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Hecate

Hecate or Hekate[a] is a goddess in ancient Greek religion and mythology, most often shown holding a pair of torches, a key, snakes, or accompanied by dogs,[1] and in later periods depicted as three-formed or triple-bodied. She is variously associated with crossroads, entrance-ways, night, light, magic, witchcraft, the Moon, knowledge of herbs and poisonous plants, graves, ghosts, necromancy, and sorcery.[2][3][4] Her earliest appearance in literature was in Hesiod's Theogony in the 8th century BCE[5] as a goddess of great honour with domains in sky, earth, and sea. Her place of origin is debated by scholars, but she had popular followings amongst the witches of Thessaly[6] and an important sanctuary among the Carian Greeks of Asia Minor in Lagina.[6] Her oldest known representation was found in Selinunte, in Sicily.

Hecate
Goddess of boundaries, crossroads, witchcraft, the Moon, necromancy, and ghosts
The Hecate Chiaramonti, a Roman sculpture of triple-bodied Hecate, after a Hellenistic original (Museo Chiaramonti, Vatican Museums)
AbodeUnderworld
AnimalsDog, polecat
SymbolPaired torches, dogs, serpents, keys, daggers, and Hecate's wheel is known as a stropholos.
ParentsPerses and Asteria
OffspringAegialeus, Circe, Empusa, Medea, Scylla
Equivalents
Mesopotamian equivalentEreshkigal
Slavic equivalentMarzanna
Roman equivalentTrivia, Diana

Hecate was one of several deities worshipped in ancient Athens as a protector of the oikos (household), alongside Zeus, Hestia, Hermes, and Apollo.[7] In the post-Christian writings of the Chaldean Oracles (2nd–3rd century CE) she was also regarded with (some) rulership over earth, sea, and sky, as well as a more universal role as Savior (Soteira), Mother of Angels and the Cosmic World Soul.[8][9] Regarding the nature of her cult, it has been remarked, "she is more at home on the fringes than in the centre of Greek polytheism. Intrinsically ambivalent and polymorphous, she straddles conventional boundaries and eludes definition."[10]

The Romans knew her by the epithet of Trivia, an epithet she shares with Diana/Artemis, each in their roles as protector of travel and of the crossroads (trivia, "three ways").[11]

Name and origin

The origin of the name Hecate (Ἑκάτη, Hekátē) and the original country of her worship are both unknown, though several theories have been proposed.

Greek origin

Whether or not Hecate's worship originated in Greece, some scholars have suggested that the name derives from a Greek root, and several potential source words have been identified. For example, ἑκών "willing" (thus, "she who works her will" or similar), may be related to the name Hecate.[12] However, no sources suggested list will or willingness as a major attribute of Hecate, which makes this possibility unlikely.[13] Another Greek word suggested as the origin of the name Hecate is Ἑκατός Hekatos, an obscure epithet of Apollo[10] interpreted as "the far reaching one" or "the far-darter".[14] This has been suggested in comparison with the attributes of the goddess Artemis, strongly associated with Apollo and frequently equated with Hecate in the classical world. Supporters of this etymology suggest that Hecate was originally considered an aspect of Artemis prior to the latter's adoption into the Olympian pantheon. Artemis would have, at that point, become more strongly associated with purity and maidenhood, on the one hand, while her originally darker attributes like her association with magic, the souls of the dead, and the night would have continued to be worshipped separately under her title Hecate.[15] Though often considered the most likely Greek origin of the name, the Ἑκατός theory does not account for her worship in Asia Minor, where her association with Artemis seems to have been a late development, and the competing theories that the attribution of darker aspects and magic to Hecate were themselves not originally part of her cult.[13]

R. S. P. Beekes rejected a Greek etymology and suggested a Pre-Greek origin.[16]

Egyptian origin

A strong possibility for the foreign origin of the name may be Heqet (ḥqt), a frog-headed Egyptian goddess of fertility and childbirth, who, like Hecate, was also associated with ḥqꜣ, ruler.[17] The word "heka" in the Egyptian language is also both the word for "magic" and the name of the god of magic and medicine, Heka.[18]

Anatolian origin

Hecate possibly originated among the Carians of Anatolia,[6] the region where most theophoric names invoking Hecate, such as Hecataeus or Hecatomnus, the father of Mausolus, are attested,[19] and where Hecate remained a Great Goddess into historical times, at her unrivalled[b] cult site in Lagina. While many researchers favour the idea that she has Anatolian origins, it has been argued that "Hecate must have been a Greek goddess."[c] The monuments to Hecate in Phrygia and Caria are numerous but of late date.[21]

William Berg observes, "Since children are not called after spooks, it is safe to assume that Carian theophoric names involving hekat- refer to a major deity free from the dark and unsavoury ties to the underworld and to witchcraft associated with the Hecate of classical Athens."[22] In particular, there is some evidence that she might be derived from the local sun goddesses (see also Arinna) based on similar attributes.[23]

If Hecate's cult spread from Anatolia into Greece, then it possibly presented a conflict, as her role was already filled by other more prominent deities in the Greek pantheon, above all by Artemis and Selene. This line of reasoning lies behind the widely accepted hypothesis that she was a foreign deity who was incorporated into the Greek pantheon. Other than in the Theogony, the Greek sources do not offer a consistent story of her parentage or of her relations in the Greek pantheon.

Older English pronunciation

In Early Modern English, the name was also pronounced disyllabically (as /ˈhɛk.ɪt/) and sometimes spelled Hecat. It remained common practice in English to pronounce her name in two syllables, even when spelled with final e, well into the 19th century.[citation needed]

The spelling Hecat is due to Arthur Golding's 1567 translation of Ovid's Metamorphoses,[24] and this spelling without the final E later appears in plays of the Elizabethan-Jacobean period.[25]Webster's Dictionary of 1866 particularly credits the influence of Shakespeare for the then-predominant disyllabic pronunciation of the name.[26]

Iconography

 
Hekataion with the Charites, Attic, 3rd century BCE (Glyptothek, Munich)

Hecate was generally represented as three-formed or triple-bodied, though the earliest known images of the goddess are singular. Her earliest known representation is a small terracotta statue found in Athens. An inscription on the statue is a dedication to Hecate, in writing of the style of the 6th century, but it otherwise lacks any other symbols typically associated with the goddess. She is seated on a throne, with a chaplet around her head; the depiction is otherwise relatively generic.[27] Farnell states: "The evidence of the monuments as to the character and significance of Hecate is almost as full as that of to express her manifold and mystic nature."[27] A 6th century fragment of pottery from Boetia depicts a goddess which may be Hecate in a maternal or fertility mode. Crowned with leafy branches as in later descriptions, she is depicted offering a "maternal blessing" to two maidens who embrace her. The figure is flanked by lions, an animal associated with Hecate both in the Chaldean Oracles, coinage, and reliefs from Asia Minor.[28] In artwork, she is often portrayed in three statues standing back to back, each with its own special attributes (torch, keys, daggers, snakes, dogs).[3]

 
Marble relief of Hecate.

The 2nd-century travel writer Pausanias stated that Hecate was first depicted in triplicate by the sculptor Alcamenes in the Greek Classical period of the late 5th century BC,[4] whose sculpture was placed before the temple of the Wingless Nike in Athens. Though Alcamenes' original statue is lost, hundreds of copies exist, and the general motif of a triple Hecate situated around a central pole or column, known as a hekataion, was used both at crossroads shrines as well as at the entrances to temples and private homes. These typically depict her holding a variety of items, including torches, keys, serpents, and daggers.[29][28] Some hekataia, including a votive sculpture from Attica of the 3rd century BC, include additional dancing figures identified as the Charites circling the triple Hecate and her central column. It is possible that the representation of a triple Hecate surrounding a central pillar was originally derived from poles set up at three-way crossroads with masks hung on them, facing in each road direction. In the 1st century AD, Ovid wrote: "Look at Hecate, standing guard at the crossroads, one face looking in each direction."[28]

Apart from traditional hekataia, Hecate's triplicity is depicted in the vast frieze of the great Pergamon Altar, now in Berlin, wherein she is shown with three bodies, taking part in the battle with the Titans. In the Argolid, near the shrine of the Dioscuri, Pausanias saw the temple of Hecate opposite the sanctuary of Eileithyia; He reported the image to be the work of Scopas, stating further, "This one is of stone, while the bronze images opposite, also of Hecate, were made respectively by Polycleitus and his brother Naucydes, son of Mothon."[30]

While Greek anthropomorphic conventions of art generally represented Hecate's triple form as three separate bodies, the iconography of the triple Hecate eventually evolved into representations of the goddess with a single body, but three faces. In Egyptian-inspired Greek esoteric writings connected with Hermes Trismegistus, and in the Greek Magical Papyri of Late Antiquity, Hecate is described as having three heads: one dog, one serpent, and one horse. In other representations, her animal heads include those of a cow and a boar.[31]

The east frieze of a Hellenistic temple of hers at Lagina shows her helping protect the newborn Zeus from his father Cronus; this frieze is the only evidence of Hecate's involvement in the myth of his birth.[32][33]

Sacred animals

Dogs were closely associated with Hecate in the Classical world. "In art and in literature Hecate is constantly represented as dog-shaped or as accompanied by a dog. Her approach was heralded by the howling of a dog. The dog was Hecate's regular sacrificial animal, and was often eaten in solemn sacrament."[34] The sacrifice of dogs to Hecate is attested for Thrace, Samothrace, Colophon, and Athens.[10] A 4th century BCE marble relief from Crannon in Thessaly was dedicated by a race-horse owner.[d] It shows Hecate, with a hound beside her, placing a wreath on the head of a mare. It has been claimed that her association with dogs is "suggestive of her connection with birth, for the dog was sacred to Eileithyia, Genetyllis, and other birth goddesses. Images of her attended by a dog[35] are also found at times when she is shown as in her role as mother goddess with child, and when she is depicted alongside the god Hermes and the goddess Cybele in reliefs.[36]

Although in later times Hecate's dog came to be thought of as a manifestation of restless souls or daemons who accompanied her, its docile appearance and its accompaniment of a Hecate who looks completely friendly in many pieces of ancient art suggests that its original signification was positive and thus likelier to have arisen from the dog's connection with birth than the dog's underworld associations."[37] The association with dogs, particularly female dogs, could be explained by a metamorphosis myth in Lycophron: the friendly looking female dog accompanying Hecate was originally the Trojan Queen Hecuba, who leapt into the sea after the fall of Troy and was transformed by Hecate into her familiar.[38]

The polecat is also associated with Hecate. Antoninus Liberalis used a myth to explain this association:

"At Thebes Proetus had a daughter Galinthias. This maiden was playmate and companion of Alcmene, daughter of Electryon. As the birth throes for Herakles were pressing on Alcmene, the Moirai (fates) and Eileithyia (birth-goddess), as a favour to Hera, kept Alcmene in continuous birth pangs. They remained seated, each keeping their arms crossed. Galinthias, fearing that the pains of her labour would drive Alcmene mad, ran to the Moirai and Eileithyia and announced that by desire of Zeus a boy had been born to Alcmene and that their prerogatives had been abolished. At all this, consternation of course overcame the Moirai and they immediately let go their arms.
Alcmene’s pangs ceased at once and Herakles was born. The Moirai were aggrieved at this and took away the womanly parts of Galinthias since, being but a mortal, she had deceived the gods. They turned her into a deceitful weasel (or polecat), making her live in crannies and gave her a grotesque way of mating. She is mounted through the ears and gives birth by bringing forth her young through the throat. Hecate felt sorry for this transformation of her appearance and appointed her a sacred servant of herself."[39]

Aelian told a different story of a woman transformed into a polecat:

"I have heard that the polecat was once a human being. It has also reached my hearing that Gale was her name then; that she was a dealer in spells and a sorceress (pharmakis); that she was extremely incontinent, and that she was afflicted with abnormal sexual desires. Nor has it escaped my notice that the anger of the goddess Hekate transformed it into this evil creature. May the goddess be gracious to me: Fables and their telling I leave to others."[40]

Athenaeus of Naucratis, drawing on the etymological speculation of Apollodorus of Athens, notes that the red mullet is sacred to Hecate, "on account of the resemblance of their names; for that the goddess is trimorphos, of a triple form". The Greek word for mullet was trigle and later trigla. He goes on to quote a fragment of verse:

"O mistress Hecate, Trioditis
With three forms and three faces
Propitiated with mullets".[41]

In relation to Greek concepts of pollution, Parker observes,

"The fish that was most commonly banned was the red mullet (trigle), which fits neatly into the pattern. It 'delighted in polluted things', and 'would eat the corpse of a fish or a man'. Blood-coloured itself, it was sacred to the blood-eating goddess Hecate. It seems a symbolic summation of all the negative characteristics of the creatures of the deep."[42]
 
A goddess, probably Hecate (possibly Artemis), is depicted with a bow, dog and twin torches.

At Athens, it is said there stood a statue of Hecate Triglathena, to whom the red mullet was offered in sacrifice.[43] After mentioning that this fish was sacred to Hecate, Alan Davidson writes,

"Cicero, Horace, Juvenal, Martial, Pliny, Seneca, and Suetonius have left abundant and interesting testimony to the red mullet fever which began to affect wealthy Romans during the last years of the Republic and really gripped them in the early Empire. The main symptoms were a preoccupation with size, the consequent rise to absurd heights of the prices of large specimens, a habit of keeping red mullet in captivity, and the enjoyment of the highly specialized aesthetic experience induced by watching the color of the dying fish change."[44]

In her three-headed representations, discussed above, Hecate often has one or more animal heads, including cow, dog, boar, serpent, and horse.[45] Lions are associated with Hecate in early artwork from Asia Minor, as well as later coins and literature, including the Chaldean Oracles.[28] The frog, which was also the symbol of the similarly named Egyptian goddess Heqet,[46] has also become sacred to Hecate in modern pagan literature, possibly due in part to its ability to cross between two elements.[47]

Comparative mythologist Alexander Haggerty Krappe cited that Hecate was also named ίππεύτρια (hippeutria – 'the equestrienne'), since the horse was "the chthonic animal par excellence".[48]

Sacred plants

Hecate was closely associated with plant lore and the concoction of medicines and poisons. In particular she was thought to give instruction in these closely related arts. Apollonius of Rhodes, in the Argonautica mentions that Medea was taught by Hecate, "I have mentioned to you before a certain young girl whom Hecate, daughter of Perses, has taught to work in drugs."[49]

The goddess is described as wearing oak in fragments of Sophocles' lost play The Root Diggers (or The Root Cutters), and an ancient commentary on Apollonius of Rhodes' Argonautica (3.1214) describes her as having a head surrounded by serpents, twining through branches of oak.[50]

The yew in particular was sacred to Hecate.

Greeks held the yew to be sacred to Hecate... Her attendants draped wreathes of yew around the necks of black bulls which they slaughtered in her honor and yew boughs were burned on funeral pyres. The yew was associated with the alphabet and the scientific name for yew today, taxus, was probably derived from the Greek word for yew, toxos, which is hauntingly similar to toxon, their word for bow and toxicon, their word for poison. It is presumed that the latter were named after the tree because of its superiority for both bows and poison.[51]

Hecate was said to favour offerings of garlic, which was closely associated with her cult.[52] She is also sometimes associated with cypress, a tree symbolic of death and the underworld, and hence sacred to a number of chthonic deities.[53]

A number of other plants (often poisonous, medicinal and/or psychoactive) are associated with Hecate.[54] These include aconite (also called hecateis),[55] belladonna, dittany, and mandrake. It has been suggested that the use of dogs for digging up mandrake is further corroboration of the association of this plant with Hecate; indeed, since at least as early as the 1st century CE, there are a number of attestations to the apparently widespread practice of using dogs to dig up plants associated with magic.[56]

Functions

 
Gilt bronze Hekataion, 1st century CE. Musei Capitolini, Rome.

