Triple Goddess
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In ancient Indo-European mythologies, various goddesses or demi-goddesses appear as a triad, either as three separate beings who always appear as a group (the Greek Moirae, Charites, Erinnyes and the Norse Norns) or as a single deity who is commonly depicted in three aspects (The Greek Hecate). Often it is ambiguous whether a single being or three are represented, as is the case with the Irish Brighid and her two sisters, also called Brighid.
Overview
The term Triple Goddess was popularised by poet and scholar Robert Graves who noted that an archetypal goddess triad occurred throughout Indo-European mythology. He was not the originator of this concept, and it appears as a recurrent theme in the "Myth and Ritual" school of classical archaeology at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century. The "Myth and Ritual" school is often associated with Cambridge University and with Oxford University in England.The theme of the goddess trinity can be found in the works of Jane Ellen Harrison,Jane Ellen Harrison, Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion, London, Cambridge University Press, 1903.Jane Ellen Harrison, Themis: A Study of the Social Origins of Greek Religion, London, Cambridge University Press, 1912.Jane Ellen Harrison, Ancient Art and Ritual , London, Cambridge University Press, 1913. A.B. Cook, George Thomson, Sir James Frazer, Robert BriffaultRobert Briffault, The Mothers (in three volumes), London and New York, 1927. and Jack Lindsay to name a few. The Triple Goddess mytheme was also explored by psychologists involved in the study of archetypes Carl Kerenyi,C. G. Jung and C. Kerényi, Essays on a Science of Mythology. Bolligen/Princeton University Press, 1967. Erich Neumann, and even Carl Jung. One of the most recent of archaeologists to explore this theme is Professor Marija Gimbutas whose studies on the Chalcolithic period of Old Europe (6500-3500 B.C.E.) have opened up entirely new avenues of research.Marija Gimbutas, The Goddesses and Gods of Old Europe. London: Thames and Hudson, 1974.Marija Gimbutas, The Living Goddesses. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999.
Many who are unacquainted with the primary sources for his research, consider Graves' statements to be highly speculative. The publication of the complete texts of the magical papyri from Greco-Roman Egypt provide exhaustive examples of the imagery usually wrongly attributed to Graves. In one hymn, for instance, the "Three-faced Selene" is simultaneously identified as the three Charites, the three Moirae, and the three Erinnyes; she is further addressed by the titles of several goddesses:
- ... they call You Hekate,
- Many-named, Mene, cleaving Air just like
- Dart-shooter Artemis, Persephone,
- Shooter of Deer, night shining, triple-sounding,
- Triple-headed, triple-voiced Selene
- Triple-pointed, triple-faced, triple-necked,
- And Goddess of the Triple Ways, who hold
- Untiring Flaming Fire in Triple Baskets,
- And You who oft frequent the Triple Way
- And rule the Triple Decades...
- ...Mother of Gods
- And Men, and Nature, Mother of All Things...
- ...Beginning
- And End are You, and You Alone rule All.
- For All Things are from You, and in You do
- All Things, Eternal One, come to their End.
This imagery was well-known to those with a Classical education and continued in poetry throughout English history. A case in point is the Garland of Laurell by the English poet, John Skelton (c. 1460 - June 21, 1529):
- Diana in the leavës green,
- Luna that so bright doth sheen,
- Persephone in Hell.
An archetypal Goddess triad is not limited to Indo-European cultures, and can also be found in some mythologies of Africa and Asia. The triadic theme also appears in medieval Christian folk traditions — notably with the three Marys.
In one of the ironies of religious history, St. Augustine of Hippo, mocked the pagan religions of his time for believing in a goddess who could be both three-and-one at the same time. This was in his second book, The City of God. By the time he wrote his third book, On the Trinity, he had become a staunch proponent of the Trinitarian structure of the world and had obviously resolved this conflict within himself or, at the very least, brought his thinking into line with the new orthodoxy.
Images of Goddess triads are well attested from both inscriptions and sculptural sources from the time of the Upper Palaeolithic. The shrine rooms of Catal Huyuk which dated from 7500 B.C.E. contain bas-relief images of a Goddess in three forms.
