- Prostitution
 
 Like the devadasis of Hindu temples, prostitute-priestesses dispensed
 the grace of the Goddess in ancient Middle-Eastern temples. Theywere often known as Charites or Graces, since they dealt in the
 unique combination of beauty and kindness called charis (Latin caritas)
 that was later translated "charity." Actually it was like Hindu karuna,
 a combination of mother-love, tenderness, comfort, mystical enlightenment,
 and sex.Hesiod said the sensual magic of the sacred whores or Horae
 "mellowed the behavior of men."1 Ishtar, the Great Whore of
 Babylon, announced, "A prostitute compassionate am I." 2 Mary Magdalene
 said of her sisters in the profession, "Not only are we
 compassionate of ourselves, but we are compassionate of all the race of
 mankind." 3
 Ancient harlots often commanded high social status and were
 revered for their learning. 6 As embodiments of the Queen of Heaven,
 in Palestine called Qadeshet, the Great Whore, the harlots were
 honored like queens at centers of learning in Greece and Asia
 Minor.7 Some even became queens. The empress Theodora, wife of
 Justinian, began her career as a temple harlot.8 St. Helena, mother of
 Constantine, was a harlot before she became an empress-saint.9
 In an Egyptian story, a priestess of Bubastis demanded all of a
 man's worldly goods for one night of her love. She said, "I am a
 hierodule; I am no mean person." 10 Until recently Egypt still had a class
 of women called ghazye, "sacred whores," who were greatly honored
 in the time of the Mamelukes and prized as brides when their period of
 service was ended.
 Temple prostitutes were revered as healers of the sick. Their very
 secretions were supposed to have medical virtue. A Sufi proverb still
 suggests this opinion: "There is healing in a woman's vagina." 12 Even
 their spittle could perform cures. Jesus's cure of blindness by spittle
 (Mark 8:23) was copied from a matriarchal tradition. A clay tablet from
 Nineveh says eye diseases can be cured by a harlot's spittle. 13 Harlots
 were also sorceresses, prophets, and seers. The Hebrew word zonah
 means both a prostitute and a prophetess. 14
 Holy Mothers designated the promiscuous priestess-shamanesses
 of Japan, also known as spirit-women. Becoming Brides of God, they
 entered the shrine to lie with a priest possessed by the god's spirit. 15
 Similar customs distinguished the Indian devadasis, human copies of
 the lascivious Heavenly Nymphs.
 The profession was popular. Temples of Aphrodite at Eryx,
 Corinth, Cyprus, and other sites were served by a thousand sacred
 harlots a piece.16 When Hellenic Greeks reduced wives to the status of
 servants, the hetaerae or courtesans remained legally and politically
 equal to men. Roman matrons of the highest aristocracy prostituted
 themselves in the temple of Juno Sospita when a revelation was
 needed. 17 Every Babylonian woman prostituted herself in the temple
 before marriage.18 By Amorite sacred law, "she who was about to
 marry should sit in fornication seven days by the gate (of the temple)."19
 Such laws were supposed to appease the Goddess, who disapproved
 of monogamy in the era when there was no formal marriage and
 children didn't know their fathers.20 In Greek myth, the Great
 Mother forbade the Heavenly Father Zeus to make a monogamous
 marriage, holding that only her own ancient system of group marriage
 was honorable.21
 The Tantric word for a sacred harlot was Veshya, probable origin  
 of the Goddess's oldest names in Greece and Rome, Hestia or Vesta,
 the Hearth-mother, served by the Vestal Virgins who were originally
 harlot-priestesses.22 "Hearth" and "Earth" both arose from the altar
 of the Saxon Goddess Ertha, or Heartha, the northern Hestia-Vesta. In
 the matriarchal age, every woman's hearth-fire was her altar.23 The
 hearth was also the omphalos, feminine hub of the universe, navel-stone
 of the temple, around which the sacred harlots performed their
 Dances of Time.
 Dancing harlots came to be called Hours: Persian houri, Greek
 horae. Egyptian temple-women also were Ladies of the Hour. Each
 ruled a certain hour of the night, and protected the solar boat of Ra in
 the underworld during his passage through her hour. 24 The Dance of
 the Hours began as a pagan ceremony of the Horae (divine "Whores")
 who kept the hours of the night by dances, as Christian monks later
 kept the hours of the day by prayers. The oldest authentic Hebrew folk
 dance is still called hora after the circle dances of the sacred harlots.
 The Horae also guarded the gates of heaven, ministered to the souls of
 the blessed, and turned the heavenly spheres.25 (See Houri.)
 The Hebrew word hor means a hole, cave, or pit, common  
 synonyms for both a sacred prostitute and the Goddess she served,
 whose yoni was represented by a hole, cave, pit, or pool of water in the
 heart of the temple.26 A similar Latin term was puteus, a well or pit,
 source of the Spanish puta, "whore." Common folk the Romans buried
 in puticuli, "pits," which like all graves used to stand for the womb of
 rebirth.27 The common root was Vedic puta, "pure" or "holy," and the
 Avestan putika, a mystical lake of the waters of birth. 28 "Lady of the
 Lake" was a title of the Great Goddess throughout Eurasia. In Aramaic,
 her shrines were Athra qaddisa, "the holy place," literally a "heavenly
 harlot-place," or genital pit or lake. 29
 "To dive into water means to delve into the mystery of Maya, to
 quest after the ultimate secret of life .... [T]he cosmic waters are at
 once the immaculate source of all things and dreadful grave." 30 All
 Asia called water a female element, the source of creation, the arche of
 Stoic philosophy. To dive into such water was a symbol of sexual
 intercourse. Communing in this way with a holy whore, man could
 realize the spiritual enlightenment called horasis. This word appears
 in the New Testament (Acts 2:17), misleadingly translated "visions." 31
 A Semitic clan, the Horites of Genesis 36, traced their descent
 from the Great Goddess as "Hora." 32 The Jews had cult prostitutes
 in the time of King Josiah, when they lived next to the temple and wove
 hangings for the sacred grove (2 Kings 23:7). Modern translations of
 the Bible call them "sodomites," but the original wording meant holy
 harlots. 33 Such holy harlots were often "brides of God," set apart to
 give birth to Sons of God, i.e., prophets and sometimes sacrificial
 victims. 34
 Holy whores were called "virgins" because they remained unmarried
 (see Virgin Birth). Like medieval nuns, they took veils as a
 badge of their office. Ishtar-Asherah-Mari-Anath was not only the Great
 Whore but also the Great Virgin (kadesha, holy one). Her Greek
 name was Athene, also described as a "virgin" (Parthenia); but Athene's
 temple, the Parthenon, was served by promiscuous hierodules like all
 other shrines of the Goddess. Later myths rationalized the perpetual
 "virginity" of lascivious fertility-goddesses by periodic hymen-renewing
 ceremonies such as sea baptism, annual bathing in sacred springs, etc.
 The virginity of Great Mother Hera was annually restored by a dip in
 the spring of Canathos at Nauplia. Pausanias said the myth was based
 on a rite of bathing the Goddess's image.35
 Because whores occupied a significant position in paganism, Christians
 vilified their profession. Churchmen didn't want to stamp out
 prostitution altogether, only amputate its spiritual meanings. St. John
 Chrysostom earned high praise from the Patriarch of Constantinople
 for robbing temple prostitutes of "the honors paid to them." 36 The triad
 of heavenly Horae were mythically virginized as three maiden saints
 martyred together, Agape, Chionia, and Irene (Love-feast, She of
 Chios, and Peace). 37 Real horae were relegated to hora-houses, no
 longer temples. The traditional red light of the whorehouse descended
 from the houses of Roman venerii who displayed the sign of an erect
 phallus, painted blood red. 38
 Medieval Germanic law forbade a man to build a horgr, or to call
 his house a horgr, on pain of forfeiting every penny he owned;
 because horgr meant a pagan shrine, a house of "holy whores" where
 priestesses carried on the old religion. Such place names as Horgsholt
 in Iceland still identify ancient shrines. 39
 In the year l 000 A.D. the Icelanders agreed to become Christian in
 name at least, and to be baptized; but all who wished were still legally
 permitted to celebrate the rites of their ancestors in private houses called
 horgr, for a while, until the church rescinded its promises of tolerance.
 40 In earlier centuries, the horgr seems to have been a mons
 veneris or omphalos in a sacred grove. 41
 Sometimes the alternate word hus (house) carried the same sense
 of "a place of worship," because every matriarch once worshipped
 the Goddess of her own hearth, which she could share with more than
 one hus-band. Hence the word hussy, Lady of the House, by
 Christian definition a promiscuous woman.42
 Promiscuity was appreciated, rather than deplored, by medieval
 minnesingers who worshipped the Goddess under her new name of
 Minne, "Love." They objected to commercialized prostitution as a
 degradation of their deity: "Love, the queen of all hearts, the freeborn,
 the one and only, is put up for public sale! What a shameful
 tribute is this that our mastery has required of her! We cultivate Love
 with embittered minds, with lies, and with deceit, and then expect from
 her joy of body and heart; but instead, she bears only pain, corruption,
 evil fruit, and blight-as her soil was sown." 43
 Theologians however accepted commercial prostitution as "a lawful
 immorality," in St. Thomas Aquinas's self-contradictory phrase.
 Aquinas said prostitution was necessary to prevent men from sodomizing
 each other: ''Take away prostitutes from the world," he said, "and
 you will fill it with sodomy."44 Prostitution enabled man to look upon
 promiscuous women as depraved, though their equally promiscuous
 clients were seen as helpless victims of compulsion. There was no
 recognition of the truth, that most prostitutes acted under a more
 telling compulsion than any man's sexuality: the need to earn wherewithal
 to keep alive. It was not an easy living. At best the prostitute
 was forced to make herself a stranger's abject servant. At worst, she
 could become his tormented victim.45
 Certain anticlerical writers maintained that prostitutes should be
 respected for their willingness to be kind. Lorenzo Valla's 15th-century
 De Voluptate called for a return to ancient customs, echoing
 Horace's Omnia voluptas bona est. Valla wrote: "Whores and
 prostitutes deserve more from the human race than do nuns with their
 chastity and virginity!" 46 Of course, such sentiments did not prevail.
 Two centuries later, English apprentices celebrated each Shrove Tuesday
 by breaking into whorehouses and beating the inmates. It also
 became customary in England for men to "punish" the whores they
 patronized by hamstringing: cutting the sinews of the legs to make
 the woman a permanent cripple.47 One might be reminded of the
 Chinese custom of crippling courtesans by footbinding.
 God punished the whores in hell even more severely than men
 punished them on earth, according to God's spokesmen, whose
 asceticism engendered sexual fantasies of astonishing violence.48 Monkish
 deprivations and repressions led to secret envy and fierce hatred of
 the carnal folk who might be suspected of enjoying sexual activity.49
 The hatred poured out in a thousand nasty fantasies of hell. Abbe
 François Arnoux, canon of Riez in 1622, provides an example:
 And the light women, these shall have in their arms a dragon most cruel,
 flaming with fire ... who shall bind and enchain their feet and their
 legs with his serpent tail and shall clasp their whole body with his cruel
 talons, who shall put his beslabbered and reeking mouth upon theirs,
 breathing therein flames of fire and sulphur and poison and venom, who
 with his nose, glandered and hideous, shall breathe into theirs a breath
 most stinking and venomous ... this dragon shall make them suffer a
 thousand agonies, a thousand colics and bitter twistings of the belly, and
 all the damned shall howl, and the devils with them, "See the wanton! see
 the strumpet! Let her be tortured indeed! To it, to it, ye devils! To it,
 ye demons! To it, ye hellish furies! See the harlot! See the trull! Hurl ye
 upon this whore and wreak upon her all the torments ye can!" 50
 On the wall of the women's section of the Church of St. John
 the Baptist in Kastoria, a painting showed God's punishment of a
 whore. Bound in hell, the woman had her legs stretched apart by two
 demons, while a third demon plunged red-hot irons into her vagina.
 Next to the woman punished for being sexually available, another
 woman labeled the Vain Coquette was similarly punished for not being
 sexually available. 51 Women attending this church might well be
 excused for thinking they were damned if they did and damned if they
 didn't.
 Churchmen did not distinguish between a professional prostitute
 and a woman in love with a lover. Both were "whores." The whole
 point of patriarchal morality was that women must not have the right
 to pick and choose men. For a woman to fall passionately in love was a
 tragedy under the medieval church: to pay for a few stolen hours of
 love, both she and her lover were doomed to an eternity of suffering. 52
 The point was illustrated by Grunewald's painting The Damnation
 of Lovers, showing a sinful pair as emaciated corpses living in hell, with
 worms burrowing through their flesh, the woman crowned with a
 coiled serpent, her genitals gnawed by a toad. According to a 15th-century
 illustration for St. Augustine's De Civitate Dei, lovers would
 be bound together on spits in hell and roasted over coals fanned by
 devils. 53
 With western religion envisioning such grisly punishments for
 sexual enjoyment, it is hardly surprising to find western civilization as
 a whole seized by a sick compulsion to destroy all forms of pleasure. 54
 Even in the Christian heaven however, whores had their special
 protectors, modeled on pagan Roman harlot-goddesses like Venus
 and Meretrix. Official Catholic patrons of whores were St. Aphra, St.
 Aphrodite, and St. Maudline (Magdalen), simple canonizations of
 former titles of the Goddess. 55 Chief protectress of whores was the
 virgin Mary. In Antwerp up to the present century, prostitutes spent
 certain annual feast days marching in procession to the churches, to
 dedicate candles to the Holy Virgin whom they called their own
 special deity. 56
 An oft-told tale of the Middle Ages said when a nun decided to
 run away from her convent, to live as a prostitute for a few days,
 Mary assumed the errant nun's appearance and took her place in the
 convent, so she wouldn't be missed and pursued. 57 A German variant
 of the story said the nun, Beatrix, left the convent to live with her
 heathen lover for 15 years. When she returned, she found that Mary
 had served as her stand-in all the while. 58
 Medieval brothels were not always clearly distinguished from
 convents. A trace of the pagan collegia of priestesses still clung to
 both institutions. Early "double convents," with men and women
 united in one community, sometimes housed consecrated prostitutes.
 Several popes maintained "holy brothels" in Rome; Queen Joanna of
 Naples founded a religious house of prostitutes called The Abbey in
 the papal city of Avignon. In Victorian times, it was still a common
 custom to call the madam of a whorehouse "the abbess," though the
 historical precedent was forgotten. 59 See Mary Magdalene.
 Outside the Judea-Christian tradition, prostitution often became a
 fully legitimate lifestyle. Black Africans never fully accepted missionaries'
 views on the matter. White men's laws deprived African women
 of their property and their monopoly of farming, trading, and crafts
 by which they supported their children. African women suffered a
 devastating loss of self-respect, for in their society a woman without
 her own income was regarded with contempt. On finding that white
 men would pay for their sexual favors, many African women took up
 prostitution as their last remaining chance to make an honest living.
 Africans still regard a successful prostitute as a usefully employed
 businesswoman rather than a criminaJ.60
 By contrast, Christian society seldom offered women any formal
 opportunity to take up prostitution as a career, but half-deliberately
 looked the other way as many hundreds of young girls "fell" into it.
 Eighteenth-century London swarmed with female children struggling
 to keep themselves alive by prostitution, according to a
 contemporary pamphlet denouncing "little Creatures piled in Heaps
 upon one another, sleeping in the public streets, in the most rigorous
 seasons, and some of them whose Heads will hardly reach above the
 Waistband of a Man's Breeches, found to be quick with Child, and
 become burdensome to the Parish." Far from extending sympathy to
 these little girls, the pamphleteer called them wicked whores, "a most
 enormous Sin to lay Snares for the Unwary, and to be the Means of
 ruining both Souls and Bodies of so many innocent young
 Gentlemen." 61
 According to the terminology of the time, a "wench" was a child
 of either sex. Dryden's description of a gentleman as one who "eats,
 drinks, and wenches abundantly" apparently meant a man who picked
 up homeless male or female children in the streets to service his
 sexual idiosyncrasies. Later, "wench" came to mean only a lower-class
 female, a servant or peasant available for a gentleman's sexual use.62
 By the 19th century, thousands of girls under the age of 14 were
 listed on English police registers as "common prostitutes." London in
 1860 had at least 500 registered prostitutes under the age of 13, and
 1500 more under the age of 16. Victorian gentlemen had a taste for
 raping child virgins, who commanded the highest prices in whorehouses.
 Experienced child whores were taught to imitate the cries
 and struggles of a newly deflowered victim, and to insert leeches or
 broken glass into their vaginas to produce a convincing flow of
 blood.63
 Josephine Butler's investigations of the English system of prostitution
 led to legislation to raise the "age of consent" to 14; still, large
 numbers of younger girls were captured and immured in brothels. "The
 law was lax on the matter of abduction, and the punishment for
 trafficking in girls was derisory." Male authorities took an interest in
 prostitution only after they clearly understood its connection with
 rampant venereal disease. Legal regulation of brothels was instituted
 then; but this didn't mean closing them. It meant subjecting them to
 medical inspections, so they would be safe for male patrons.64
 Whores were not considered full-fledged human beings. The
 18th-century term for a whore was "a fleshy convenience." 65 The
 word "convenience" also meant an outhouse. One might say that from
 the revered sacred harlot of antiquity to this was a long road
 backward.
 Marginal note:As Mother of
 Harlots, Ishtar was
 called the Great
 Goddess HAR. Her
 high priestess the
 Harine was spiritual
 ruler of "the city of
 Ishtar." 4 HAR was a
 cognate of the
 Persian houri and the
 Greek Hora, also the
 origin of "harem,"
 which used to mean
 a Temple of Women,
 or a sanctuary.5 A
 similar meaning was
 once attached to
 seraglio, from Semitic
 serai, a shrine of
 queens.
 
 Alma Mater
 
 "Soul-Mother," a Roman teaching priestess, especially one empowered
 to give instruction in the sexual Mysteries. (See Cowrie). The
 name was based on Al-Mah, a Middle-Eastern name of the Moongoddess,
 also a title of her temple women, almah- the same word that
 described the virgin Mary in the Hebrew versions of the Gospels.1
 The priestess called alma mater bore a relationship to the male initiate
 similar to that of the Tantric Shakti.
 
