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  2. Hecate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hecate

    Hecate (/ ˈ h ɛ k ə t i / HEK-ə-tee; [4] Ancient Greek: Ἑκάτη) [a] is a goddess in ancient Greek religion and mythology, most often shown holding a pair of torches, a key, or snakes, or accompanied by dogs, [5] and in later periods depicted as three-formed or triple-bodied.

  3. List of Greek deities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Greek_deities

    Hecate (Ἑκάτη), goddess of magic, witchcraft, the night, the Moon, ghosts, and necromancy; Pan (Πάν), god of shepherds, pastures, and fertility; Prometheus (Προμηθεύς). God of forethought and crafty counsel, and creator of mankind. Leto (Λητώ). Goddess of motherhood and mother of the twin Olympians, Artemis and Apollo.

  4. Heqet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heqet

    Heqet (Egyptian ḥqt, also ḥqtyt "Heqtit"), sometimes spelled Heket, is an Egyptian goddess of fertility, identified with Hathor, represented in the form of a frog. [ 1 ] To the Egyptians, the frog was an ancient symbol of fertility, related to the annual flooding of the Nile .

  5. Medea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medea

    Medea is known in most stories as a sorceress and is often depicted as a priestess of the goddess Hecate. She first appears in Hesiod's Theogony around 700 BCE, [2] but is best known from Euripides's tragedy Medea and Apollonius of Rhodes's epic Argonautica.

  6. Triple Goddess (Neopaganism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triple_Goddess_(Neopaganism)

    [2] Additional examples of the goddess Hecate viewed as a triple goddess associated with witchcraft include Lucan's tale of a group of witches, written in the 1st century BCE. In Lucan's work (LUC. B.C. 6:700-01), the witches speak of "Persephone, who is the third and lowest aspect of our goddess Hecate". [3]

  7. Category:Hecate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Hecate

    Articles relating to the goddess Hecate, who is variously associated with crossroads, entrance-ways, night, light, magic, witchcraft, the Moon, knowledge of herbs and poisonous plants, graves, ghosts, necromancy, and sorcery. She is thought to have originated in Heqet, Egyptian goddess of witchcraft, fertility and childbirth.

  8. List of night deities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_night_deities

    Selene, Titaness goddess and personification of the moon; Thanatos, the personification of death, the son of Nyx and Erebus and twin brother of Hypnos; Roman. Diana Trivia, goddess of the hunt, the moon, crossroads, equivalent to the Greek goddesses Artemis and Hecate; Latona, mother goddess of day and night, equivalent to the Greek goddess Leto

  9. Diana (mythology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diana_(mythology)

    She evokes the triple goddess of Diana, Selene, and Hecate, and specifies that she requires the powers of the latter. [5] The 1st century poet Horace similarly wrote of a magic incantation invoking the power of both Diana and Proserpina. [23] The symbol of the crossroads is relevant to several aspects of Diana's domain.