alike mingled and exchanged favours.
Is this Phrygian cap, worn by Mithras a distant cousin to the Nite Hood? Our sleep mask and cap that leads us into a journey absent of light only to bring us forward into light again. We are tied to the sun and worship it by our inherent circadian rhythm and a week from now, Dec 21st, we will experience the longest night of the year. We remember our place in the universe and celebrate far into this night with friends and family to welcome the light back into our lives.