 Angels
 
 The earliest angels were heavenly nymphs, like Hindu apsaras, who
 dispensed sensual bliss to the blessed ones. Vikings called them
 Valkyries. Greeks called them Horae. Persians called them Houris, or
 Peris (fairies). A guardian angel was a personal Shakti who watched
 over a man and took him into her ecstatic embrace at the moment
 of death.
 Hindu angels were created primarily for lovemaking. They had no
 menstruation, pregnancy, birth, or nursing, though they were mothers.
 Each child appeared miraculously on its mother's knee at the age of
 five years. Apsaras could copulate endlessly with gods without any
 emission of fluids or loss of energy. Such a being was "the perfect
 dispenser of sensual delight and amorous bliss on a divine scale."1
 Like the queen of the Holy Grail palace in bardic romance, the angel
 was a "Dispenser of Joy." (See Grail, Holy.)
 There were earthy angels too, the dakinis, "Skywalkers." Tantric
 writings said they lived in the Palace of Lotus Light. They were
 sometimes called prostitutes' daughters, or yoginis, i.e., yogapriestesses. 2
 Although such angels seemed to be every man's wish fulfillment,
 patriarchal religions denied the sexuality of angels. Moslems rejected
 the Houris (heavenly "whores"), and insisted the angels are without
 carnal desires. 3 Yet this contradicted the teaching of the Koran, that
 after death every hero would receive beautiful girls as heavenly
 companions.4
 European Christianity consigned the formerly divine Horae to
 Fairyland, the earthly paradise distinguished from the celestial one.
 The place was called locus voluptatis terrestis, the Terrestrial Place of
 Pleasure, or pratum felicitatus, the Paradise of Joy.5
 Angels were often confused with seraphs and cherubs. The former
 were six-winged fiery flying serpents, the lightning-spirits of Chaldean
 myth. The latter were Semitic kerubh, from Shehan mu-karrib,
 "priests of the moon"; sometimes they could take the form of birds.
 Angels accompanying the Hindu Great Goddess were able to fly on the
 wings of garuda birds.6
 Biblical angels were "sons of God" who came to earth to beget
 children on mortal women (Genesis 6:4). Later these were called
 demons, or incubi, or "fallen" angels. The Book of Enoch blamed
 women for the angels' fall. Women had "led astray the angels of
 heaven." 7 In the Magic Papryi, the words angel, spirit, god, and demon
 were interchangeable.8 When St. Paul said women's heads must be
 covered in church "because of the angels" (1 Corinthians 11:10), he
 meant the daemones (demons) supposed to be attracted to women's
 hair. The Greeks thought each person had an individual guardian angel
 or daemon which could appear in animal form, and under Christianity
 evolved into the "familiar spirit." There were no really well-defined
 distinctions between angels, demons, familiars, fairies, elves, saints,
 genii, ancestral ghosts, or pagan gods.9 Among supernatural beings one
 might always find many hazy areas of overlapping identities, even
 "good" or "evil" qualities being blurred.
 A Gallup poll showed in 1978 that over half of all Americans still
 believe in angels. 10
 
 Lupa
   
 Sacred She-Wolf of Roman legend, nurse of the foundling twins
 Romulus and Remus. Lupa' s temple harlots were lupae, sometimes
 called Queens (or high priestesses) in outlying towns of the empire.
 Lupa' s greatest festival was the annual Lupercalia, celebrated in the
 Grotto of the She-Wolf, with orgiastic rites to insure the year's
 fertility. After participating in the ceremony, naked youths traveled
 throughout Palatine towns to "purify" them.1 Perhaps this was why,
 after Lupa' s festival was adopted by the Christian church, it was
 renamed the Feast of the Purification of the Virgin.2 See Dog;
 Werewolf.
 
 Bitch
 This became a naughty word in Christian Europe because it was one ofclose for comfort, especially since Diana herself was assimilated to the
 the most sacred titles of the Goddess, Artemis-Diana, leader of the
 Scythian alani or "hunting dogs." The Bitch-goddess of antiquity was
 known in all Indo-European cultures, beginning with the Great Bitch
 Sarama who led the Vedic dogs of death. The Old English word for
 a hunting dog, bawd, also became a naughty word because it applied to
 the divine Huntress's promiscuous priestesses as well as her dogs. 1
 Harlots and "bitches" were identified in the ancient Roman cult of
 the Goddess Lupa, the Wolf Bitch, whose priestesses the lupae gave
 their name to prostitutes in general.2 Earthly representatives of the Wolf
 Bitch ruled the Roman town of Ira Flavia in Spain, as a queen or
 series of queens named Lupa.3
 In Christian terms, "son of a bitch" was considered insulting not
 because it meant a dog, but because it meant a devil-that is, a
 spiritual son of the pagan Goddess.
 
 Sarama
 
 Vedic bitch-goddess, mother of the brindled Dogs of Yama, who
 were westernized first as the Celtic Hounds of Annwn and then as the
 Christian Hounds of Hell. 1 Sarama was the eastern form of the
 Huntress, known in classical mythology as Artemis, Diana, or Hecate.
 (See Dog.) Like other Huntress-figures she symbolized the deathdealing
 function of the Goddess who implacably hunted down all whose
 time of dissolution had come, according to the cycles of karma.
 
 Artemis
 
 Amazonian Moon-goddess, worshipped at Ephesus under the Latin
 name of Diana or "Goddess-Anna." Like the Hindu Goddess Saranyu
 who gave birth to all animals, she was called Mother of Creatures.
 Her image at Ephesus had a whole torso covered with breasts, to show
 that she nurtured all living things. Yet she was also the Huntress,
 killer of the very creatures she brought forth.1 In Sparta her name was
 given as Artamis, "Cutter," or "Butcher." 2
 Artemis's myths extend back to Neolithic sacrificial customs. At
 Taurus her holy women, under their high priestess lphigeneia,
 sacrificed all men who landed on their shores, nailing the head of each
 victim to a cross.3 At Hierapolis, the Goddess's victims were hung on
 artificial trees in her temple. In Attica, Artemis was ritually propitiated
 with drops of blood drawn from a man's neck by a sword, a symbolic
 remnant of former beheadings. Human victims were later replaced by
 bulls, hence the Goddess's title Tauropolos, "bull-slayer." 4
 Her Huntress aspect was another form of the destroying Crone or
 waning moon. Like Hecate, she led the nocturnal hunt; her priestesses
 wore the masks of hunting dogs. Alani, "hunting dogs," was the
 Greek name for Scythians who revered Artemis. The mythological
 hunting dogs who tore the Horned God Actaeon to pieces were really
 Artemis's sacred bitches.
 Classic mythographers pretended that Actaeon committed the sin
 of seeing the chaste virgin Goddess in her bath, and she condemned
 him out of offended modesty. Actually, the bath, the nakedness, and the
 tearing to pieces of the sacred king were all part of the drama. In
 barbarian Germany, the Goddess's ritual bath could be witnessed only
 by "men doomed to die." 5 Actaeon's deerskin and antlers marked
 him as the pre-Hellenic stag king, reigning over the sacred hunt for half
 a Great Year before he was torn to pieces and replaced by his tanist
 (co-king). In the first century A.D., Artemis's priestesses still pursued and
 killed a man dressed as a stag on the Goddess's mountain.6 Her
 groves became the "deer-gardens" (German Tiergarten, Swedish Djurgarden),
 once the scene of venison feasts.
 One of Artemis's most popular animal incarnations was the Great
 She-Bear, Ursa Major, ruler of the stars and protectress of the axis
 mundi, Pole of the World, marked in heaven by the Pole Star at the
 center of the small circle described by the constellation Ursa Major.
 Helvetian tribes in the neighborhood of Berne worshipped her as the
 She-Bear, which is still the heraldic symbol of Berne. The city's very
 name means "She-Bear." 7 Sometimes the Helvetians called her Artio,
 shortened to Art by Celtic peoples who coupled her with the bear-king
 Arthur. As Artio's Lord of the Hunt, the medieval god of witches
 came to be known as "Robin son of Art." According to the Irish, Art
 meant "God," but its earlier connotation was "Goddess" -specifically
 the Bear-Goddess.8 She was also canonized as a Christian saint,
 Ursula, derived from her Saxon name of Ursel, the She-Bear.
 There was a rather sophisticated astronomical reason for worshipping
 the heavenly She-Bear who followed her track around the Pole
 Star, year by year. It was probably discovered first in the far east. "The
 months and seasons are determined by the revolution of Ursa Major.
 The tail of the constellation pointing to the east at nightfall announces
 the arrival of spring, pointing to the south the arrival of summer,
 pointing to the west the arrival of autumn, and pointing to the north the
 arrival of winter. ... The Great Bear occupies a prominent position
 in the Taoist heavens as the aerial throne of the supreme deity." This
 deity in Taoist tradition is the Queen of Heaven, Holy Mother Ma
 Tsu P'o, with characteristics similar to those of Artemis. She protects
 seafarers and governs the weather; she is called a virgin, and Matron
 of the Measure; she is a Mother of Mercy who has been compared to
 the virgin Mary and to the Buddhist Goddess Maritchi.9
 The axis mundi was often associated with male gods, as either a
 Great Serpent or a World Tree more or less recognized as a phallic
 symbol. Similarly the Little Bear within the circle of the Great Bear was
 pictured by the Greeks as Areas, her son (see Callisto). Yet among
 the oldest traditions may be found hints that this world-supporting tree
 or pole was female. Even as Yggdrasil, the World Tree of the
 Vikings, it showed many parallels with birth-giving, fruit- or milkproducing
 mother trees of the Near East, under its older name of
 Mjotvidr or Mutvidr, "Mother-Tree." Sometimes it was Mead-Tree,
 like "the milk-giving tree of the Finno-Ugric peoples, a symbol which
 must go back ultimately to Mesopotamia, and be of great antiquity." It
 was said that "the tree is the source of unborn souls," which would
 give birth to the new primal woman, Life (Lif) in the new universe after
 the present cycle came to an end. Its fruit could be given to women
 in childbirth "that what is within may pass out." The spring at the tree's
 root was a fountain of wisdom or of the life-giving fluid aurr, which
 may be likened to the "wise blood" of the Mother-that much mythologized
 feminine lifesource likened to the Kula nectar in the
 uterine spring of Kundalini, as if the maternal tree upholding the
 universe were the Mother's spine with its many chakras.10 See
 Menstrual Blood.
 "Many-breasted" Artemis was always a patroness of nurture,
 fertility, and birth. Male gods turned against these attributes in
 opposing the cult of the Goddess. Her own twin brother and sometime
 consort Apollo made birth illegal on his sacred isle of Delos;
 pregnant women had to be removed from the island lest they offend the
 god by giving birth there.11 Christians continued to vilify Artemis.
 Tatian said, "Artemis is a poisoner; Apollo performs cures." 12 The
 Gospels demanded destruction of Artemis's Ephesian temple (Acts
 19:27). St. John Chrysostom preached against this temple in 406 A.D.
 Soon afterward, it was looted and burned. The patriarch of Constantinople
 praised Chrysostom's zeal: "In Ephesus he stripped the treasury
 of Artemis; in Phrygia, he left without sons her whom they called the
 Mother of the Gods." 13 See Diana.
 Marginal note:
 Ursa Major "Great
 Bear," colloquially
 called the Big
 Dipper, a circumpolar
 constellation with
 seven bright stars
 including the "north
 pole pointers."
 
 Callisto
 "Fairest One," a title of Artemis as totemic She-Bear and mother
 of Areas, the Little Bear. Calliste was an old name for Artemis's sacred
 island Thera (She-Beast). Hellenic writers said the Attic rites of
 Artemis involved young girls dressed as the She-bear, which gave rise to
 the myth of Callisto, a nymph who lost her virginity to Zeus and gave
 birth to the bear-child. They were placed in heaven as Ursa Major and
 Ursa Minor.1 Of course the nymph was the virgin aspect of the
 Goddess herself.
 
 Alani
 
 "Hunting dogs," Greek name for the Scythian tribes who worshipped
 Artemis as their Divine Huntress. The name Alan still carried
 the original Greek meaning of a hunting dog when it became popular
 among the Scots during the Middle Ages. Artemis was often called the
 Great Bitch, and her hunting priestesses were the "sacred bitches"
 who chased, killed, and consumed boar-gods and stag-gods like Phorcis
 or Actaeon. Thus, to Christians, "son of a bitch" meant a devil
 worshipper-that is, a pagan devotee of the Goddess. See Dog.
 
 Maera
 
 Black bitch-totem of Hecate, a form assumed by her Trojan incarnation,
 Queen Hecuba, when she was captured by Odysseus. The cause
 of his long wandering exile apparently was the curse Hecuba-Maera
 laid on him. Some said she was killed and buried in "The Bitch's
 Tomb." Others said she scared away her enemies with her spells and
 curses and ran free.
 She was an animal version of the fatal Crone-goddess Moera,
 symbolized by the Lesser Dog Star whose rising announced human
 sacrifices in Attica. One of her victims was a king whose daughter
 Odysseus married, "and whose fate he will therefore have shared in
 the original myth." 1 Similar sacrifices were still offered to the Death -
 goddess and Wolf-mother Maerin in her temple at Trondheim as late
 as the 11th century A.D. 2
 
 Diana
 
 "Queen of Heaven," Roman name for the Triple Goddess as (1)
 Lunar Virgin, (2) Mother of Creatures, and (3) the Huntress (Destroyer).
 Her Greek name was Artemis. Her major pilgrimage centers
 were Ephesus and Nemi, the Sacred Grove. She was Dione, Diana
 Nemorensis, or Nemetona, Goddess of the Moon-grove. In her
 sanctuaries, sacred kings periodically engaged in combat, the loser dying
 as the god Hippolytus, the winner invested as the Goddess's new
 favorite, Virbius. See Hippolytus, Saint.
 As Diana Egeria, patroness of childbirth, nursing, and healing, the
 Goddess made Nemi' s holy spring the Lourdes of pagan Rome.1 The
 legendary King Numa was said to have derived all his wisdom from a
 sacred marriage with her.
 Diana's cult was so widespread in the pagan world that early
 Christians viewed her as their major rival, which is why she later
 became "Queen of Witches." The Gospels commanded total destruction
 of all temples of Diana, the Great Goddess worshipped by "Asia
 and all the world" (Acts 19:27).
 Roman towns all over Europe habitually called the local mother
 goddess Diana, as later Christian towns were to call her Madonna.
 Fortunatus said Diana was the Goddess worshipped at Vernemeton,
 "which in the Gaulish language means the Great Shrine." In the 5th
 century A.D., the Gauls regarded her as their supreme deity. Christians
 spoke slightingly of their pagan custom of adoring the spirit of Diana
 in a cut branch or a log of wood.2 Gozbert, a 7th-century Frankish
 chieftain, doubted the claims of a Christian missionary on the ground
 that the Christian God was "no better than our own Diana.''3
 At Ephesus, the Goddess was called Mother of Animals, Lady of
 Wild Creatures, and Many-Breasted Artemis, shown with her entire
 torso covered with breasts to nourish the world's creatures.4 In the 4th
 century A.D., the church took over this shrine and re-dedicated it to
 the virgin Mary. 5 One of the earliest churches devoted to "Our Lady"
 existed at Ephesus in 431; but most of the people believed the Lady
 was Diana, not Mary. In 432 the Council of Ephesus tried to eliminate
 worship of the pagan Goddess, but the bishops were besieged by
 crowds demanding, "Give us our Diana of the Ephesians!"6
 An excuse for converting Diana's temples into Mary's churches
 was provided by a made-to-order legend that Mary lived at Ephesus
 in her old age. Her tomb was located there, and some Christians even
 pointed out the house in which she had lived. 7 But sometimes she
 was identified with the sinister Widow of Ephesus, a Crone aspect of
 the Goddess showing some primitive features.
 Petronius's version of the myth said the Widow hung her husband's
 dead body on one of the three crosses in front of Diana's
 temple, replacing the body of a previously crucified thief. Then she lay
 with her new lover at the foot of the cross. 8 The parallel between this
 image and that of the triple Mary at the foot of Jesus's cross was too
 Christian myth as Mary's mother, or elder self, the "Grandmother of
 God" under the name of either Anna (Hannah) or Di-anna
 (Dinah).9
 Gnostic Christians called their Wisdom-goddess Sophia the same
 Grandmother of God, and frequently identified her with Diana of
 Ephesus. When Diana's temple was finally pulled down, as the Gospels
 ordered, its magnificent porphyry pillars were carried to Constantinople
 and built into the church of Holy Sophia. 10
 The magic of Ephesus was remembered through the Middle Ages.
 A writer said in 1725: "It is recorded in divers authors that in the
 image of Diana, which was worshipped at Ephesus, there were certain
 obscure words or sentences ... written upon the feet, girdle and
 crown of the said Diana: the which, if a man did use, having written
 them out, and carrying them about him, he should have good luck in
 all his businesses." 11
 Some Christians even remembered that Diana was once the triple
 deity who ruled the world. A 14th-century poem attributed to the
 Bishop of Meaux said Diana was an old name for the Trinity. 12
 Officers of the Inquisition however regarded Diana as the "Goddess
 of the heathen" with whom witches made their aerial night
 journeys-or thought they did. 13 The worship of Diana was denounced
 wherever it was found, even when the worshippers were members of
 the clergy. In the 14th century, a bishop found the monks of Frithelstock
 Priory worshipping a statue of "the unchaste Diana" at an altar
 in the woods, and made them destroy it. 14 The notorious inquisitor
 Torquemada declared bluntly that Diana is the devil. 15
 Devil or not, Diana ruled the wild forests of Europe through the
 medieval period. As patron of the forest of Ardennes she was Dea
 Arduenna; as patron of the Black Forest she was Dea Abnoba. 16
 Serbians, Czechs, and Poles knew her as the woodland Moongoddess
 Diiwica, Devana, or Dziewona.17 She remained the Goddess
 of wild woodlands and hunting, all the way up to the 18th century in
 England.
 Dianic rites were celebrated even in church, despite objections
 from the clergy. A minister wrote against the traditional parade of a
 stag's head into St. Paul's Cathedral in London: "bringing in procession
 into the church the head of a deer, fixed on the top of a long spear or
 pole, with the whole company blowing Hunters Horns in a sort of
 hideous manner; and with this rude pomp they go up to the High
 Altar, and offer it there. You would think them all the mad Votaries of
 Diana." 18
 
 Horsel
 
 Teutonic Moon-goddess, Venus of the Horselberg; also called Ursel
 or Ercel. Her many lovers included Tännhauser in Germany and
 Thomas Rhymer (Thomas of Ercel's Down) in England. According
 to the Thuringian Chronicle, she appeared as a fiery trinity in 1398,
 as "three great fires in the air" descending to rest in the Horselberg.1
 Eventually the Goddess Horsel was canonized as the apocryphal St.
 Ursula, with her "eleven thousand virgins" -transformations of the
 Moon-mother and her daughter stars.
 
