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Goddess Aja





    Aja is a West African woodland goddess




    • Her disciples learn herb knowledge from her, guaranteeing their bodily and spiritual well-being.




    Aja, Herbs, And Ritual Offerings


    When supernatural entities accept or reject ceremonial offerings, Osun and the Aje play a significant role. 


    When acknowledged, they strengthen and support herbal remedies; if not, they undermine their effectiveness and that of the ceremonial components. 

    Animals like ign (vultures) and aja (dogs), who eat the sacrificial sacrifices, are inspired by Aje. Consequently, they are revered by the babalawo and Eleerindınlogun

     Additionally, Chief Mrs. Elsoj made it clear that due to their close connection to and involvement with Osun, the Aje's leader, the Eleerindınlogun, herbs and roots are easily accessible to them as a result. 

    So, unlike diviners in other systems who must first pay particular devotion to the Aje in order for the elements to be effective, they are given the ability to employ ritual and herbal components at whim. 

    Before extracting herbs or roots for ritual preparation, they chant a number of praises to the Iyami and ask for their assistance. 

    The standing of Aje and Osun among them is agreed upon by every single one of my sources. 

    In the words of Ifa priest of Babalawo Oyegbad, this is summarized: 

    Aje, often referred to as Iyami, are strong as such that the cosmos has been entrusted to their protection by Olodumare. 

    They now have control and authority over its business thanks to him. The cosmos is firmly held together by them. They continue to keep the planet in order. 

    Osun is not only one of them; she is also their leader. In addition, Osun's function is essential in restoring harmony to any tense relationship. 

    Osun's standing among the spiritual beings explains why her influence over ritual procedures is crucial to the deity's plan for resolving disputes and crises. 

    The effectiveness of the ceremonial sacrifices suggested by diviners may be achieved by communication with all spiritual beings.

    Therefore, it is said that Osun, the head of the Aje, has the mystic ability to restrain or remove the violent acts of other deities as well as human potential and prosperity.



    Legends, Belief And Folklore Associated with Goddess Aja.




    Aja is an Orisha in Yoruba mythology, patron of the forest, its animals, and herbal healers, whom she taught their craft. 


    • Aja may also refer to a "wild wind" in Yoruba. 
    • If someone gets taken away by aja and later returns, it is said that he would become a strong "jujuman" (or babalawo). 
      • The voyage is said to last anywhere from 7 to 3 months, and the individual who is carried is said to have gone to the country of the dead or heaven (Orun)."  




    • She is a botanist who knows all there is to know about plants and is a master of potions and healing herbs. She taught this art to the Yoruba people, who continue to perform it now. 

    In Yoruba folklore and consequently in Santerian religious practice, Aja is a great healer





    • She is considered to be the spirit who taught all other healers how to do their jobs. 
    • She is a strong Orisha, and it is said that if she takes you away but lets you return after a few days, you will be bestowed with her magical abilities
    • A. B. Ellis said in Yoruba-Speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast of West Africa, published in 1894, that

      "Aja, whose name seems to mean "wild vine," whisks strangers away into the woods and educates them about the therapeutic powers of plants, but she never hurts them. 

    Aja is humanoid in appearance, although she is short, standing between one and two feet tall. 

    Women utilize the aja vine to treat enflamed breasts."  


    Aja is one of the most elusive Earth Gods and Goddesses since she chooses to show herself to humanity rather than hurt or fear them.






    Worshiping Aja is much rarer in the West, but it shouldn't matter since Aja symbolizes a global value of environmental care and preservation, regardless of religion or spiritual calling.

    Aja safeguards the woods, which are home to trees that provide oxygen and filter the air and water for all living creatures. 

    There would be more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere if trees were not safeguarding humans, and there would be no barrier to limit the speed of an already fast changing climate.


    Among the Nigerian Goddesses and Gods, Orisha is immensely popular. 



    Goddess Aja is the spirit of the forest and the animals that live there, as well as domestic healers

    Goddess Aja much like Goddess Diana of Europe  and Goddess Korravai of India is a woodland goddess, and also a goddess of animals.

    Goddess Aja always teaches us understanding empathy for the natural world, and a well-balanced empathy is the preventive strategy that prevents environmental degradation, destruction, and ecological anguish. 

    Thus Goddess Aja and Her true healing begins to unfold naturally and inevitably.











    Frequently Asked Questions:



    Who Is Goddess Aja?


    Aja is an Orisha, a spirit that inhabits the forest and its creatures, as well as herbal healers. She would search her woodlands for medical plants and combine the herbs, roots, and other plant components to develop treatments for the ill.


    Who is Africa's most powerful goddess?


    In Yoruba religion, Oshun is known as the river orisha, or goddess, and is linked with water, cleanliness, fertility, love, and sensuality. She is one of the most powerful orishas, yet she, like other gods, exhibits human characteristics including vanity, envy, and spite.


