MSN Home  |  My MSN  |  Hotmail
Sign in to Windows Live ID Web Search:   
go to MSNGroups 
Free Forum Hosting
 
Important Announcement Important Announcement
The MSN Groups service will close in February 2009. You can move your group to Multiply, MSN’s partner for online groups. Learn More
Witches Circle of BrewContains "mature" content, but not necessarily adult.[email protected] 
  
What's New
  
  Welcome2  
  ****> Welcome New Members**  
  Rules  
  Fair Use Copy Write Laws  
  Resources Used to Create This Chat Room  
  Meet The Team Updated  
  Message Boards  
  General  
  Â¨*:The Witches Mail Room  
  Craft Ideas  
  .·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·..·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·.  
  Nature of our ways  
  A Witches History and Future  
  What Is Magick (fixed for an easier read)  
  Year of the Witch  
  Sabbat Basics  
  Witches Place to start  
  Code of Ethics for Teachers of Wicca  
  Teachers Guide to the Pagan Student Added  
  Teachings of Mother Earth  
  Frequently Asked Questions  
  Q's & A's Discus  
  Recommended Reading  
  First Degree Witch  
  Second Degree Witch  
  .·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·..·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·.  
  Witches Circle of Brew Winds of Change  
  Paganism Defined  
  Pagan Beliefs  
  Wiccan Beliefs  
  Wiccan Reed  
  Witches Law  
  Witches Ethics  
  Witches Reed  
  Â·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨  
  Death  
  Karma  
  Grounding  
  Sheilding  
  Visualisations  
  Meditation Made Easy  
  Meditation Chakr  
  .·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·..·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·.  
  Altar Set Up  
  **Creating your BOS  
  **Cauldrons  
  Magickal Symbols  
  Introduction to Self Dedication  
  Wiccan Self Dedication  
  Self- Dedication for the Solitary  
  Ritual Structure  
  Pathworking  
  Pagan Rituals  
  .·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·..·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·.  
  Casting a Circle  
  Casting Out Ritual  
  The Charge of the Goddess/god  
  Call of the Goddess  
  Call The Quarters  
  Drawing Down The Moon  
  Charge of The God  
  Charge of the Horned God  
  Charge of the Dark God  
  Invocation to Freyja  
  Invocation to Odin  
  Invocation of the Goddess Hella  
  .·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·..·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·.  
  )0(Realms and Meanings of Some Popular Deities  
  )0(Goddesses (under constant construction))0(  
  )0(Gods and Goddesses )0(  
  )0(Tripple Goddess)0(  
  )0(The Goddess as Crone  
  )0(The Goddess as Mother  
  )0(The Goddess As Maiden  
  Hecate, Morrighan, Brigit  
  Yemaya, Kali, Akenaten  
  Estsanatlehi, Nut,White Buffalo Woman  
  Greenman, Hades, Horus  
  Tog-Sothoth, Mammon, Herne  
  The Dagda, Vulcan, Hermes  
  .·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·..·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·.  
  The Moon  
  The Waters of Mother Earth  
  Correspondents For All  
  The Elements  
  Day Correspondents  
  Color Correspondents  
  Candle Correspondents  
  Herbal Correspondents  
  Incense Correspondents  
  Some Stones And Gems  
  Fowl Correspondents  
  .·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·..·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·.  
  .·:*¨¨*:Spells  
  .·:*¨¨*:Spell crafting 101  
  Astral Projection  
  What's in Your Aura  
  Aromatherapy  
  .·:*¨¨*:Dressing the Part  
  Imagine -- A Thought for all  
  .·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·..·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·.  
  Witchy Shops Links  
  Links  
  Pictures  
    