 Ursula, Saint
 
 Christianized form of the Saxon Goddess Ursel, or Horsel, the
 "Ercel" of Thomas Rhymer's Erceldoune, and the Venus of the
 Horselberg-Venusberg. Ursel means "She-Bear," the title of Artemis
 Calliste, the same as the Helvetian Goddess Artio, in the guise of Ursa
 Major, the Great Bear (Big Dipper), whose constellation circles the
 pole star without disappearing into the sea. The ancients said Artemis
 the She-Bear ruled all the stars until Zeus usurped her place.1
 The mythical St. Ursula was accompanied by eleven thousand
 virgins, a common pagan image of the Moon-goddess accompanied
 by her children, the stars. One of the Goddess's foremost shrines was
 Cologne, where "Ursel'' was converted into a Christian heroine to
 account for the reverence paid to her by the local people.
 The tale on which Ursula's canonization was based was first
 invented about the 9th century A.D.; then, "During the 12th century
 this pious romance was preposterously elaborated through the mistakes
 of imaginative visionaries; a public burial-ground uncovered at Cologne
 was taken to be the grave of the martyrs, false relics came into
 circulation and forged epitaphs of non-existent persons were
 produced."2
 The churchmen claimed that St. Ursula was a Breton princess
 betrothed to Conon, prince of England, in the 5th century A.D. Prior
 to her marriage, she took her eleven thousand virgins on a pilgrimage.
 While passing through Cologne, they were attacked and slaughtered
 by the Huns, at the instigation of two Roman generals who feared the
 Christian ladies' exemplary piety would convert all the northern
 barbarians to Christ.3
 This fable was intended to Christianize the lunar bear-goddess
 worshipped at Cologne, the same who was Artio, the Helvetian
 "Mother of Animals," with another cult center at Berne ("She-Bear"),
 where her portrait still appears on the Bernese coat of arms.4 Ursel
 and Artio were alternate names of the triple Artemis who took the
 "bear-king" Arthur to paradise. The Greeks said Artemis Calliste,
 " Fairest One," was associated with both the moon and the constellation
 of the Great Bear. In Britain, Ursa Major was often called "Mistress
 Ursula," at fust a title of ~he Goddess, later transferred to the saint. 5
 Artemis the She-Bear was so widely recognized as the Mother
 of Animals that the island once sacred to her, Callista, is still called
 Thera, "She-Beast."6 Arcadians traced their descent from her son
 Areas, the Little Bear (Ursa Minor), a bear-god like the Celtic Arthur.
 Hellenic mythographers pretended that Areas's mother was a mere
 nymph, Calliste, who was punished for losing her virginity by receiving
 the form of a bear, along with her child; but Artemis took pity on
 them and placed them in the stars as Ursa Major and Ursa Minor. This
 version of the myth was invented "to account for the traditional
 connection between Artemis and the Great Bear." 7 The Christian
 version was invented for different reasons, but with the same ultimate
 aim: to mortalize the Goddess.
 Some memory of Ursula the Moon-goddess seems to haunt the
 foundation of the Ursuline order of nuns, by St. Angela Merici in
 1506. Catholic authorities now claim the Ursulines were the oldest
 order of teaching nuns. But most convents were centers oflearning
 for women until the church forbade women's education in the 13th
 century.8 The Ursulines were perhaps the only order of teaching
 nuns who remained obedient to the papacy, and so were permitted to
 continue.
 Yet the Ursulines began under a cloud of suspicion. Angela Merici
 was a native of Brescia, which Pope Calixtus III described as a hotbed
 of witches.9 Angela's first group of sisters numbered exactly 28, the
 lunar number. They made their first devotion in a church dedicated
 to another mythical saint who was only another transformation of the
 Goddess, St. Afra or Aphra (Aphrodite). 10 Angela was not allowed to
 establish her holy society of teachers until forty years had pass~d since
 her original vision, which she received not in a church but in an open
 field under the moon. She and her women had no religious habit, no
 vows, no communal life. They went to their pupils' homes to teach,
 like itinerant governesses.
 The church was not interested in Angela until she underwent
 "popular" canonization in her home territory. Two centuries later,
 the church decided to take advantage of the popularity of her cult by
 declaring her Blessed. Finally in 1807 she was canonized by Pope
 Pius VII. 11 But she is still almost as vague and dim as the Ursuline lunar
 She-Bear that the people of Brescia once worshipped. A 20thcentury
 Catholic scholar mentioned her with one of those curious slips
 of the pen so common among patriarchal writers; he said the
 Ursuline order was founded by "Bishop Angela of Brescia." 12
 
 Karuna
 
 Tantric term for the basic quality of mother-love, directly experienced
 in infancy and ramified in adulthood to embrace all forms of love:
 touching, tenderness, compassion, sensual enjoyment, and eroticism.
 Many centuries before Freudian psychology recognized "infantile sexuality,"
 Tantric sages called karuna the essence of religion: a gut
 feeling of loving-kindness, as opposed to the often cruel or useless
 verbalizing of theological principles.1 It was understood that karuna
 must be learned through physical and sexual contact comfort, by adults
 and children alike. Thus the identity of infantile, sexual, warmly
 loving, and religious behavior patterns was perceived long ago and is just
 now being rediscovered by western civilization.
 The ancients well knew the experience of being in love recapitulates
 the mother-child relationship in its intimate physical attachment,
 trust, and dependence. Recognition of one particular other as a love
 object surely evolved from the instinctive mechanism that binds
 together individual mothers and offspring. It has been shown even in
 the animal realm that adequate sexual functioning in adulthood
 depends on satisfactory relations with the mother in infancy.2
 In ancient times the Goddess's sacred whores were special teachers
 of karuna, which may have been the root of modern Italian carogna,
 "whore." Pagan Rome gave the Great Goddess the title of Mater Cara,
 "Mother Beloved." 3 She combined all the qualities of sexuality,
 motherhood, marital bliss, friendship, generosity and mercy, or caritas,
 which the Christian church later purged of its sensual implications
 and transformed into "charity," the giving of money to earn points in
 the after-life. The Greek version of karuna was embodied in the
 Charites or Graces, the naked Triple Goddess, whose quality of "grace"
 was also altered in the Christian context. In Babylon, the Great
 Mother under the name of Ishtar was also the Great Whore and the
 lover of all men, expressing karuna in her self-description, "A
 prostitute compassionate am I." 4
 The Christian derivative of Mari-Ishtar was Mary Magdalene,
 the sacred harlot who said harlots are "compassionate of all the
 race of mankind." 5 Gnostic Gospels mentioned Mary Magdalene as the
 original female pope, embodying the true Christian spirit kept secret
 from male apostles, while it passed directly from Jesus through
 his surpassing love for Mary.6 Significantly, Christian iconographers
 often confused Mary the harlot and Mary the mother. See
 Prostitution
 Motherhood, sensual satisfactions, and kindly feelings were associated
 with the spirit of the Goddess under all her names, and especially
 with women as her earthly representatives. The integrated idea of
 karuna with all its ramifications has virtually disappeared from modern
 western society, where it is even difficult to explain its older
 meanings. Yet "those modes of perceiving the world and organizing
 behavior which are more distinctly 'female' can't be thought of as
 having sprung into being in the context of the world we now inhabit.
 ... We must think in terms of patterns of behaving that developed over
 untold centuries, and which were keyed to survival of the human
 group in the primitive environment. Such a way of being would have
 been predicated upon powerful social bonds, 'bonds of love,' which
 would serve to keep otherwise more vulnerable individuals in close
 proximity to protectors." Every individual was to some extent in need
 of protectors: "It may be that we feel loneliness to be so potentially
 annihilating because, to the lone human-and above all, the lone
 human infant or child-being alone was death." 7
 Western culture began to lose sight of the close relationship
 between sensuality and loving-kindness when its theology followed
 St. Augustine to his conclusion that every child is born tainted with sin
 because of its necessarily sexual conception. 8 Nearly all manifestations
 of love fell under theological suspicion because nearly all involved
 the feminine principle in some way. (See Romance.) "Men's sexual
 drive was unacceptable to them and so it was projected onto women. It
 was women whose lust was said to be insatiable .... [V]iewing woman
 as seductress and temptress is still evident, as can be seen by the fact
 that prostitutes, but seldom their customers, are arraigned, and the
 fact that the rape victim is often seen as having 'asked for' her attack by
 dressing or behaving seductively."9
 In a society that lacks any coherent articulation of the concept of
 karuna, women as mothers, lovers, and caretakers "learn early that
 they should be ashamed of the very set of qualities which are particularly
 theirs. Ironically, at the same time, they are constantly threatened by
 the prospect that if they are not affectionate enough and as close and
 loving to others as they ought to be, they will have failed in their own
 and others' eyes." The result is "a noxious social climate which fosters
 too little feeling in men and too much in women." 10
 Loss of this all-important concept may create social evils of the
 most pervasive sort. "Male public culture gets caught up with
 machines and puts emphasis on things that are not alive. The decisionmaking
 of males in power tends to happen in a vacuum with little
 reference to the needs of life. Paradoxically, the public leaders who are
 supposed to help us deny death become increasingly oblivious to life
 and show increasing contempt for it. We have a civilization in which
 males in high places imitate a male god in heaven-both think
 themselves above the petty concerns of simple nurture and delight in
 generative life." 11
 
 Kauri
 
 Pre-Vedic name of the Goddess as dispenser of karuna. Kauri was
 sometimes translated "Brilliant One," a name for the Goddess's virgin
 aspect: she who gave their "Power" (Shakti) to the gods.1 Kauri was
 also a name for the vulva (yoni), descriptive of the cowrie shell accepted
 all over the world as a symbol of the female genital and its curative
 and generative properties.
 
 Kwai-Yin / Kuan-Yin
 Eponymous Great Mother of China, known as the Lady Who Brings
 Children; embodiment of the yin principle, as Kali embodied the yoni
 principle in India. Kwai-Yin perpetually contemplated the Golden
 Vial of her own womb, which produced the entire world while her
 consort Shang-te (Father Heaven) lived within her in a Chinese
 version of the Jewel in the Lotus. Kwai-Yin and her Japanese counterpart
 Kwannon represented the principle of karuna, Boundless
 Compassion.1
   
 GraceIn a famous New Testament passage, the quality said to be greater
 than faith or hope is caritas (1 Corinthians 13), translated sometimes
 "charity," sometimes "love." Both translations are inexact. The word
 meant "grace," specifically the grace of the Triple Goddess, embodied
 in the boon-bestowing Three Graces who dispensed caritas (Latin) or
 charis (Greek) and were called the Charites. Julian said their grace was a
 gift from heaven: "The threefold gift of the Charites comes to us
 from heaven, from the circles of the stars." 1
 Romans sometimes called grace venia, the divine correlative of
 Venus, bringing visible tokens of the goddess's favor. 2 Grace meant
 the same as Sanskrit karuna, dispensed by the heavenly nymphs and
 their earthly copies, the sacred harlots of Hindu temples (devadasis) .
 Their "grace" was a combination of beauty, kindness, mother-love,
 tenderness, sensual delight, compassion, and care.
 Graces were emanations of the Goddess. They danced in her
 shrines. They tended to her adornment. They acted as midwives to
 the gods. They were patrons of music, dance, poetry, and art.3 They
 were shown over and over in the same classic pose as three naked
 women dancing, in attitudes strongly resembling those of the Heavenly
 Nymphs on the Temple of Love at Khajuraho in lndia.4
 Greek writers called the Graces Aglaia (Brilliant), Thalia (FlowerBringer),
 and Euphrosyne (Heart's Joy); but they had older names
 inherited from a dim prehistory. Homer knew only one Grace, named
 Cale or Kale, perhaps a cognate of Kali.5 The Gnostic author Marcus
 also used the word Grace or Charis as a title of the Goddess: "May She
 who is before all things, the incomprehensible and indescribable
 Grace, fill you within, and increase in you her own knowledge." 6
 Christians took the pagan concept of charis and struggled to divest
 it of sexual meanings for application to an ascetic creed. "Charity"
 became a basic tenet of primitive Christianity, as of Buddhism before it,
 on the theory that a sure place in heaven could be won by giving
 away one's worldly goods to the poor. Jesus listed the blessings prepared
 for those who voluntarily made themselves meek, humble, and poor
 on earth (Luke 6:20-30). The church's word for these "Beatitudes" was
 macarisma, a word of ancient origin, invoking the Triple Goddess as
 Ma (birth), Charis (grace), and Ma (death).7 The cognate word charisma
 meant Mother-given grace.
 Charis merged with "charity" via ancient precedents equating love
 and affection with hospitality and gift-giving, the "maternal virtues."
 Homeric literature used the word philein, "lovingness," to mean openhanded
 hospitality.8 As re-interpreted by Christian theology, the
 "graciousness" that used to mean both liberality and warm physical
 affection came to suggest liberality alone, practiced to secure one's
 own immortality.
 
 Charites
 
 "Graces," heavenly dispensers of charis (Latin caritas), the grace of
 Mother Aphrodite, which the Bible translates either "love" or "charity"
 (1 Corinthians 13). The Charites were ancient manifestations of the
 Triple Goddess. Pausanias said they were worshipped at Orchomenos
 as three standing stones.1 The classic myth of their nymph-hood
 hardly described them; nor did their Christian form, the mythical St.
 Charity. See Grace; Sophia, Saint.
 
 Hetaera
 
 "Companion," Greek title of a courtesan, the only kind of woman to
 retain full equality with men in the male-dominated Hellenic period.
 Like Christian nuns of the early medieval period, Greek hetaerae
 remained unmarried to protect their property rights from the depredations
 of patriarchal marriage laws. Unlike wives, they were free to
 attend schools, establish salons, and take a vital part in social and
 intellectual life of the time.
 Their title may have been related to Egyptian heter, "friendship,"
 whose hieroglyphic sign was two women grasping each other's
 hands.1
 
 Har
 
 Ishtar as the patroness of temple prostitutes or harines was known as
 the Great Goddess Har. Like Greek horae, Persian houris, and other
 sacred harlots, her priestesses occupied the part of the temple that
 came to be called Harem, the Sanctuary. 1 Kings had to prove their
 virility, hence their right to rule, by impregnating the harines, until it
 became a custom to let certain priests take over this duty. (See
 Prostitution.)
 From the root har came Hara, Hebrew for both a holy mountain
 and a pregnant belly; Hariti or Haraiti, the "Lofty Mountain" of
 paradise in both pre-Vedic Dravidian and Old Iranian cosmology; and
 Harmonia, a "daughter of Aphrodite," a bringer of peace, one of the
 functions of the holy harlot. Harmonia was mythologized as an ancient
 queen of Boeotia, married to Cadmus, whose name in Phoenician
 was kedem, "the Oriental." 2 When Cadmus and Harmonia died and
 went to paradise, they were both transformed into serpents.3 Probably
 they were assimilated to the male-and-female, perpetually entwined
 serpents of the Hermetic caduceus, whose meaning was "Life." (See
 Serpent.)
 
 Ishtar
 
 Babylonian "Star," the Great Goddess who appears in the Bible as
 Ashtoreth, Anath, Asherah, or Esther, the Queen of Heaven (Jeremiah
 44: 19). She was also the Great Whore, described in Revelation 17:5
 as Babylon the Great, the Mother of Harlots. Another of her titles was
 the Goddess Har, who called herself the compassionate prostitute.
 Men communed with her through the sexual rites of her harlotpriestesses.
 1 See Prostitution.
 Babylonian scriptures called Ishtar the Light of the World, Leader
 of Hosts, Opener of the Womb, Righteous Judge, Lawgiver, Goddess
 of Goddesses, Bestower of Strength, Framer of All Decrees, Lady of
 Victory, Forgiver of Sins, etc.2 Much of the liturgical flattery addressed
 to God in the Old Testament was plagiarized from Babylonian prayers
 to Ishtar. One example:
 Who dost make the green herb to spring up, mistress of mankind! Who
 hast created everything, who dost guide aright all creatures! Mother
 Ishtar, whose power no god can approach! A prayer will I utter; may she
 do unto me what seems good unto her . ... 0 my mistress, make me to
 know my deed, establish for me a place of rest! Absolve my sins, lift up my
 face! 3
 A Babylonian prayer that obviously prefigured the prayers and
 psalms of biblical writers, even the biblical theology, said to the Goddess:
 "0 Thou art adorable, who givest salvation, life, and justice, vivify
 my name." 4 Like the Old Testament God, Ishtar was the Mighty One,
 winner of battles and overthrower of mountains.5 She said:
 In the brilliant heavens, to give omens in abundance, I appear, I appear in
 perfection. With exultation in my supremacy, with exultation do I, a
 Goddess, walk supreme; Ishtar, the Goddess of evening, am I; Ishtar, the
 Goddess of morning, am I; Ishtar, who opens the portals of heaven, in
 my supremacy. The heavens I destroy, the earth I devastate, in my
 supremacy. Who rises resplendent on the firmament of heaven, invoked
 above and below, in my supremacy. The mountain I sweep away
 altogether, in my supremacy. The great wall of the mountain am I,
 their great foundation am I, in my supremacy. 6
 A long Babylonian prayer presents numerous metaphors and
 liturgical phrases later copied by Jewish priests on behalf of their god:
 I beseech thee, Lady of ladies, Goddess of goddesses, Ishtar, queen of all
 cities, leader of all men. Thou art the light of the world, thou art the
 light of heaven .. . . Supreme is thy might, O Lady, exalted art thou above
 all gods. Thou renderest judgment and thy decision is righteous; unto
 thee are subject the laws of the earth and the laws of heaven, the laws of
 the temple and of the shrine, and the laws of the private apartment and
 of the secret chamber. Where is the place where thy name is not, and
 where is the spot where thy commandments are not known? At thy
 name the earth and the heavens shake, and the gods they tremble; the
 spirits of heaven tremble at thy name and the men hold it in awe. Thou
 art great, thou art exalted; all the men of Sumer, and all creatures, and all
 mankind glorify thy name. With righteousness dost thou judge the
 deeds of men, even thou; thou lookest upon the oppressed and to the
 downtrodden thou bringest justice every day. How long, Queen of
 Heaven and Earth, how long, how long, Shepherdess of pale-faced men,
 wilt thou tarry? How long, O Queen whose feet are not weary and
 whose knees make haste? How long, Lady of Hosts, Lady of Battles?
 Glorious one whom all the spirits of heaven fear, who subduest all
 angry gods; mighty above all rulers, who hold est the reins of kings.
 Opener of the womb of all women, great is thy light. Shining light of
 heaven, light of the world, enlightener of all the places where men dwell,
 who gatherest together the hosts of the nations. Goddess of men,
 divinity of women, thy counsel passeth understanding. Where thou
 glancest the dead come to life, and the sick rise and walk; and the mind
 that is distressed is healed when it looks upon thy face. How long, 0 Lady,
 shall mine enemy triumph over me? Command, and at thy command
 the angry god will turn back. Ishtar is great! Ishtar is Queen! My Lady is
 exalted, my Lady is Queen. 7
 
   
 the Ishtar Gate
 
 Akkadian sources show that Ishtar was the same Great Goddess
 revered all over the Near East under such names as Dea Syria, Astarte,
 Cybele, Aphrodite, Kore, Mari, etc.:
 Praise Ishtar, the most awesome of the Goddesses, revere the queen of
 women, the greatest of the deities. She is clothed with pleasure and
 love. She is laden with vitality, charm, and voluptuousness. In lips she is
 sweet; life is in her mouth. At her appearance rejoicing becomes full.
 She is glorious . ... The fate of everything she holds in her hand. . ..
 Ishtar-to her greatness who can be equal? Strong, exalted, splendid
 are her decrees .... Ishtar among the gods, extraordinary is her station.
 Respected is her word; it is supreme over them. She is their queen;
 they continually cause her commands to be executed. All of them bow
 down before her. 8
 The powers of the underworld bowed down before her when
 she went underground to rescue her son-lover Tammuz, as her Sumerian
 forerunner Inanna rescued the same son-lover, Dumuzi. She said
 to the seven gatekeepers: "If thou openest not the gate so that I cannot
 enter, I will smash the door, I will shatter the bolt, I will smash the
 doorpost, I will move the doors, I will raise up the dead, eating the
 living, so that the dead will outnumber the living."9 This threat was
 typical of Ishtar's dark underworld twin, Eresh-kigal, the Death-goddess
 who had power to deprive the heavenly gods of their sacrificial
 food. 10 Ishtar's temporary departure caused sterility and suspension of
 sexual activities over the whole earth: "After the Lady Ishtar has
 descended, the bull no longer mounts the cow, the ass no longer bends
 over the she-ass, and the man no longer bends over the woman in the
 street: the man slept in his place, the woman slept alone." 11
 This Descent into Hell was a perilous but necessary part of the
 sacred drama, lasting three days and culminating in the Day of Joy,
 when the god was restored to life. 12 This inaugurated a new year after
 penitential atonement and sacrifice. "It is on New Year's Day that
 Ishtar lies with Tammuz, and the king reproduces this mythical hierogamy
 by consummating the ritual union with the Goddess [i.e., with
 the hierodule who represents her on earth] in a secret chamber of the
 temple, where the nuptial bed of the Goddess stands." 13
 Gilgamesh said the Goddess was cruel to her lovers, since each in
 turn personified the dying god who refreshed the earth's fertility with
 his blood. 14 When the god was incarnate in bulls, the animals were
 emasculated and their severed genitals thrown to the Goddess's
 image, a rite "probably derived from the rite of self-emasculation which
 had been practiced in honor of lshtar." 15 Ishtar's priestesses apparently
 performed some version of the rite each year in the temple of Jerusalem,
 where the virgin form of the Goddess was called Mari, Mari-Anna,
 or Miriam, and her holy women annually wailed for the sacrificial death
 of Tammuz (Ezekiel8:14). See Salome; Mary Magdalene.
 
