Pagan
History, The Goddess and God
For
a modern history of English Wicca, the reader can most profitably consult the
works of
Janet and Stuart Farrar and Doreen Valiente.
PREHISTORY
Up
until recently, the earliest known remnants of human society that give us any
clues to the spiritual dimension of prehistoric man are those belonging to the
Gravettian-Aurignacian cultures of 2500- 1500 B.C.E. This is called the Upper
Paleolithic Period. Though most of the sites so far discovered have been found
in Europe, a very important site in Anatolia (modern Turkey) has also been
found and is the (so far) the first or oldest City of Catal Huyuk (pronounced
chatal Hoo-Yook), they form a conjectural foundation for the religion of the
goddess as it emerged in the later Neolithic Age of the Near East. There have
been numerous studies of these Paleolithic cultures, including extensive
explorations of the sites occupied by these peoples, including the apparent
rites connected with the disposal of their dead.
The
earliest remains of ancient civilization indicating some form of Goddess
worship were in the caves in Lascaux, France. Here, the first and earliest
non-anthropomorphic divine figures were symbolized by the horse for female
Divinity and the Bison as the male divine influence. This portion of the cave
was painted in approximately 17,000 B.C.E. and sealed approximately 10,000
B.C.E. The anthropomorphic Goddess figures appear sometime approximately 7,000
B.C.E. The earliest remains in Catal Huyuk have been reliably carbon dated to
6,500 B.C. and show some interesting parallels in that the horse was replaced
with an anthropomorphic goddess and the Bison (an ice age animal) has been
replaced with the aurochs bull, ancestor of modern cattle. The anthropomorphic
Goddess is an Earth Mother and the nearby volcanoes (then active) were
considered her breasts.
One
major conjecture has been that the concept of the creator of all human life
may have been formulated by the clan's image of women.
The
reasoning behind this conjecture lies in the observations in this century of
the few remaining Paleolithic type cultures. These Paleolithic cultures tend
to be woman centered since it is from the women that babies come and the women
are absolutely essential for the continuation of the tribe or clan. Current
information also indicates that it is also probable that the mother was
regarded as the sole (or at least primary) parent of children in this culture,
and that there was a definite pattern of ancestor worship. It is also very
probable that ancestry was matrilineal.
The
most tangible evidence that these very ancient cultures and their predecessors
worshipped a goddess is the numerous sculptures of women found throughout most
of Europe and the Near east. Some of these sculptures date as far back as
25,000 B.C.E.! Small female figurines, made of stone, bone and clay (most
seemingly pregnant) have been found throughout the widespread
Gravettian-Aurignacian sites as far apart as Spain, France, Germany, Austria,
and Russia spanning an apparent period of at least 10,000 years. Erich
Neumnann, in "The Great Mother" (p.95) says- "Of the Stone Age
sculptures known to us, there are fifty-five female figures and only five male
figures. The male figures, of youths, are atypical and poorly executed, hence
it is certain that they had no significance for the cult. This fits in with
the secondary character of the male godhead, who appeared only later in the
history of religions and derived his divine rank from his mother, the
Goddess."
Johannes
Maringer, in his book the "Gods of Prehistoric Man" says- "it
appears highly probable then that the female figurines were idols of a Great
Mother cult, practiced by the non-nomadic Aurignacian mammoth hunters who
inhabited the immense Eurasian territories that extended from Southern France
to Lake Baikal in Siberia." It was from the Lake Baikal area in Siberia
that tribes are believed to have migrated across the Bering land bridge to
North America about this time period, and formed the nucleus of what was to
become the race of North American Indians. In some primitive societies known
to history, the male role in procreation was not known. Intercourse and
pregnancy both begin with puberty, and there was no evident reason to regard
one as the cause of the other. Women were believed to conceive from the light
of the moon or from ancestral spirits.