As a goddess of boundaries

Hecate was associated with borders, city walls, doorways, crossroads and, by extension, with realms outside or beyond the world of the living. She appears to have been particularly associated with being 'between' and hence is frequently characterized as a "liminal" goddess. "Hecate mediated between regimes—Olympian and Titan—but also between mortal and divine spheres."[57] This liminal role is reflected in a number of her cult titles: Apotropaia (that turns away/protects); Enodia (on the way); Propulaia/Propylaia (before the gate); Triodia/Trioditis (who frequents crossroads); Klêidouchos (holding the keys), etc.

As a goddess expected to avert harmful or destructive spirits from the house or city over which she stood guard and to protect the individual as she or he passed through dangerous liminal places, Hecate would naturally become known as a goddess who could also refuse to avert the demons, or even drive them on against unfortunate individuals.[58]

It was probably her role as guardian of entrances that led to Hecate's identification by the mid fifth century with Enodia, a Thessalian goddess. Enodia's very name ("In-the-Road") suggests that she watched over entrances, for it expresses both the possibility that she stood on the main road into a city, keeping an eye on all who entered, and in the road in front of private houses, protecting their inhabitants.[59]

This function would appear to have some relationship with the iconographic association of Hecate with keys, and might also relate to her appearance with two torches, which when positioned on either side of a gate or door illuminated the immediate area and allowed visitors to be identified. "In Byzantium small temples in her honour were placed close to the gates of the city. Hecate's importance to Byzantium was above all as a deity of protection. When Philip of Macedon was about to attack the city, according to the legend she alerted the townspeople with her ever present torches, and with her pack of dogs, which served as her constant companions."[60] This suggests that Hecate's close association with dogs derived in part from the use of watchdogs, who, particularly at night, raised an alarm when intruders approached. Watchdogs were used extensively by Greeks and Romans.[61]

 
Drawing of a Hekataion.

Cult images and altars of Hecate in her triplicate or trimorphic form were placed at three-way crossroads (though they also appeared before private homes and in front of city gates).[10] In what appears to be a 7th-century indication of the survival of cult practices of this general sort, Saint Eligius, in his Sermo warns the sick among his recently converted flock in Flanders against putting "devilish charms at springs or trees or crossroads",[62] and, according to Saint Ouen would urge them "No Christian should make or render any devotion to the deities of the trivium, where three roads meet...".[63]

As a goddess of the underworld

Thanks to her association with boundaries and the liminal spaces between worlds, Hecate is also recognized as a chthonic (underworld) goddess. As the holder of the keys that can unlock the gates between realms, she can unlock the gates of death, as described in a 3rd-century BCE poem by Theocritus. In the 1st century CE, Virgil described the entrance to hell as "Hecate's Grove", though he says that Hecate is equally "powerful in Heaven and Hell." The Greek Magical Papyri describe Hecate as the holder of the keys to Tartaros.[28] Like Hermes, Hecate takes on the role of guardian not just of roads, but of all journeys, including the journey to the afterlife. In art and myth, she is shown, along with Hermes, guiding Persephone back from the underworld with her torches.[28]

By the 5th century BCE, Hecate had come to be strongly associated with ghosts, possibly due to conflation with the Thessalian goddess Enodia (meaning "traveller"), who travelled the earth with a retinue of ghosts and was depicted on coinage wearing a leafy crown and holding torches, iconography strongly associated with Hecate.[28]

As a goddess of witchcraft

By the 1st century CE, Hecate's chthonic and nocturnal character had led to her transformation into a goddess heavily associated with witchcraft, witches, magic, and sorcery. In Lucan's Pharsalia, the witch Erichtho invokes Hecate as "Persephone, who is the third and lowest aspect of Hecate, the goddess we witches revere", and describes her as a "rotting goddess" with a "pallid decaying body", who has to "wear a mask when [she] visit[s] the gods in heaven."[28]

Like Hecate, "the dog is a creature of the threshold, the guardian of doors and portals, and so it is appropriately associated with the frontier between life and death, and with demons and ghosts which move across the frontier. The yawning gates of Hades were guarded by the monstrous watchdog Cerberus, whose function was to prevent the living from entering the underworld, and the dead from leaving it."[64]

As a goddess of the moon

 
Hecate the Moon, fresco by Francesco de' Rossi, ca. 1543–45)

Hecate was seen as a triple deity, identified with the goddesses Luna (Moon) in the sky and Diana (hunting) on the earth, while she represents the Underworld.[65] Hecate's association with Helios in literary sources and especially in cursing magic has been cited as evidence for her lunar nature, although this evidence is pretty late; no artwork before the Roman period connecting Hecate to the Moon exists.[66] Nevertheless, the Homeric Hymn to Demeter shows Helios and Hecate informing Demeter of Persephone's abduction, a common theme found in many parts of the world where the Sun and the Moon are questioned concerning events that happen on earth based on their ability to witness everything[66] and implies Hecate's capacity as a moon goddess in the hymn.[67] Another work connecting Hecate to Helios possibly as a moon goddess is Sophocles' lost play The Root Cutters, where Helios is described as Hecate's spear:

O Sun our lord and sacred fire, the spear of Hecate of the
roads, which she carries as she attends her mistress in the sky[68]

This speech from the Root Cutters may or may not be an intentional association of Hecate with the Moon.[69] In Seneca's Medea, the titular Medea invokes her patron Hecate whom she addresses as "Moon, orb of the night" and "triple form".[70] Hecate and the moon goddess Selene were frequently identified with each other and a number of Greek and non-Greek deities;[71] the Greek Magical Papyri and other magical texts emphasize a syncretism between Selene-Hecate with Artemis and Persephone among others.[71] In Italy, the triple unity of the lunar goddesses Diana (the huntress), Luna (the Moon) and Hecate (the underworld) became a ubiquitous feature in depictions of sacred groves, where Hecate/Trivia marked intersections and crossroads along with other liminal deities.[72] The Romans celebrated enthusiastically the multiple identities of Diana as Hecate, Luna and Trivia.[72]

From her father Perses, Hecate is often called “Perseis” (meaning “daughter of Perses”)[73][74] which is also the name of one of the Oceanid nymphs, Helios’ wife and Circe’s mother in other versions.[75] In one version of Hecate's parentage, she is the daughter of Perses not the son of Crius but the son of Helios, whose mother is the Oceanid Perse.[76] Karl Kerenyi noted the similarity between the names, perhaps denoting a chthonic connection among the two and the goddess Persephone;[77] it is possible that this epithet gives evidence of a lunar aspect of Hecate.[78] Fowler also noted that the pairing (i. e. Helios and Perse) made sense given Hecate’s association with the Moon.[79] Mooney however notes that when it comes to the nymph Perse herself, there's no evidence of her actually being a moon goddess on her own right.[80]

Cult

 
Hecate holding two torches and dancing in front of an altar, beyond which is a cult statue, ca. 350–300 BC, red-figure vase, Capua, Italy.

Worship of Hecate existed alongside other deities in major public shrines and temples in antiquity, and she had a significant role as household deity.[81] Shrines to Hecate were often placed at doorways to homes, temples, and cities with the belief that it would protect from restless dead and other spirits. Home shrines often took the form of a small Hekataion, a shrine centred on a wood or stone carving of a triple Hecate facing in three directions on three sides of a central pillar. Larger Hekataions, often enclosed within small walled areas, were sometimes placed at public crossroads near important sites – for example, there was one on the road leading to the Acropolis.[82] Likewise, shrines to Hecate at three way crossroads were created where food offerings were left at the new Moon to protect those who did so from spirits and other evils.[83]

Dogs were sacred to Hecate and associated with roads, domestic spaces, purification, and spirits of the dead. Dogs were also sacrificed to the road.[84] This can be compared to Pausanias' report that in the Ionian city of Colophon in Asia Minor a sacrifice of a black female puppy was made to Hecate as "the wayside goddess", and Plutarch's observation that in Boeotia dogs were killed in purificatory rites. Dogs, with puppies often mentioned, were offered to Hecate at crossroads, which were sacred to the goddess.[85]

History

The earliest definitive record of Hecate's worship dates to the 6th century B.C.E., in the form of a small terracotta statue of a seated goddess, identified as Hecate in its inscription. This and other early depictions of Hecate lack distinctive attributes that would later be associated with her, such as a triple form or torches, and can only be identified as Hecate thanks to their inscriptions. Otherwise, they are typically generic, or Artemis-like.[28]

Hecate's cult became established in Athens about 430 B.C.E. At this time, the sculptor Alcamenes made the earliest known triple-formed Hecate statue for use at her new temple. While this sculpture has not survived to the present day, numerous later copies are extant.[28] It has been speculated that this triple image, usually situated around a pole or pillar, was derived from earlier representations of the goddess using three masks hung on actual wooden poles, possibly placed at crossroads and gateways.[28]

Sanctuaries

Hecate was a popular divinity, and her cult was practiced with many local variations all over Greece and Western Anatolia. Caria was a major center of worship and her most famous temple there was located in the town of Lagina. The oldest known direct evidence of Hecate's cult comes from Selinunte (near modern-day Trapani in Sicily), where she had a temple in the 6th–5th centuries BC.[86]

There was a Temple of Hecate in Argolis:

Over against the sanctuary of Eileithyia is a temple of Hecate [the goddess probably here identified with the apotheosed Iphigenia, and the image is a work of Skopas. This one is of stone, while the bronze images opposite, also of Hecate, were made respectively by Polykleitos and his brother Naukydes.[87]

There were also a shrine to Hecate in Aigina, where she was very popular:

Of the gods, the Aiginetans worship most Hecate, in whose honour every year they celebrate mystic rites which, they say, Orpheus the Thrakian established among them. Within the enclosure is a temple; its wooden image is the work of Myron, and it has one face and one body. It was Alkamenes, in my opinion, who first made three images of Hecate attached to one another [in Athens].[88]

Aside from her own temples, Hecate was also worshipped in the sanctuaries of other gods, where she was apparently sometimes given her own space. A round stone altar dedicated to the goddess was found in the Delphinion (a temple dedicated to Apollo) at Miletus. Dated to the 7th century BCE, this is one of the oldest known artefacts dedicated to the worship of Hecate.[13] In association with her worship alongside Apollo at Miletus, worshipers used a unique form of offering: they would place stone cubes, often wreathes, known as γυλλοι (gylloi) as protective offerings at the door or gateway.[13][89] There was an area sacred to Hecate in the precincts of the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus, where the priests, megabyzi, officiated.[90] This sanctuary was called Hecatesion (Shrine of Hecate).[91] Hecate was also worshipped in the Temple of Athena in Titane: "In Titane there is also a sanctuary of Athena, into which they bring up the image of Koronis [mother of Asklepios] ... The sanctuary is built upon a hill, at the bottom of which is an Altar of the Winds, and on it the priest sacrifices to the winds one night in every year. He also performs other secret rites [of Hecate] at four pits, taming the fierceness of the blasts [of the winds], and he is said to chant as well the charms of Medea."[92] She was most commonly worshipped in nature, where she had many natural sanctuaries. An important sanctuary of Hecate was a holy cave on the island of Samothrake called Zerynthos:

In Samothrake there were certain initiation-rites, which they supposed efficacious as a charm against certain dangers. In that place were also the mysteries of the Korybantes [Kabeiroi] and those of Hekate and the Zerinthian cave, where they sacrificed dogs. The initiates supposed that these things save [them] from terrors and from storms.[93]

Cult at Lagina

Hecate's most important sanctuary was Lagina, a theocratic city-state in which the goddess was served by eunuchs.[6]

The temple is mentioned by Strabo:

Stratonikeia [in Karia, Asia Minor] is a settlement of Makedonians ... There are two temples in the country of the Stratonikeians, of which the most famous, that of Hecate, is at Lagina; and it draws great festal assemblies every year.[94]

Lagina, where the famous temple of Hecate drew great festal assemblies every year, lay close to the originally Macedonian colony of Stratonikeia, where she was the city's patron.[95] In Thrace she played a role similar to that of lesser-Hermes, namely a ruler of liminal regions, particularly gates, and the wilderness.

Cult at Byzantium

 
Juniper wood Hekataion. Ptolemaic Egypt, c. 304–30 BCE.

Hecate was greatly worshipped in Byzantium. She was said to have saved the city from Philip II of Macedon, warning the citizens of a night time attack by a light in the sky, for which she was known as Hecate Lampadephoros. The tale is preserved in the Suda.[e]

As Hecate Phosphorus (the 'star' Venus) she is said to have lit the sky during the Siege of Philip II in 340 BCE, revealing the attack to its inhabitants. The Byzantines dedicated a statue to her as the "lamp carrier".[98] According to Hesychius of Miletus there was once a statue of Hecate at the site of the Hippodrome in Constantinople.[99]

Hecate's island

Hecate's island (Ἑκάτης νήσου) also called Psamite (Ψαμίτη), was an islet in the vicinity of Delos. It was called Psamite, because Hecate was honoured with a cake, which was called psamiton (ψάμιτον).[100] The island is the modern Megalos (Great) Reumatiaris.[101]

Deipnon

The Athenian Greeks honoured Hecate during the Deipnon. In Greek, deipnon means the evening meal, usually the largest meal of the day. Hecate's Deipnon is, at its most basic, a meal served to Hecate and the restless dead once a lunar month[102] during the New Moon. The Deipnon is always followed the next day by the Noumenia,[103] when the first sliver of the sunlit Moon is visible, and then the Agathos Daimon the day after that.

The main purpose of the Deipnon was to honour Hecate and to placate the souls in her wake who "longed for vengeance."[104] A secondary purpose was to purify the household and to atone for bad deeds a household member may have committed that offended Hecate, causing her to withhold her favour from them. The Deipnon consists of three main parts: 1) the meal that was set out at a crossroads, usually in a shrine outside the entryway to the home[105] 2) an expiation sacrifice,[106] and 3) purification of the household.[107]

Epithets

 
Sketch of a stone Hecataion. Richard Cosway, British Museum.