Mother, Daughter and Crone
Certain followers of the Wiccan and some New Age religions, as well as some archeologists and mythographers,[[Citing sources citation needed]] believe that long before the coming of the monotheistic patriarchal religions, the Triple Goddess embodied the three-fold aspect of a Great Goddess, sometimes, incorrectly, identified with Gaia, the Earth Mother (Roman Magna Mater).Descriptions of the relation between Greek Mythology and the Triple Goddess can be found in many of the myths translated in Robert Graves' anthology The Greek Myths and more cryptically and poetically in his book The White Goddess and his book of essays entitled Mammon and the Black Goddess. In the introduction to the book he wrote with Idries Shah, entitled, "The Sufis" he translates one of the poems of the Sufi mystic, Ibn Arabi (1165-1240) which illustrates that the triadic concept of the Goddess remained as a theme even among the medieval Sufis:
- I follow the religion of Love,
- Now I am sometimes called
- A Shepherd of gazelles
- And now a Christian monk,
- And now a Persian sage.
- My beloved is three-
- Three yet only one;
- Many things appear as three,
- Which are no more than one.
- Give Her no name,
- As if to limit one
- At sight of Whom
- All limitation is confounded.
In pre-Islamic Arabia and Nabataea the goddess triad were called "the three daughters of Allah": al-Lat ("the Goddess"), Uzza ("Power") the youngest, and Manat ("Fate") the crone, "the third, the other". They were known collectively as the three cranes. The name al-Lat is known from the time of the histories of Herodotus in which she is named Alilat, meaning "The Goddess".
The three aspects of the goddess are the Maiden (Greek Persephone), pure and a representation of new beginnings; the Mother (Greek Demeter), wellspring of life, giving and compassionate; and the Crone (Greek Hecate) wise, knowing, a culmination of a lifetime of experience. These aspects may also represent the cycle of birth, life and death (and rebirth).
Some Neopagans claim historical antecedent for their beliefs, with some even holding that in Old Europe, in the Aegean world, and in the most ancient Near East, the Triple Goddess preceded the coming of nomadic speakers of Indo-European languages.
Wiccans and some New Age religions often profess to work with the Goddess in her triple form and sometimes apply the Maiden, Mother and Crone symbolism to goddesses who do not historically fit this pattern. An example of this would be the goddess Hecate, who could be depicted as three maidens when in triplicate or as an old woman by herself.
Maiden
The Maiden represents enchantment, inception, expansion, the female principle, the promise of new beginnings, youth, excitement, and a carefree erotic aura.[[Citing sources citation needed]] Potential maiden goddesses include: Brigid, Nimue, Durga, Verdandi and others.Mother
The Mother represents ripeness, fertility, fulfillment, stability, and power[[Citing sources citation needed]]. Potential mother goddesses include:Aa, Ambika, Ceres, Astarte, Lakshmi, Urd, and others.Crone
The Crone represents wisdom, repose, and compassion[[Citing sources citation needed]]. Potential crone goddesses include: Hel, Maman Brigitte, Oya Yansa ("Mother of Nine"), Skuld, Sedna, Kali, and others.Triadic imagery
In The White Goddess, Graves said:
- the New Moon is the white goddess of birth and growth;
- the Full Moon, the red goddess of love and battle;
- the Old Moon, the black goddess of death and divination.
Another common error in Neopagan writings which needs to be clarified in this context is the confusion regarding the term "New Moon". The traditional new moon (which is the sighting of the first crescent moon in the western sky at sunset) which was used as the starting point of lunar calendars to this day is not the same as the modern astronomical term "new moon" which refers to the dark of the moon.