 Uchati
 
 "Weepers," title of sacred harlots of Ishtar, whose duty it was to make
 formal lamentations for the dead. 1 They also wailed for the dead savior
 Tammuz in the temple of Jerusalem, where Ishtar was worshipped as
 Mari, Queen of Heaven (Ezekiel 8:14 ). Their title was related to
 Egyptian Utchatti or Udjatti, Divine Eyes, sacred to the Goddess
 Maat as the All-Seeing Eye, whose hieroglyphic eye emblem later
 became associated with the cult of Horus.2
 
 Asherah
 
 Semitic name of the Great Goddess, possibly from Old Iranian asha,
 "Universal Law," a law of the matriarch, like Roman ius naturale.1
 Asherah was "in wisdom the Mistress of the Gods." 2 Sumerians
 called her Ashnan, "strength of all things," and "a kindly and bountiful
 maiden." 3 Her sacred city Mar-ash appears in the Bible as Mareshah
 (Joshua 15:44).
 The Old Testament "Asherah" is translated "grove," without any
 explanation that the sacred grove represented the Goddess's genital
 center, birthplace of all things. In the matriarchal period, Hebrews
 worshipped the Goddess in groves (I Kings 14:23), later cut down by
 patriarchal reformers who burned the bones of Asherah's priests on their
 own altars (2 Chronicles 24:4-5).
 The Goddess's grove-yoni was Athra qaddisa, "the holy place"
 (literally, "divine harlot"). Sometimes she was called simply "Holiness,"
 a word later applied to Yahweh. Canaanites called her Qaniyatu
 elima, She Who Gives Birth to the Gods, or Rabbatu athiratu
 yammi, Lady Who Traverses the Sea (i.e., the Moon).4 Rabbatu was an
 early female form of rabbi. Athirat, Athra, Aethra, Athyr, and Egypt's
 Hathor were all variations of the same name for the Goddess.5 In Egypt
 she was also a Law-giving Mother, Ashesh, an archaic form of lsis;
 the name meant both "pouring out" and "supporting," the functions of
 her breasts. Her yonic shrine in Thebes was Asher, Ashrel, or Ashrelt.
 Some called her "Great Lady of Ashert, the lady of heaven, the queen
 of the gods." 6
 For a while, Asherah accepted the Semitic god El as her consort.
 She was the Heavenly Cow, he the Bull.7 After their sacred marriage,
 she bore the Heavenly Twins, Shaher and Shalem, the stars of morning
 and evening (see Lucifer). The marriage rite seems to have involved
 the cooking of a kid in its mother's milk, a procedure later forbidden by
 Jewish priests (Exodus 23:19).8
 
 Rabbatu
 
 "Holy One," female form of rabbi, applied to the semitic Goddess or
 her priestesses. 1 See Asherah.
 
 Qadeshet
 
 Arabic qadisha, Hebrew kadesha meant a sacred harlot or Holy
 Virgin; qadeshet was also the title of Astarte and her temple women.
 The word meant "priestess." In the Koran it was used as a name for
 Mohammed's rich wife Khadija, whose money supported the prophet's
 endeavors.1 Astarte-the-Qadeshet was the Syrian counterpart of Ishtar,
 Babylon's Great Whore, who declared herself the Mother of
 Compassion.2 See Prostitution.
 
 Astarte
 
 Lady of Byblos, one of the oldest forms of the Great Goddess in the
 Middle East, identified with Egypt's Hathor, Mycenae's Demeter,
 Cyprus's Aphrodite.
 Her shrine at Byblos dated back to the Neolithic and flourished
 throughout the Bronze Age.1 She was the same creating-preserving and-
 destroying Goddess worshipped by all Indo-European cultures, and
 still typified by Kali as the symbol of Nature. Astarte was the "true
 sovereign of the world," tirelessly creating and destroying, eliminating
 the old and generating the new. 2 Sidonian kings could not rule
 without her permission. Each king styled himself first and foremost
 "Priest of Astarte."
 Sumerian cylinder seals from Lagash, ca. 2300 B.C., showed the
 Goddess in a pose identical with Kali' s love-and-death sacramental
 posture, squatting on top of her consort's body. 3
 Astarte ruled all the spirits of the dead who lived in heaven wearing
 bodies of light, visible from earth as stars. Hence, she was known as
 Astroarche, "Queen of the Stars." 6 She was the mother of all souls in
 heaven, the Moon surrounded by her star-children, to whom she
 gave their "astral" (starry) bodies. Occultists still speak of the astral body
 as an invisible double, having forgotten the word's original connotation
 of starlight.7
 Astarte-Ashtoreth was transformed into a devil by Christian writers,
 who automatically assumed that any deity mentioned in the Bible
 other than Yahweh was one of the denizens of hell. She was also
 masculinized. One finds in books of the 15th and 16th centuries a
 demon Ashtoreth or Astaroth, a "duke" or "prince" of hell. 8 Milton
 knew better; he spoke of "Astarte, queen of heaven, with crescent
 horns." 9
 Scholars who really understood the mystery of Astarte recognized
 in her one of the ancient prototypes of the virgin Mary. In Syria and
 Egypt her sacred dramas celebrated the rebirth of the solar god from the
 celestial Virgin each 25th of December. A newborn child was
 exhibited, while the cry went up that the Virgin had brought forth.
 Frazer says, "No doubt the Virgin who thus conceived and bore a
 son on the twenty-fifth of December was the great Oriental goddess
 whom the Semites called the Heavenly Virgin or simply the Heavenly
 Goddess; in Semitic lands she was a form of Astarte." 10
 Marginal notes:
 The Bible calls her
 Asherah or Ashtoreth,
 the Goddess worshipped
 by Solomon
 ( l Kings 11:5).
 To the Arabs the
 Goddess was Athtar,
 "Venus in the
 Morning." In Aramaic
 she was Attar-Samayin,
 "Morning Star
 of Heaven," uniting
 two sexes in herself, like
 Lucifer the Morning
 Star and Diana Lucifera.
 Her Hurrian
 name was Attart, or
 sometimes Ishara,
 another form of lshtar,
 "the Star. " 4 To Canaanites,
 she was
 Celestial Ruler, Mistress
 of Kingship,
 mother of all baalim
 (gods).5
 
 Mari
 
 Basic name of the Goddess known to the Chaldeans as Marratu, to
 the Jews as Marah, to the Persians as Mariham, to the Christians as
 Mary: as well as Marian, Miriam, Mariamne, Myrrhine, Myrtea,
 Myrrha, Maria, and Marina. Her blue robe and pearl necklace were
 classic symbols of the sea, edged with pearly foam. 1
 The Goddess's Amorite' city of Mari was one of the wonders of the
 ancient world. Its six-acre temple-palace astonished archeologists who
 uncovered it in the 1930s. Mari dominated the area now known as the
 Holy Land until it fell to the armies of Hammurabi in 1700 B.C.4
 Semites worshipped an androgynous combination of Goddess and
 God called Mari-El (Mary-God), corresponding to the Egyptian
 Meri-Ra which combined the feminine principle of water with the
 masculine principle of the sun.5
 The Syrian version of Mari or Meri was worshipped in combination
 with her serpent-consort Yamm, derived from Yama, the Hindu
 Lord of Death. Yamm alternated with Baal, "the Lord," as the
 Goddess's favorite and a sovereign over heaven and the abyss. Indian
 Yama was one of the consorts of Kel-Mari, as Kali was called in the
 south.8 Tantric Buddhists still speak of the "Slayer of the Death
 King," Yama-Mari, who was identified with the Dalai Lama.9 Jews and
 early Christians used the same combination of names, Mari-Yamm or
 Mariam, for the mother of Jesus.10
 The spirit of the archaic Mari entered into Babylonian diviners
 known as mare baruti, sea-mothers, who operated in the bit mummu
 or womb-chamber, where statues of the gods were said to be "born"
 (made animate). 11 In similar womb-chambers the Hindu goddess was
 worshipped as Kau-Mari or Kel-Mari. 12 She is still invoked as Marici-Tara,
 the Diamond Sow on the Lotus Throne, "Glorious One, the
 sun of happiness." She is the Goddess "whose mayik vesture is the
 sun," forerunner of the Gospels' "woman clothed with the sun"
 (Revelation 12: I), who was identified with the virgin Mary.l3
 She was also the Great Fish who gave birth to the gods, later the
 Mermaid, Mare-mynd, mareminde, marraminde, maraeman, or
 mereminne. 20
 In short, she was always Mother Sea. Her Latin name was Maria,
 "the Seas." St. Peter Chrysologus called her Christian incarnation,
 the virgin Mary, "the gathering together of the waters." 21 But she was
 also the earth and heavens, since her earliest form was a trinity. She
 was worshipped in pre-Roman Latium as Marica, mother of the first
 king Latinus, who was also her priapic goat-footed consort Faunus.
 She was probably the same Goddess worshipped by the Slavs under the
 name of Marzanna (Mari-Anna), who "fostered the growth of
 fruits." 22
 Mari and her pagan consort were incongruously canonized as a
 pair of Christian saints, Addai and Mari (Adonis and AphroditeMari).
 Their legends called them "bishops" dispatched to Aphrodite's
 cult center at Edessa, probably because their portraits appeared there,
 and it was easier to Christianize them than to destroy them.
 Their cult began with Nestorian Christians who called them "Holy
 Apostles Addai and Mari." 23 Another Christianization was St.
 Maura, from the Goddess's Fate-name Moera, "older than Time." 24
 As the Fate-spinner who held men's destinies in her hand, she
 generated a taboo: on St. Maura'a day, women were forbidden to spin
 or sew.25
 Medieval Spain knew the Goddess Mari as a "Lady" or "Mistress"
 who lived in a magic cave and rode through the night sky as a ball of
 fire.26 This may have meant the red harvest moon, or possibly the moon
 in eclipse-always a dire omen. The Goddess Mari was said to give
 gifts of fairy gold and precious stones, which might turn into worthless
 lumps of coal by the light of day.27 In later centuries, the same
 worthless gifts were given to "bad" children by St. Nicholas at
 Christmas.
 The island of lnis Maree had a ruined temple, sacred to a certain
 "St. Mourie" -none other than the Goddess Mari for whom the
 island was named. In 1678 the Presbytery of Dingwall "disciplined"
 some people who sacrified bulls to the divinity of Loch Maree on the
 25th of August, a day dedicated to Aphrodite-Mari for more than 1500
 years. 28
 Marginal notes:
 Many place names
 evolved from Marian
 shrines. Among
 them were Amari or
 Ay-Mari, the
 Cyprian home of
 Aphrodite Marina;
 Marib, City of the
 Moon, seat of the
 queens of Sheba; Marea
 in western Egypt;
 Maronea near Lake
 Ismaris; Maru,
 mother-city of the
 Medes; Sa-Maria, a
 country whose name
 meant literally "holy
 blood of Mary." 2 One
 of the entrances to
 her underworld womb,
 a sacred cave
 accessible only by sea,
 was Mar-Mari,
 "Mother Sea." 3
 Sometimes the deity
 was named simply Mer,
 an Egyptian word for
 both "waters" and
 "mother-love." 6
 Mer was also a
 component of the
 names of Egyptian
 queens in the first
 dynasty. One of Egypt's
 oldest names was Ta-Mera,
 Land of the
 Waters, which could
 also be interpreted as a
 Land of the Great
 Mothers.7
 Northern Europe
 knew the same Goddess
 as Maerin, wedded
 to Thor at her shrine in
 Trondheim.14 To
 the Saxons she was
 Wudu-Maer:
 literally, a Wood-Mary,
 or Goddess of the
 Grove. To the Celts she
 was Maid Marian,
 beloved by Robin, the
 witches' Horned
 God. Their greenwood
 cult caused church
 authorities considerable
 trouble in the 14th
 century. 15
 Mari was the same
 Merian or Merjan
 worshipped in Persia as
 Queen of the Peris
 (Fairies).16 Iran had its
 mother goddess
 Mariana from very
 ancient times.I7 She
 might be traced to the
 land of Akkad,
 created by a Goddess
 called the Lady
 Marri, Mother of the
 World.18 A king of
 Mari in 2500 B.C.,
 united with the
 Goddess, took the royal
 name of Lamki-Mari.
 19
 
 Houri
 Persian-Arabian heavenly nymph, sexual angel, or temple prostitute:
 cognate with the Greek hora, Babylonian harine, Semitic harlot or
 "whore." Houris were dancing "Ladies of the Hour" who kept time
 in heaven and tended the star-souls. See Angel; Prostitution.
 
 Horae
 Aphrodite's celestial nymphs, who performed the Dances of the
 Hours, acted as midwives to the gods, and inspired earthly horae (harlotpriestesses)
 to train men in the sexual Mysteries. The dance still
 called hora was based on the priestesses' imitation of the zodiacal
 circling of "hours." Time-keeping is horology because of the systems
 devised by these ancient priestesses of the Goddess. See Prostitution.
 The Horae were called "fair ones, begetters of all things, who in
 appointed order bring on day and night, summer and winter, so as to
 make months and years grow full."Marginal note:In Egypt they were
 "Ladies of the Hour,"
 in Persia houris, in
 Babylon harines; among
 Semites they were
 the "whores" called hor
 (a hole), ancestresses
 of the Horites.
   
 
 Agape, Saint
 
 "Love Feast," first of Aphrodite's holy whores (Horae), was canonized
 as a Christian saint when icons of the Horae were re-labeled
 "virgin martyrs": Sts. Agape, Chione, and lrene.1 Agape originally
 personified the rite of sexual communion, as practiced in Aphrodite's
 temples and adopted by some early Christian sects as a Tantric type
 of "spiritual marriage." By the 7th century A.D. the agape ceremony was
 declared heretical, but it continued secretly throughout the Middle
 Ages.2 See Menstrual Blood.
 
 Chionia
 
 "Snow Queen," a Greek title of one of the Horae; an untouchable
 virgin Goddess of the high mountains, prototype of the medieval fairy,
 Virginal the Ice Queen. She was also canonized as a Christian
 "virgin martyr."
 
 Irene, Saint
 
 "Peace," the third of Aphrodite's three Horae; the Dove who
 announced the coming of death. She also associated with the "peace" to
 be won by ritual castration, even as late as the 14th century A.D. when
 a nun or priestess bearing her name was linked to the heretical sect of
 Mount Athos monks who emasculated themselves.' (See
 Castration.)
 The pagan temple of Irene on the acropolis of Constantinople was
 taken over by Christians and renamed the Church of Holy Irene. 2Thus the Byzantine Goddess was canonized, along with her two sisters
 in the same Trinity.3
  
 Aphrodite
 
 Often dismissed as a "Greek goddess of love," Aphrodite was really
 much more than that. Like Kali, she was a Virgin-Mother-Crone
 trinity. She was once indistinguishable from the Fates (Moirai); her
 old name was Moira, and she was said to be older than Time. She governed
 the world by ius naturale, the natural law of the maternal clan.1
 She was not only Greek. She was the Dea Syria, also known as
 Asherah or Astarte, Goddess of the oldest continuously-occupied
 temple in the world.2 She was the ancestral mother of the Romans, for
 she gave birth to their founding father, Aeneas.3 Under the name of
 Venus, she was the mother of the Venetii, whose capital city became
 Venice, called "Queen of the Sea" after the Goddess herself.
 One of Aphrodite's major centers of worship was the city of
 Paphos on Cyprus, the island named for its copper mines. Thus, she
 was called "the Cyprian" or "the Paphian," and her sacred metal was
 copper. She was also called Mari, the Sea. Egyptians referred to her
 island as Ay-Mari.4During the Christian era, Aphrodite's temple on Cyprus was
 converted into a sanctuary of the virgin Mary, another name of the
 same Goddess, but in this sanctuary the virgin Mary is hailed to this day
 as Panaghia Aphroditessa, "All-holy Aphrodite." 5
 Continued worship of the goddess on Cyprus probably contributed
 to the Christian belief that the whole population of Cyprus descended
 from demons.6 In reality, Cyprian Aphrodite was like all other
 manifestations of the Great Goddess: ruling birth, life, love, death,
 time, and fate, reconciling man to all of them through sensual and
 sexual mysticism. The Cyprian sage Zenon taught Aphrodite's philosophy:
 "mankind and the universe were bound tqgether in the system
 of fate .... Diogenes Laertios tells us that Zenon was the first to
 define the end of human existence as 'life in accordance with nature.' " 7
 Aphrodite had almost as many "emanations" as Thousand-Named
 Kali. She was not only Mari and Moira and Marina and Pelagia and
 Stella Maris, all titles related to her control of the sea; she was also
 Ilithyia, Goddess of childbirth; Hymen, Goddess of marriage; Venus,
 Goddess of sexuality and the hunt; Urania, Queen of Heaven; Androphonos,
 the Destroyer of Men; and many others. She was often
 identified with Isis. Anchises, her lover who begot Aeneas and then was
 castrated, had a name meaning "he who mates with lsis." 8 Under
 several of her names, Aphrodite mated with Semitic gods. Her cult
 occupied the main temple in Jerusalem after 70 A.D. In the 4th
 century it was said that Constantine's mother found the true cross of
 Christ buried in Aphrodite's Jerusalem temple. (See Cross.)
 One of Aphrodite's greatest shrines in Asia Minor was the city of
 Aphrodisias, once dedicated to Ishtar. Up to the 12th century A.D.,
 when the city was taken by Seljuk Turks, the Goddess was worshipped
 there as the patron of arts and letters, crafts, and culture.9 Recent
 excavations have uncovered exquisite artifacts and statuary, bespeaking
 a cultivated and sophisticated lifestyle under the Goddess's rule. 10
 The calendar still keeps the name of Aphrodite on the month
 dedicated to her, April (Aphrilis). The ancient Kalendar of Romulus
 said this was the month of Venus. 11  
 Dove
 