Hecate was known by a number of epithets:

  • Apotropaia (Ἀποτρόπαια), the one that turns away/protects.[108]
  • Brimo (Βριμώ), angry/terrifying. [109]
  • Chthonia (Χθωνία), of the earth/underworld.[110]
  • Enodia (Ἐννοδία), she on the way/road.[111]
  • Klêidouchos (Κλειδοῦχος), holding the keys.[112]
  • Kourotrophos (Κουροτρόφος), nurse of children.[112]
  • Krokopeplos (Κροκόπεπλος), saffron cloaked.[113]
  • Melinoe (Μηλινόη).[114]
  • Phosphoros, Lampadephoros (Φωσφόρος, Λαμπαδηφόρος), bringing or bearing light.[112]
  • Propolos (Πρόπολος), who serves/attends.[112]
  • Propulaia/Propylaia (Προπύλαια), before the gate.[115]
  • Soteria (Σωτηρία), savior.[9]
  • Trimorphe (Τρίμορφη), three-formed.[112]
  • Triodia/Trioditis (Τριοδία, Τριοδίτης), who frequents crossroads.[112]

Historical and literary sources

Archaic period

 
Hecate, Greek goddess of the crossroads; drawing by Stéphane Mallarmé in Les Dieux Antiques, nouvelle mythologie illustrée in Paris, 1880

Hecate has been characterized as a pre-Olympian chthonic goddess. The first literature mentioning Hecate is the Theogony (c. 700 BCE) by Hesiod:

And [Asteria] conceived and bore Hecate whom Zeus the son of Cronos honored above all. He gave her splendid gifts, to have a share of the earth and the unfruitful sea. She received honor also in starry heaven, and is honored exceedingly by the deathless gods. For to this day, whenever any one of men on earth offers rich sacrifices and prays for favor according to custom, he calls upon Hecate. Great honor comes full easily to him whose prayers the goddess receives favorably, and she bestows wealth upon him; for the power surely is with her. For as many as were born of Earth and Ocean amongst all these she has her due portion. The son of Cronos did her no wrong nor took anything away of all that was her portion among the former Titan gods: but she holds, as the division was at the first from the beginning, privilege both in earth, and in heaven, and in sea.[116]

According to Hesiod, she held sway over many things:

Whom she will she greatly aids and advances: she sits by worshipful kings in judgement, and in the assembly whom she will is distinguished among the people. And when men arm themselves for the battle that destroys men, then the goddess is at hand to give victory and grant glory readily to whom she will. Good is she also when men contend at the games, for there too the goddess is with them and profits them: and he who by might and strength gets the victory wins the rich prize easily with joy, and brings glory to his parents. And she is good to stand by horsemen, whom she will: and to those whose business is in the grey discomfortable sea, and who pray to Hecate and the loud-crashing Earth-Shaker, easily the glorious goddess gives great catch, and easily she takes it away as soon as seen, if so she will. She is good in the byre with Hermes to increase the stock. The droves of kine and wide herds of goats and flocks of fleecy sheep, if she will, she increases from a few, or makes many to be less. So, then, albeit her mother's only child, she is honored amongst all the deathless gods. And the son of Cronos made her a nurse of the young who after that day saw with their eyes the light of all-seeing Dawn. So from the beginning she is a nurse of the young, and these are her honours.[117]

 
The coins of Agathocles of Bactria (ruled 190–180 BCE), show Zeus holding Hecate in his hand.[118]

Hesiod's inclusion and praise of Hecate in the Theogony has been troublesome for scholars, in that he seems to hold her in high regard, while the testimony of other writers, and surviving evidence, suggests that this may have been the exception. One theory is that Hesiod's original village had a substantial Hecate following and that his inclusion of her in the Theogony was a way of adding to her prestige by spreading word of her among his readers.[119] Another theory is that Hecate was mainly a household god and humble household worship could have been more pervasive and yet not mentioned as much as temple worship.[120] In Athens, Hecate, along with Zeus, Hermes, Athena, Hestia, and Apollo, were very important in daily life as they were the main gods of the household.[7] However, it is clear that the special position given to Hecate by Zeus is upheld throughout her history by depictions found on coins of Hecate on the hand of Zeus[121] as highlighted in more recent research presented by d'Este and Rankine.[122]

In the Homeric Hymn to Demeter (composed c. 600 BCE), Hecate is called "tender-hearted", an epithet perhaps intended to emphasize her concern with the disappearance of Persephone, when she assisted Demeter with her search for Persephone following her abduction by Hades, suggesting that Demeter should speak to the god of the Sun, Helios. Subsequently, Hecate became Persephone's companion on her yearly journey to and from the realms of Hades, serving as a psychopomp. Because of this association, Hecate was one of the chief goddesses of the Eleusinian Mysteries, alongside Demeter and Persephone,[1] and there was a temple dedicated to her near the main sanctuary at Eleusis.[28]

Classical period

Variations in interpretations of Hecate's roles can be traced in classical Athens. In two fragments of Aeschylus she appears as a great goddess. In Sophocles and Euripides she is characterized as the mistress of witchcraft and the Keres.[citation needed]

One surviving group of stories[clarification needed] suggests how Hecate might have come to be incorporated into the Greek pantheon without affecting the privileged position of Artemis. Here, Hecate is a mortal priestess often associated with Iphigenia. She scorns and insults Artemis, who in retribution eventually brings about the mortal's suicide.[119]

In the Argonautica, a 3rd-century BCE Alexandrian epic based on early material,[123] Jason placates Hecate in a ritual prescribed by Medea, her priestess: bathed at midnight in a stream of flowing water, and dressed in dark robes, Jason is to dig a round pit and over it cut the throat of a ewe, sacrificing it and then burning it whole on a pyre next to the pit as a holocaust. He is told to sweeten the offering with a libation of honey, then to retreat from the site without looking back, even if he hears the sound of footsteps or barking dogs.[124] All these elements betoken the rites owed to a chthonic deity.[citation needed]

Late Antiquity

 
Hecate battles Clytius next to Artemis, Gigantomachy frieze, Pergamon Altar, Pergamon Museum, Berlin.

During the Gigantomachy, Hecate fought by the side of the Olympian gods, and slew the giant Clytius using her torches.[125] Hecate is depicted fighting Clytius in the east frieze of the Gigantomachy, in the Pergamon Altar next to Artemis;[126] she appears with a different weapon in each of her three right hands, a torch, a sword and a lance.[3] Her fight with the Giant appears in a number of ancient vase paintings and other artwork.[33][127]

Hecate is the primary feminine figure in the Chaldean Oracles (2nd–3rd century CE),[128] where she is associated in fragment 194 with a strophalos (usually translated as a spinning top, or wheel, used in magic) "Labour thou around the Strophalos of Hecate."[129] This appears to refer to a variant of the device mentioned by Psellus.[130]

In Hellenistic syncretism, Hecate also became closely associated with Isis. Lucius Apuleius in The Golden Ass (2nd century) equates Juno, Bellona, Hecate and Isis:

Some call me Juno, others Bellona of the Battles, and still others Hecate. Principally the Ethiopians which dwell in the Orient, and the Egyptians which are excellent in all kind of ancient doctrine, and by their proper ceremonies accustomed to worship me, do call me Queen Isis.[131]

In the syncretism during Late Antiquity of Hellenistic and late Babylonian ("Chaldean") elements, Hecate was identified with Ereshkigal, the underworld counterpart of Inanna in the Babylonian cosmography. In the Michigan magical papyrus (inv. 7), dated to the late 3rd or early 4th century CE, Hecate Erschigal is invoked against fear of punishment in the afterlife.[132]

Hecate is also referenced in the Gnostic text Pistis Sophia.[133]

Parents, consorts and children

In the earliest written source mentioning Hecate, Hesiod emphasized that she was an only child, the daughter of Perses and Asteria, the sister of Leto (the mother of Artemis and Apollo). Grandmother of the three cousins was Phoebe[117] the ancient Titan goddess whose name was often used for the moon goddess.[134][135] In various later accounts, Hecate was given different parents.[136] She was said to be the daughter of Zeus by either Asteria, according to Musaeus,[137] Hera, thus identified with Angelos,[138] or Pheraea, daughter of Aeolus;[139] the daughter of Aristaeus the son of Paion, according to Pherecydes;[140] the daughter of Nyx, according to Bacchylides;[137] the daughter of Perses, the son of Helios, by an unknown mother, according to Diodorus Siculus;[76] while in Orphic literature, she was said to be the daughter of Demeter[141] or Leto[142] or even Tartarus.[143]

As a virgin goddess, she remained unmarried and had no regular consort, though some traditions named her as the mother of Scylla[144] through either Phorbas[145][f] or Phorcys.[146]

Sometimes she is also stated to be the mother (by Aeëtes[76]) of the goddess Circe and the sorceress Medea,[147] who in later accounts was herself associated with magic while initially just being a herbalist goddess, similar to how Hecate's association with Underworld and Mysteries had her later converted into a deity of witchcraft.

Once, Hermes chased Hecate (or Persephone) with the aim to rape her; but the goddess snored or roared in anger, frightening him off so that he desisted, hence her earning the name "Brimo" ("angry").[148]

Genealogy

Legacy

Strmiska (2005) claimed that Hecate, conflated with the figure of Diana, appears in late antiquity and in the Early Middle Ages as part of an "emerging legend complex" known as "The Society of Diana"[154] associated with gatherings of women, the Moon, and witchcraft that eventually became established "in the area of Northern Italy, southern Germany, and the western Balkans."[155] This theory of the Roman origins of many European folk traditions related to Diana or Hecate was explicitly advanced at least as early as 1807[156] and is reflected[dubious ] in etymological claims by early modern lexicographers from the 17th to the 19th century, connecting hag, hexe "witch" to the name of Hecate.[157] Such derivations are today proposed only by a minority[158][159] A medieval commentator has suggested a link connecting the word "jinx" with Hecate: "The Byzantine polymath Michael Psellus [...] speaks of a bullroarer, consisting of a golden sphere, decorated throughout with symbols and whirled on an oxhide thong. He adds that such an instrument is called a iunx (hence "jinx"), but as for the significance says only that it is ineffable and that the ritual is sacred to Hecate."[160]

Shakespeare mentions Hecate both before the end of the 16th century (A Midsummer Night's Dream, 1594–1596), and just after, in Macbeth (1605): specifically, in the title character's "dagger" soliloquy: "Witchcraft celebrates pale Hecate's offerings..."[161] Shakespeare mentions Hecate also in King Lear. While disclaiming all his paternal care for Cordelia, Lear says, "The mysteries of Hecate and the night, By all the operations of the orbs From whom we do exist and cease to be, Here I disclaim all my paternal care" (The Arden Shakespeare, King Lear, Page no.165)

Modern reception

 
Hekate, pastel on paper by Maximilian Pirner, 1901.

In 1929, Lewis Brown, an expert on religious cults, connected the 1920s Blackburn Cult (also known as, "The Cult of the Great Eleven,") with Hecate worship rituals. He noted that the cult regularly practiced dog sacrifice and had secretly buried the body of one of its "queens" with seven dogs.[162] Researcher Samuel Fort noted additional parallels, to include the cult's focus on mystic and typically nocturnal rites, its female dominated membership, the sacrifice of other animals (to include horses and mules), a focus on the mystical properties of roads and portals, and an emphasis on death, healing, and resurrection.[163]

As a "goddess of witchcraft", Hecate has been incorporated in various systems of modern witchcraft, Wicca, and neopaganism,[164] in some cases associated with the Wild Hunt of Germanic tradition,[165] in others as part of a reconstruction of specifically Greek polytheism, in English also known as "Hellenismos".[166] In Wicca, Hecate has in some cases become identified with the "crone" aspect of the "Triple Goddess".[167]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Pronounced /ˈhɛkəti/ HEK-ə-tee; older form Hecat /ˈhɛkɪt/ HEK-it; Ancient Greek: Ἑκάτη, romanizedHekátē, Attic Greek pronunciation: [hekátɛː], Koine Greek pronunciation: [heˈkati]; Doric Greek: Ἑκάτᾱ, romanized: Hekátā, pronounced [hekátaː]; Latin: Hecatē [ˈhɛkateː] or Hecata [ˈhɛkata].
  2. ^ Berg 1974, p. 128: Berg comments on Hecate's endorsement of Roman hegemony in her representation on the pediment at Lagina solemnising a pact between a warrior (Rome) and an amazon (Asia).
  3. ^ Berg's argument for a Greek origin rests on three main points:
    (1) Almost all archaeological and literary evidence for her cult comes from the Greek mainland, and especially from Attica—all of which dates earlier than the 2nd century BCE.
    (2) In Asia Minor only one monument can be associated with Hecate prior to the 2nd century BCE.
    (3) The supposed connection between Hecate and attested "Carian theophoric names" is not convincing, and instead suggests an aspect of the process of her Hellenization.
    He concludes, "Arguments for Hecate's "Anatolian" origin are not in accord with evidence."[20]
  4. ^ This statue is in the British Museum, inventory number 816.
  5. ^ "In 340 B.C., however, the Byzantines, with the aid of the Athenians, withstood a siege successfully, an occurrence the more remarkable as they were attacked by the greatest general of the age, Philip of Macedon. In the course of this beleaguerment, it is related, on a certain wet and moonless night the enemy attempted a surprise, but were foiled by reason of a bright light which, appearing suddenly in the heavens, startled all the dogs in the town and thus roused the garrison to a sense of their danger. To commemorate this timely phenomenon, which was attributed to Hecate, they erected a public statue to that goddess [...]".[96]
    "If any goddess had a connection with the walls in Constantinople, it was Hecate. Hecate had a cult in Byzantium from the time of its founding. Like Byzas in one legend, she had her origins in Thrace. Since Hecate was the guardian of "liminal places", in Byzantium, small temples in her honor were placed close to the gates of the city. Hecate's importance to Byzantium was above all as deity of protection. When Philip of Macedon was about to attack the city, according to the legend, she alerted the townspeople with her ever-present torches, and with her pack of dogs, which served as her constant companions. Her mythic qualities thenceforth forever entered the fabric of Byzantine history."[97]
    "A statue known as the 'Lampadephoros' was erected on the hill above the Bosphorous to commemorate Hecate's defensive aid."[97]
    This story apparently survived in the works Hesychius of Miletus, who in all probability lived in the time of Justinian. His works survive only in fragments preserved in Photius and the Suda, a Byzantine lexicon of the 10th century AD. The tale is also related by Stephanus of Byzantium and Eustathius.
  6. ^ The ancient text is corrupted; an alternative correction of the name into 'Phoebus' (that is, Apollo) has been also suggested. It could also be that the fragment reads 'Phorcys', agreeing with Acusilaus' version.[146]