Fates
Another cross-cultural archetype is the three goddesses of Fate. In Greek Mythology there are the Moirai; in Norse mythology there are the Norns. The Weird Sisters of Shakespeare's Macbeth and Wyrd Sisters of Terry Pratchett's novel of the same name are most definitely inspired by these deities. The three supernatural female figures called variously the Ladies, Mother of the Camenae, the Kindly Ones, and a number of other different names in The Sandman graphic novels by Neil Gaiman play self-consciously on both the triple Fates and the Maiden-Mother-Crone goddess archetypes. The manifestation of a Fate goddess in multiple forms in also attested from ancient Egypt papyri in which the birth of a child is greeted by the appearance of the Seven (or in some writings Nine) Hathors.In traditional Greek folklore, a low table is still prepared on the 6th night following a birth with food and drink so that the Fates may enter the house and bless the child with good fortune. [[Citing sources citation needed]] A similar ceremony occurs in India, where the goddess who visits is in single-form and is named Sashthi ("sixth").[[Citing sources citation needed]] This is similar to the Scandanavian tales of the Norns who visit the houses in which a birth has taken place.[[Citing sources citation needed]] All of these themes, over the course of time, move from the realm of sacred myth to that of popular folktale and folk-custom. Most of the original cultural undercurrents would have had to be pre-Indo-European to have lasted so long and to have stretched across so wide a cultural and linguistic expanse.[[Citing sources citation needed]]
The earthly representatives of the Fates may have been travelling bands of women in the role of priestesses, seers and celebrants, evident from the Norse sagas (cf. Egils Saga) and Indo-European and Egyptian myth and folktale (cf. Sleeping Beauty, The Westcar Papyrus).
The celebration of the life-thresholds was from early times in the hands of woman and was repressed comparatively recently. That is why the Three Fates, the Three Graces and the Three Furies were said to be sisters. When the women presided over the blessing of the child at birth and who acted as midwives they served the Fates, when they performed the traditional dances and songs for blessing weddings and acted as bridesmaids they served the Graces and when they fulfilled the role of professional mourners and psychopomp they served the Furies[[Citing sources citation needed]].
The Ennead
An expansion of the triadic concept is that the triad can expand into an ennead, or a group of nine aspects or nine goddesses, e.g. the Nine Muses, the Nine Maidens.The manifestation of the Daughter (the red or rajasic) aspect of the Great Goddess, known to archaeologists as The Goddess of Love-and-Battle[[Citing sources citation needed]] (such as Inanna/Ishtar of Mesopotamia and Freyja of Scandinavia), is represented pictorially as The Three Graces, The Bull with Three Cranes or the as triad: Athene, Hera and Aphrodite in The Judgement of Paris representing the embodiments of victory in battle, royal dominion, and love. This was a recurrent theme in Bronze Age myth and iconography in both Europe and the Middle East. This was a time before Astarte became Aphrodite, as a separate goddess of love. This was a later, Iron Age development. As Anne Ross noted in her work Pagan Celtic Britain, "there is no Celtic goddess of love".Anne Ross, Pagan Celtic Britain. New York: Columbia University Press, 1968.
Each aspect of the goddess could thus appear in triad, for example, the Dea Matrona or Matres ("the Mother goddesses") shown as a triad throughout the Celtic, Gaulish and Romano-Celtic territories. They are still known in Welsh folklore as Y Mamau ("the Mothers").
References
See also
- Goddess
- Triple deities
- Dea Matrona
- Matres
- Marija Gimbutas
- Kumari
- Mahavidyas
- The Judgement of Paris
- Durga
- Goddess movement
- Morrigan
- The aspects of the Great Goddess in Shaktism
External links
- [Neo-pagan definition of the three aspects of the Triple Goddess]
- [The Great Mother:An Analysis of the Archetype, Erich Neumann, Princeton University Press]
- [Betz, Hans Dieter, editor The Greek Magical Papyri in Translation, Including the Demotic Spells, Volume 1. 2d edition. 406 p., 42 figures. 7 x 10 1986, 1992]
- Varaha Purana
- Skanda Purana
- [The Robert Graves forum which contains an informed debate on issues regarding the imagery of the Triple Goddess]
- [The Westcar Papyrus : The Egyptian Goddesses manifesting as travelling midwives/name-givers]
- [The Westcar Papyrus in English]
- [Sashthi and the ceremony of the sixth night after the birth of a child]
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