  .·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·..·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·.  
  â˜†â˜†â˜†â˜† Divinations ☆☆☆☆  
  Tarot  
  Ouji Board Divination  
  Clairvoyance Page  
  Palmistry  
  Bone Magick  
  Tea Time  
  Druids Page 1  
  Druid Laws & Rules  
  Pagan Pride  
  Colours  
  A Web of Spiders  
  Archnifacts  
  The Alchemy of Fragrance  
  Hair Care - Frugal  
  Home Made Lotions  
  Runes  
  Scrying  
  CrystalBallGazin  
  Past Lives  
  Geomency  
  Dream  
  Yin and Yang Explained  
  How Yin and Yang Got it's Symbol  
  .·:*¨¨*:.·:*¨¨*:.·:*¨¨*:.·:*¨¨*:.·:*¨¨*:  
  .·:*¨¨Astrology  
  .·:*¨Spell a Day  
  .·:*¨¨Daily Zen  
  Sabbat Info  
  .·:Bottany today  
  .·:*¨¨Daily Om  
  .·:*Aromatherapy  
  Druids  
  Process of Dying  
  .·:*¨¨*:.·:*¨¨*:.·:*¨¨*:.·:*¨¨*:.·:*¨¨*:  
  HERBS  
  Find Your Herb  
  Greek Mythology  
  Deities  
  Amulets  
  Any Recipes'  
  Siggy Offers  
  SIggy Pickup  
  snag tags  
  Backgrounds  
  .·:Home Remedies  
  Crystals  
  .·:*¨¨*:.·Poetry Corner.·:*¨¨*:  
  .·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·..·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·.  
  Poetry Board  
  ~~**POEM***~~Witches Dance  
  **A Prayer to The Goddess During Hard Times  
  **The Earth is My Mother  
  **The Ocean  
  **The Goddess  
  **We Hid in The Night  
  **The Moon and The Sun  
  The Book Club  
  .·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·..·:*¨¨*:·.�?·:*¨¨*:·.  
  
  
  Tools  
 
 

 
 
THE TRIPLE GODDESS IN CELTIC TRADITION
 
© Copyright 2002 Montague Whitsel, All Rights Reserved.

 

 