Neolithic
cultures have left a bit more evidence for study and the images are a bit
clearer and less speculative. One good instance of this is the stone age
painting of a priestess officiating over a group of worshippers along with a
male wearing a horned head-dress. An interesting point here is that the
priestess pictured is wearing a garter and wielding a ceremonial dagger, much
like the ones used in modern witchcraft.
The
beginnings of Roman religion are sure to have been based on the Etruscan
culture. Ancestor worship was the earliest form of religion in Rome. Another
interesting fact relating to ancient Matrilineal forms influencing present
society is reflected in the Jewish custom, current today, that membership
comes from the mother's side of a marriage.
The
above mentioned goddess images, some as old as 7000 BC, offer silent testimony
to the most ancient worship of a great goddess in the land that is most often
remembered today as the homeland of Judaism and Christianity. In exploring the
influence and importance of the worship of the Goddess in Canaan in biblical
times, we find that as Ashtoreth, Asherah (perhaps the origin of the tribe of
Asher?),
Astarte,
Attoret, Anath, or simply as Elat or Baalat, she was the principal deity of
such great Canaanite cities as Tyre, Sidon, Ascalon, Beth Anath, Aphaca,
Byblos, and Ashtoreth Karnaim.
In
Egypt, the Hebrews had known the worship of the Goddess as Isis or Hathor. For
four generations they had been living in a land where women held a very high
status and the matrilineal descent system continued to function at most
periods.
Judging
from the number of Hebrews who emerged from Egypt in the Exodus, as compared
with the family of the twelve sons who supposedly entered it four generations
earlier, it seems likely that a great number of those Hebrews known as
Israelites may actually have been Egyptians, Canaanites, Semitic nomads and
other, Goddess-worshipping, peoples who had joined together in Egypt.
Archaeological records and artefacts reveal that the religion of the Goddess
still flourished in many of the cities of Canaan long after the Hebrews
invaded.
What
are some of the modern day applications of this long history of Goddess
worship? For an answer to this, let's look at an encapsulation of the
"herstory" of the legend of the Universal Goddess as taught to the
new entrants to the Faerie Tradition in 20th Century America.
According
to the legends of the Faerie, Witchcraft and magick began more than 35
thousand years ago, when the last ice age in Europe began and small bands of
nomadic hunters followed the free-running reindeer and bison herds. They were
armed with but primitive weapons ( Stone Age, remember?), and had to lure or
chase the animals over a cliff or into a pit to kill and eat them. As Starhawk
says,"...some among the clans were gifted, could "call" the
herds to a cliff side or a pit, where a few beasts, in willing sacrifice,
would let themselves be trapped."
As
the last ice age retreated the tribes of nomadic hunters worshipped the
Goddess of the Wild Things and Fertility and the God of the Hunt.Semipermanent
homes were set up in caves carved out by the glaciers. Shamans and Shamanka
conducted rites within hard to reach portions of the caves, which were painted
with scenes of the hunt, magical symbols and the tribes totem animals.
The
transition from Hunter-Gatherers to agriculturists was reflected in the change
of the "Lady of the Wild Things and Fertility" to the "Barley
Mother" and the "God of the Hunt" to the "Lord of the
Grain". The importance of the phases of the moon and the sun was
reflected in the rituals that evolved around sowing, reaping, and letting out
to pasture.
Villages
grew into towns and cities and society changed from tribal to communal to
urban. Paintings on the plastered walls of shrines depicted the Goddess giving
birth to the Divine Child - Her son, consort and seed. The Divine Child was
expected to take a special interest in the city dwellers, just as His Mother
and Father had taken an interest in the people who lived away from the cities.
Mathematics,
astronomy, poetry, music, medicine, and the understanding of the workings of
the human mind, developed side by side with the lore of the deeper mysteries.
