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The Great Goddess

Reverence of the Divine Feminine from the Paleolithic to the Present

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
• A study of the primordial figure of the Great Goddess and her continued worship through time as shown by the myths, shrines, and sanctuaries around the world that honor this powerful symbol of creation.
• A noted historian on pre-Christian societies provides an extensive worldwide listing of sites and sanctuaries associated with goddess worship.
• Explores goddess worship in cultures around the world, including Native American, Egyptian, Indian, and Oriental civilizations.
• Demonstrates that although her worship has sometimes been forced underground it has never disappeared.
In ancient Babylon she was Anat, in Egypt, Isis and Hathor, Dana in Celtic Ireland, Rhea and Demeter in Greece, and in India, Anapurna the Provider. She is the Great Goddess, the Goddess of Beginnings, the symbol of Earth and the giver of life, the Vast Mother, who represents all the powers and mysteries of creation for early humanity.
Shifting her solar association onto masculine deities and blackening those of her symbols that, like the serpent, could not be assimilated, patriarchal societies forced the preeminent power of the feminine into an obscure and subservient position. Yet, as shown by noted scholar Jean Markale, the Goddess did not simply disappear when her position was usurped, and the power she represents has been the source of continuous religious devotion from ancient times through the Middle Ages up to the present day.
In looking at the plethora of myths, sites, and sanctuaries devoted to this powerful figure, The Great Goddess provides abundant evidence of the extraordinary permanence of her worship—even at the heart of those religions that tried to destroy her.
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    • Booklist

      November 1, 1999
      %% This is a multi-book review: SEE also the title "The Great Goddesses of Egypt." %% Two new books on the divine feminine, as the subtitle of one of them styles it, are differently focused.Lesko, an Egyptologist, concentrates, naturally enough, on a single land. Egypt's pantheon includes many powerful goddesses. To limn them, Lesko assembles the songs and rituals of their cults and descriptions of cult artifacts and of archaeological findings. Encompassing the sunny love goddess Hathor, the winged goddess Isis, who mourned the loss of her lover-brother Osiris, and lesser-known figures, such as the cobra-headed Wadjet, Lesko's coverage presents substantial and complex material clearly and satisfactorily. Although academic in intention, the book, neither forbidding nor obscure, is a good, approachable general text on Egypt's female deities.Markale, a French scholar known for his interpretations of Celtic myth, provides a breathtakingly sweeping overview of the divine feminine, which, he argues, has been a primary focus of human reverence since the Paleolithic era. He conducts us through the goddess shrines of Europe, vividly depicting the sanctuaries and their resident divinities. He traces recurrent images and themes, such as the vulval cave, the serpent of rebirth, and the lunar crescent, and shows how they transmitted the same spiritual meanings over eons of time. Most fascinating is his presentation of evidence that images and legends of the Christian Mother of God are deeply based in ancient goddess symbology. Written with fervor and panache, Markale's very readable book is an extraordinary and challenging treatment of the subject. ((Reviewed November 1, 1999))(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 1999, American Library Association.)

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