Hecate of Lagina
Attachment of Hecate
16 x 16 x 4 mm
The lentoid shaped intaglio is engraved with the figure of the three-headed goddess Hecate. Her arms rising in a gesture of praying or putting a spell on. Groundline. Slightly butn stone. Wear marks. Traces of the iron setting on the backside.
und dem Unterirdischen. Seit dem 5. Jahrhundert v. Chr. wird sie
mit der Göttin Artemis, mit der sie laut Hesiod (theog. 409-411)
auch familiär verwandt ist, und mit Persephone sowie mit
Ereschkigal, der sumerischen Unterweltsherrin, oder der
Mondgöttin Selene gleichgesetzt.
The archetypal und archaic Anatolian goddess, Cybele, was revered not only throughout Anatolia but also on the neighboring (modern day) Greek islands.
Evidence of her cult can still be seen today in the cave formations and niches carved into hillsides. Her great gift to humanity is the mystery of rebirth.
Many of these caves symbolize the birth canal and end in womb-like forms. On the island of Samos, for example, one enters the caves as if stepping back into the darkness of the womb—not of a biological mother and father, but of the Great Goddess of eternity.
During our journey through Anatolia, we will visit many such places—caves and rock niches where Cybele was likely venerated long before the appearance and unveiling of the many goddesses who later emerged in human consciousness, in our hearts and in our souls.