          Celtic mythology is replete with tripled or triadic deities.  In this article I address this phenomenon by first exploring the Celtic fascination with threes and triads as a way of alluding to the mysterious dimensions of the cosmos in which we find ourselves living.  I then apply this to the question of why there are triple deities.  The major part of the article is then an exploration of the mythos of two triple Goddesses: (1) ANU—DANU—TAILTIU (Goddess of Sources, Springs and the Earth) and (2) the Celtic Lunar Goddess �?BOANN—BRIGHID—CERIDWEN, mentioning ways of encountering these Goddesses today, through chant, meditation and imaging.
          “Did the Celts worship the Goddess?�?nbsp;  This is a question that I often get asked by curious and sincere people looking into Celtic mysticism and spirituality.  As it stands, the question implies a now popularized story concerning the distant past; i.e., when all of humankind �?in the Neolithic (c. 10,000 �?c. 6,000 BCE) �?supposedly worshipped a single, unified, “Great Goddess,�?long before there were any gods to speak of and when life was a kind of earthly paradise.  Whether or not this scenario turns out to be verifiable (in historic and archaeological terms), it has already made a deep impact on contemporary religious consciousness.  It often affects the kinds of ideas Neo-Pagans have about the distant past.
         While there is a growing body of evidence for a Goddess-centered religion in what is now called “Old Europe�?(see the work of Marija Gimbutas, et. al.), Celtic religion seems to have had its own unique mythic paradigm. The Celts worshipped a great many goddesses �?as well as gods �?and nowhere seem to have worshipped a single “Great Goddess.�?nbsp; There were very few paired gods & goddesses in Celtic mythology (the Daghda and the Boann in Irish mythology is an obvious exception).  Nowhere do we find the gods killing off goddesses, as is supposed to have happened in other mythologies as the Great Goddess lost favor, being supplanted by warrior gods in the society’s pantheon of deities.
         While they didn’t worship a Great Goddess, neither did the Celts worship a “Great God�?(at least not until the rise of Celtic Christianity in the 4th century CE).  In fact, if by ‘they�?we mean something like “the Celts as a whole, in all times and places,�?‘they�?didn’t worship any deity in common!  Celtic religion is deeply and persistently polytheistic; it is regionally rooted.  Celtic deities are almost always tied to particular tuatha (“tribes�? or perhaps to regional sacred sites; e.g., springs, wells, ancient trees.
          Each Celtic tuath had its own deities, both gods & goddesses.  These deities were manifestations or perhaps personifications of all of the various aspects of daily life.  There were deities of the stable, the hearth, the field, the well, the cradle, the springs and wells from which people drew their daily supply of water, and of virtually every other dimension of life.  There were gods of hunting and of sport.  There were goddesses of healing, war-craft and magic.  There were gods of time and space, and goddesses of the numinous and mysterious aspects of daily life.  Each of these deities could be called upon when they were needed, while at other times people paid little or no attention to them.
          There were also deities with a regional status; i.e., that were worshipped in a general area by more than one tuath.  Danu �?who had a Continental origin �?may have originally been connected with the Danube River.  She was later mentioned in other Celtic areas and may be implicated in the name of the Irish Tuatha Dé Danann (the People of ‘Danu�?).  As such, Danu may have been the patron source goddess of one of the early Celtic groups to enter into Ireland and settle there.  There are other goddesses who were known by one name on the Continent and by another name in Britain, Scotland and Ireland, such as the Irish goddess Brighid.  She was known as Brigantia in Britain and as Bride in Scotland.
         The Celts did not generally treat their deities as ‘parental�?figures; beings to ‘depend on�?or in relation to which they saw themselves as subservient.  Rather, the deities suggested ways of referring to energies in the cosmos through which a person could become empowered or resourced.  They often treated their gods & goddesses more or less as equals, yet always with the tip of the hat to their supernatural and immortal nature.
I sometimes think that the Celts were approaching a much more mature kind of relationship with the universe than was being expressed in many of the Mediterranean-based religions, where people had for a long time felt themselves to be the pawns of their gods (you only have to read the Odyssey to get a sense of this) and where others were giving up their autonomy and willingly becoming slaves to their God.  The Celts seemed to realize that gods & goddesses were an important manifestation of the universe while at the same time acknowledging their own autonomy from their deities.  If so, it would have been interesting to see where a Celtic religion would have gone without the interference of Christianity.