References

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  79. ^ Fowler, p. 16, vol. II
  80. ^ Mooney, p. 58
  81. ^ Aune, David Edward (2006). Apocalypticism, Prophecy and Magic in Early Christianity: Collected Essays. Mohr Siebeck. pp. 356ff. ISBN 3161490207.
  82. ^ Wycherley, R. (1970). Minor Shrines in Ancient Athens. Phoenix, 24(4), 283–295. doi:10.2307/1087735
  83. ^ "CULT OF HEKATE : Ancient Greek religion". Theoi.com. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
  84. ^ As Sterckx (2002) observes, "The use of dog sacrifices at the gates and doors of the living and the dead as well as its use in travel sacrifices suggest that dogs were perceived as daemonic animals operating in the liminal or transitory realm between the domestic and the unknown, danger-stricken outside world". Roel Sterckx, The Animal and The Daemon in Early China, State University of New York Press, 2002, pp 232–233. Sterckx explicitly recognizes the similarities between these ancient Chinese views of dogs and those current in Greek and Roman antiquity, and goes on to note "Dog sacrifice was also a common practice among the Greeks where the dog figured prominently as a guardian of the underworld." (Footnote 113, p318)
  85. ^ Simoons, Frederick J. (1994). Eat Not This Flesh: Food Avoidances from Prehistory to the Present. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 233–234. ISBN 978-0299142544.
  86. ^ Redazione ANSA. "Oldest ever trace of Hekate cult found". 16 January 2018.
  87. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 2. 22. 7
  88. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 2.30.2 (trans. Jones)
  89. ^ J.-M. Carbon, S. Peels and V. Pirenne-Delforge, Collection of Greek Ritual Norms (CGRN), Liège 2015– (http://cgrn.ulg.ac.be, consulted in [2019]).
  90. ^ Strabo, Geography, 14.1.23
  91. ^ Strabo, Geography 14. 1. 23 (trans. Jones)
  92. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 2.12.1
  93. ^ Suidas s.v. All' ei tis humôn en Samothraikei memuemenos esti
  94. ^ Strabo, Geography 14.2.15 (trans. Jones)
  95. ^ Strabo, Geography 14.2.25; Kraus 1960.
  96. ^ Holmes, William Gordon (2003). The Age of Justinian and Theodora. pp. 5–6.
  97. ^ a b Limberis, Vasiliki (1994). Divine Heiress. Routledge. pp. 126–127.
  98. ^ Russell, Thomas James (2017). Byzantium and the Bosporus. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. p. 184. ISBN 9780198790525.
  99. ^ Patria of Constantinople
  100. ^ Suda, epsilon, 365
  101. ^ Travels in Greece and Turkey: Undertaken by Order of Louis XVI, and with the Authority of the Ottoman Court, Volume 2, 1801, p.309
  102. ^ The play Plutus by Aristophanes (388 BCE), line 594 any translation will do or Benjamin Bickley Rogers is fine
  103. ^ Harvard Theological Review, Vol. 65, No.2, 1972 pages 291–297
  104. ^ These are the biaiothanatoi, aoroi and ataphoi (cf. Rohde, i. 264 f., and notes, 275–277, ii. 362, and note, 411–413, 424–425), whose enthumion, the quasi-technical word designating their longing for vengeance, was much dreaded. See Heckenbach, p. 2776 and references.
  105. ^ Antiphanes, in Athenaeus, 313 B (2. 39 K), and 358 F; Melanthius, in Athenaeus, 325 B. Plato, Com. (i. 647. 19 K), Apollodorus, Melanthius, Hegesander, Chariclides (iii. 394 K), Antiphanes, in Athenaeus, 358 F; Aristophanes, Plutus, 596.
  106. ^ Hekate's Suppers, by K. F. Smith. Chapter in the book The Goddess Hekate: Studies in Ancient Pagan and Christian Philosophy edited by Stephen Ronan. Pages 57 to 64
  107. ^ Roscher, 1889; Heckenbach, 2781; Rohde, ii. 79, n. 1. also Ammonius (p. 79, Valckenaer)
  108. ^ Alberta Mildred Franklin, The Lupercalia, Columbia University, 1921, p. 68.
  109. ^ Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica 3.1194
  110. ^ Jon D. Mikalson, Athenian Popular Religion, UNC Press, 1987, p. 76.
  111. ^ Sarah Iles Johnston, Restless Dead: Encounters Between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece, University of California Press, 1999, pp. 208–209.
  112. ^ a b c d e f Liddell-Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon.
  113. ^ Adam Forrest, The Orphic Hymn to Hekate, Hermetic Fellowship, 1992.
  114. ^ Ivana Petrovic, Von den Toren des Hades zu den Hallen des Olymp (Brill, 2007), p. 94; W. Schmid and O. Stählin, Geschichte der griechischen Literatur (C.H. Beck, 1924, 1981), vol. 2, pt. 2, p. 982; W.H. Roscher, Ausführliches Lexikon der griechischen und römischen Mythologie (Leipzig: Teubner, 1890–94), vol. 2, pt. 2, p. 16.
  115. ^ Sarah Iles Johnston, Restless Dead: Encounters Between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece, University of California Press, 1999, p. 207.
  116. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 411–425.
  117. ^ a b Hesiod, Theogony 429–452.
  118. ^ Foreign Influence on Ancient India, Krishna Chandra Sagar, Northern Book Centre, 1992 [1]
  119. ^ a b Johnston, Sarah Iles, (1991). Restless Dead: Encounters Between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece. ISBN 0-520-21707-1
  120. ^ Household and Family Religion in Antiquity by John Bodel and Saul M. Olyan, page 221, published by John Wiley & Sons, 2009
  121. ^ "Baktria, Kings, Agathokles, ancient coins index with thumbnails". WildWinds.com. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
  122. ^ d'Este & Rankine, Hekate Liminal Rites, Avalonia, 2009
  123. ^ "The legend of the Argonauts is among the earliest known to the Greeks," observes Peter Green, The Argonautika, 2007, Introduction, p. 21.
  124. ^ Apollonios Rhodios (tr. Peter Green), The Argonautika, University of California Press, 2007, p140
  125. ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Library 1.6.2
  126. ^ The J. Paul Getty Museum, p. 101
  127. ^ A collection of vase-paintings of Hecate fighting Clytius can be seen here.
  128. ^ The Chaldean Oracles is a collection of literature that date from somewhere between the 2nd century and the late 3rd century, the recording of which is traditionally attributed to Julian the Chaldaean or his son, Julian the Theurgist. The material seems to have provided background and explanation related to the meaning of these pronouncements, and appear to have been related to the practice of theurgy, pagan magic that later became closely associated with Neoplatonism, seeHornblower, Simon; Spawforth, Antony, eds. (1996). The Oxford Classical Dictionary (Third ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. p. 316. ISBN 0-19-866172-X.
  129. ^ English translation used here from: William Wynn Wescott (tr.), The Chaldean Oracles of Zoroaster, 1895.
  130. ^ "A top of Hekate is a golden sphere enclosing a lapis lazuli in its middle that is twisted through a cow-hide leather thong and having engraved letters all over it. [Diviners] spin this sphere and make invocations. Such things they call charms, whether it is the matter of a spherical object, or a triangular one, or some other shape. While spinning them, they call out unintelligible or beast-like sounds, laughing and flailing at the air. [Hekate] teaches the taketes to operate, that is the movement of the top, as if it had an ineffable power. It is called the top of Hekate because it is dedicated to her. In her right hand she held the source of the virtues. But it is all nonsense." As quoted in Frank R. Trombley, Hellenic Religion and Christianization, C. 370–529, Brill, 1993, p. 319.
  131. ^ Apuleius, The Golden Ass 11.47.
  132. ^ Hans Dieter Betz, "Fragments from a Catabasis Ritual in a Greek Magical Papyrus", History of Religions 19,4 (May 1980):287–295). The goddess appears as Hecate Erschigal only in the heading: in the spell itself only Erschigal is called upon with protective magical words and gestures.
  133. ^ George R. S. Mead (1963). "140". Pistis Sophia. Jazzybee Verlag. ISBN 9783849687090. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  134. ^ Boyle, p. 147
  135. ^ Gordon MacDonald Kirkwood, A Short Guide to Classical Mythology, p. 88
  136. ^ Gantz, p. 26.
  137. ^ a b Scholia on Apollonius Rhodius' Argonautica 3.467
  138. ^ Scholia on Theocritus 2.12
  139. ^ Scholia on Theocritus 2.36; Tzetzes ad Lycophron Alexandra 1175
  140. ^ Pherecydes, FHG 1 frag. 10
  141. ^ Scholiast on Apollonius of Rhodes, Argonautica 3.467 = Pherecydes, fr. 44 Fowler = FGrHist 3 fr. 44 = Vorsokr. 2 B 16 = Bacchylides, fr. 1 B Snell-Maehler = Orphic fr. 41 Kern.
  142. ^ Proclus, Commentary on Plato's Cratylus 406 b (p. 106, 25 Pasqu.) [= Orphic fr. 188 Kern] [= OF 317 Bernabé]; West 1983, pp. 266, 267. The fragment is as follows: "Straightaway divine Hecate, the daughter of lovely-haired Leto, approached Olympus, leaving behind the limbs of the child."
  143. ^ Orphic Argonautica 977
  144. ^ Joseph Eddy Fontenrose, Python: A Study of Delphic Myth and Its Origins, Biblo & Tannen Publishers, 1974, p. 96.
  145. ^ Hesiod fr. 200 Most [= fr. 262 MW] (Most, pp. 310, 311).
  146. ^ a b Acusilaus. fr. 42 Fowler (Fowler, p. 32).
  147. ^ Grimal; Smith.
  148. ^ Tzetzes ad Lycophron 1176, 1211; Heslin, p. 39
  149. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 132–138, 337–411, 453–520, 901–906, 915–920; Caldwell, pp. 8–11, tables 11–14.
  150. ^ Although usually the daughter of Hyperion and Theia, as in Hesiod, Theogony 371–374, in the Homeric Hymn to Hermes (4), 99–100, Selene is instead made the daughter of Pallas the son of Megamedes.
  151. ^ According to Hesiod, Theogony 507–511, Clymene, one of the Oceanids, the daughters of Oceanus and Tethys, at Hesiod, Theogony 351, was the mother by Iapetus of Atlas, Menoetius, Prometheus, and Epimetheus, while according to Apollodorus, 1.2.3, another Oceanid, Asia was their mother by Iapetus.
  152. ^ According to Plato, Critias, 113d–114a, Atlas was the son of Poseidon and the mortal Cleito.
  153. ^ In Aeschylus, Prometheus Bound 18, 211, 873 (Sommerstein, pp. 444, 445 n. 2, 446, 447 n. 24, 538, 539 n. 113) Prometheus is made to be the son of Themis.
  154. ^ Magliocco, Sabina. (2009). Aradia in Sardinia: The Archaeology of a Folk Character. Pp. 40–60 in Ten Years of Triumph of the Moon. Hidden Publishing.
  155. ^ Michael Strmiska, Modern paganism in world cultures, ABC-CLIO, 2005, p. 68.
  156. ^ Francis Douce, Illustrations of Shakspeare, and of Ancient Manners, 1807, p. 235-243.
  157. ^ John Minsheu and William Somner (17th century), Edward Lye of Oxford (1694–1767), Johann Georg Wachter, Glossarium Germanicum (1737), Walter Whiter, Etymologicon Universale (1822)
  158. ^ e.g. Gerald Milnes, Signs, Cures, & Witchery, Univ. of Tennessee Press, 2007, p. 116; Samuel X. Radbill, "The Role of Animals in Infant Feeding", in American Folk Medicine: A Symposium Ed. Wayland D. Hand. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1976.
  159. ^ "Many have been caught by the obvious resemblance of the Gr. Hecate, but the letters agree to closely, contrary to the laws of change, and the Mid. Ages would surely have had an unaspirated Ecate handed down to them; no Ecate or Hecate appears in the M. Lat. or Romance writings in the sense of witch, and how should the word have spread through all German lands?" Jacob Grimm, Teutonic Mythology, 1835, (English translation 1900). The actual etymology of hag is Germanic and unrelated to the name of Hecate. See e.g. Mallory, J.P, Adams, D.Q. The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World. Oxford University Press, 2006. p. 223
  160. ^ Mark Edwards, Neoplatonic saints: the Lives of Plotinus and Proclus by their Students, Liverpool University Press, 2000, p. 100; Writing at some length about the ancient greek 'iunx' Marcel Detienne never mentions any connection to Hecate, see Detienne M, The Gardens of Adonis, Princeton UP, 1994, pp.83–9..
  161. ^ "No Fear Shakespeare: Macbeth: Act 2, Scene 1, Page 2".
  162. ^ Weird Rituals Laid to Primitive Minds, Los Angeles Examiner, 14 October 1929.
  163. ^ Cult of the Great Eleven, Samuel Fort, 2014, 320 pages. ASIN B00OALI9O4
  164. ^ e.g.Sabina Magliocco, Witching Culture: Folklore and Neopaganism in America, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004, p79
  165. ^ James R. Lewis, Witchcraft Today: An Encyclopedia of Wiccan and Neopagan Traditions, 1999, pp 303–304; For a 'Moon magick' reference to Hecate as "Lady of the Wild Hunt and witchcraft" see: D. J. Conway, Moon Magick: Myth & Magic, Crafts & Recipes, Rituals & Spells, Llewellyn, 1995, p157
  166. ^ Hellenion (USA) "Hellenion".. "Hekate's Deipnon – Temenos".
  167. ^ E.g. Wilshire, Donna (1994). Virgin mother crone: myths and mysteries of the triple goddess. Rochester, VT: Inner Traditions International. p. 213. ISBN 0-89281-494-2..

Sources

Primary sources

  • Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica, with an English translation by R. C. Seaton. Loeb Classical Library 1. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1912.
  • Hesiod, Theogony, in The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White, Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Orphic Argonautica, translated by Jason Colavito, derived from his text at argonauts-book.com, 2011.
  • Ovid, Metamorphoses, translated by Brookes More (1859-1942), from the Cornhill edition of 1922.
  • Pausanias, Pausanias Description of Greece with an English Translation by W.H.S. Jones, Litt.D., and H.A. Ormerod, M.A., in 4 Volumes. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1918. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Strabo, The Geography of Strabo. Edition by H.L. Jones. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press; London: William Heinemann, Ltd. 1924. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.

Secondary sources

  • Athanassakis, Apostolos N., and Benjamin M. Wolkow, The Orphic Hymns, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013. ISBN 978-1-4214-0882-8. Google Books.
  • Berg, William, "Hecate: Greek or "Anatolian"?", Numen 21.2 (August 1974:128-40)
  • Burkert, Walter, 1985. Greek Religion (Cambridge: Harvard University Press) Published in the UK as Greek Religion: Archaic and Classical, 1987. (Oxford: Blackwell) ISBN 0-631-15624-0.
  • de’Este, Sorita. Circle for Hekate: volume 1. 1910191078
  • Farnell, Lewis Richard, (1896). "Hekate: Representations in Art", The Cults of the Greek States. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
  • Fowler, R. L. (2000), Early Greek Mythography: Volume 1: Text and Introduction, Oxford University Press, 2000. ISBN 978-0198147404.
  • Gantz, Timothy, Early Greek Myth: A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996, Two volumes: ISBN 978-0-8018-5360-9 (Vol. 1), ISBN 978-0-8018-5362-3 (Vol. 2).
  • Green, C. M. C., Roman Religion and the Cult of Diana at Aricia, Cambridge University Press, University of Iowa, 2007, ISBN 978-0-521-85158-9. Online text available at Google books.
  • Johnston, Sarah Iles, (1990). Hekate Soteira: A Study of Hekate's Role in the Chaldean Oracles and Related Literature.
  • Johnston, Sarah Iles, (1991). Restless Dead: Encounters Between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece. ISBN 0-520-21707-1
  • Kerenyi, Karl. The Gods of the Greeks. 1951.
  • Kern, Otto. Orphicorum Fragmenta, Berlin, 1922. Internet Archive
  • Mallarmé, Stéphane, (1880). Les Dieux Antiques, nouvelle mythologie illustrée.
  • Merriam-Webster (1995). Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of Literature. Inc, Merriam-Webster. ISBN 9780877790426..
  • Mooney, Carol M., Hekate: Her Role and Character in Greek Literature from before the Fifth Century B.C., a thesis submitted to the faculty of graduate studies, McMaster University, 1971.
  • Rabinovich, Yakov. The Rotting Goddess. 1990.
  • Ruickbie, Leo. Witchcraft Out of the Shadows: A Complete History. Robert Hale, 2004.
  • Seyffert, Oskar, A Dictionary of Classical Antiquities, Mythology, Religion, Literature and Art, from the German of Dr. Oskar Seyffert, S. Sonnenschein, 1901.
  • The Classical Review, volume IX, 1985, Library of Illinois.
  • Von Rudloff, Robert. Hekate in Ancient Greek Religion. Horned Owl Publishing (July 1999)

External links

  • Encyclopædia Britannica 1911: "Hecate"
  • by Yakov Rabinovich, complete book included in the anthology "Junkyard of the Classics" published under the pseudonym Ellipsis Marx.
  • Theoi Project, Hecate Classical literary sources and art
  • Hekate in Greek esotericism 10 January 2003 at the Wayback Machine: Ptolemaic and Gnostic transformations of Hecate
  • Cast of the Crannon statue, at the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
  • Hecate from Mythopedia
  • Ancient texts on Hecate, from Tiresias: The Ancient Mediterranean Religions Source Database.