 Aphrodite's totem, the bird of sexual passion, symbolically equivalent
 to the yoni.1 In India, too, the dove was paravata, the symbol of lust.2
 Joined to her consort the phallic serpent, the Dove-goddess stood for
 sexual union and "Life."
 The phrase attributed to Jesus, "Be ye therefore wise as serpents,
 and harmless as doves" (Matthew 10:16), was no random metaphor
 but a traditional invocation of the Syrian God and Goddess.3 The
 Oriental meaning was remembered by the gypsies, whose folk tales
 said the souls of ancestors lived inside magic hollow mountains, the men
 having been changed into serpents and the women into doves.4
 Christians adopted the feminine dove as a symbol of the Holy
 Ghost, originally the Goddess Sophia, representing God's "Wisdom"
 as the Goddess Metis represented the "Wisdom" of Zeus. Gnostic
 Christians said Sophia was incarnate in the dove that impregnated the
 virgin Mary, the same dove that descended on Jesus at his baptism to
 impregnate his mind (Matthew 3:16). Pious admirers of Pope Gregory
 the Great made him even more saintly than Jesus by reporting that
 the Holy Ghost in dove shape descended on him not once but many
 times.5 All this was copied from Roman iconography which showed the
 human soul as a dove that descended from the Dove-goddess's
 oversoul to animate the body.6
 Aphrodite as a bringer of death, or "peace," sometimes bore the
 name of Irene, Dove of Peace. Another of her death-goddess names
 was Epitymbria, "She of the Tombs." 7 Romans called her Venus
 Columba, Venus-the-Dove. Her catacombs, mausoleums, and necropoli
 were known as columbaria, "dovecotes." 8 Thus the soul
 returning to the Goddess after death was again envisioned as a dove.
 From this image, Christians copied their belief that the souls of saints
 became white doves that flew out of their mouths at the moment of
 death. In the Catholic ceremony of canonization, white doves are
 released from cages at the crucial moment of the ritual.9
 Christian iconography showed seven rays emanating from the
 dove of the Holy Ghost: an image that went back to some of the most
 primitive manifestations of the Goddess.10 In the Orient, the mystic
 seven were the Pleiades or "Seven Sisters," whose Greek name
 meant "a flock of doves." They were daughters or "rays" of Aphrodite
 under her title of Pleione, Queen of the Sea.11 Hemdotus said seven
 holy women known as Doves founded the oracles of Dodona, Epirus,
 and Theban Amon.12 They were worshipped in the Middle East as
 Seven Sages or Seven Pillars of Wisdom: the seven woman-shaped
 pillars that had been upholding temples of the Goddess since the
 third millenium B.C. 13 See Caryatid. Arabs still revere the Seven Sages,
 and some remember that they were women, or "doves." 14 The
 Semitic word for "dove," ione, was a cognate of "yoni" and related to
 the Goddess Uni, who later became Iune, or Juno.
 The cult of the Doves used to incorporate primitive rites of
 castration and its modification, circumcision. India called the seven
 Sisters "razors" or "cutters" who judged and "critically" wounded men,
 the Krittikas, "Seven Mothers of the World," root of the Greek
 kritikos, "judge." They killed and gave rebirth to gods who were
 castrated to make them fertile, like women. The name of Queen
 Semiramis, legendary founder of Babylon, also meant "Dove" in the
 Syrian tongue. She was said to have castrated all her consorts. 15
 When circumcision replaced castration, the doves were involved in
 that too. Even Christian symbolism made the connection. The
 official symbol of the Festival of the Circumcision of Christ was a dove,
 holding in its beak a ring representing the Holy Prepuce. "Christ's
 fructifying blood" was linked with the similar emblem of Pentecost,
 which showed the descending dove on a background of blood red,
 officially described as a representation of the church fertilized by the
 blood of Christ and the martyrs.16
 A certain "maiden martyr" called St. Columba (Holy Dove) was
 widely revered, especially in France, although she never existed as a
 human being.17 Another curious survival of pagan dove-lore was the
 surname given to St. Peter: Bar-Iona, "Son of the Dove." 18 Some
 survivals may have been invented to explain the doves appearing on
 ancient coins as symbols of Aphrodite and Astarte.19
 
 Columba, Saint
 
 "Holy Dove," a spurious canonization of Aphrodite as a "maiden
 martyr" Columba of Sens.1 Celtic myth called her Colombe, the yoni
 maiden mated to Lancelot as a lightning bolt, the Phallus of Heaven.2
 See Lightning.
 
 Mermaid
 
 Literally "Virgin of the Sea," the mermaid was an image of fish-tailed
 Aphrodite, the medieval Minne, Maerin, Mari, Marina, mereminne,
 mare-mynd, mareminde, marraminde, or maraeman.1 Her Death-
 goddess aspect, sometimes named Ran, received the souls of those put
 to sea in funeral boats; or, she might trap living men in her fish net.
 Teutons said drowned men went to dwell in the house of Ran.2
 An English law, still on the books in the 19th century, officially
 claimed for the Crown "all mermaids found in British waters." 3
 
 Thalassa
 
 The Goddess at Rhodes and Miletus, mother of the Telchines
 ("enchanters"). As patroness of sex and marriage, she was an archaic
 form of Aphrodite Marina. She was invoked at Roman weddings by
 the cry Talassio, the meaning of which had been forgotten, but
 everyone knew "it was the correct thing to shout at weddings." 1
 
 Nymph
 Greek nymphe, Latin nympha, a bride or a nubile young woman.
 The same word was applied to female-genital symbols like the lotus
 flower, water lilies, and certain shells. "Nymphs" served as priestesses
 in ancient temples of the Goddess, especially in sexual ceremonies,
 where they represented the divine principle of flowering fertility and
 were sometimes known as Brides of God. See Virgin birth.
 In medieval times the word nymph was applied to either a witch or
 a fairy, since both descended from the pre-Christian priestess. As
 spirits of nature, the "nymphs" were believed to embed their souls
 forever in certain parts of the natural world that the Goddess had
 ruled in antiquity: there were water nymphs, tree nymphs, mountain
 nymphs, and nymphs who dwelt in the earth, the sea, or Fairyland.
 Their ancient connection with sexuality was more or less consistently
 maintained. Even now, "nymphomania" connotes sexual obsession,
 like the moon-madness supposed to motivate the ancient nymphs in
 their seasons of mating.
 
 Echo
 
 Greek "nymph" at whose reflecting pool Narcissus met his death.
 According to the classical myth, Echo grieved so sorely for her beloved
 flower-god that she pined away until there was nothing left of her but
 her voice.
 Originally, she was Acco, the pre-Hellenic birth-goddess, in an
 oracular mood as "the last echo of the Voice," meaning the Voice of
 Creation, the same as the Goddess Vac in ancient India (see Logos). In
 Hebrew she was Bath Kol, Daughter of the Voice. 1
 Apparently the Word she spoke to the springtime god NarcissusAntheus-
 Adonis-Hyacinthus was the death curse heralding the final
 phase of the sacred king's fatal drama; for Narcissus was the same god as
 Dionysus with all his flower-titles.2
 
 Peri
 
 Persian fairy or genie, usually female, like western fairies but sometimes
 considered one of the fallen angels (djinn). A peri could also be a
 familiar spirit, a mischievous elf, a heavenly nymph, a Shakti. Sufis
 called a peri a pir, lady-love.
 
 Saliva
 
 Both Mohammed and Jesus claimed to restore sight to the blind by
 applying saliva to their eyes (Mark 8:23). This was an imitation of cures
 previously attributed to priestesses of the Goddess. A clay tablet from
 Nineveh says eye diseases could be cured by the mixed saliva and milk
 of a temple harlot. Romans thought blindness could be cured by the
 saliva of a mother of sons. As late as the 19th century, Italian folk
 healers were still trying to cure blindness with the saliva and milk of
 the mother of a premature child.1
 Notions of the wonderful curative power of female saliva may be
 traced back to Tantrism and its Chinese offshoot, Tao, whose
 scriptures called women's saliva "a great medicine," one of the three
 wonderful yin juices, the others being breast milk and menstrual
 blood.2
 European pagan heroes also cured blindness with saliva-so many
 of them that medieval churchmen had to say this was one of the
 recognition signs for Antichrist. 3
 
 Toga
 
 Garment of clan-ruling matronae in pre-patriarchal Rome. Men
 adopted the toga as they gained political power, until in classical times
 the only women still wearing it were promiscuous priestesses of the
 Goddess. Thus it became a custom to distinguish a prostitute by the
 name of "toga-wearer." 1
 
 Vestal Virgins
 Priestesses of Rome's oldest Goddess-matriarch, Vesta, who was the
 same as the Greeks' Hestia. Descendants of an ancient order of holy
 women who guarded the public hearth and altar, the Vestals were
 entrusted with keeping alight the perpetual fire that was the mystic heart
 of the empire.
 Vestals were virgines, i.e., women who vowed never to marry
 because they were brides of the spirit of Rome, in the same sense that
 Christian nuns were brides of Christ. Vestals underwent the same
 ceremony that was later applied to nuns, to limit their magic female
 powers: they had their hair shaved off.1 In an earlier era, however, they
 were not so restricted. Like all other ancient priestesses who ruled by
 virtue of magic and motherhood, the Vestals used to be the governing
 sisterhood of Latium.
 Rhea Silvia or "Rhea of the Woodland" was called the First
 Vestal; she was actually the Goddess Rhea transplanted to the Latin
 colonies. According to Roman legend; she gave birth to Romulus and
 Remus, the founders of Rome. Their midwife, Acca Larentia,
 another Vestal described as a "courtesan," gave birth to all the ancestral
 spirits the Romans called lares. (See Akka.)
 The Vestals were never altogether virginal in the physical sense.
 Their marriage to the phallic deity of the Palladium was physically
 consummated in Vesta's temple, under conditions of great secrecy. The
 ceremony was performed by a priest called the Pontifex Maximus,
 "great maker of the pons/' which meant a bridge, a path, or a way. The
 Pontifex Maximus had what Dumezil calls "an obscure, now unknown
 duty" toward the Vestal Virgins. 2 One might suppose that his
 "way" was something like the Way of eastern sex-sacraments; that is,
 he built the "bridge" between Father Heaven and Mother Earth
 (Vesta).
 The office of Pontifex was adopted by Christians, and became a
 "pontiff," synonymous with "pope." The Vestals however were
 emphatically not adopted by Christians, although several of the details
 of their habit and lifestyle passed on to Christian convents. Pagans
 revered the Vestals and were horrified by the way they were treated by
 Christian regimes in the 4th and 5th centuries. In 382 A.D., the
 endowments of all the pagan temples were withdrawn, including that of
 Vesta's 600-year-old Mother-hearth. "Worst of all in the opinion of
 some traditionalists, the fire on Vesta's hearth was to be permitted to go
 out: the Vestal Virgins were to lose their endowments and immunity
 from taxation, and all their privileges were to be taken away. The tiny order of
 six Vestals was particularly hated by the Christians .... Their
 Christian enemies feared them as mysterious and magical: they did not
 understand them and did not want to do so; they wanted only to see
 them destroyed." 3
 
 Amata
 
 "Beloved," the title of a Vestal Virgin as a Bride of God-that is,
 bride of the spirit of Rome manifested in the phallic Palladium.1 The
 title was copied by Christian nuns who called themselves Brides of
 Christ.
 
 Hestia
 
 Greek "Hearth," one of the oldest matriarchal Goddesses, in Latin,
 Vesta. She represented the home place, every man's "center of the
 world." When the matriarchs ruled, "The hearth was in the midst of
 the dwelling; that hearth was to each member of the household, as it
 were, an umbilicum orbis, or navel of the earth ... [h]earth being
 only another form of earth, as in the German erde and herde."
 Pythagoras said the fire of Hestia was the center of the earth.1
 Romans had the same idea about the altar of Vesta, with its
 perpetual fire tended by the mystic Vestal Virgins. Cicero said the
 power of Vesta extends over all altars and hearths, therefore all prayers
 and offerings begin and end with her, "because she is the guardian of
 the innermost things." 2
 Hestia never had a consort, for no god could share her strictly
 matriarchal province, the Prytaneum or public hearth of every town.
 It was said of her that "seated in the midst of the celestial dwelling-place
 she receives the richest part of sacrifices, and among men she is of all
 the deities the most venerated." 3
 
 Focus
 
 Latin for "hearth," the first altar, and center of early tribal life. 1
 Goddess of the focus was Vesta (Greek Hestia), whose priestesses
 · tended a perpetual fire that was bound up with the soul of Rome. It
 was believed the altar of Vesta was the center of the universe. The cult
 arose from Neolithic views of matrilocal power radiating from the
 home center of the clan, with the matriarch as high priestess and
 religious ceremonies centering on her hearth. 2
 
 Venus
 
 Roman name for the Great Goddess in her sexual aspect, derived
 from the eponymous mother of Venetian tribes of the Adriatic, after
 whom the city of Venice was also named. "Veneration" and "venery"
 were further derivatives. Venery used to mean hunting; for, like
 her eastern counterpart Artemis, Venus was once a Lady of Animals,
 and her Horned God-Adonis, both the hunter and the sacrificial
 stag-became venison, which meant "Venus's son." 1
 Early Christian fathers denounced the temples "dedicated to the
 foul devil who goes by the name of Venus-a school of wickedness
 for all the votaries of unchasteness." 2 What this meant was that they
 were schools of instruction in sexual techniques, under the tutelage of
 the venerii or harlot-priestesses. 3 They taught an approach to spiritual
 grace, called venia, through sexual exercises like those of Tantrism.4
 Like Tantric yogis, educated Romans envisioned the moment of
 death as a culminating sexual union, a final act of the sacred marriage
 promised by the religion of Venus. Ovid, an initiate, said he wished to
 die while making love: "Let me go in the act of coming to Venus; in
 more senses than one let my last dying be done." 5 Centuries later, in
 Shakespeare's time, "to die" was still a common metaphor for sexual
 orgasm.6 An English treatise on interpretation of dreams said if a sick
 man dreamed of marrying a lovely maiden, it meant death.7 When
 Christians said to die was to be gathered to the bosom of Christ or
 Abraham, they unwittingly based the concept on the ancient female
 one.
 Modern interpretations of classical mythology tend to picture
 Venus as a sex goddess only. Her birth-giving and death-giving
 aspects have been suppressed; but they were equally important in her
 cult. As Queen of the Shades she was identified with Proserpine, but
 went by the name of Libitina. Plutarch said Libitina was only another
 name for Venus, "the goddess of generation." 8
 During the early Middle Ages, Venus became the ruling Fairy
 Queen of the magic mountains called Venusbergs. She also became
 a Christian saint, St. Venerina, who never existed in human form but
 only as a cult figure continuing the worship of the Goddess in
 Calabria.9 In the Balkans she was called St. Venere, and is still invoked
 as a patron of marriage by young girls making a wish that they might
 find good husbands. 10 The magic rhyme addressed to the planet Venus
 as Evening Star still echoes down the centuries: "Star light, star
 bright, first star I see tonight, I wish I may, I wish I might, have the wish
 I wish tonight."
 Venus the Evening Star was also Stella Maris, Star of the Sea. In
 her sacred city of Venice, on Ascension Day each year, the Duke of
 Venice ceremonially married her by throwing a gold wedding ring into
 the sea.11 This practice continued through Renaissance times, even
 when the title of Stella Maris was assimilated to Mary.
   
 
 Virgin Birth"Holy Virgin" was the title of harlot-priestesses of lshtar, Asherah, or
 Aphrodite. The title didn't mean physical virginity; it meant simply
 "unmarried." The function of such "holy virgins" was to dispense
 the Mother's grace through sexual worship; to heal; to prophesy; to
 perform sacred dances; to wail for the dead; and to become Brides of
 God.
 Children born of such temple women were called by the Semites
 bathur, by the Greeks parthenioi, "virgin-born." 1 According to the
 Protoevangelium, the Virgin Mary was a kadesha and perhaps married
 to one of that class of priests known as "fathers of the god." 2 See
 Firstborn.
 Mary's impregnation was similar to Persephone's. In her Virgin
 guise, Persephone sat in a holy cave and began to weave the great
 tapestry of the universe, when Zeus appeared as a phallic serpent, to
 beget the savior Dionysus on her. 3 Mary sat in the temple and began
 to spin a blood-red thread, representing Life in the tapestry of fate,
 when the angel Gabriel "came in unto her" (Luke 1:28), the biblical
 phrase for sexual intercourse. Gabriel's name means literally "divine
 husband." 1
 Hebrew Gospels designated Mary by the word almah, mistakenly
 translated "virgin," but really meaning "young woman." 5 It was
 derived from Persian Al-Mah, the unmated Moon-goddess.6 Another
 cognate was Latin alma, "living soul of the world," virtually identical
 to Greek psyche, Sanskrit shakti. The Holy Virgins or temple-harlots
 were "soul-teachers" or "soul-mothers" -the alma mater.
 Christian translators insisted on rendering Mary's title as "virgin,"
 which saddled their religion with an embarrassing article of faith.
 Even today, theologians like Karl Barth declare that "It is essential to the
 true Christian faith to accept the doctrine of the virgin birth" -thus
 drastically reducing the number of people who can be called true
 Christians.7
 Early Christians demanded a virgin birth for their Savior out of
 simple imitativeness. All the other Saviors had one, for they were
 born of the Goddess incarnate in a chosen "virgin of the temple,"
 whose business it was to bear Saviors. The notion that mortal women
 were impregnated by gods or spirits was a matter of everyday acceptance
 throughout the ancient world. Even the Old Testament says the
 archaic "giants" (ancestral heroes) were born of mortal women impregnated
 by spirits that came from God (Genesis 6:4).
 Zoroaster, Sargon, Perseus, Jason, Miletus, Minos, Asclepius, and
 dozens of others were God-begotten and virgin-born. Even Zeus, the
 Heavenly Father who begot many other "virgin-born" heroes, was
 himself called Zeus Mamas, "Virgin-born Zeus." 8 Plutarch noted
 among the Egyptians the common belief that the spirit of God was
 capable of sexual intercourse with mortal women.9
 Heracles was born of another almah, the Virgin Alcmene, whose
 name means Power of the Moon.10 Her husband also, like the
 biblical Joseph, kept away from her bed during her pregnancy. The
 same tale was told of Plato, whose nephew affirmed that he was begotten
 by the god Apollo, his earthly parents having no sexual
 relations until after his birth. 11 Christians believed this, and solemnly
 attested that Plato was a virgin-born son of the sun god. 12
 After Christianity was established as the official religion of the
 Roman empire, however, church fathers tried to discredit all other
 virgin births by claiming that the devil had devised them, and maliciously
 placed them in a past time, so they would pre-date the real Savior.
 Justin Martyr wrote, "When I am told that Perseus was born of a virgin,
 I realize that here again is a case in which the serpent and deceiver
 has imitated our religion." 13
 Despite the efforts of church fathers, the virgin birth of Jesus was
 neither the first nor the last such miracle given credence by Christians.
 Priapic idols of antiquity, credited with the power to father
 children, actually fathered other priapic idols who became saints like
 Foutin, Gurtlichon, Gilles, Regnaud, and Guignole; these were credited
 with the same power of fertilization and were much adored by
 women who desired offspring. 14 Women of Tuscany and Portugal
 thought they could become pregnant by eating apples specially
 consecrated by a priest. Spaniards remembered the virgin birth of Mars,
 and thought any woman could conceive like Mars's mother Juno, by
 eating a lily. It was believed that souls could enter a woman's body in
 the form of flies, worms, or serpents, to cause impregnation. Cases
 were solemnly documented, like that of a Scot named Gillie Downak
 Chravolick, conceived when his mother raised her skirts on an old
 battlefield and received into her "private member" some ashes from the
 burned bones of dead warriors. 15 As impregnation by a god used to be
 the "acceptable explanation for pregnancy in most pagan countries
 where the sexual act was part of the fertility rites," so Christians
 thought impregnation by spirits was still credible, whether the alleged
 father was a dead hero, a devil, an incubus, or even-in some sects the
 Holy Ghost again.l6
 Such an untenable belief survived because it was important to
 men. The impossible virgin mother was everyman's longed-for resolution
 of Oedipal conflicts: pure maternity, never distracted from her
 devotion by sexual desires. Churchmen unwittingly showed their
 anxiety by denying even the evidence of their own Gospels that Jesus
 had brothers and sisters. St. Ambrose insisted that Mary never
 conceived again, since God couldn't have chosen for his mother-bride
 "a woman who would defile the heavenly chamber with the seed of a
 man." 17
 Theologians in effect severed the two halves of the pagan Goddess,
 whose realistic femininity combined abundant sexuality and
 maternity. One half was labeled harlot and temptress, the other a female
 ascetic even in motherhood. The Goddess's old title, Sancta Matrona-
 Holy Mother-was added to the canon of saints as a phony St.
 Matrona, whose pseudo-biography made her a "hermitess." 18
 The primitive naivete of the virgin-birth concept was dressed in
 pretentious verbiage, purporting to explain it, while actually hiding it
 from prying eyes. "A shadow is formed by light falling upon a body.
 The Virgin, as a human being, could not hold the fulness of divinity;
 but the power of the most High overshadowed her, while the incorporeal
 light of the godhead took a human body within her, and so she was
 able to bear God." 19
 Churchmen often presented the doctrine of the virgin birth as
 "ennobling" to women, since they viewed women's natural sexuality
 as degrading. Seldom were female sexuality and motherhood perceived
 as component parts of the same whole. Some women were astute
 enough to see that the doctrine effectively degraded real womanhood by
 exalting a never-attainable ideal. At the end of the 19th century one
 woman wrote:
 I think that the doctrine of the Virgin birth as something higher, sweeter,
 nobler than ordinary motherhood, is a slur on all the natural motherhood
 of the world. ... Out of this doctrine, and that which is akin to it,
 have sprung all the monasteries and nuns of the world, which have
 disgraced and distorted and demoralized manhood and womanhood for a
 thousand years. I place beside this false, monkish, unnatural claim ...
 my mother, who was as holy in her motherhood as was Mary herself. 20Marginal note:The temple hierodules
 were called
 virgines or venerii in
 Rome, horae in Greece,
 kadishtu, qadesh, or
 kadesha in Babylon, Canaan,
 and Palestine.
 