          One of the most fascinating aspects of Celtic mythology is the existence of the so-called “Triple�?or “Triadic�?Goddesses.  For some reason the Celts didn’t just worship single, individual deities, but linked some of them together in threes; never four, never two, but three.  The Celts were fascinated by threes, tripled images and triadic ideas.  Triple designs and three-part motifs �?such as the triskelion; a three-fold spiral �?appear in the very earliest examples of Celtic Art.  When Celtic people wanted to encode their wisdom for posterity, they created “triads;�?three-part sayings that could be memorized and passed down orally.  The Celtic imagination was populated by a number of tripled or triadic deities �?gods as well as goddesses �?that were somehow more mysterious than the general deities and that functioned to express mystical rather than more mundane or practical truths.  What is it about threes and triads and triple manifestations of things that so appealed to the Celtic Mind?
           The longer I study Celtic mythology and practice Celtic spirituality the clearer it is to me that the Celts were deeply appreciative of the mysterious element in the reality we inhabit.  Behind all that we as human beings ‘know�?and call ‘real�?is a deeper reality; a numinous realm just beyond our mind’s grasp.  The everyday events that we so often take for granted reveal, if looked at from another angle, this other, more mysterious dimension.  If you search long enough, study hard enough, worship gods & goddesses devoutly enough, Celtic mystics believed, what you would eventually come up against is ‘Mystery;�?everything opens out into the unknown.  The cosmos is strange and mysterious.  For the Celts, reality emerges from this Mysterious ‘beyond�?and returns to it again at time’s end.   To say that something was ‘three�?or to present it with three names or three aspects was one way of alluding to this Mystery.
          I tend to think that the number �?�?fascinated the Celts because, in one sense, it is the first number with enough complexity to symbolize the mystery inherent in the cosmos.  ‘One�?may be seen as single, simple, unadorned.  ‘Two�?is the number of opposition, contradiction, complementarity, and duality.  ‘Three�?pushes beyond our usual habit of dividing the world up into ‘this�?and ‘that, ‘here�?and ‘there,�?‘us�?and ‘them,�?‘you�?and me.�?nbsp; It introduces the mysterious ‘third;�?the tantalizing ‘other�?�?into our neatly bifurcated worlds.  ‘Four�?represents the cardinal points of the Earth and as such brings us back into the spatio-temporal realm.  Three is the liberating number; the number of Mystery.
         As such, the Celtic triple or triadic deities are just one more vehicle through which to express this mysterious otherness.  Triadic gods & goddesses did not become such through a process of multiplication; i.e., different tuatha (i.e., “tribes�? didn’t just recognize the ‘same�?deities in each other’s ‘pantheons�?and then bring three of their names together for the sake of simplicity!  Rather, I think there must have been triple gods & goddesses from the very emergence of Celtic consciousness; these deities are as archaic as the Celtic fascination with the number �?.�?/STRONG>
       Thinking in these terms, we might suppose that certain local deities were always thought of as in some way triadic.  There was a need for a triple goddess or a triple god; it said something about the nature of reality that couldn’t be expressed through the myths of single deities.  While there is a tendency among some students of Celtic mythology to see triads or triple-aspect deities as emerging only at the regional level and to imply that these triads were ‘more important�?than the ‘merely�?local deities, I think this draws too much on a Mediterranean bias with its tendency to value abstractions over the specific and hierarchy over egalitarian social arrangements.  When you enter the Celtic Realm, you leave the world where these presuppositions work; you are in a different mythological cosmos.
          According to a strictly Celtic logic, something may be given a triple-aspect in order to draw out its more mysterious element; not because it is ‘higher�?or ‘better�?than other things, but because it reveals the strangeness of Nature and human existence in an unusually powerful or poetic way.  When something becomes triadic or is tripled, it has the power to awaken us to the Mystery inherent in the cosmos and our experience of it.  Gods & goddesses that are presented as triadic or who have a triple-aspect are revelatory in a unique way.
         I will here discuss two primary triple goddesses.  The first of these is ANU—DANU—TAILTIU, a Goddess of Sources, Rivers and the Earth.  The second triad �?BOANN—BRIGHID—CERIDWEN �?is one expression of the Celtic Lunar Goddess and Muse of Poets, Bards and Storytellers.  Each of these triads represents practical experiences while alluding to a more noumenal dimension.  In the pages that follow, we will explore their mythos and suggest ways of connecting with these mysterious triple deities.
A.     ANU—DANU—TAILTIU (The Goddess of Origin and Destination)
       All things have a beginning and an end.  The Celts were well aware of this.  They personified the temporal limits of existence and the mysteries these perimeters implied (Birth—Life—Death—Rebirth) in the character or function of various gods & goddesses.  In Ireland, three goddesses seem to have played this role: ANU, the goddess of sustenance, nurture and abundance, DANU, the lady of movement, tides and process, and TAILTIU �?the goddess of vigor, strength, and endurance.  While separately quite influential in the Irish Celtic World, together they had the effect of alluding to realities concerning the limits of our existence.  While we will deal with each of them in turn, keep in mind that they form a triad; a vehicle for the mysterious transcendence of the ordinary.

 Page 2     Page 3
 
 
 

Created for :
Witches Circle of Brew

by: ©Graphics R us