Far
to the east, nomadic tribes devoted themselves to the arts of war and
conquest. Wave after wave of invasion swept over Europe from the Bronze Age
onward. Warrior gods drove the Goddess' people out from the fertile lowlands
and the fine temples, into the hills and high mountains, where they became
known as the Sidhe, the Picts or Pixies, and the Fair Folk or the Fairies. The
mythological cycle of Goddess and Consort, Mother and Child, which had held
sway for 30,000 years was changed to conform to the values of the conquering
patriarchies.
In
Canaan, Yahweh fought a bloody battle to ensure that his followers had
"no other gods before me." The Goddess was given a masculine name
and assigned the role of a false god. Along with the suppression of the
Goddess, women lost most of the rights they had previously enjoyed.
In
Greece, the Goddess in Her many aspects, was "married" to the new
gods resulting in the Olympic Pantheon. The Titans, who the Olympians
displaced were more in touch with the primal aspects of the Goddess.
The
victorious Celts in Gaul and the British Isles, adopted many features of the
Old Religion and incorporated them into the Druidic Mysteries. The Faerie,
breeding cattle in the stony hills and living in turf-covered round huts
preserved the Craft. They celebrated the eight feasts of the Wheel of the Year
with wild processions on horseback, singing and chanting along the way and
lighting ritual bonfires on the mountaintops. It was said that the invaders
often joined in the revels and many rural families, along with some royalty,
could claim to have Faerie blood. The College of the Druids and the Poetic
Colleges of Ireland and Wales were said to have preserved many of the old
mysteries.
In
the late 1400's the Catholic Church attempted to obliterate its competitors,
and the followers of the Old Religion were forced to "go
underground." They broke up into small groups called Covens and, isolated
from each other, formed what would later be known as the Family Traditions.
Inevitably, parts of the Craft were forgotten or lost and what survives today
is fragmentary.
After
nearly five centuries of persecution and terror, came the Age of Disbelief.
Memory of the True Craft had faded as members who could remember how they once
had met openly died, and those who came after never knew of them. All that was
left were the hideous stereotypes which were ludicrous, laughable or just
plain tragic. With the repeal of the last Witchcraft Act in England in 1954,
the Craft started to re-emerge as an alternative to a world that viewed the
planet as a resource to be exploited.
Janet
and Stewart Farrar, in the introduction to The Witches Goddess say of the
modern re-emergence of the Goddess " ..may well prove to be one of the
most significant spiritual, psychic and psychological developments of our
lifetime". They have since done a wonderful job of presenting an overview
of the ascendancy and history of the expression of the masculine principle of
deity as expressed by Male God-forms and Gods with their book The Witches'
God. What do the Farrars consider this "masculine principle" to be?
"...it represents the linear-logical,analyzing, fertilizing aspect, with
its emphasis on Ego-consciousness and individuality, while the feminine
principle represents the cyclical-intuitive, synthesizing, formative,
nourishing aspect, with its emphasis on the riches of the unconscious, both
Personal and Collective, and on relatedness."
As
mankind started to develop his cultures in directions that were more male
dependent in the nature of the cultures, the emphasis in religion shifted to
become more male god than female goddess oriented. As this happened, the
Goddess(es) lost ground to the God(s). At first, the female aspect merely
became secondary to the male, but eventually the male took over and dominated
to the total exclusion of the female, particularly in western society as we
know it today. "The first major god-form to claim a monopoly of divinity
was the Hebrew Yahweh, from which in due course sprang the Christian and
Moslem forms." "Dr. Raphael Patai, in his books Man and Temple and
The Hebrew Goddess shows that the Goddess Asherah was worshipped alongside
Yahweh as his wife and sister in the Temple at Jerusalem for 240 of the 360
years the temple complex existed, and her image was publicly displayed
there."
There
is also evidence that the Jewish community at elephantine in Egypt
acknowledged two goddess-wives of Yahweh, and also there still remains in
Ezekiel (xxiii)a metaphorical reference to a pair of wives, where Yahweh
condemns the "whoredom" of two sisters who "became mine and
bore me sons and daughters".