Great Goddess

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Great Goddess is the concept of an almighty goddess or mother goddess, or a matriarchal religion. Apart from various specific figures called this from various cultures, the Great Goddess hypothesis, is a postulated fertility goddess supposed to have been worshipped in the Neolithic era across most of Eurasia at least. Scholarly belief in this hypothesis has reduced in recent decades,[1] though theological belief in a Great Goddess is common in the Goddess movement.

Specific examples include:

  • Great Goddess, referring to the Greek and Roman goddess
    Gaia
    (mother of the Titans)
  • Great Goddess, anglicized form of the Roman Magna Dea
  • Great Goddess, anglicized form of the Sanskrit Mahadevi, the Shakti sum of all goddesses
  • Magu (deity), a deity in Chinese and Korean myth
  • Great Goddess of Teotihuacan, an ancient Mesoamerican deity
  • Great Goddess, also known as the Triple Goddess, an important feminine deity of the Neopagan religion of Wicca

Notes

  1. ^ Hutton 2022, chapter 2

References

Hutton, Ronald (2022). Queens of the Wild: Pagan Goddesses in Christian Europe: An Investigation. Yale University Press.

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See also