 Kadi
 
 Babylonian Goddess of Der, a serpent with a woman's head and
 breasts. Her name was the root of kadishtu, Hebrew kadesha, a temple
 harlot known as a Holy One, or Virgin Bride of God (see Prostitution;
 Virgin Birth). She may have descended from the Vedic Goddess
 Kadru, mother of all Nagas or sacred serpents, who attained immortality
 through the magic blood she gave them to drink. 1
 
 Athene
 
 Mother-goddess of Athens, worshipped as Holy Virgin, Athene
 Parthenia, in the Parthenon, her "Virgin-temple." Though classic
 writers insisted on her chastity, older traditions gave her several
 consorts, such as Hephaestus and Pan.1 She was united with the phallic
 Pallas, whose "Palladium" was a lingam, later Rome's greatest fetish. 2
 Athene came from North Africa. She was the Libyan Triple
 Goddess Neith, Metis, Medusa, Anath, or Ath-enna. An inscription
 at Larnax-Lapithou named her Athene in Greek, Anat in Phoenician.3
 Pre-Hellenic myths said she came from the uterus of Lake Tritonis
 (Three Queens) in Libya.4 Egyptians sometimes called Isis Athene,
 which meant "I have come from myself." 5
 Greeks claimed Athene was born from Zeus's head, after he
 swallowed her mother Metis-i.e., Medusa, "Female Wisdom,"
 formerly symbolized by the Gorgoneum, Athene' s snake-haired mask,
 invested with power to turn men to stone. 6 Gorgo, or Gorgon, was
 Athene's Destroyer aspect.7 Funerary statues or phallic pillars were her
 "men turned to stone," perhaps even identified with the pillars of the
 Parthenon which was seized by Christians at an unknown date in
 the 5th or 6th century A.D. and rededicated as a temple of the virgin
 Mary.8
 
 Salome
 
 The Bible presents the Dance of the Seven Veils as a mere vulgar
 striptease performed by Salome to "please Herod" (Matthew 14:6-8).
 Actually, the Dance of the Seven Veils was an integral part of the
 sacred drama, depicting the death of the surrogate-king, his descent into
 the underworld, and his retrieval by the Goddess, who removed one
 of her seven garments at each of the seven underworld gates. The
 priestess called Salome or "Peace" (Shalom) impersonated the descending
 Goddess, passing through seven gates in the temple of
 Jeru-salem which meant House of Peace. "Josephus records that the
 first name of the city was Solyma. Salma, or Salim, was evidently the
 Semite god of the rising or renewed sun; Salmaone was the Aegean
 goddess from whom he took his titles, as did Salmoneus the Aeolian." 1
 Salome represented Ishtar as the third of her three high priestesses
 or "Marys." Her name was a translation of the Greek Irene,
 "Peace," the third of the sacred harlots called Horae.2 She may have
 been identical with the sacred harlot Mary Magdalene, or Mary of
 the Temple, whose so-called "seven devils" were the same underworld
 gatekeepers to whom the temple dancer gave her veils. These veils,
 like the rainbow veils of Maya, signified the layers of earthly appearances
 or illusions falling away from those who approach the central
 Mystery of the deeps. Isis too had seven stoles with the same mystical
 significance. 3
 The dancing priestess was more than a trivial entertainer. Salome's
 husband Joseph was killed after he lay with the queen, Mariamne or
 Miriam (Mary).4 Salome was present with the virgin Mary-the same
 Mary?-at the birth of Jesus; some said she was the midwife who
 delivered the holy child.5 Salome was present with all three Marys at the
 death of Jesus (Mark 15:40). Obviously she was also involved in the
 death of John the Baptist, which seems to have been not a murder but a
 ritual sacrifice.
 Some early Christian sects (the Mandaeans) ignored Jesus, and
 worshipped John the Baptist as the true sacrificed Christ.6 An early
 Greek epiphany hymn said it was the blood of John the Baptist that
 "bedewed" -i.e., fructified-the mothers and children of Jerusalem.
 7 As an initiated Essenic prophet, John would have been sacerand
 "chosen" to die as a surrogate for the king, whose blood was required
 for fertility of the land. John was beheaded, a common form of sacrificial
 death throughout the early Aegean and Levantine cultures, still
 practiced to this day in some of the eastern temples of the Goddess,
 though the victims are now animals instead of men. 8
 Though only a fragment in its present form, the story of Salome
 presents evidence for the survival of the Tammuz-lshtar cult in
 Jerusalem, where someone periodically died in the role of the god, and
 the women raised the ancient lament for the victim in the temple
 (Ezekiel 8:14).
 