hecate, other, uses, disambiguation, hekate, goddess, ancient, greek, religion, mythology, most, often, shown, holding, pair, torches, snakes, accompanied, dogs, later, periods, depicted, three, formed, triple, bodied, variously, associated, with, crossroads, . For other uses see Hecate disambiguation Hecate or Hekate a is a goddess in ancient Greek religion and mythology most often shown holding a pair of torches a key snakes or accompanied by dogs 1 and in later periods depicted as three formed or triple bodied She is variously associated with crossroads entrance ways night light magic witchcraft the Moon knowledge of herbs and poisonous plants graves ghosts necromancy and sorcery 2 3 4 Her earliest appearance in literature was in Hesiod s Theogony in the 8th century BCE 5 as a goddess of great honour with domains in sky earth and sea Her place of origin is debated by scholars but she had popular followings amongst the witches of Thessaly 6 and an important sanctuary among the Carian Greeks of Asia Minor in Lagina 6 Her oldest known representation was found in Selinunte in Sicily HecateGoddess of boundaries crossroads witchcraft the Moon necromancy and ghostsThe Hecate Chiaramonti a Roman sculpture of triple bodied Hecate after a Hellenistic original Museo Chiaramonti Vatican Museums AbodeUnderworldAnimalsDog polecatSymbolPaired torches dogs serpents keys daggers and Hecate s wheel is known as a stropholos ParentsPerses and AsteriaOffspringAegialeus Circe Empusa Medea ScyllaEquivalentsMesopotamian equivalentEreshkigalSlavic equivalentMarzannaRoman equivalentTrivia DianaHecate was one of several deities worshipped in ancient Athens as a protector of the oikos household alongside Zeus Hestia Hermes and Apollo 7 In the post Christian writings of the Chaldean Oracles 2nd 3rd century CE she was also regarded with some rulership over earth sea and sky as well as a more universal role as Savior Soteira Mother of Angels and the Cosmic World Soul 8 9 Regarding the nature of her cult it has been remarked she is more at home on the fringes than in the centre of Greek polytheism Intrinsically ambivalent and polymorphous she straddles conventional boundaries and eludes definition 10 The Romans knew her by the epithet of Trivia an epithet she shares with Diana Artemis each in their roles as protector of travel and of the crossroads trivia three ways 11 Contents 1 Name and origin 1 1 Greek origin 1 2 Egyptian origin 1 3 Anatolian origin 1 4 Older English pronunciation 2 Iconography 2 1 Sacred animals 2 2 Sacred plants 3 Functions 3 1 As a goddess of boundaries 3 2 As a goddess of the underworld 3 3 As a goddess of witchcraft 3 4 As a goddess of the moon 4 Cult 4 1 History 4 2 Sanctuaries 4 2 1 Cult at Lagina 4 2 2 Cult at Byzantium 4 2 3 Hecate s island 4 3 Deipnon 4 4 Epithets 5 Historical and literary sources 5 1 Archaic period 5 2 Classical period 5 3 Late Antiquity 5 4 Parents consorts and children 6 Genealogy 7 Legacy 7 1 Modern reception 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Sources 11 1 Primary sources 11 2 Secondary sources 12 External linksName and origin EditThe origin of the name Hecate Ἑkath Hekate and the original country of her worship are both unknown though several theories have been proposed Greek origin Edit Whether or not Hecate s worship originated in Greece some scholars have suggested that the name derives from a Greek root and several potential source words have been identified For example ἑkwn willing thus she who works her will or similar may be related to the name Hecate 12 However no sources suggested list will or willingness as a major attribute of Hecate which makes this possibility unlikely 13 Another Greek word suggested as the origin of the name Hecate is Ἑkatos Hekatos an obscure epithet of Apollo 10 interpreted as the far reaching one or the far darter 14 This has been suggested in comparison with the attributes of the goddess Artemis strongly associated with Apollo and frequently equated with Hecate in the classical world Supporters of this etymology suggest that Hecate was originally considered an aspect of Artemis prior to the latter s adoption into the Olympian pantheon Artemis would have at that point become more strongly associated with purity and maidenhood on the one hand while her originally darker attributes like her association with magic the souls of the dead and the night would have continued to be worshipped separately under her title Hecate 15 Though often considered the most likely Greek origin of the name the Ἑkatos theory does not account for her worship in Asia Minor where her association with Artemis seems to have been a late development and the competing theories that the attribution of darker aspects and magic to Hecate were themselves not originally part of her cult 13 R S P Beekes rejected a Greek etymology and suggested a Pre Greek origin 16 Egyptian origin Edit A strong possibility for the foreign origin of the name may be Heqet ḥqt a frog headed Egyptian goddess of fertility and childbirth who like Hecate was also associated with ḥqꜣ ruler 17 The word heka in the Egyptian language is also both the word for magic and the name of the god of magic and medicine Heka 18 Anatolian origin Edit Hecate possibly originated among the Carians of Anatolia 6 the region where most theophoric names invoking Hecate such as Hecataeus or Hecatomnus the father of Mausolus are attested 19 and where Hecate remained a Great Goddess into historical times at her unrivalled b cult site in Lagina While many researchers favour the idea that she has Anatolian origins it has been argued that Hecate must have been a Greek goddess c The monuments to Hecate in Phrygia and Caria are numerous but of late date 21 William Berg observes Since children are not called after spooks it is safe to assume that Carian theophoric names involving hekat refer to a major deity free from the dark and unsavoury ties to the underworld and to witchcraft associated with the Hecate of classical Athens 22 In particular there is some evidence that she might be derived from the local sun goddesses see also Arinna based on similar attributes 23 If Hecate s cult spread from Anatolia into Greece then it possibly presented a conflict as her role was already filled by other more prominent deities in the Greek pantheon above all by Artemis and Selene This line of reasoning lies behind the widely accepted hypothesis that she was a foreign deity who was incorporated into the Greek pantheon Other than in the Theogony the Greek sources do not offer a consistent story of her parentage or of her relations in the Greek pantheon Older English pronunciation Edit In Early Modern English the name was also pronounced disyllabically as ˈ h ɛ k ɪ t and sometimes spelled Hecat It remained common practice in English to pronounce her name in two syllables even when spelled with final e well into the 19th century citation needed The spelling Hecat is due to Arthur Golding s 1567 translation of Ovid s Metamorphoses 24 and this spelling without the final E later appears in plays of the Elizabethan Jacobean period 25 Webster s Dictionary of 1866 particularly credits the influence of Shakespeare for the then predominant disyllabic pronunciation of the name 26 Iconography Edit Hekataion with the Charites Attic 3rd century BCE Glyptothek Munich Hecate was generally represented as three formed or triple bodied though the earliest known images of the goddess are singular Her earliest known representation is a small terracotta statue found in Athens An inscription on the statue is a dedication to Hecate in writing of the style of the 6th century but it otherwise lacks any other symbols typically associated with the goddess She is seated on a throne with a chaplet around her head the depiction is otherwise relatively generic 27 Farnell states The evidence of the monuments as to the character and significance of Hecate is almost as full as that of to express her manifold and mystic nature 27 A 6th century fragment of pottery from Boetia depicts a goddess which may be Hecate in a maternal or fertility mode Crowned with leafy branches as in later descriptions she is depicted offering a maternal blessing to two maidens who embrace her The figure is flanked by lions an animal associated with Hecate both in the Chaldean Oracles coinage and reliefs from Asia Minor 28 In artwork she is often portrayed in three statues standing back to back each with its own special attributes torch keys daggers snakes dogs 3 Marble relief of Hecate The 2nd century travel writer Pausanias stated that Hecate was first depicted in triplicate by the sculptor Alcamenes in the Greek Classical period of the late 5th century BC 4 whose sculpture was placed before the temple of the Wingless Nike in Athens Though Alcamenes original statue is lost hundreds of copies exist and the general motif of a triple Hecate situated around a central pole or column known as a hekataion was used both at crossroads shrines as well as at the entrances to temples and private homes These typically depict her holding a variety of items including torches keys serpents and daggers 29 28 Some hekataia including a votive sculpture from Attica of the 3rd century BC include additional dancing figures identified as the Charites circling the triple Hecate and her central column It is possible that the representation of a triple Hecate surrounding a central pillar was originally derived from poles set up at three way crossroads with masks hung on them facing in each road direction In the 1st century AD Ovid wrote Look at Hecate standing guard at the crossroads one face looking in each direction 28 Apart from traditional hekataia Hecate s triplicity is depicted in the vast frieze of the great Pergamon Altar now in Berlin wherein she is shown with three bodies taking part in the battle with the Titans In the Argolid near the shrine of the Dioscuri Pausanias saw the temple of Hecate opposite the sanctuary of Eileithyia He reported the image to be the work of Scopas stating further This one is of stone while the bronze images opposite also of Hecate were made respectively by Polycleitus and his brother Naucydes son of Mothon 30 While Greek anthropomorphic conventions of art generally represented Hecate s triple form as three separate bodies the iconography of the triple Hecate eventually evolved into representations of the goddess with a single body but three faces In Egyptian inspired Greek esoteric writings connected with Hermes Trismegistus and in the Greek Magical Papyri of Late Antiquity Hecate is described as having three heads one dog one serpent and one horse In other representations her animal heads include those of a cow and a boar 31 The east frieze of a Hellenistic temple of hers at Lagina shows her helping protect the newborn Zeus from his father Cronus this frieze is the only evidence of Hecate s involvement in the myth of his birth 32 33 Sacred animals Edit Dogs were closely associated with Hecate in the Classical world In art and in literature Hecate is constantly represented as dog shaped or as accompanied by a dog Her approach was heralded by the howling of a dog The dog was Hecate s regular sacrificial animal and was often eaten in solemn sacrament 34 The sacrifice of dogs to Hecate is attested for Thrace Samothrace Colophon and Athens 10 A 4th century BCE marble relief from Crannon in Thessaly was dedicated by a race horse owner d It shows Hecate with a hound beside her placing a wreath on the head of a mare It has been claimed that her association with dogs is suggestive of her connection with birth for the dog was sacred to Eileithyia Genetyllis and other birth goddesses Images of her attended by a dog 35 are also found at times when she is shown as in her role as mother goddess with child and when she is depicted alongside the god Hermes and the goddess Cybele in reliefs 36 Although in later times Hecate s dog came to be thought of as a manifestation of restless souls or daemons who accompanied her its docile appearance and its accompaniment of a Hecate who looks completely friendly in many pieces of ancient art suggests that its original signification was positive and thus likelier to have arisen from the dog s connection with birth than the dog s underworld associations 37 The association with dogs particularly female dogs could be explained by a metamorphosis myth in Lycophron the friendly looking female dog accompanying Hecate was originally the Trojan Queen Hecuba who leapt into the sea after the fall of Troy and was transformed by Hecate into her familiar 38 The polecat is also associated with Hecate Antoninus Liberalis used a myth to explain this association At Thebes Proetus had a daughter Galinthias This maiden was playmate and companion of Alcmene daughter of Electryon As the birth throes for Herakles were pressing on Alcmene the Moirai fates and Eileithyia birth goddess as a favour to Hera kept Alcmene in continuous birth pangs They remained seated each keeping their arms crossed Galinthias fearing that the pains of her labour would drive Alcmene mad ran to the Moirai and Eileithyia and announced that by desire of Zeus a boy had been born to Alcmene and that their prerogatives had been abolished At all this consternation of course overcame the Moirai and they immediately let go their arms Alcmene s pangs ceased at once and Herakles was born The Moirai were aggrieved at this and took away the womanly parts of Galinthias since being but a mortal she had deceived the gods They turned her into a deceitful weasel or polecat making her live in crannies and gave her a grotesque way of mating She is mounted through the ears and gives birth by bringing forth her young through the throat Hecate felt sorry for this transformation of her appearance and appointed her a sacred servant of herself 39 Aelian told a different story of a woman transformed into a polecat I have heard that the polecat was once a human being It has also reached my hearing that Gale was her name then that she was a dealer in spells and a sorceress pharmakis that she was extremely incontinent and that she was afflicted with abnormal sexual desires Nor has it escaped my notice that the anger of the goddess Hekate transformed it into this evil creature May the goddess be gracious to me Fables and their telling I leave to others 40 Athenaeus of Naucratis drawing on the etymological speculation of Apollodorus of Athens notes that the red mullet is sacred to Hecate on account of the resemblance of their names for that the goddess is trimorphos of a triple form The Greek word for mullet was trigle and later trigla He goes on to quote a fragment of verse O mistress Hecate Trioditis With three forms and three faces Propitiated with mullets 41 dd dd In relation to Greek concepts of pollution Parker observes The fish that was most commonly banned was the red mullet trigle which fits neatly into the pattern It delighted in polluted things and would eat the corpse of a fish or a man Blood coloured itself it was sacred to the blood eating goddess Hecate It seems a symbolic summation of all the negative characteristics of the creatures of the deep 42 A goddess probably Hecate possibly Artemis is depicted with a bow dog and twin torches At Athens it is said there stood a statue of Hecate Triglathena to whom the red mullet was offered in sacrifice 43 After mentioning that this fish was sacred to Hecate Alan Davidson writes Cicero Horace Juvenal Martial Pliny Seneca and Suetonius have left abundant and interesting testimony to the red mullet fever which began to affect wealthy Romans during the last years of the Republic and really gripped them in the early Empire The main symptoms were a preoccupation with size the consequent rise to absurd heights of the prices of large specimens a habit of keeping red mullet in captivity and the enjoyment of the highly specialized aesthetic experience induced by watching the color of the dying fish change 44 In her three headed representations discussed above Hecate often has one or more animal heads including cow dog boar serpent and horse 45 Lions are associated with Hecate in early artwork from Asia Minor as well as later coins and literature including the Chaldean Oracles 28 The frog which was also the symbol of the similarly named Egyptian goddess Heqet 46 has also become sacred to Hecate in modern pagan literature possibly due in part to its ability to cross between two elements 47 Comparative mythologist Alexander Haggerty Krappe cited that Hecate was also named ippeytria hippeutria the equestrienne since the horse was the chthonic animal par excellence 48 Sacred plants Edit Hecate was closely associated with plant lore and the concoction of medicines and poisons In particular she was thought to give instruction in these closely related arts Apollonius of Rhodes in the Argonautica mentions that Medea was taught by Hecate I have mentioned to you before a certain young girl whom Hecate daughter of Perses has taught to work in drugs 49 The goddess is described as wearing oak in fragments of Sophocles lost play The Root Diggers or The Root Cutters and an ancient commentary on Apollonius of Rhodes Argonautica 3 1214 describes her as having a head surrounded by serpents twining through branches of oak 50 The yew in particular was sacred to Hecate Greeks held the yew to be sacred to Hecate Her attendants draped wreathes of yew around the necks of black bulls which they slaughtered in her honor and yew boughs were burned on funeral pyres The yew was associated with the alphabet and the scientific name for yew today taxus was probably derived from the Greek word for yew toxos which is hauntingly similar to toxon their word for bow and toxicon their word for poison It is presumed that the latter were named after the tree because of its superiority for both bows and poison 51 Hecate was said to favour offerings of garlic which was closely associated with her cult 52 She is also sometimes associated with cypress a tree symbolic of death and the underworld and hence sacred to a number of chthonic deities 53 A number of other plants often poisonous medicinal and or psychoactive are associated with Hecate 54 These include aconite also called hecateis 55 belladonna dittany and mandrake It has been suggested that the use of dogs for digging up mandrake is further corroboration of the association of this