Posted by Lady Zamora
on April 29, 2008 at 11:20 PM
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Beltane is a time of great fertility -- for the earth itself, for
animals, and of course for people as well. This season has been
celebrated by cultures going back thousands of years, in a variety of
ways, but nearly all shared the fertility aspect. Typically, this is a
Sabbat to celebrate gods of the hunt or of the forest, and goddesses of
passion and motherhood, as well as agricultural deities. Here are a
list of gods and goddesses that can be honored as part of your
tradition's Beltane rituals.
- Artemis (Greek): The moon goddess Artemis was associated with the
hunt, and was seen as a goddess of forests and hillsides. This pastoral
connection made her a part of spring celebrations in later periods.
- Bes (Egyptian): Worshipped in later dynasties, Bes was a household protection god, and watched over mothers and young children.
- He and his wife, Beset, were paired up in rituals to cure problems with infertility.
- Bacchus (Roman): Considered the equivalent of Greek god
Dionysus, Bacchus was the party god -- grapes, wine, and general
debauchery were his domain. In March each year, Roman women could
attend secret ceremonies called the bacchanalia, and he is associated with sexual free-for-alls and fertility.
- Flora (Roman): This goddess of spring and flowers had her own festival, Floralia,
which was celebrated every year between April 28 to May 3. Romans
dressed in bright robes and floral wreaths, and attended theater
performances and outdoor shows. Offerings of milk and honey were made
to the goddess.
- Hera (Greek): This goddess of marriage was the equivalent of
the Roman Juno, and took it upon herself to bestow good tidings to new
brides. A maiden about to marry could make offerings to Hera, in the
hopes that she would bless the marriage with fertility. In her earliest
forms, she appears to have been a nature goddess, who presides over
wildlife and nurses the young animals which she holds in her arms.
- Kokopelli (Hopi): This flute-playing, dancing spring god
carries unborn children upon his own back, and then passes them out to
fertile women. In the Hopi culture, he is part of rites that relate to
marriage and childbearing, as well as the reproductive abilities of
animals. Often portrayed with rams and stags, symbolic of his
fertility, Kokopelli occasionally is seen with his consort,
Kokopelmana.
- Pan (Greek): This agricultural god watched over shepherds
and their flocks. He was a rustic sort of god, spending lots of time
roaming the woods and pastures, hunting and playing music on his flute.
Pan is typically portrayed as having the hindquarters and horns of a
goat, similar to a faun. Because of his connection to fields and the
forest, he is often honored as a spring fertility god.
- Priapus (Greek): This fairly minor rural god has one giant
claim to fame -- his permanently erect and enormous phallus. The son of
Aphrodite by Dionysus (or possibly Zeus, depending on the source), he
was mostly worshipped in homes rather than in an organized cult.
Despite his constant lust, most stories portray him as sexually
frustrated, or even impotent. However, in agricultural areas he was
still regarded as a god of fertility, and at one point he was
considered a protective god, who threatened sexual violence against
anyone -- male or female -- who transgressed the boundaries he guarded.
- Shiele-na-Gig (Celtic): Although the Sheela-na-Gig is
technically the name applied to the carvings of women with exaggerated
vulvas that have been found in Ireland and England, there's a theory
that the carvings are representative of a lost pre-Christian goddess.
Typically, the Sheela-na-Gig adorns buildings in areas of Ireland that
were part of the Anglo-Norman conquests in the 12th century. She is
shown as a homely woman with a giant yoni, which is spread wide to
accept the seed of the male. Folkloric evidence indicates that the
figures are theory that the figures were part of a fertility rite,
similar to "birthing stones", which were used to bring on conception.
- Xochiquetzal (Aztec): This fertility goddess was associated
with spring, and represented not only flowers but the fruits of life
and abundance. She was also the patron goddess of prostitutes and
craftsmen
-- Patti Wigington