    What is the name of the African healer goddess?


    In Yoruba folklore and consequently in Santerian religious practice, Aja is a great healer. She is considered to be the spirit who taught all other healers how to do their jobs. She is a strong Orisha, and it is said that if she takes you away but lets you return after a few days, you will be bestowed with her magical abilities.


    What is the name of the African nature goddess?


    Asase Yaa is regarded as Mother Earth, the earth goddess of fertility, and the upholder of truth by the Akan people of West Africa.


    Which dark goddess is the most powerful?


    She's one of the most well-known and revered Orishas. Among the Yorùbá people, Oshun is a significant river god. Divinity, femininity, fertility, beauty, and love are all goddesses to her. She has a link to fate and divination.


    What are the seven African superpowers?


    Initiation into the Seven African Powers is another frequent initiation (Elegua, Obatala, Oggun, Chango, Yemaya, Oshun, and Orunmilla). Babalu-Aye is often substituted for Orunmilla by Cuban devotees. The Seven African Powers have been merged into a single eleke.


    What exactly are orisha?


    orisha, often written orixa or orisa, is a Yoruba deity who lives in southern Nigeria. The Edo of southern Nigeria, the Ewe of Ghana, Benin, and Togo, and the Fon of Benin all worship them (who refer to them as voduns).


    What is the maximum number of orishas you can have?


    According to Yoruba culture, there are 400 + 1 orisha, which is considered a holy number. According to some reports, the number is "as many as you can conceive of plus one more - an infinite number." Depending to the oral tradition, there are 400, 700, or 1,440 orisha.


    References And Further Reading:



    • Morton-Williams, Peter. “The Yoruba Ogboni Cult in [Uppercase Letter O with Vertical Line below]y[Lowercase Letter o with Vertical Line Below].” Africa: Journal of the International African Institute 30, no. 4 (1960): 362–74. https://doi.org/10.2307/1157598.
    • Dennett, R. E. “How the Yoruba Count (Continued).” Journal of the Royal African Society 17, no. 65 (1917): 60–71. http://www.jstor.org/stable/715685.

    • Drewal, Henry John, John Pemberton, and Rowland Abiodun. “Yoruba: Nine Centuries of African Art and Thought.” African Arts 23, no. 1 (1989): 68–104. https://doi.org/10.2307/3336802.
    • Yai, Ọlabiyi Babalọla. “In Praise of Metonymy: The Concepts of ‘Tradition’ and ‘Creativity’ in the Transmission of Yoruba Artistry over Time and Space.” Research in African Literatures 24, no. 4 (1993): 29–37. http://www.jstor.org/stable/3820251.
    • Matory, J. Lorand. “Rival Empires: Islam and the Religions of Spirit Possession among the Ọ̀yọ́-Yorùbá.” American Ethnologist 21, no. 3 (1994): 495–515. http://www.jstor.org/stable/645918.
    • Akínyemí, Akíntúndé. “Yorùbá Oral Literature: A Source of Indigenous Education for Children.” Journal of African Cultural Studies 16, no. 2 (2003): 161–79. http://www.jstor.org/stable/3559467.
    • Falen, Douglas J. “Vodún, Spiritual Insecurity, and Religious Importation in Benin.” Journal of Religion in Africa 46, no. 4 (2016): 453–83. http://www.jstor.org/stable/26358824.



    Goddess Leshachikha

     




    Leshachikha: Forest goddess in Slavic mythology.

    Leshachikha is regarded as a turbulent woodland god in Eastern Europe.

    She protects the forest's soil and creatures, punishing anyone who harm them.


    ~Kiran Atma


    Goddess Samovila

     



    Samovila: Slavic forest goddess.

    Samovila is the ruler of the forest and the protector of the creatures who reside there.

    Anyone who mistreats her pets will suffer greatly.

    She is a shapeshifter who can change into any animal and teaches the talent to the devout and dedicated.

    Samovila is a favorite among kitchen Witches because of her mastery of plants and herb remedies.


    ~Kiran Atma

    Goddess Worship In Italy



      The spirit and inspiration of the Divine Female permeate the whole fabric of Italy, whether it is in a quiet city square or a bustling museum. Her obelisks in Rome's Saint Peter's Square at the Vatican symbolize the site of historic lyceums, or institutions for studying Goddess mysteries. Her statues are still present at Malta's megalithic temple complexes, which are located just south of Sicily

      You may discover sculptures, objects, and fabrics showing her from Paleolithic to modern times by entering the Louvre in Paris or museums in Turin, London, Naples, or Ankara. Amazing cave paintings from Lascaux, France, from 15,000 BCE depict her. She may also be seen in palm-sized items that are touching, like the Venus of Willendorf (25,000 BCE), which was discovered in Austria. 