plant with Hecate indeed since at least as early as the 1st century CE there are a number of attestations to the apparently widespread practice of using dogs to dig up plants associated with magic 56 Functions Edit Gilt bronze Hekataion 1st century CE Musei Capitolini Rome As a goddess of boundaries Edit Hecate was associated with borders city walls doorways crossroads and by extension with realms outside or beyond the world of the living She appears to have been particularly associated with being between and hence is frequently characterized as a liminal goddess Hecate mediated between regimes Olympian and Titan but also between mortal and divine spheres 57 This liminal role is reflected in a number of her cult titles Apotropaia that turns away protects Enodia on the way Propulaia Propylaia before the gate Triodia Trioditis who frequents crossroads Kleidouchos holding the keys etc As a goddess expected to avert harmful or destructive spirits from the house or city over which she stood guard and to protect the individual as she or he passed through dangerous liminal places Hecate would naturally become known as a goddess who could also refuse to avert the demons or even drive them on against unfortunate individuals 58 It was probably her role as guardian of entrances that led to Hecate s identification by the mid fifth century with Enodia a Thessalian goddess Enodia s very name In the Road suggests that she watched over entrances for it expresses both the possibility that she stood on the main road into a city keeping an eye on all who entered and in the road in front of private houses protecting their inhabitants 59 This function would appear to have some relationship with the iconographic association of Hecate with keys and might also relate to her appearance with two torches which when positioned on either side of a gate or door illuminated the immediate area and allowed visitors to be identified In Byzantium small temples in her honour were placed close to the gates of the city Hecate s importance to Byzantium was above all as a deity of protection When Philip of Macedon was about to attack the city according to the legend she alerted the townspeople with her ever present torches and with her pack of dogs which served as her constant companions 60 This suggests that Hecate s close association with dogs derived in part from the use of watchdogs who particularly at night raised an alarm when intruders approached Watchdogs were used extensively by Greeks and Romans 61 Drawing of a Hekataion Cult images and altars of Hecate in her triplicate or trimorphic form were placed at three way crossroads though they also appeared before private homes and in front of city gates 10 In what appears to be a 7th century indication of the survival of cult practices of this general sort Saint Eligius in his Sermo warns the sick among his recently converted flock in Flanders against putting devilish charms at springs or trees or crossroads 62 and according to Saint Ouen would urge them No Christian should make or render any devotion to the deities of the trivium where three roads meet 63 As a goddess of the underworld Edit Thanks to her association with boundaries and the liminal spaces between worlds Hecate is also recognized as a chthonic underworld goddess As the holder of the keys that can unlock the gates between realms she can unlock the gates of death as described in a 3rd century BCE poem by Theocritus In the 1st century CE Virgil described the entrance to hell as Hecate s Grove though he says that Hecate is equally powerful in Heaven and Hell The Greek Magical Papyri describe Hecate as the holder of the keys to Tartaros 28 Like Hermes Hecate takes on the role of guardian not just of roads but of all journeys including the journey to the afterlife In art and myth she is shown along with Hermes guiding Persephone back from the underworld with her torches 28 By the 5th century BCE Hecate had come to be strongly associated with ghosts possibly due to conflation with the Thessalian goddess Enodia meaning traveller who travelled the earth with a retinue of ghosts and was depicted on coinage wearing a leafy crown and holding torches iconography strongly associated with Hecate 28 As a goddess of witchcraft Edit By the 1st century CE Hecate s chthonic and nocturnal character had led to her transformation into a goddess heavily associated with witchcraft witches magic and sorcery In Lucan s Pharsalia the witch Erichtho invokes Hecate as Persephone who is the third and lowest aspect of Hecate the goddess we witches revere and describes her as a rotting goddess with a pallid decaying body who has to wear a mask when she visit s the gods in heaven 28 Like Hecate the dog is a creature of the threshold the guardian of doors and portals and so it is appropriately associated with the frontier between life and death and with demons and ghosts which move across the frontier The yawning gates of Hades were guarded by the monstrous watchdog Cerberus whose function was to prevent the living from entering the underworld and the dead from leaving it 64 As a goddess of the moon Edit Hecate the Moon fresco by Francesco de Rossi ca 1543 45 Hecate was seen as a triple deity identified with the goddesses Luna Moon in the sky and Diana hunting on the earth while she represents the Underworld 65 Hecate s association with Helios in literary sources and especially in cursing magic has been cited as evidence for her lunar nature although this evidence is pretty late no artwork before the Roman period connecting Hecate to the Moon exists 66 Nevertheless the Homeric Hymn to Demeter shows Helios and Hecate informing Demeter of Persephone s abduction a common theme found in many parts of the world where the Sun and the Moon are questioned concerning events that happen on earth based on their ability to witness everything 66 and implies Hecate s capacity as a moon goddess in the hymn 67 Another work connecting Hecate to Helios possibly as a moon goddess is Sophocles lost play The Root Cutters where Helios is described as Hecate s spear O Sun our lord and sacred fire the spear of Hecate of the roads which she carries as she attends her mistress in the sky 68 This speech from the Root Cutters may or may not be an intentional association of Hecate with the Moon 69 In Seneca s Medea the titular Medea invokes her patron Hecate whom she addresses as Moon orb of the night and triple form 70 Hecate and the moon goddess Selene were frequently identified with each other and a number of Greek and non Greek deities 71 the Greek Magical Papyri and other magical texts emphasize a syncretism between Selene Hecate with Artemis and Persephone among others 71 In Italy the triple unity of the lunar goddesses Diana the huntress Luna the Moon and Hecate the underworld became a ubiquitous feature in depictions of sacred groves where Hecate Trivia marked intersections and crossroads along with other liminal deities 72 The Romans celebrated enthusiastically the multiple identities of Diana as Hecate Luna and Trivia 72 From her father Perses Hecate is often called Perseis meaning daughter of Perses 73 74 which is also the name of one of the Oceanid nymphs Helios wife and Circe s mother in other versions 75 In one version of Hecate s parentage she is the daughter of Perses not the son of Crius but the son of Helios whose mother is the Oceanid Perse 76 Karl Kerenyi noted the similarity between the names perhaps denoting a chthonic connection among the two and the goddess Persephone 77 it is possible that this epithet gives evidence of a lunar aspect of Hecate 78 Fowler also noted that the pairing i e Helios and Perse made sense given Hecate s association with the Moon 79 Mooney however notes that when it comes to the nymph Perse herself there s no evidence of her actually being a moon goddess on her own right 80 Cult Edit Hecate holding two torches and dancing in front of an altar beyond which is a cult statue ca 350 300 BC red figure vase Capua Italy Worship of Hecate existed alongside other deities in major public shrines and temples in antiquity and she had a significant role as household deity 81 Shrines to Hecate were often placed at doorways to homes temples and cities with the belief that it would protect from restless dead and other spirits Home shrines often took the form of a small Hekataion a shrine centred on a wood or stone carving of a triple Hecate facing in three directions on three sides of a central pillar Larger Hekataions often enclosed within small walled areas were sometimes placed at public crossroads near important sites for example there was one on the road leading to the Acropolis 82 Likewise shrines to Hecate at three way crossroads were created where food offerings were left at the new Moon to protect those who did so from spirits and other evils 83 Dogs were sacred to Hecate and associated with roads domestic spaces purification and spirits of the dead Dogs were also sacrificed to the road 84 This can be compared to Pausanias report that in the Ionian city of Colophon in Asia Minor a sacrifice of a black female puppy was made to Hecate as the wayside goddess and Plutarch s observation that in Boeotia dogs were killed in purificatory rites Dogs with puppies often mentioned were offered to Hecate at crossroads which were sacred to the goddess 85 History Edit The earliest definitive record of Hecate s worship dates to the 6th century B C E in the form of a small terracotta statue of a seated goddess identified as Hecate in its inscription This and other early depictions of Hecate lack distinctive attributes that would later be associated with her such as a triple form or torches and can only be identified as Hecate thanks to their inscriptions Otherwise they are typically generic or Artemis like 28 Hecate s cult became established in Athens about 430 B C E At this time the sculptor Alcamenes made the earliest known triple formed Hecate statue for use at her new temple While this sculpture has not survived to the present day numerous later copies are extant 28 It has been speculated that this triple image usually situated around a pole or pillar was derived from earlier representations of the goddess using three masks hung on actual wooden poles possibly placed at crossroads and gateways 28 Sanctuaries Edit Hecate was a popular divinity and her cult was practiced with many local variations all over Greece and Western Anatolia Caria was a major center of worship and her most famous temple there was located in the town of Lagina The oldest known direct evidence of Hecate s cult comes from Selinunte near modern day Trapani in Sicily where she had a temple in the 6th 5th centuries BC 86 There was a Temple of Hecate in Argolis Over against the sanctuary of Eileithyia is a temple of Hecate the goddess probably here identified with the apotheosed Iphigenia and the image is a work of Skopas This one is of stone while the bronze images opposite also of Hecate were made respectively by Polykleitos and his brother Naukydes 87 There were also a shrine to Hecate in Aigina where she was very popular Of the gods the Aiginetans worship most Hecate in whose honour every year they celebrate mystic rites which they say Orpheus the Thrakian established among them Within the enclosure is a temple its wooden image is the work of Myron and it has one face and one body It was Alkamenes in my opinion who first made three images of Hecate attached to one another in Athens 88 Aside from her own temples Hecate was also worshipped in the sanctuaries of other gods where she was apparently sometimes given her own space A round stone altar dedicated to the goddess was found in the Delphinion a temple dedicated to Apollo at Miletus Dated to the 7th century BCE this is one of the oldest known artefacts dedicated to the worship of Hecate 13 In association with her worship alongside Apollo at Miletus worshipers used a unique form of offering they would place stone cubes often wreathes known as gylloi gylloi as protective offerings at the door or gateway 13 89 There was an area sacred to Hecate in the precincts of the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus where the priests megabyzi officiated 90 This sanctuary was called Hecatesion Shrine of Hecate 91 Hecate was also worshipped in the Temple of Athena in Titane In Titane there is also a sanctuary of Athena into which they bring up the image of Koronis mother of Asklepios The sanctuary is built upon a hill at the bottom of which is an Altar of the Winds and on it the priest sacrifices to the winds one night in every year He also performs other secret rites of Hecate at four pits taming the fierceness of the blasts of the winds and he is said to chant as well the charms of Medea 92 She was most commonly worshipped in nature where she had many natural sanctuaries An important sanctuary of Hecate was a holy cave on the island of Samothrake called Zerynthos In Samothrake there were certain initiation rites which they supposed efficacious as a charm against certain dangers In that place were also the mysteries of the Korybantes Kabeiroi and those of Hekate and the Zerinthian cave where they sacrificed dogs The initiates supposed that these things save them from terrors and from storms 93 Cult at Lagina Edit Hecate s most important sanctuary was Lagina a theocratic city state in which the goddess was served by eunuchs 6 The temple is mentioned by Strabo Stratonikeia in Karia Asia Minor is a settlement of Makedonians There are two temples in the country of the Stratonikeians of which the most famous that of Hecate is at Lagina and it draws great festal assemblies every year 94 Lagina where the famous temple of Hecate drew great festal assemblies every year lay close to the originally Macedonian colony of Stratonikeia where she was the city s patron 95 In Thrace she played a role similar to that of lesser Hermes namely a ruler of liminal regions particularly gates and the wilderness Cult at Byzantium Edit Juniper wood Hekataion Ptolemaic Egypt c 304 30 BCE Hecate was greatly worshipped in Byzantium She was said to have saved the city from Philip II of Macedon warning the citizens of a night time attack by a light in the sky for which she was known as Hecate Lampadephoros The tale is preserved in the Suda e As Hecate Phosphorus the star Venus she is said to have lit the sky during the Siege of Philip II in 340 BCE revealing the attack to its inhabitants The Byzantines dedicated a statue to her as the lamp carrier 98 According to Hesychius of Miletus there was once a statue of Hecate at the site of the Hippodrome in Constantinople 99 Hecate s island Edit Hecate s island Ἑkaths nhsoy also called Psamite PSamith was an islet in the vicinity of Delos It was called Psamite because Hecate was honoured with a cake which was called psamiton psamiton 100 The island is the modern Megalos Great Reumatiaris 101 Deipnon Edit The Athenian Greeks honoured Hecate during the Deipnon In Greek deipnon means the evening meal usually the largest meal of the day Hecate s Deipnon is at its most basic a meal served to Hecate and the restless dead once a lunar month 102 during the New Moon The Deipnon is always followed the next day by the Noumenia 103 when the first sliver of the sunlit Moon is visible and then the Agathos Daimon the day after that The main purpose of the Deipnon was to honour Hecate and to placate the souls in her wake who longed for vengeance 104 A secondary purpose was to purify the household and to atone for bad deeds a household member may have committed that offended Hecate causing her to withhold her favour from them The Deipnon consists of three main parts 1 the meal that was set out at a crossroads usually in a shrine outside the entryway to the home 105 2 an expiation sacrifice 106 and 3 purification of the household 107 Epithets Edit Sketch of a stone Hecataion Richard Cosway British Museum Hecate was known by a number of epithets Apotropaia Ἀpotropaia the one that turns away protects 108 Brimo Brimw angry terrifying 109 Chthonia X8wnia of the earth underworld 110 Enodia Ἐnnodia she on the way road 111 Kleidouchos Kleidoῦxos holding the keys 112 Kourotrophos Koyrotrofos nurse of children 112 Krokopeplos Krokopeplos saffron cloaked 113 Melinoe Mhlinoh 114 Phosphoros Lampadephoros Fwsforos Lampadhforos bringing or bearing light 112 Propolos Propolos who serves attends 112 Propulaia Propylaia Propylaia before the gate 115 Soteria Swthria savior 9 Trimorphe Trimorfh three formed 112 Triodia Trioditis Triodia Triodiths who frequents crossroads 112 Historical and literary sources EditArchaic period Edit Hecate Greek goddess of the crossroads drawing by Stephane Mallarme in Les Dieux Antiques nouvelle mythologie illustree in Paris 1880 Hecate has been characterized as a pre Olympian chthonic goddess The first literature mentioning Hecate is the Theogony c 700 BCE by Hesiod And Asteria conceived and bore Hecate whom Zeus the son of Cronos honored above all He gave her splendid gifts to have a share of the earth and the unfruitful sea She received honor also in starry heaven and is honored exceedingly by the deathless gods For to this day whenever any one of men on earth offers rich sacrifices and prays for favor according to custom he calls upon Hecate Great honor comes full easily to him whose prayers the goddess receives favorably and she bestows wealth upon him for the power surely is with her For as many as were born of Earth and Ocean amongst all these she has her due portion The son of Cronos did her no wrong nor took anything away of all that was her portion among the former Titan gods but she holds as the division was at the first from the beginning privilege both in earth and in heaven and in sea 116 According to Hesiod she held sway over many things Whom she will she greatly aids and advances she sits by worshipful kings in judgement and in the assembly whom she will is distinguished among the people And when men arm themselves for the battle that destroys men then the goddess is at hand to give victory and grant glory readily to whom she will Good is she also when men contend at the games for there too the goddess is with them and profits them and he who by might and strength gets the victory wins the rich prize easily with joy and brings glory to his parents And she is good to stand by horsemen whom she will and to those whose