 Mary
 Fathers of the Christian church strongly opposed the worship of
 Mary because they were well aware that she was only a composite of
 Mariamne, the Semitic God-Mother and Queen of Heaven; Aphrodite-
 Mari, the Syrian version of lshtar; Juno the Blessed Virgin; Isis as
 Stella Maris, Star of the Sea; Maya the Oriental Virgin Mother of the
 Redeemer; the Moerae or trinity of Fates; and many other versions of
 the Great Goddess. 1 Even Diana Lucifera the Morning-Star Goddess
 was assimilated to the Christian myth as Mary's "mother," Anna or
 Dinah. Churchmen knew the same titles were applied to Mary as to
 her pagan forerunners: "queen of heaven, empress of hell, lady of all
 the world." 2
 The Speculum beatae Mariae said Mary was like the Juno-Artemis-
 Hecate trinity: "queen of heaven where she is enthroned in
 the midst of the angels, queen of earth where she constantly manifests
 her power, and queen of hell where she has authority over the
 demons." According to the Office of the Virgin, she was the primordial
 being, "created from the beginning and before the centuries." 3
 Christian patriarchs therefore sought to humanize and belittle
 Mary, to prove her unworthy of adoration. Epiphanius ordered: "Let
 the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit be worshipped, but let no one
 worship Mary." 4 Anastasius said, "Let no one call Mary the Mother
 of God, for Mary was but a woman, and it is impossible that God should
 be born of a woman." 5 Ambrose called Mary the "temple" of God,
 and "only he is to be adored who worked within the temple." 6 Up to
 the 5th century the church persecuted as heretics a sect calling
 themselves Marianites, who claimed that Mary possessed the true
 quality of divinity.7 Mariolatry has plagued Christian patriarchy
 throughout its history, as the popular need to worship the Mother-figure
 always arose unbidden.
 Some early church fathers sought a way out of the dilemma by
 attacking Mary's motherhood, to prove her neither divine nor really
 maternal. Some claimed Jesus wasn't born in the ordinary way but
 suddenly materialized before Mary.8 Marcionites said Jesus could
 never touch vulgar female flesh, therefore he was never born at all. He
 descended from heaven as a fully formed adult.9 Some church fathers
 rejected Mary's motherhood on the ground that she was not only a
 mere mortal, but even a sinful woman.10
 There was ecclesiastical opposition to Mary throughout the Christian
 era. Pope Nicholas III ordered Jean d'Olive, a friar
 "distinguished for learning and piety," to burn with his own hands a
 tract he had written in praise of Mary because it expressed excessive
 devotion to her. 11 When it was permitted, Marian devotion did appear
 to take on an Oriental extravagance.
 Germanus, Patriarch of Constantinople in 717, called Mary "Lady
 all-holy" and "Lady most venerable," maintaining that no one could
 be saved or receive the gift of grace except through her, since God
 obeys her "through and in all things, as his true mother." Henri
 Boudon, archdeacon of Evreux, said his people thought Mary "as much
 as, or more than, God himself." Isidore Glabas said Mary ruled in
 heaven before her earthly birth; like a creatress she brought all things
 into being, and all the angels obeyed her. Bernardine of Siena said
 Mary's birth of the Savior through her own mystic powers was more
 miraculous than God's generation of him. "Even if she had not been
 the Mother of God, she would nevertheless have been the mistress of
 the world." Louis-Marie de Montfort declared that Mary had absolute
 power over God.12
 People of the Middle Ages often viewed God as their persecutor,
 Mary as their defender. Early 16th-century woodcuts showed God
 shooting arrows of pestilence, war, and inflation at the world, while the
 inscription pleaded with Mary to restrain him.13 It was said that
 "Mary stands for Mercy, and it is only because of her influence at court,
 not because of love or goodwill on God's part, that heaven is within
 reach." 14 A 14th-century Franciscan wrote:
 When we have offended Christ, we should go first to the Queen of
 Heaven and offer her . .. prayers, fasting, vigils, and alms; then she, like
 a mother, will come between thee and Christ, the father who wishes to
 beat us, and she will throw the cloak of mercy between the rod of
 punishment and us, and soften the king's anger against us. 15
 Ashe says, "Christian scripture and doctrine totally preclude
 placing Mary above Christ. Yet the vitality of Christ's own Church has
 often seemed to depend on her rather than him . ... [W]ithout her he
 would probably have lost his kingdom." 16 During its first five centuries,
 Christ's church discovered that no amount of force would make
 people renounce their Mother Goddess. She had to be preserved in
 some form :
 The church seemed doomed to failure, destined to go down to bloody
 death amidst the bleeding corpses of its victims, when the people
 discovered Mary. And only when Mary, against the stem decrees of the
 church, was dug out of the oblivion to which Constantine had assigned
 her and became identified with the Great Goddess was Christianity finally
 tolerated by the people . ... The only reality in Christianity is Mary, the
 Female Principle, the ancient goddess reborn. 17
 In the eastern empire it was said the mark of true Christian faith
 was to "confess the holy Ever-Virgin Mary, truly and properly the
 Mother of God, to be higher than every creature whether visible or
 invisible." Ephraem of Syria called Mary the bride or spouse of Jesus as
 well as his mother, after the fashion of the pagan Goddess and her
 son-consort; she was also Gate of Heaven, Ark, and Garden of Paradise.
 Mary personally sprinkled the face of Adam with life-giving rain,
 which placed her in the creation myth as "co-redemptress." Ephraem's
 opinions were called heretical by some, but after a lapse of 1600
 years-in the year 1920-he was declared a Doctor of the Universal
 Church by papal decree.18
 The Christian figure of Mary was gradually created during the first
 four centuries of the Christian era, out of bits and pieces of the Great
 Goddess who conceived "sons of God" and Saviors in all the temples of
 the ancient world. The Protoevangelium said Mary served as a
 temple hierodule, and received God's seed as she was beginning to spin
 a blood-red thread in the temple-the work of the Fate-virgin, first of
 the Moerae or "Marys," who spun the thread of destiny. 19 At this
 mystically crucial moment the angel Gabriel "came in unto her"
 (Luke l :28), the biblical phrase for sexual intercourse.
 Other sources also identified Mary with the Fate-spinner, whom
 the Greeks called Clotho, youngest of the trinity of Moerae. The
 Coptic Discourse on Mary, attributed to Cyril of Jerusalem, represented
 Mary as the same triple Goddess of Fate, incarnate in the three
 Marys who stood at the foot of Jesus's cross. 20 In like manner, the three
 Fates of Nordic myth stood at the foot of Odin's tree of sacrifice; their
 virgin aspect was sometimes Freya, "the Lady." The Swedes called the
 constellation of Orion the distaff of the virgin Mary, because it was
 formerly the distaff used by Freya to spin the destinies of men.21
 Greek myth presented an image of the Virgin Persephone almost
 identical to that of fate-spinning Mary. Persephone sat in a sacred
 cave or temple, starting to spin a web with a great picture of the
 universe-the magic picture which the Mother made into reality. At
 that moment the Heavenly Father appeared in the form of a phallic
 serpent and begot the savior Dionysus on her.22
 In an effort to make Mary's impregnation as sexless as possible,
 some Christian ascetics invented very peculiar mechanisms for it.
 Sacred art showed semen emanating from God's mouth and passing
 through a long tube that led under Mary's skirts. Some theologians
 claimed God's seed was carried to Mary in the beak of the Holy Dove.
 Others said it came from Gabriel's mouth, to be filtered through the
 sacred lily before entering Mary's body by way of her ear. 23
 Though the Christian God took over the Triple Goddess's ancient
 trinitarian character at the Council of Nicaea, there is some evidence
 that early Christians perceived Mary as a trinity. Like the Buddhists'
 Mara, she was sometimes a spirit of death.24 The Gospel of Mary
 identified all three of the Marys at Jesus's crucifixion with one another,
 as if they were the same Triple Goddess who attended the death of
 the pagan Savior. 25
 For some centuries, eastern churches worshipped a Father-Mother-Son
 trinity modeled on such pagan triads as Osiris-Isis-Horus,
 Zeus-Rhea-Zagreus, Apollo-Artemis-Heracles, etc. This idea was so
 commonplace that even writers of the Koran felt compelled to deny
 the divine trinity of God, Mary, and Jesus.26 Moslem sources also
 preserved another manifestation of the Virgin Goddess as Mar
 Mariam or Sancta Maria, mother of the Persian savior Mani.27 As "the
 Sea" (Maria), the Triple Goddess swallowed up the god she gave
 birth to. In solemn imitation, the women of Alexandria threw images of
 Osiris into the sea after his Passion Play. 28 Hebraic copies of this rite
 probably account for Plutarch's report that the chief city of Palestine-Jerusalem-
 was built in honor of a child whom Isis killed and threw
 into the sea. 29
 Mary was also closely associated with the Great Goddess of
 Ephesus, whose temples she took over. In the 5th century an
 Ephesian priest named Proclus delivered a sermon on the multiform
 nature of Mary, calling her "the living bush, which was not burnt by
 the fire of the divine birth ... virgin and heaven, the only bridge
 between God and men, the awesome loom ... on which the garment
 of union was woven." 30
 Much was made of the. reversal of Mary's Latin Ave and the name
 of Eve (Eva). Mystics said Mary was Eve's purified reincarnation, as
 Jesus was the similar reincarnation of Adam.31 Somehow, theologians
 failed to recognize that the new incarnations apparently reversed the
 parent-child relationship. Then again, as Adam and Eve were spouses,
 so the relationship of Mary and Jesus sometimes verged on the sexual
 or conjugal. In a legend ascribed to St. John, Jesus welcomed Mary into
 heaven with the words, "Come, my chosen, and I shall set thee in my
 seat, for I have coveted the beauty of thee." 32
 The church's doctrine of the assumption of Mary was explained in
 a number of ways. Early churchmen declared that Jesus visited
 Mary's tomb-variously located in Ephesus, Bethlehem, Gethsemane,
 or Josaphat-and raised up her corpse, which he made to live again;
 then he personally escorted her into heaven as a live woman.33 She was
 not a soul or a spirit but an immortal person in her own original body.
 This became the official modern view when the doctrine of the
 assumption was declared an article of faith in 1950, when Pope Pius
 XII pronounced that "the immaculate mother of God, the ever Virgin
 Mary, when the course of her earthly life was run, was assumed in
 body and in soul to heavenly glory." 34 But the point had already been
 argued for more than a thousand years.
 The church's problem was to take advantage of popular reverence
 for Mary but at the same time prevent her literal deification. Some
 theologians of the 13th century claimed Mary's mortality should bring
 more women to obey the church, because the king of heaven "is no
 mere man but a mere woman is its queen. It is not a mere man who is
 set above the angels and all the rest of the heavenly court, but a mere
 woman is; nor is anyone who is merely man as powerful there as a mere
 woman." 35
 Always the theologians feared to impute too much power and
 glory to Mary. Pope John XXIII, presuming to know Mary's inner
 thoughts, announced: "The Madonna is not pleased when she is put
 above her Son," though in fact it was the church who was not
 pleased. Catholic doctrines themselves attributed to her two of the three
 basic characteristics of divinity: she was immortal by reason of the
 assumption, and sinless by reason of the Immaculate Conception.
 The third requirement of divinity, omniscience, was conceded to her
 by popular belief. A 13th-century Mariale said she had perfect knowledge
 of divine mysteries, understood all scriptures, foresaw the future,
 and knew everything about mathematics, geography, astronomy, alche-
 my, and canon law-even in her earthly life, when there was no
 canon and therefore no canon law. 36 A French manuscript illustration
 showed Mary enthroned beside God on Judgment Day, weighing
 souls in her balances like her prototype the Goddess Maat 3000 years
 earlier.37 (See Alchemy.)
 The Welsh confused Mary with the triadic White Goddess, and
 seldom asked the blessing of God without also imploring the favor of
 "the white Mary." 38 Saints' tales implied that Mary's was the true touch
 of canonization. St. Bernard was ennobled by three drops of milk that
 the Virgin pressed from her own breast for him. 39 St. Catherine of
 Siena also claimed to have been nourished by Mary's milk.40
 Many legends depicted Mary as the only true source of the milk of
 human kindness. At Mainz Cathedral she gave away one of her
 image's gold shoes to a starving beggar, who had pleased her by playing
 his fiddle for her. He was caught with the shoe, arrested, and
 sentenced to death. On the way to the scaffold he paused to pray to the
 Virgin, and she exonerated him by publicly giving him her other
 shoe. The beggar was released, but the priests took away the gold shoes
 and locked them in the treasury, "lest the Virgin should again be
 tempted to bestow them upon some penniless beggar who prayed for
 her aid." 41
 Mary's mercy often proved superior to that of God or Jesus. She
 was occasionally represented leaning on the balance that weighed a
 sinner's few good deeds, to make them heavier than his evil deeds
 and save him from damnation. Her mercy extended even to the Jews,
 despite her priests' detestation of them. On Easter Day in Bourges, a
 Jewish child took Holy Communion along with his Christian friends.
 For this offense, the boy's father threw him into a furnace; but he lay
 unharmed by the fire, saying the Lady who stood on the Christians'
 altar was protecting him. "Then the Christians, understanding that
 he meant the statue of the Blessed Mary, took the aged Jew and threw
 him into the furnace, and he was burnt and consumed." 42
 Ethiopian Christians' Lefafa Sedek, "Bandlet of Righteousness,"
 said God gave the secrets of salvation to humanity only because Mary
 requested it, when she began to grieve for her relatives writhing in hell's
 River of Fire. Egyptian paganism was the real source of this "Christian"
 scripture, copied from the Book of the Dead with the name of
 God substituted for Ra, of Christ for that of Thoth, and of Mary for
 that of All-Merciful Isis.43
 Some theologians said even the worst of sinners could win a sure
 salvation by doing some special service for Mary. Two scribes pleased
 her by making copies of the Book of the Miracles of the Virgin Mary.
 Afterward they committed many sins, and when they died, devils
 came for their souls. But the Virgin pulled them away from the devils,
 saving them on account of their devotion to her.44
 At times it seemed that Mary, not God, was the real opponent of
 evil forces. Spengler said this was "one of the maxima of the Gothic,
 one of its unfathomable creations-one that the present day forgets and
 deliberately forgets .... It is not possible to exaggerate either the
 grandeur of this forceful, insistent picture or the depth of sincerity with
 which it was believed in. The Mary-myths and the Devil-myths
 formed themselves side by side, neither possible without the other.
 Disbelief in either of them was deadly sin. There was a Mary-cult of
 prayer, and a Devil-cult of spells and exorcisms." 45 Historian Henry
 Adams noted: "Without Mary, man had no hope except in atheism,
 and for atheism the world was not ready .... The thirteenth century
 could not afford to admit a doubt. Society had staked its existence, in
 this world and the next, on the reality and power of the Virgin." 46
 Caesarius of Heisterbach told a story showing that Mary was more
 revered than God. A knight of Liege needed money and so made a
 pact with Satan. When asked to curse and renounce God, he did so
 willingly. However, when the demon required him to renounce the
 Virgin, he refused, horrified. Therefore the Virgin later intervened to
 save him from damnation. 47
 Mary dispensed compassion (Hindu karuna) more effectively than
 Christ, for this very quality had been associated with the feminine
 image from the beginning. Compassion was the charis of sacred harlots,
 which contributed much to Mary's consistent patronage of prostitutes.
 The "whore" Mary Magdalene was one of the original Marian
 trinity.48 Augstein says Mariolatry evolved because "the people needed
 a queen of heaven, as the Israelites needed one in Jeremiah's time,
 one for whom they could bake cakes, a great mother, a fertility-prostitute;
 but she was half shown to them, half withheld, and Freud
 only gives us half the truth when he says that the Christian religion
 recreated the mother-god." 49 Actually, the people recreated the
 mother-god out of their own pagan heritage.
 Churchmen claimed that all women lay under a threefold curse.
 They were accursed if they were barren. They were accursed also if
 they conceived, since conception was of the nature of original sin. They
 were accursed by the pains of childbirth, in fulfillment of God's curse
 on Eve. But Mary escaped all three curses. "Mary alone of all women is
 blessed, because she is virgin and fruitful, she conceives in holiness,
 and gives birth without pain." 50 Of course this view of Mary did little to
 improve the lot of ordinary women, presenting them with a wholly
 impossible ideal, yet implying that they fell short of the ideal only
 because of their sinfulness. 51 The ancients saw no incongruity in a
 Goddess who was both virgin and mother (as well as lover and crone),
 because she represented all women in all phases of life. Christians
 however insisted on taking the "miracle" literally, having lost sight of its
 subtle allegory.
 A hidden reason for the church's adoption of Mary was the
 successful amputation of her pre-Christian sexuality. Of all the
 attributes she inherited from the ancient Goddess, Mary's virginity was
 most emphasized. She was called "the Virgin," not "the Mother."
 Church fathers insisted that she never engaged in sexual intercourse in
 her life, even though the Bible plainly spoke of Jesus's brothers and
 sisters. 52 St. Ambrose demanded, "Would the Lord Jesus have chosen
 for his mother a woman who would defile the heavenly chamber with
 the seed of a man, that is to say one incapable of preserving her virginal
 chastity intact?" 53 Marian legends insisted that, although Mary was
 amazingly beautiful, no man could ever look on her with desire. 54
 Yet some monasteries institutionalized desire for Mary, who "married"
 the monks as Christ "married" nuns. If a knight placed his ring
 on the finger of Mary's image, she would grip it firmly so it couldn't be
 removed. At this, the knight considered himself a Bridegroom of the
 Virgin and entered a monastery. The same tales were told of pagan
 statues of Venus, who "married" any man who placed a ring on her
 marble finger. 55 In 1470 a Breton Black Friar, Alain de Ia Roche,
 claimed the Virgin married him in the presence of many saints and
 angels, placing on his finger a ring woven of her hair. 56
 Cistercians styled themselves "Knights of Our Lady," associating
 their Lady with the pagan May Queen. Aegidus's 13th-century
 history of the order said it was the custom in the time of Bishop Albero
 for the clergy of Liege to choose "from among their concubines" a
 Paschal and Pentecostal Queen, who was robed in purple, crowned,
 throned, and worshipped with drums and music, "revered almost
 with idolatry as if she were an idol." 57 She also manifested herself as the
 Fairy Queen who watched over a monastery near Laach as the
 monks' divine Bride. She announced each man's death three days in
 advance by placing a lily in his stall at midnight. 58
 Gothic cathedrals were dedicated not to God or Jesus but to Notre
 Dame; they were collectively called "Our Ladies" or "Palaces of the
 Queen of Heaven." 59 Many of them were built over pagan shrines of
 the Great Goddess. Rome's cathedral of Santa Maria Maggiore was
 built over the sacred cave of the Magna Mater. Santa Maria in Aracoeli
 on the Capitoline Hill was formerly a temple of Tanit. Mary's
 churches throughout Italy were founded on shrines of Juno, Isis,
 Minerva, Diana, Hecate. One church was even naively named Santa
 Maria sopra Minerva: Holy Mary over (the shrine of) Minerva.60
 In the 6th century, the great temple of Isis at Philae was rededicated
 to Mary.61 Aphrodite's sanctuaries on Cyprus became
 churches of Mary, whom the Cypriots continued to address by Aphrodite's
 name.62 At Chartres, the heathen idol of the virgo paritura (Virgin
 Giving Birth) was preserved in the so-called Druid Grotto underneath
 the cathedral. It was said to be a black statue of Mary.63
 Ecclesia, "the Church," was one of Mary's titles. She was identi-
 fied with both the buildings and the organization of Holy Mother
 Church as bride and mother of God. Yet this pseudo-female church
 remained the exclusive property of men. As late as February 1977
 Pope Paul VI again forbade ordination of women, saying the church
 "does not consider herself [sic] authorized to admit women to priestly
 ordination." The pope maintained that priests must have a "natural
 resemblance" to Christ, and if they were women "it would be
 difficult to see in the minister the image of Christ." 64 There was no
 mention that a priestess might present a resemblance to Mary, who
 symbolized the church itself. The modern church prefers to forget that
 early churches of Mary were staffed by priestesses, not priests. 65
 Above all, Christian authorities feared Mary might be the channel
 through which Goddess-worship could reestablish itself, for she
 inspired utterances similar to those the ancient Mother inspired, like
 Goethe's: "Supreme and sovereign Mistress of the World! ... Oh
 Virgin, in the highest sense most pure, oh Mother, worthy of all our
 worship, our chosen Queen, equal with the gods." 66 The secret,
 ineradicable heresies of Marian worship received graphic form in the
 famous Vierge Ouvrante-Mary as a statue that opened up to show
 God, Jesus, angels, and saints contained inside her.
 In the generating and nourishing, protective and transformative, feminine
 power of the unconscious, a wisdom is at work that is infinitely superior
 to the wisdom of man's waking consciousness, and that, as source of vision
 and symbol, of ritual and law, poetry and vision, intervenes, summoned
 or unsummoned, to save man and give direction to his life.
 This feminine-maternal wisdom is no abstract, disinterested knowledge,
 but a wisdom of loving participation . ... In the patriarchal
 development of the Judea-Christian West, with its masculine, monotheistic
 trend toward abstraction, the goddess, as a feminine figure of
 wisdom, was disenthroned and repressed. She survived only secretly, for
 the most part in heretical and revolutionary bypaths . ...
 Seen from the outside, the "Vierge Ouvrante" is the familiar and
 unassuming mother with child. But when opened she reveals the
 heretical secret within her. God the Father and God the Son, usually
 represented as heavenly lords who in an act of pure grace raise up the
 humble, earth-bound mother to abide with them, prove to be contained in
 her; prove to be the "contents" of her all-sheltering body. 67
 Mary represented the second of the two expedients men used to
 overcome their fear of women, according to Horney: disparagement
 and idealization.68 But she was so ideal that she had to be apotheosized
 just as unmistakably as Jesus himself. So she rose bodily from the
 earth and ascended to glory. Unfortunately, those who formulated
 this idea were quite ignorant of the vastness of the universe, and their
 simplistic "rising to the sky" no longer serves an age in which such
 information is readily available. Even assuming that Mary's body could
 travel at the speed oflight-an impossible idea to begin with-it
 would be only two thousand light-years away at the present time, about
 one-fiftieth of the distance across our own galaxy, let alone plunged
 into the unthinkable immensity of intergalactic space. And yet in an era
 when the absurdity of the idea is perfectly plain to the educated, to be
 exact on June 30, 1968, the Credo of Pope Paul VI reconfirmed the
 dogma of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary-though God
 apparently didn't take the trouble to inform him about the method of its
 accomplishment. 69
 But not all minds in the modern age are modern minds. Many
 remain ignorant of what has been discovered about the physical
 universe. Many are ignorant of the theories and doctrines professed by
 their own religion. They worship Mary only because their inner
 being demands a mother-archetype, and she is the only one presented
 to them. They don't know how many "Marys" there were before
 Christianity. But educated churchmen know. Canon John de Satge
 wrote: "The evangelical has a strong suspicion that the deepest roots
 of the Marian cultus are not to be found in the Christian tradition at all.
 The religious history of mankind shows a recurring tendency to
 worship a mother-goddess . ... May it not be the case, the evangelical
 wonders, that what we have here is in reality an older religion, a
 paganism which has been too lightly baptized into Christ and whose
 ancient features persist under a thin Christian veil?" 70
 However, Mary wasn't "lightly" adopted by Christianity. She was
 opposed, attacked, and finally accepted only with many theological
 misgivings and restrictions. Early Gospels that dwelt on the divinity of
 Mary were labeled "poisonous" by the orthodox church.71 Christian
 mystics who coveted the female role and spoke of "becoming Mary and
 bearing God from within," did so in defiance of the church's earlier
 edict that Mary couldn't claim the title of Theotokos (God-bearer),
 because God couldn't be born of a mortal woman.72 The edict was
 abandoned after several centuries only because Christians wished to
 emulate the pagan Mystery-cults whose Savior-gods were invariably
 born of mortal virgins. (See Virgin Birth.)
 Christian art of the first five centuries showed Mary in a position
 lower than Jesus, even lower than the Magi, who wore haloes while
 she wore none. In the 6th century she acquired a halo and rose to the
 central position in a group of non-haloed apostles. By the 9th century
 she reigned as Queen of Heaven in the middle of the apse in two
 cathedrals. 73
 By the 14th century, Wyclif was writing: "It seems to me
 impossible that we should obtain the reward without the help of Mary.
 There is no sex or age, no rank or position, of anyone in the whole
 human race, which has no need to call for the help of the Holy Virgin."
 The Te Deum Laudamus declared, "All the earth doth worship
 thee, Spouse of the Eternal Father." 74
 When Mary appeared in a subordinate position, it was in the role
 of Daughter-like the Virgin Kore-on the lap of the Elder Goddess
 represented by "God's grandmother," the ancient Anna (St. Anne,
 called Mary's mother). In some painted or sculpted groupings, the
 two Goddesses and the male infant seem to form a trinity quite
 exclusive of God. 75 An observer might be reminded of the Egyptian
 god-king on the laps of his Two Mothers, they who would nurse him
 forever and thus give him eternal life. The mythical history of St.
 Anne reveals that she, even more directly than Mary, descended from
 the image of that fertile Creatress, Mother Earth. 76
 Legends and images of Mary exerted an uncanny appeal even in
 the "scientific" modern age with its professed skepticism about the
 supernatural. In 1945, a young boy named Joseph Vitolo was greatly
 impressed by the film Song of Bernadette, and subsequently conjured
 up a vision of the Virgin for himself. He conversed with her for sixteen
 consecutive nights at a certain rock in the Bronx. She told him to
 have a chapel built on the spot, and promised the appearance of a
 healing spring within a short time.
 Though the site received the popular name of the Bronx Lourdes,
 and credulous folk hurried there in astonishing numbers to pray for
 miraculous cures, the spring never appeared. Eventually, young Joseph
 became embarrassed by the fuss he had caused. He then said the
 Virgin told him she wouldn't come any more to that place. Despite this
 disappointment, for many years the faithful continued to gather and
 dig in the mud, seeking the holy spring.77
 But it was not only the simple-minded who sought help from
 Mary. Historian Henry Adams thought Christianity's divine mother,
 however attenuated, offered the only hope of spiritual comfort in an
 alienated technological society. He saw that "the males of his society,
 who had transferred so many of their once autonomous activities to
 machines and automatons, did not have sufficient life-sense to save
 the race. In their blind pride over their scientific facilities, they would
 cling to the insensate mechanisms they had created, making them go
 faster and faster, though incapable of applying the brakes .... Henry
 Adams, at the end of his own career, turned to another countervailing
 form of energy, the energy of life, the energy of erotic love, reproduction,
 and creation; he sought a counterpoise to chaos by invoking
 woman's faith in her own creativity, in all the ramifying, formative
 processes of life, above all those of sex, love, and motherhood." In a
 poetic address to the Virgin he said: "I feel the energy of faith, not in
 the future science but in you."78
 Once more it seemed that God (or man) depended on his Mother
 (or woman) to straighten up the mess he had made, even if it meant
 ceding supreme power to her. An 18th-century theologian wrote, "At
 the command of Mary all obey, even God." Today it is widely
 recognized even by laymen that "two rivers of common source, Mary
 and Maya, the Virgin and Shakti, once again run into one: and the
 Goddess is once more, as she ever was, the creatrix of the universe, the
 self-revealing energy of the unknowable God." 79
 
 Myrrh
 
 Appearing at two crucial points in Christian mythology, at Jesus's
 birth (Matthew 2: ll) and again at his death (Mark 15:23), myrrh
 represented the mystic virgin mother who was also Mother Death,
 called Mary, or Miriam, or Mari, or Myrrha, or-as the Christians
 called the virgin Mary-"Myrrh of the Sea." 1
 The pagans' version of Mary was the temple-maiden Myrrha, who
 gave birth to Adonis, "the Lord," in the same cave at Bethlehem that
 Christians claimed as Jesus's birthplace.2 Myrrh was used as aphrodisiac
 incense in Adonis's rites, and its thorny twigs probably formed the
 mock crown of the sacred king, still called the Crown of Thorns. Myrrh
 was an emblem of Mara, a common Oriental name for the spirit of
 death.3
 Some scholars have offered a theory that myrrh was given Jesus on
 the cross to deaden his pain, because of a Jewish tradition that "the
 kindly women of Jerusalem" used to give myrrh to "those who were led
 out to execution." 4 The theory cannot be supported, since myrrh has
 no analgesic properties. The women of Jerusalem apparently had
 another, less kindly reason for giving myrrh to those executed; even
 early Christians remembered that myrrh meant the death and rebirth of
 a god and was identified with his holy mother.
 In the lore of magic, myrrh was credited with power to cause
 menstruation: perhaps a relic of ancient legends of the castrated god's
 shedding of the "blood of life." 5
 
 Theotokos
 
 "God-bearer," title of the virgin Mary. Church fathers originally
 opposed the title because "It is impossible that God should be born of a
 woman." 1 Later church authorities changed their minds and pronounced
 it possible.
 
 Ecclesia
 
 "The Church," a title of the virgin Mary, who was supposed to
 represent the physical body of which Christ was the spiritual head. Holy
 Mother Church was both bride and mother of God, according to
 Christian mystics, postulating even an incestuous Sacred Marriage in
 the old pagan style. The erotic poetry of Solomon's Song was glossed
 as an expression of the love between Christ and "Ecclesia." lrenaeus
 said Mary-Ecclesia was "the pure womb which regenerates man unto
 God." As in the manner of pagan temples, even the church building
 was likened to Mary's body.
 
 Immaculate Conception
 
 Often erroneously thought to refer to the conception of Christ, the
 doctrine of the Immaculate Conception actually was invented to absolve
 the virgin Mary of original sin from the moment of her own
 conception. Early fathers of the church said Mary couldn't be Theotokos
 (God-bearer) if she was human, therefore tainted with the sin of
 Eve; it was heresy to worship her as divine.1 Nevertheless, people
 insisted on worshipping her.2 By the 12th century, Mariolatry even
 overshadowed the worship of God and Christ; so the doctrine of the
 Immaculate Conception was invented to make her uniquely holy.
 Many churchmen opposed the doctrine, which was heatedly
 argued for the next 700 years. Finally it was adopted as an article of
 faith by Pope Pius IX in 1854.3 Every Catholic was commanded to
 believe henceforth that Mary "at the first instant of her conception,
 was preserved immaculate from all stain of original sin, by the singular
 grace and privilege granted to her by Almighty God." 4
 A certain unnamed medieval holy man had been informed by a
 divine source that Mary's birthday was September 8, precisely nine
 months after the December festival which originally represented the
 conception of the Virgin Goddess Kore.5 Apparently the date was
 chosen to celebrate Epiphany and the Immaculate Conception at the
 same time.
 These events being equally devoid of documentation, their invention
 and promulgation sometimes aroused scorn among
 non-Catholics. Hazlitt scoffed: "We hear of her immaculate conception
 as an afterthought, on the part of the Romanists.... [T]he whole
 narrative touching her [Mary] is evidently fabulous, and ... the immaculate
 conception by her mother, her own purification ... are
 absurdities." 6
 How Mary's conception took place was a problem that aroused
 some ingenious theological nonsense. Mary's father was not God or a
 spirit but a living man, and if he had sexual intercourse with Mary's
 mother it would mean using the medium of transmission of original
 sin, by the church's own teaching. Some theologians would have it that
 his seed was carried magically, as if he were an incubus.
 
 Gabriel
 
 The angel who brought God's seed to the virgin Mary. The Bible
 says Gabriel "came in unto her," which meant he had sexual intercourse
 with her, in King James terminology (Luke 1:28). Gabriel's
 name means "divine husband." 1 There seems to have been a hidden
 reference to the ancient custom, whereby temple virgins were impregnated
 by certain priests.designated "fathers of the god," as in
 Egypt.2 See Mary; Virgin Birth.
 