business is in the grey discomfortable sea and who pray to Hecate and the loud crashing Earth Shaker easily the glorious goddess gives great catch and easily she takes it away as soon as seen if so she will She is good in the byre with Hermes to increase the stock The droves of kine and wide herds of goats and flocks of fleecy sheep if she will she increases from a few or makes many to be less So then albeit her mother s only child she is honored amongst all the deathless gods And the son of Cronos made her a nurse of the young who after that day saw with their eyes the light of all seeing Dawn So from the beginning she is a nurse of the young and these are her honours 117 The coins of Agathocles of Bactria ruled 190 180 BCE show Zeus holding Hecate in his hand 118 Hesiod s inclusion and praise of Hecate in the Theogony has been troublesome for scholars in that he seems to hold her in high regard while the testimony of other writers and surviving evidence suggests that this may have been the exception One theory is that Hesiod s original village had a substantial Hecate following and that his inclusion of her in the Theogony was a way of adding to her prestige by spreading word of her among his readers 119 Another theory is that Hecate was mainly a household god and humble household worship could have been more pervasive and yet not mentioned as much as temple worship 120 In Athens Hecate along with Zeus Hermes Athena Hestia and Apollo were very important in daily life as they were the main gods of the household 7 However it is clear that the special position given to Hecate by Zeus is upheld throughout her history by depictions found on coins of Hecate on the hand of Zeus 121 as highlighted in more recent research presented by d Este and Rankine 122 In the Homeric Hymn to Demeter composed c 600 BCE Hecate is called tender hearted an epithet perhaps intended to emphasize her concern with the disappearance of Persephone when she assisted Demeter with her search for Persephone following her abduction by Hades suggesting that Demeter should speak to the god of the Sun Helios Subsequently Hecate became Persephone s companion on her yearly journey to and from the realms of Hades serving as a psychopomp Because of this association Hecate was one of the chief goddesses of the Eleusinian Mysteries alongside Demeter and Persephone 1 and there was a temple dedicated to her near the main sanctuary at Eleusis 28 Classical period Edit Variations in interpretations of Hecate s roles can be traced in classical Athens In two fragments of Aeschylus she appears as a great goddess In Sophocles and Euripides she is characterized as the mistress of witchcraft and the Keres citation needed One surviving group of stories clarification needed suggests how Hecate might have come to be incorporated into the Greek pantheon without affecting the privileged position of Artemis Here Hecate is a mortal priestess often associated with Iphigenia She scorns and insults Artemis who in retribution eventually brings about the mortal s suicide 119 In the Argonautica a 3rd century BCE Alexandrian epic based on early material 123 Jason placates Hecate in a ritual prescribed by Medea her priestess bathed at midnight in a stream of flowing water and dressed in dark robes Jason is to dig a round pit and over it cut the throat of a ewe sacrificing it and then burning it whole on a pyre next to the pit as a holocaust He is told to sweeten the offering with a libation of honey then to retreat from the site without looking back even if he hears the sound of footsteps or barking dogs 124 All these elements betoken the rites owed to a chthonic deity citation needed Late Antiquity Edit Hecate battles Clytius next to Artemis Gigantomachy frieze Pergamon Altar Pergamon Museum Berlin During the Gigantomachy Hecate fought by the side of the Olympian gods and slew the giant Clytius using her torches 125 Hecate is depicted fighting Clytius in the east frieze of the Gigantomachy in the Pergamon Altar next to Artemis 126 she appears with a different weapon in each of her three right hands a torch a sword and a lance 3 Her fight with the Giant appears in a number of ancient vase paintings and other artwork 33 127 Hecate is the primary feminine figure in the Chaldean Oracles 2nd 3rd century CE 128 where she is associated in fragment 194 with a strophalos usually translated as a spinning top or wheel used in magic Labour thou around the Strophalos of Hecate 129 This appears to refer to a variant of the device mentioned by Psellus 130 In Hellenistic syncretism Hecate also became closely associated with Isis Lucius Apuleius in The Golden Ass 2nd century equates Juno Bellona Hecate and Isis Some call me Juno others Bellona of the Battles and still others Hecate Principally the Ethiopians which dwell in the Orient and the Egyptians which are excellent in all kind of ancient doctrine and by their proper ceremonies accustomed to worship me do call me Queen Isis 131 In the syncretism during Late Antiquity of Hellenistic and late Babylonian Chaldean elements Hecate was identified with Ereshkigal the underworld counterpart of Inanna in the Babylonian cosmography In the Michigan magical papyrus inv 7 dated to the late 3rd or early 4th century CE Hecate Erschigal is invoked against fear of punishment in the afterlife 132 Hecate is also referenced in the Gnostic text Pistis Sophia 133 Parents consorts and children Edit In the earliest written source mentioning Hecate Hesiod emphasized that she was an only child the daughter of Perses and Asteria the sister of Leto the mother of Artemis and Apollo Grandmother of the three cousins was Phoebe 117 the ancient Titan goddess whose name was often used for the moon goddess 134 135 In various later accounts Hecate was given different parents 136 She was said to be the daughter of Zeus by either Asteria according to Musaeus 137 Hera thus identified with Angelos 138 or Pheraea daughter of Aeolus 139 the daughter of Aristaeus the son of Paion according to Pherecydes 140 the daughter of Nyx according to Bacchylides 137 the daughter of Perses the son of Helios by an unknown mother according to Diodorus Siculus 76 while in Orphic literature she was said to be the daughter of Demeter 141 or Leto 142 or even Tartarus 143 As a virgin goddess she remained unmarried and had no regular consort though some traditions named her as the mother of Scylla 144 through either Phorbas 145 f or Phorcys 146 Sometimes she is also stated to be the mother by Aeetes 76 of the goddess Circe and the sorceress Medea 147 who in later accounts was herself associated with magic while initially just being a herbalist goddess similar to how Hecate s association with Underworld and Mysteries had her later converted into a deity of witchcraft Once Hermes chased Hecate or Persephone with the aim to rape her but the goddess snored or roared in anger frightening him off so that he desisted hence her earning the name Brimo angry 148 Genealogy EditHecate s family tree 149 UranusGaiaPontusOceanusTethysHyperionTheiaCriusEurybiaThe RiversThe OceanidsHeliosSelene 150 EosAstraeusPallasPersesCronusRheaCoeusPhoebeHestiaHeraPoseidonZeusLetoAsteriaDemeterHadesApolloArtemisHECATEIapetusClymene or Asia 151 Themis Zeus MnemosyneAtlas 152 MenoetiusPrometheus 153 EpimetheusThe HoraeThe MusesLegacy Edit The Triple Hecate 1795 William Blake Strmiska 2005 claimed that Hecate conflated with the figure of Diana appears in late antiquity and in the Early Middle Ages as part of an emerging legend complex known as The Society of Diana 154 associated with gatherings of women the Moon and witchcraft that eventually became established in the area of Northern Italy southern Germany and the western Balkans 155 This theory of the Roman origins of many European folk traditions related to Diana or Hecate was explicitly advanced at least as early as 1807 156 and is reflected dubious discuss in etymological claims by early modern lexicographers from the 17th to the 19th century connecting hag hexe witch to the name of Hecate 157 Such derivations are today proposed only by a minority 158 159 A medieval commentator has suggested a link connecting the word jinx with Hecate The Byzantine polymath Michael Psellus speaks of a bullroarer consisting of a golden sphere decorated throughout with symbols and whirled on an oxhide thong He adds that such an instrument is called a iunx hence jinx but as for the significance says only that it is ineffable and that the ritual is sacred to Hecate 160 Shakespeare mentions Hecate both before the end of the 16th century A Midsummer Night s Dream 1594 1596 and just after in Macbeth 1605 specifically in the title character s dagger soliloquy Witchcraft celebrates pale Hecate s offerings 161 Shakespeare mentions Hecate also in King Lear While disclaiming all his paternal care for Cordelia Lear says The mysteries of Hecate and the night By all the operations of the orbs From whom we do exist and cease to be Here I disclaim all my paternal care The Arden Shakespeare King Lear Page no 165 Modern reception Edit Hekate pastel on paper by Maximilian Pirner 1901 In 1929 Lewis Brown an expert on religious cults connected the 1920s Blackburn Cult also known as The Cult of the Great Eleven with Hecate worship rituals He noted that the cult regularly practiced dog sacrifice and had secretly buried the body of one of its queens with seven dogs 162 Researcher Samuel Fort noted additional parallels to include the cult s focus on mystic and typically nocturnal rites its female dominated membership the sacrifice of other animals to include horses and mules a focus on the mystical properties of roads and portals and an emphasis on death healing and resurrection 163 As a goddess of witchcraft Hecate has been incorporated in various systems of modern witchcraft Wicca and neopaganism 164 in some cases associated with the Wild Hunt of Germanic tradition 165 in others as part of a reconstruction of specifically Greek polytheism in English also known as Hellenismos 166 In Wicca Hecate has in some cases become identified with the crone aspect of the Triple Goddess 167 See also EditHecate journal Janus Roman god Lampad Nymphs of the Underworld in Greek mythologyNotes Edit Pronounced ˈ h ɛ k e t i HEK e tee older form Hecat ˈ h ɛ k ɪ t HEK it Ancient Greek Ἑkath romanized Hekate Attic Greek pronunciation hekatɛː Koine Greek pronunciation heˈkati Doric Greek Ἑkatᾱ romanized Hekata pronounced hekataː Latin Hecate ˈhɛkateː or Hecata ˈhɛkata Berg 1974 p 128 Berg comments on Hecate s endorsement of Roman hegemony in her representation on the pediment at Lagina solemnising a pact between a warrior Rome and an amazon Asia Berg s argument for a Greek origin rests on three main points 1 Almost all archaeological and literary evidence for her cult comes from the Greek mainland and especially from Attica all of which dates earlier than the 2nd century BCE 2 In Asia Minor only one monument can be associated with Hecate prior to the 2nd century BCE 3 The supposed connection between Hecate and attested Carian theophoric names is not convincing and instead suggests an aspect of the process of her Hellenization He concludes Arguments for Hecate s Anatolian origin are not in accord with evidence 20 This statue is in the British Museum inventory number 816 In 340 B C however the Byzantines with the aid of the Athenians withstood a siege successfully an occurrence the more remarkable as they were attacked by the greatest general of the age Philip of Macedon In the course of this beleaguerment it is related on a certain wet and moonless night the enemy attempted a surprise but were foiled by reason of a bright light which appearing suddenly in the heavens startled all the dogs in the town and thus roused the garrison to a sense of their danger To commemorate this timely phenomenon which was attributed to Hecate they erected a public statue to that goddess 96 If any goddess had a connection with the walls in Constantinople it was Hecate Hecate had a cult in Byzantium from the time of its founding Like Byzas in one legend she had her origins in Thrace Since Hecate was the guardian of liminal places in Byzantium small temples in her honor were placed close to the gates of the city Hecate s importance to Byzantium was above all as deity of protection When Philip of Macedon was about to attack the city according to the legend she alerted the townspeople with her ever present torches and with her pack of dogs which served as her constant companions Her mythic qualities thenceforth forever entered the fabric of Byzantine history 97 A statue known as the Lampadephoros was erected on the hill above the Bosphorous to commemorate Hecate s defensive aid 97 This story apparently survived in the works Hesychius of Miletus who in all probability lived in the time of Justinian His works survive only in fragments preserved in Photius and the Suda a Byzantine lexicon of the 10th century AD The tale is also related by Stephanus of Byzantium and Eustathius The ancient text is corrupted an alternative correction of the name into Phoebus that is Apollo has been also suggested It could also be that the fragment reads Phorcys agreeing with Acusilaus version 146 References Edit a b Edwards Charles M July 1986 The Running Maiden from Eleusis and the Early Classical Image of Hekate American Journal of Archaeology Boston Massachusetts Archaeological Institute of America 90 3 307 318 doi 10 2307 505689 JSTOR 505689 S2CID 193054943 Merriam Webster 1995 p 527 a b c Seyffert s v Hecate a b d Este Sorita amp Rankine David Hekate Liminal Rites Avalonia 2009 trans M L West 1988 Hesiod Theogony and Works and Days New York Oxforx World s Classics pp vii ISBN 978 0 19 953831 7 a b c d Burkert Walter 1987 Greek Religion Archaic and classical Oxford UK Blackwell p 171 ISBN 0 631 15624 0 a b Panopoulos Christos Pandion Hellenic Household Worship LABRYS Bryn Mawr Classical Review 02 06 11 Bmcr brynmawr edu Archived from the original on 22 October 2013 Retrieved 24 September 2012 a b Sarah Iles Johnston Hekate Soteira Scholars Press 1990 a b c d Hornblower Simon Spawforth Antony eds 1996 The Oxford Classical Dictionary Third ed New York City Oxford University Press p 671 ISBN 0 19 866172 X Green p 133 At least in the case of Hesiod s use see Clay Jenny Strauss 2003 Hesiod s Cosmos Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 135 ISBN 0 521 82392 7 Clay lists a number of researchers who have advanced some variant of the association between Hecate s name and will e g Walcot 1958 Neitzel 1975 Derossi 1975 The researcher is led to identify the name and function of Hecate as the one by whose will prayers are accomplished and fulfilled This interpretation also appears in Liddell Scott A Greek English Lexicon in the entry for Hecate which is glossed as lit she who works her will a b c d Mooney Carol M Hekate Her Role and Character in Greek Literature from before the Fifth Century B C 1971 Open Access Dissertations and heses Paper 4651 Wheelwright P E 1975 Metaphor and Reality Bloomington p 144 ISBN 0 253 20122 5 Fairbanks Arthur A Handbook of Greek Religion American Book Company 1910 R S P Beekes Etymological Dictionary of Greek 2009 Brill p 396 McKechnie Paul R Guillaume Philippe 2008 Ptolemy the second Philadelphus and his world BRILL p 133 ISBN 978 90 04 17089 6 Heka Kraus Theodor 1960 Hekate Studien zu Wesen u Bilde der Gottin in Kleinasien u Griechenland in German Heidelberg DE Berg 1974 p 134 Kraus 1960 p 52 list pp 166 ff Berg 1974 p 129 Bachvarova Mary May 2010 Hecate An Anatolian sun goddess of the underworld SSRN Electronic Journal doi 10 2139 ssrn 1608145 Golding Arthur 1567 Book Seven Ovid s Metamorphoses ISBN 9781406792416 Marlowe Christopher c 1603 first published 1604 performed earlier Doctor Faustus act III scene 2 line 21 via Google Books Pluto s blue fire and Hecat s tree Shakespeare William c 1595 c 1594 1596 A Midsummer Night s Dream act V scene 1 line 384 By the triple Hecat s team Shakespeare William c 1605 c 1603 1607 Macbeth act III scene 5 line 1 Why how now Hecat Jonson Ben 1641 c 1637 act II scene 3 line 668 The Sad Shepherd our dame Hecat Webster Noah 1866 A Dictionary of the English Language 10th ed Rules for pronouncing the vowels of Greek and Latin proper names p 9 Hecate pronounced in three syllables when in Latin and in the same number in the Greek word Ἑkath in English is universally contracted into two by sinking the final e Shakespeare seems to have begun as he has now confirmed this pronunciation by so adapting the word in Macbeth And the play going world who form no small portion of what is called the better sort of people have followed the actors in this world and the rest of the world have followed them Hec ate Brewer s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable 1894 3 syl in Greek 2 in Eng a b Lewis Richard Farnell 1896 Hekate Representations in Art The Cults of the Greek States Oxford University Press Oxford p 549 a b c d e f g h i j k l Rabinowitz Jacob The Rotting Goddess The origin of the witch in classical antiquity s demonization of fertility religion Autonomedia 1998 Hekate Her Sacred Fires ed Sorita d Este Avalonia 2010 Pausanias 2 22 7 Yves Bonnefoy Wendy Doniger Roman and European Mythologies University of Chicago Press 1992 p 195 Johnston p 213 a b The Oxford Classical Dictionary p 650 Alberta Mildred Franklin The Lupercalia Columbia University 1921 p67 page 21 image of Hecate attended by a dog timerift net Archived from the original on 24 October 2011 Images of goddesses Eidola eu 28 February 2010 Retrieved 24 September 2012 Johnston Sarah Iles 1999 Restless Dead University of California Press pp 211 212 Lycophron Alexandra Classical texts library Theoi Antoninus Liberalis 1992 Metamorphoses Translated by Celoria Francis Psychology Press 29 Aelian 1958 On the Characteristics of Animals by Aelian Translated by Scholfield Alwyn Faber Harvard University Press Bohn H G 1854 The Learned Banqueters Translated by Yonge Charles Duke Parker Robert 1990 Miasma Pollution and purification in early Greek religion Oxford University Press pp 362 363 Leake William Martin 1841 The Topography of Athens London UK p 492 Davidson Alan 2002 Mediterranean Seafood Ten Speed Press p 92 Bonnefoy Yves Doniger Wendy 1992 Roman and European Mythologies University of Chicago Press p 195 Hecate Encyclopaedia Britannica article 1823 Armour