 Mary Magdalene
 
 The Gospels say Jesus cast seven devils out of the sacred harlot Mary
 Magdalene, and appeared first to her after his resurrection (Mark 16:9).
 Books later eliminated from the canon by Christian censors gave
 further curious details about the relationship: Jesus loved Mary Magdalene
 more than all other apostles, called her Apostle to the Apostles
 and "the Woman Who Knew the All," and often kissed her.1 He said
 she would excel every other disciple in the coming Kingdom of
 Light, where she would rule. 2
 Before Gnostic Gospels were cut out of the canon, they were
 accepted as the Word of God, as much as the synoptic Gospels and
 other New Testament writings. Therefore medieval traditions concerning
 Mary Magdalene hark back to her early mystical supremacy. She
 was called Mary Lucifer, "Mary the Light-giver." It was said Jesus
 raised Lazarus from the dead solely for love of her. "There was no
 grace that He refused her, nor any mark of affection that He withheld
 from her."3
 The Pistis Sophia made Mary Magdalene the questioner of Jesus,
 in the Oriental manner of the catechism applied to the god by his
 Shakti or Devi (Goddess). The female questioner then was addressed as
 "Dearly Beloved."4 Jesus used the same form of address, though later
 editors eliminated all traces of the identity of his questioner; but it was
 apparent that his "dearly beloved" was Mary Magdalene.5
 Origen showed a mystic devotion to Mary Magdalene, confusing
 her with the Goddess by calling her "the mother of all of us," and
 sometimes Jerusalem, and sometimes The Church (Ecclesia, another
 title of the Virgin). Origen claimed Mary Magdalene was immortal,
 having lived from the beginning of time.6
 Thus it seems Mary the Whore was only another form of Mary
 the Virgin, otherwise the Triple Goddess Mari-Anna-Ishtar, the
 Great Whore of Babylon who was worshipped along with her savior-son
 in the Jerusalem temple.7 The Gospel of Mary said all three Marys of
 the canonical books were one and the same.8
 Indeed, the Virgin and Whore were still confused with one
 another in the 7th century A.D. when, on the day of the Nativity of
 the Blessed Virgin, Pope Sergius instituted an annual procession to the
 old temple of the prostitute-goddess Libera, changing the temple's
 name to Santa Maria Maggiore: Most-Great Holy Mary.9 It was not
 made clear which Holy Mary was meant. A Gnostic poem merged
 the two of them as a primal feminine power: "I am the first and the last.
 I am the honored one and the scorned one. I am the whore, and the
 holy one." 10
 Magdalene means "she of the temple-tower." The Jerusalem
 temple had a triple tower representing the triple deity, one tower
 bearing the name of the queen, Mariamne, an earthly incarnation of the
 Goddess Mari. 11 This was the same Mariamne, Miriam, or Mary
 who took Joseph for her lover. 12 Priestesses of this temple apparently
 subsidized Jesus and his companions, according to Luke 8:1-3,
 which says Jesus and "the twelve" were financially supported by Mary
 Magdalene and a group of women. Latin texts say the women
 provided for "him" (Jesus), but Greek texts make it "them." 13
 The seven "devils" exorcised from Mary Magdalene seem to have
 been the seven Maskim, or Anunnaki, Sumero-Akkadian spirits of
 the seven nether spheres, born of the Goddess Mari. Their multiple
 birth was represented in her sacred dramas, which may account for
 their alleged emergence from Mary Magdalene. An Akkadian tablet
 said ofthem: "They are seven! In the depths of the ocean, they are
 seven! In the brilliancy of the heavens, they are seven! They proceed
 from the ocean depths [Maria], from the hidden retreat." 14
 The Gospels say no men attended Jesus's tomb, but only Mary
 Magdalene and her women. Only women announced Jesus's resurrection.
 This was because men were barred from the central mysteries
 of the Goddess. Priestesses announced the successful conclusion of
 the rites, and the Savior's resurrection. The Bible says the male apostles
 knew nothing ofJesus's resurrection, and had to take the women's
 word for it (Luke 2 4: 10-11 ). The apostles were ignorant of the sacred
 tradition and didn't even realize a resurrection was expected: "They
 knew not the scripture, that he must rise again from the dead"
 (John 20:9).
 Mari-Ishtar the Great Whore anointed-or christ-ened-her
 doomed god when he went into the underworld, whence he would
 rise again at her bidding. That is, she made him a Christ. Her priestess
 raised the lament for him when he died in the flesh, as a sacrificial
 victim. In the Epic of Gilgamesh, victims were told: "The harlot who
 anointed you with fragrant oil laments for you now." 15 Templewomen
 of Jerusalem raised the same lament for Tammuz (Ezekiel
 8: 14), with whom Jesus was identified. Jesus himself said Mary
 Magdalene anointed him for his burial, pouring a precious unguent on
 his head in the time-honored manner of the sacred king' s crowning
 (Matthew 26:7-12). The christening-vase of holy oil was the ubiquitous
 symbol of Mary Magdalene in Christian art-though the virgin Mary
 also bore the harlot's title of Holy Vase. 16 See Jesus Ben Pandera.
 Virgin and Whore constantly exchanged attributes through the
 Middle Ages; the virgin Mary was consistently a special patron of
 prostitutes.'7 A Christian magic ring, now in the London museum,
 bears the legend, "Holy Mary Magdalene pray for me." 18
 Pope Julius II by a papal bull established a "sacred" brothel in
 Rome, which flourished under his successors Leo X and Clement
 VII. The earnings of this brothel supported the Holy Sisters of the
 Order of St. Mary Magdalene, indicating that the Holy Sisters and
 the magdalenes (whores) were one and the same. Pope Innocent III
 also favored Rome's collegia of prostitutes, called virgines, "unmarried
 women." He publicly announced that ariy man who married one of
 them would be specially praised in heaven. 19
 Much Christian myth-making went into the later history of Mary
 Magdalene. She was said to have lived for a while with the virgin
 Mary at Ephesus. This story probably was invented to account for the
 name Maria associated with the Ephesian Goddess. Afterward, Mary
 Magdalene went to Marseilles, another town named after the ancient
 sea-mother Mari. Her cult centered there. Bones were found at
 Vezelay and declared to be hers. Her dwelling was a cave formerly
 sacred to the pagans, at St. Baume (Holy Tree).2° For thirty years she
 lived there without eating or drinking, her only nourishment the sweet
 songs of the angels, a "delightful repast" she daily took in through her
 ears.21 A church was built over her grotto. Local winegrowers still offer
 votive candles to her for a good vintage, as if the ancient fertilitymother
 still occupied the site. 22
 St. Martha accompanied Mary to Provence and worked a number
 of miracles there. Meeting a dragon named Tarasque (i.e., the Celtic
 deity Taranis), Martha destroyed him by tying him up with her girdle
 and pouring holy water on his head. 23 Old images of the Twofold
 Goddess with her Great Serpent seem to have been renamed Mary and
 Martha. More often, Mary appeared as the typical feminine trinity
 ruling birth, love, and death. As Holy Mary at the Cradle, she was the
 midwife (or birth-goddess) who delivered Jesus.24 As harlot and
 funerary priestess she was linked with sex and death. Finally there was
 the Gnostic suggestion that she was the original "pope," foundress of
 Christ's church, according to the Oriental idea that spiritual authority
 must pass from male to female and vice versa (see Peter, Saint).
 Some said she married St. John the Evangelist.25 In 12th-century Milan
 they were worshipped together in a dual cathedral built and administered
 by the monks of St. John jointly with the virgines of St. Maria
 Maggiore, also entitled Sancta Dei Genetrix (Holy Mother of God).
 The androgynous cathedral was excavated in 1943-44, but its discovery
 was kept secret. 26
 During the 13th century a Dianic temple was rededicated to Mary
 Magdalene. At Easter, the story of her conversion of the rulers of
 Marseilles was chanted at the altar. Later the sacred song was suppressed.
 Later still, Mary's devotees were forbidden to hold mass. In
 1781, the Magdalene temple was demolished. 27
 
 Magdala
 
 "High Place," or "Temple"; in Herod's triple-towered palace in
 Jerusalem, the sanctuary of Queen Mariamne. Thus "Miriam of
 Magdala" (Mary Magdalene) was either the queen herself or a high
 priestess impersonating the Goddess Mari. See Mary.
 
 Freya/Frea/Frigga/Frigg
  
 Great Goddess of northern Europe, leader of the "primal matriarchs"
 called Afliae, "powerful ones," or Disir, "divine grandmothers":
 the same as the Hindu matrikadevis or mother goddesses. Freya was
 the Vanadis, the ruling ancestress (dis) of the Vanir or elder gods, who
 ruled before the arrival of Odin and the patriarchal Aesir ("Asians")
 from the east. Myths said Odin learned everything he knew about magic
 and divine power from Freya. 1
 The pagans said nothing could be lucky without Freya's presence.
 Even the gods languished and began to decline toward death, like
 mortals, when Freya was taken from them.2
 Like all forms of the Goddess, Freya represented sexual love,
 which is why her alternate name Frigg became a colloquialism for
 sexual intercourse. Her consort Frey sometimes took the form of a
 phallus. In Uppsala his name was Fricco, "Lover," cognate with the
 phallic god Priapus, from the Indo-European root prij, to make love-which
 also gave rise to the modern "prick." 3
 Though he was sometimes called Freya's twin brother, like the
 Artemis-Apollo, Isis-Osiris pairs, Frey made a lingam-yoni combination
 with Freya. Their names meant "the Lord" and "the Lady." 4
 Some writers identified them with Attis and Cybele, tracing Frigga to
 "Frigia" or Phrygia, the Magna Mater's home.5
 Frey was the god of Yule, the pagan solstitial festival assimilated to
 Christmas. At the turning of the solar year he was born of his virgin-mother-
 sister-bride.6 Like other seasonal gods he had a perpetual rival,
 Njord, the other half of the year. They were collectively blotgodar
 (blood-gods), who fought and sacrificed each other over and over. Njord
 was called the first god of the Swedes, having ruled before Odin
 brought alien gods from Asia. Frey was another aspect of him, worshipped
 in the sacred grove at Uppsala long before it was taken over
 by Odin's priests.7 The grove itself stood for the body of the Goddess.
 Many of Freya's names were only kennings (metaphors) from the
 hymns composed in her honor by her skalds. Focusing on the theme
 of love, and known as mansongr, "woman songs," these compositions
 were specifically forbidden by the medieval church. 11 Despite the
 opposition of the clergy, Germans persisted in believing that Freya's
 sacred day, Friday, was the luckiest day for weddings. 12
 Freya or one of her equivalents married each of the early Swedish
 kings: "They were regarded in heathen times as the husbands of the
 fertility goddess .... [T]hey suffered a real or symbolic death in that
 capacity when their time of supremacy came to an end." Scandinavian
 Aryans followed the typical pattern of sacred marriage between
 Goddess and king, the latter becoming identified with the male
 fertility deity whose function it was "to die for the land and for his
 people, while the goddess never dies. Her function is to weep over
 him, perhaps to help bring about his return, or to give birth to the divine
 child who is to take his place." 13 (See Kingship.)
 After their abrupt sacrificial deaths, Freya kept the spirits of slain
 kings and heroes in her Fensalir or Marsh-halls, also called Folkvangr,
 the Field of Warriors. 14 They could be reborn after spending a
 cycle of time in the wet, fertile earth-womb. Freya's Marsh-halls
 recall the "bog" where Baal-Hadad lay for seven years before he was
 resurrected to godhood by priestesses of Asherah. 15 Like the early
 Semitic worshippers of the Great Mother, Aryans were "men of
 clay"-the meaning of their name-because their bodies came forth
 from Modir. This meant the root of both "mud" and "mother"; she was
 the same primal creatress whom the Russians called Moist Mother
 Earth. 16 Modir too was another manifestation of Freya.
 She was especially linked with the strange archaic god Heimdall,
 whose name meant "a ram," undoubtedly one of the ubiquitous
 animal substitutes for a human sacrifice. The ram's horn was Heimdall's
 ringing Gjallarhorn, on which he blew the Last Trump to announce
 the coming of doomsday and the world's destruction. In the Bible,
 magic ram's horns were supposed to bring about the destruction of
 Jericho in the same manner 17 The link between Heimdall and Freya
 suggested her Kali-like function as a Destroying Goddess, which she
 would assume when men and gods displeased her by forgetting her
 principles of right living, justice, honor, and peace. She knew more
 magic than the gods. Her knowledge was collectively seidr, cognate of
 Sanskrit siddhi, the miraculous powers developed by the practice of
 yoga.
 Freya had so many incarnations and aspects that the scholars who
 tried to characterize her by only one of them soon ran into a mass of
 contradictions. She was called the Goddess of fertility, love, the moon,
 the sea, the earth, the underworld, death, birth; virgin, mother,
 ancestress, queen of heaven, ruler of fate, of the stars, of magic; the
 Great Sow wedded to the sacrificial boar; the Mistress of Cats; the
 leader of Valkyries; the Saga or "sayer" who inspired all sacred poetry.
 In sum, she was as many-sided as any other version of the Goddess.
 Marginal note:
 Freya had many
 alternate names. She
 was Gerd the Earth
 Mother, or Eartha;
 Godiva, "the
 Goddess"; Syr, "the
 Sow"; Gefn, "the
 Giver"; Horn, the holy
 harlot; the Vanadis;
 or Mardoll, the Moon
 Shining Over the
 Sea.8 Sometimes she
 was simply Lofn,
 "Love." 9 She was also
 identified with
 Mana, the Moon; or
 Hel, the underworld;
 or Nerthus, the primal
 Goddess of the Plow,
 in charge of the fertility
 of the earth; she
 separated the island of
 Zealand from
 Sweden by plowing a
 furrow around it. 10
 
 Friday
 
 Day of the Goddess Freya, called unlucky by Christian monks,
 because everything associated with female divinity was so called. Friday
 the 13th was said to be especially unlucky because it combined the
 Goddess's sacred day with her sacred number, drawn from the 13
 months of the pagan lunar year. (See Menstrual Calendar.)
 Romans named the day dies Veneris after Venus, their own
 version of the same Goddess. In modern French, Friday is still
 vendredi, 1 and in Italian, venerdi.
 Friday used to be the seventh day of the week. It was the Sabbath
 of the Jewish lunar calendar and is still the Sabbath of Islam.
 Scandinavian pagans, Hindus, and rural Scots insisted that Friday was
 the most propitious day for a marriage because it was the day that
 favored fertility.
 Fish were eaten on Friday as fertility charms, in honor of Venus
 (or Freya) whose totems they were. Fish are still considered "aphrodisiac"
 food because they were sacred to Aphrodite. Thus the Catholic
 habit of eating fish on Friday was wholly pagan in origin. But the
 church never acknowledged the debt. In the Middle Ages, when pagan
 votaries of Freya continued to celebrate her rites on Friday, churchmen
 designated her day as the day of "devil worship." 2
 
 Vanir
 
 Scandinavian elder deities: peace-loving, matriarchal, agricultural
 nature spirits led by Mother Earth and by Freya, "the Lady," called
 Vanadfs or Matriarch of the Vanir. The warlike Aesir led by Father
 Odin moved into the territory of the Vanir and made war against them,
 beginning with an act of cruelty: the Aesir seized and tortured their
 holy sorceress, Gullveig.1 In the end the Vanir were conquered, but
 many generations remained in awe of their miraculous powers. They
 were said to have accomplished everything by magic, and invented all
 the knowledge that the new gods learned. 2
 Whether the Vanir were described as elder gods, giants, elves,
 matriarchs, or "primal ancestresses," they seem to have represented
 pre-patriarchal farming cultures who were forced to give way to nomadic
 Aryan invaders.
 
 Kelle/Kelly
 
 Irish-druidic priest-name, derived from pre-Christian holy harlots of
 the Goddess Kelle, Kale, or Kali. Irish writings described the divine
 harlot Mary Magdalene as a kelle. 1 The medieval term Kele-De was
 considered somewhat mysterious, translated "Bride of God" if a woman,
 "Servant of God" if a man.2 These translations were inaccurate.
 Kele-De meant literally the spirit of the Goddess Kele, evidently
 identical with the Goddess Kali of the original Indo-European Celts.
 Votaries of the Goddess Kele stressed the search for inward
 perfection through meditation, yogic style.3 Her gods assumed the
 lotus position like eastern yogis. Her primitive Grail hero, Peredur,
 experienced her as the "most beautiful woman in the world,"
 represented by the three colors of the Divine Prakriti, still known as the
 Gunas, standing for her powers of creation, preservation, and
 destruction. 4
 The mythical "St. Kilda" seems to have been another version of
 the Goddess Kele, dwelling on a remote rocky islet once identified
 with the western paradise of the dead. St. Kilda's Isle still exists, but the
 origin of its name has been forgotten. The ubiquitous Irish word kill,
 a cell or cave, once meant a shrine of Kele, whose holy men called
 themselves Culdees, Colidees, Cele-De, Keledio, etc. Some were
 described in Christian histories as monks, though they were obviously
 married.5
 Kildare was a major shrine of the Goddess Kilda-Kele, or Brigit,
 identified with the virgin Mary after Christian monks appropriated
 the site. But the guardianship of the sacred fire at Kildare had long been
 a prerogative of priestesses; the shrine was forbidden to men.6
 Confusion of Kilda-Kele-Brigit with Mary was not too far-fetched, as
 they had been aspects of the same Goddess for thousands of years in
 India as Kali-Mari or Kel-Mari, the Pot Goddess who made human
 forms out of clay.7 (See Kali Ma.)
 
 Xochiquetzal
 
 Mexican Aphrodite: a many-faceted Love Goddess, Moon-virgin,
 fairy queen, and Madonna; a patroness of marriage and sacred harlots,
 dance, songs, spinning, weaving, changes and transformations, magic,
 and art. Like Syrian Adonis, her son-lover was a young vegetation god. 1
 Her worshippers said Xochiquetzal was the mother of all races of
 humanity after the primordial flood. Her many children were as
 dumb as animals until her holy spirit in the form of a dove descended on
 them from the Tree of Heaven and gave them speech. In this way all
 the world's languages were created. 2
 In addition to the dove, another symbol Xochiquetzal shared with
 the ancient Indo-European Goddesses was her sacred flower, the
 marigold-perhaps a New World version of the golden Thousand Petaled
 Lotus representing the Great Mother in India.
 Xochiquetzal's paradise was located "above the nine heavens in a
 very pleasant and delectable place, accompanied and guarded by
 many people and waited on by other women of the rank of goddesses,
 where are many delights of fountains, brooks, flower-gardens." 3 This
 fairyland was available after death to those who faithfully served the
 Goddess and lived according to her laws.
 
 Thais, Saint
 
 The famous harlot Thais, mistress of Alexander the Great, was
 transferred to the 4th century A.D. in her Christianized legend, which
 ignored chronology so Thais could repent her gaudy life and be
 converted to Christianity by one of the Coptic cenobites, usually St.
 Anthony. To fulfill what seemed to be one of the ascetics' favorite
 fantasies, Thais at the height of her beauty and fame was said to have renounced
 her sins, mortified her flesh, burned her fine clothes and
 ornaments, given away all her wealth to the church, and walled herself
 up in a desert cell to live in the midst of her own filth. The only trouble
 with the hagiographer's tale was that, at the time it was supposed to
 have happened, Thais had already been dead for more than 600
 years.
 
 From Barbara Walker's Women's Encyclopedia of Myths and Secrets
zondag 13 oktober 2013
The Sacred Prostitute
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