Robert A 2001 Gods and Myths of Ancient Egypt American University in Cairo Press p 116 Varner Gary R 2007 Creatures in the Mist Little people wild men and spirit beings around the world A study in comparative mythology New York NY Algora Publishing p 135 ISBN 978 0 87586 546 1 Krappe Alexander Haggerty 1932 La poursuite du Gilla Dacker et les Dioscures celtiques The pursuit of the Gilla Dacker and the Celtic dioscuri Revue Celtique in French 49 102 R L Hunter The Argonautica of Apollonius Cambridge University Press 2005 p 142 citing Apollonius of Rhodes Daniel Ogden Magic Witchcraft and Ghosts in the Greek and Roman Worlds Oxford University Press 2002 pp 82 83 Matthew Suffness Ed Taxol Science and Applications CRC Press 1995 p 28 Frederick J Simoons Plants of Life Plants of Death University of Wisconsin Press 1998 p 143 Fragkiska Megaloudi Plants and Diet in Greece From Neolithic to Classic Periods Archaeopress 2006 p 71 Frieze Henry Dennison Walter 1902 Virgil s Aeneid New York American Book Company pp N111 Hecate had a botanical garden on the island of Colchis where the following alkaloid plants were kept Akoniton Aconitum napellus Diktamnon Dictamnus albus Mandragores Mandragora officinarum Mekon Papaver somniferum Melaina Claviceps pupurea Thryon Atropa belladona and Cochicum Margaret F Roberts Michael Wink Alkaloids Biochemistry Ecology and Medicinal Applications Springer 1998 p 16 Robert Graves The Greek Myths Penguin Books 1977 p 154 Frederick J Simoons Plants of Life Plants of Death University of Wisconsin Press 1998 pp 121 124 Bonnie MacLachlan Judith Fletcher Virginity Revisited Configurations of The Unpossessed Body University of Toronto Press 2007 p 14 Sarah Iles Johnston Restless Dead Encounters Between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece University of California Press 1999 p 209 Sarah Iles Johnston Restless Dead Encounters Between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece University of California Press 1999 p 208 Vasiliki Limberis Divine Heiress The Virgin Mary And The Creation of Christian Constantinople Routledge 1994 pp 126 127 Hornblower Simon Spawforth Antony eds 1996 The Oxford Classical Dictionary Third ed New York Oxford University Press p 490 ISBN 0 19 866172 X Amanda Porterfield Healing in the history of Christianity Oxford University Press 2005 p 72 Saint Ouen Vita Eligii book II 16 Archived 20 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine Richard Cavendish The Powers of Evil in Western Religion Magic and Folk Belief Routledge 1975 p 62 Servius Commentary on the Aeneid 6 118 Green C M C 2007 Roman Religion and the Cult of Diana at Aricia New York Cambridge University Press a b Queen of the Night Rediscovering the Celtic Moon Goddess pp 62 63 Athanassakis and Wolkow p 90 Loeb Classical Library 1994 Sophocles Fragments p 271 Oxford University Gantz p 27 Seneca Medea 750 753 a b Hordern J H Love Magic and Purification in Sophron PSI 1214a and Theocritus Pharmakeutria The Classical Quarterly 52 no 1 2002 165 a b Bergmann Bettina Joseph Farrell Denis Feeney James Ker Damien Nelis and Celia Schultz An Exciting Provocation John F Miller s Apollo Augustus and the Poets Vergilius 1959 58 2012 10 11 Apollonius of Rhodes Argonautica 3 478 Ovid Metamorphoses 7 74 Seneca Medea 812 Smith s v Hecate Homer Odyssey 10 135 Hesiod Theogony 956 Apollonius of Rhodes Argonautica 4 591 Apollodorus 1 9 1 Cicero De Natura Deorum 48 4 Hyginus Fabulae Preface a b c Diodorus Siculus Historic Library 4 45 1 Karl Kerenyi The Gods of the Greeks 1951 pp 192 193 The Classical Review vol 9 pp 391 392 Fowler p 16 vol II Mooney p 58 Aune David Edward 2006 Apocalypticism Prophecy and Magic in Early Christianity Collected Essays Mohr Siebeck pp 356ff ISBN 3161490207 Wycherley R 1970 Minor Shrines in Ancient Athens Phoenix 24 4 283 295 doi 10 2307 1087735 CULT OF HEKATE Ancient Greek religion Theoi com Retrieved 24 September 2012 As Sterckx 2002 observes The use of dog sacrifices at the gates and doors of the living and the dead as well as its use in travel sacrifices suggest that dogs were perceived as daemonic animals operating in the liminal or transitory realm between the domestic and the unknown danger stricken outside world Roel Sterckx The Animal and The Daemon in Early China State University of New York Press 2002 pp 232 233 Sterckx explicitly recognizes the similarities between these ancient Chinese views of dogs and those current in Greek and Roman antiquity and goes on to note Dog sacrifice was also a common practice among the Greeks where the dog figured prominently as a guardian of the underworld Footnote 113 p318 Simoons Frederick J 1994 Eat Not This Flesh Food Avoidances from Prehistory to the Present Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Press pp 233 234 ISBN 978 0299142544 Redazione ANSA Oldest ever trace of Hekate cult found 16 January 2018 Pausanias Description of Greece 2 22 7 Pausanias Description of Greece 2 30 2 trans Jones J M Carbon S Peels and V Pirenne Delforge Collection of Greek Ritual Norms CGRN Liege 2015 http cgrn ulg ac be consulted in 2019 Strabo Geography 14 1 23 Strabo Geography 14 1 23 trans Jones Pausanias Description of Greece 2 12 1 Suidas s v All ei tis humon en Samothraikei memuemenos esti Strabo Geography 14 2 15 trans Jones Strabo Geography 14 2 25 Kraus 1960 Holmes William Gordon 2003 The Age of Justinian and Theodora pp 5 6 a b Limberis Vasiliki 1994 Divine Heiress Routledge pp 126 127 Russell Thomas James 2017 Byzantium and the Bosporus Oxford UK Oxford University Press p 184 ISBN 9780198790525 Patria of Constantinople Suda epsilon 365 Travels in Greece and Turkey Undertaken by Order of Louis XVI and with the Authority of the Ottoman Court Volume 2 1801 p 309 The play Plutus by Aristophanes 388 BCE line 594 any translation will do or Benjamin Bickley Rogers is fine Harvard Theological Review Vol 65 No 2 1972 pages 291 297 These are the biaiothanatoi aoroi and ataphoi cf Rohde i 264 f and notes 275 277 ii 362 and note 411 413 424 425 whose enthumion the quasi technical word designating their longing for vengeance was much dreaded See Heckenbach p 2776 and references Antiphanes in Athenaeus 313 B 2 39 K and 358 F Melanthius in Athenaeus 325 B Plato Com i 647 19 K Apollodorus Melanthius Hegesander Chariclides iii 394 K Antiphanes in Athenaeus 358 F Aristophanes Plutus 596 Hekate s Suppers by K F Smith Chapter in the book The Goddess Hekate Studies in Ancient Pagan and Christian Philosophy edited by Stephen Ronan Pages 57 to 64 Roscher 1889 Heckenbach 2781 Rohde ii 79 n 1 also Ammonius p 79 Valckenaer Alberta Mildred Franklin The Lupercalia Columbia University 1921 p 68 Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica 3 1194 Jon D Mikalson Athenian Popular Religion UNC Press 1987 p 76 Sarah Iles Johnston Restless Dead Encounters Between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece University of California Press 1999 pp 208 209 a b c d e f Liddell Scott A Greek English Lexicon Adam Forrest The Orphic Hymn to Hekate Hermetic Fellowship 1992 Ivana Petrovic Von den Toren des Hades zu den Hallen des Olymp Brill 2007 p 94 W Schmid and O Stahlin Geschichte der griechischen Literatur C H Beck 1924 1981 vol 2 pt 2 p 982 W H Roscher Ausfuhrliches Lexikon der griechischen und romischen Mythologie Leipzig Teubner 1890 94 vol 2 pt 2 p 16 Sarah Iles Johnston Restless Dead Encounters Between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece University of California Press 1999 p 207 Hesiod Theogony 411 425 a b Hesiod Theogony 429 452 Foreign Influence on Ancient India Krishna Chandra Sagar Northern Book Centre 1992 1 a b Johnston Sarah Iles 1991 Restless Dead Encounters Between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece ISBN 0 520 21707 1 Household and Family Religion in Antiquity by John Bodel and Saul M Olyan page 221 published by John Wiley amp Sons 2009 Baktria Kings Agathokles ancient coins index with thumbnails WildWinds com Retrieved 24 September 2012 d Este amp Rankine Hekate Liminal Rites Avalonia 2009 The legend of the Argonauts is among the earliest known to the Greeks observes Peter Green The Argonautika 2007 Introduction p 21 Apollonios Rhodios tr Peter Green The Argonautika University of California Press 2007 p140 Pseudo Apollodorus Library 1 6 2 The J Paul Getty Museum p 101 A collection of vase paintings of Hecate fighting Clytius can be seen here The Chaldean Oracles is a collection of literature that date from somewhere between the 2nd century and the late 3rd century the recording of which is traditionally attributed to Julian the Chaldaean or his son Julian the Theurgist The material seems to have provided background and explanation related to the meaning of these pronouncements and appear to have been related to the practice of theurgy pagan magic that later became closely associated with Neoplatonism seeHornblower Simon Spawforth Antony eds 1996 The Oxford Classical Dictionary Third ed New York Oxford University Press p 316 ISBN 0 19 866172 X English translation used here from William Wynn Wescott tr The Chaldean Oracles of Zoroaster 1895 A top of Hekate is a golden sphere enclosing a lapis lazuli in its middle that is twisted through a cow hide leather thong and having engraved letters all over it Diviners spin this sphere and make invocations Such things they call charms whether it is the matter of a spherical object or a triangular one or some other shape While spinning them they call out unintelligible or beast like sounds laughing and flailing at the air Hekate teaches the taketes to operate that is the movement of the top as if it had an ineffable power It is called the top of Hekate because it is dedicated to her In her right hand she held the source of the virtues But it is all nonsense As quoted in Frank R Trombley Hellenic Religion and Christianization C 370 529 Brill 1993 p 319 Apuleius The Golden Ass 11 47 Hans Dieter Betz Fragments from a Catabasis Ritual in a Greek Magical Papyrus History of Religions 19 4 May 1980 287 295 The goddess appears as Hecate Erschigal only in the heading in the spell itself only Erschigal is called upon with protective magical words and gestures George R S Mead 1963 140 Pistis Sophia Jazzybee Verlag ISBN 9783849687090 Retrieved 2 November 2021 Boyle p 147 Gordon MacDonald Kirkwood A Short Guide to Classical Mythology p 88 Gantz p 26 a b Scholia on Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica 3 467 Scholia on Theocritus 2 12 Scholia on Theocritus 2 36 Tzetzes ad Lycophron Alexandra 1175 Pherecydes FHG 1 frag 10 Scholiast on Apollonius of Rhodes Argonautica 3 467 Pherecydes fr 44 Fowler FGrHist 3 fr 44 Vorsokr 2 B 16 Bacchylides fr 1 B Snell Maehler Orphic fr 41 Kern Proclus Commentary on Plato s Cratylus 406 b p 106 25 Pasqu Orphic fr 188 Kern OF 317 Bernabe West 1983 pp 266 267 The fragment is as follows Straightaway divine Hecate the daughter of lovely haired Leto approached Olympus leaving behind the limbs of the child Orphic Argonautica 977 Joseph Eddy Fontenrose Python A Study of Delphic Myth and Its Origins Biblo amp Tannen Publishers 1974 p 96 Hesiod fr 200 Most fr 262 MW Most pp 310 311 a b Acusilaus fr 42 Fowler Fowler p 32 Grimal Smith Tzetzes ad Lycophron 1176 1211 Heslin p 39 Hesiod Theogony 132 138 337 411 453 520 901 906 915 920 Caldwell pp 8 11 tables 11 14 Although usually the daughter of Hyperion and Theia as in Hesiod Theogony 371 374 in the Homeric Hymn to Hermes 4 99 100 Selene is instead made the daughter of Pallas the son of Megamedes According to Hesiod Theogony 507 511 Clymene one of the Oceanids the daughters of Oceanus and Tethys at Hesiod Theogony 351 was the mother by Iapetus of Atlas Menoetius Prometheus and Epimetheus while according to Apollodorus 1 2 3 another Oceanid Asia was their mother by Iapetus According to Plato Critias 113d 114a Atlas was the son of Poseidon and the mortal Cleito In Aeschylus Prometheus Bound 18 211 873 Sommerstein pp 444 445 n 2 446 447 n 24 538 539 n 113 Prometheus is made to be the son of Themis Magliocco Sabina 2009 Aradia in Sardinia The Archaeology of a Folk Character Pp 40 60 in Ten Years of Triumph of the Moon Hidden Publishing Michael Strmiska Modern paganism in world cultures ABC CLIO 2005 p 68 Francis Douce Illustrations of Shakspeare and of Ancient Manners 1807 p 235 243 John Minsheu and William Somner 17th century Edward Lye of Oxford 1694 1767 Johann Georg Wachter Glossarium Germanicum 1737 Walter Whiter Etymologicon Universale 1822 e g Gerald Milnes Signs Cures amp Witchery Univ of Tennessee Press 2007 p 116 Samuel X Radbill The Role of Animals in Infant Feeding in American Folk Medicine A Symposium Ed Wayland D Hand Berkeley University of California Press 1976 Many have been caught by the obvious resemblance of the Gr Hecate but the letters agree to closely contrary to the laws of change and the Mid Ages would surely have had an unaspirated Ecate handed down to them no Ecate or Hecate appears in the M Lat or Romance writings in the sense of witch and how should the word have spread through all German lands Jacob Grimm Teutonic Mythology 1835 English translation 1900 The actual etymology of hag is Germanic and unrelated to the name of Hecate See e g Mallory J P Adams D Q The Oxford Introduction to Proto Indo European and the Proto Indo European World Oxford University Press 2006 p 223 Mark Edwards Neoplatonic saints the Lives of Plotinus and Proclus by their Students Liverpool University Press 2000 p 100 Writing at some length about the ancient greek iunx Marcel Detienne never mentions any connection to Hecate see Detienne M The Gardens of Adonis Princeton UP 1994 pp 83 9 No Fear Shakespeare Macbeth Act 2 Scene 1 Page 2 Weird Rituals Laid to Primitive Minds Los Angeles Examiner 14 October 1929 Cult of the Great Eleven Samuel Fort 2014 320 pages ASIN B00OALI9O4 e g Sabina Magliocco Witching Culture Folklore and Neopaganism in America University of Pennsylvania Press 2004 p79 James R Lewis Witchcraft Today An Encyclopedia of Wiccan and Neopagan Traditions 1999 pp 303 304 For a Moon magick reference to Hecate as Lady of the Wild Hunt and witchcraft see D J Conway Moon Magick Myth amp Magic Crafts amp Recipes Rituals amp Spells Llewellyn 1995 p157 Hellenion USA Hellenion Hekate s Deipnon Temenos E g Wilshire Donna 1994 Virgin mother crone myths and mysteries of the triple goddess Rochester VT Inner Traditions International p 213 ISBN 0 89281 494 2 Sources EditPrimary sources Edit Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica with an English translation by R C Seaton Loeb Classical Library 1 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1912 Hesiod Theogony in The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G Evelyn White Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1914 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Orphic Argonautica translated by Jason Colavito derived from his text at argonauts book com 2011 Ovid Metamorphoses translated by Brookes More 1859 1942 from the Cornhill edition of 1922 Pausanias Pausanias Description of Greece with an English Translation by W H S Jones Litt D and H A Ormerod M A in 4 Volumes Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1918 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Strabo The Geography of Strabo Edition by H L Jones Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1924 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Secondary sources Edit Athanassakis Apostolos N and Benjamin M Wolkow The Orphic Hymns Johns Hopkins University Press 2013 ISBN 978 1 4214 0882 8 Google Books Berg William Hecate Greek or Anatolian Numen 21 2 August 1974 128 40 Burkert Walter 1985 Greek Religion Cambridge Harvard University Press Published in the UK as Greek Religion Archaic and Classical 1987 Oxford Blackwell ISBN 0 631 15624 0 de Este Sorita Circle for Hekate volume 1 1910191078 Farnell Lewis Richard 1896 Hekate Representations in Art The Cults of the Greek States Oxford University Press Oxford Fowler R L 2000 Early Greek Mythography Volume 1 Text and Introduction Oxford University Press 2000 ISBN 978 0198147404 Gantz Timothy Early Greek Myth A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources Johns Hopkins University Press 1996 Two volumes ISBN 978 0 8018 5360 9 Vol 1 ISBN 978 0 8018 5362 3 Vol 2 Green C M C Roman Religion and the Cult of Diana at Aricia Cambridge University Press University of Iowa 2007 ISBN 978 0 521 85158 9 Online text available at Google books Johnston Sarah Iles 1990 Hekate Soteira A Study of Hekate s Role in the Chaldean Oracles and Related Literature Johnston Sarah Iles 1991 Restless Dead Encounters Between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece ISBN 0 520 21707 1 Kerenyi Karl The Gods of the Greeks 1951 Kern Otto Orphicorum Fragmenta Berlin 1922 Internet Archive Mallarme Stephane 1880 Les Dieux Antiques nouvelle mythologie illustree Merriam Webster 1995 Merriam Webster s Encyclopedia of Literature Inc Merriam Webster ISBN 9780877790426 Mooney Carol M Hekate Her Role and Character in Greek Literature from before the Fifth Century B C a thesis submitted to the faculty of graduate studies McMaster University 1971 Rabinovich Yakov The Rotting Goddess 1990 Ruickbie Leo Witchcraft Out of the Shadows A Complete History Robert Hale 2004 Seyffert Oskar A Dictionary of Classical Antiquities Mythology Religion Literature and Art from the German of Dr Oskar Seyffert S Sonnenschein 1901 The Classical Review volume IX 1985 Library of Illinois Von Rudloff Robert Hekate in Ancient Greek Religion Horned Owl Publishing July 1999 External links EditMyths of the Greek Goddess Hecate Encyclopaedia Britannica 1911 Hecate The Rotting Goddess by Yakov Rabinovich complete book included in the anthology Junkyard of the Classics published under the pseudonym Ellipsis Marx Theoi Project Hecate Classical literary sources and art Hekate in Greek esotericism Archived 10 January 2003 at the Wayback Machine Ptolemaic and Gnostic transformations of Hecate Cast of the Crannon statue at the Ashmolean Museum Oxford Hecate from Mythopedia Ancient texts on Hecate from Tiresias The Ancient Mediterranean Religions Source Database Portals Ancient Greece Religion MythsHecate at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hecate amp oldid 1131889342, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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