      In Ostia Antica, there is a temple or sacellum called Bellona that is devoted to the Italic goddess Bellona, who may have been combined with Magna Mater.

      The deep beauty and spirit of the Goddess continue to inspire and be suggested by tapestries like La Dame a la Licorne, The Lady and the Unicorn, which is housed at the Cluny Museum in France. The adventurous pilgrim traveling to holy places throughout Europe will encounter all of this. 


      Goddess Worship In Pompeii.


      The partly discovered city of Pompeii, which was left behind when Mount Vesuvius erupted in 79 CE, offers a rare window into a history that has been frozen in time. Travelers may still read graffiti and ads on walls and floors in Pompeii, as well as enjoy mosaic tile flooring and look out for carriage wheel ruts on the stone pavement. 

      One might imagine hearing and smelling the activity of long ago. In addition to stadiums, brothels, temples, and private residences, there are villas to discover. Even some of the impoverished people's bodies who perished in the volcanic explosion have been preserved for interested people to see. One of the most well-preserved buildings in this enormous metropolis is the Temple of Isis, which stands out as the ideal illustration of Isis worship as it developed outside of Egypt and into the Greco-Roman world. 

      All around the Mediterranean area and Asia Minor, immigrants, sailors, warriors, merchants, and her priesthood of men and women sung Isis' praises. She mixed with the native deities in various other nations. In reality, the worship of Isis was once fiercely competitive with that of other mystery religions, including the cult of Mithras and young Christianity, due to her popularity across the known globe. 

      If Western civilization might have evolved on a matriarchal foundation, Isis "may have been too tenacious a mistress to dethrone," claims R. E. Witt in Isis in the Ancient World. Some elements of Isis worship did alter as it spread outside of Egypt. 

      Instead of the exotic and green-hued Osiris, Isis was now married to the Ptolemaic hybrid deity Serapis. Serapis was an Egyptian version of Osiris-Apis that was Hellenized, avoiding the animal head representations of Egypt that the Greeks and Romans misunderstood. 

      They were unaware that the powers of the animals they mirrored were inherent in these deities. Harpocrates, Anubis, and Horus all traveled with Isis when she left Egypt. (In the Vatican Museum, there is an intriguing statue of a Hellenized Anubis that evokes images of Scooby Do.) 

      Isis sometimes had her own temple or often shared a temple with a local goddess, although many other ancient Egyptian goddesses were becoming less popular in many nations. In certain cases, like with her sanctuary at Delos, her temple was not centrally positioned but rather was situated on the outside of the city in a zone designated for foreign deities. 

      However, this was not the situation in Pompeii, a significant Roman city close to the port of Ostia, where grain from Egypt often came to feed Rome. Here, on great real land, was the Isis temple. Isis was immensely popular among the Roman aristocracy, and the city of Pompeii and many of its citizens' lives revolved around her temple. 

      Processions were a ceremonial component of Isis worship in Pompeii that may have originated in Egyptian ritual. It is difficult to determine where the tradition originated since we know Mesopotamia also used ceremonial processions. 

      The massive temple estates constructed in the Egyptian style, however, have vanished, even at Pompeii. Iseums, or temples to Isis on foreign country, were more humble but nevertheless followed many Egyptian customs. They were a subterranean crypt under the surface-level temple building. The crypt was used for rituals, ceremonies, and storage. 

      The Nilometer was vital in Egyptian temples because it assessed the life giving water level of the Nile upon which life, fertility, and wealth relied. It was still in use in Pompeii but had been changed to become a more symbolic object. Evidence suggests that several iseums and mansions of the Isian priests, such the one belonged to Loreius Tiburtinus, were built with permanent water channels that may represent the Nile flood waters spilling. 

      The usage of holy ritual pitchers and situlas, or sacred pails, may be seen in murals of processions and scenes on temple walls, even if adherents of the faith outside of Egypt progressively lost touch with the ancient meaning of Nile water. 

      These probably held Nile water that was transported or utilized in rituals; this would be a more practical method to include the Nile's customary significance during Egyptian worship while distant from the real source. Even though Isis' temple was modest by the standards of a normal contemporary Christian church, it was prominently situated next to a theater, the Forum, and the temple of Asclepius and Neptune in the public square at Pompeii. The temple was located in the middle of the compound's holy quadrangle. There were a number of round columns at ground level in front of the temple. 

      There were three additional round columns to the left and right before entering the pronaos, or front hall, which was a little under 98 square feet (30 sq. m) in size as one ascended the seven stairs to the temple proper. The inner chapel, or cella, which was located behind the pronaos, included two pedestals for sculptures of Isis and Serapis. 

      The whole structure was covered with paintings that included images of Isis and Io, ritual practitioners, priests, floral trellises, the mummy of Osiris, Anubis, Isis wearing an ankh, Perseus rescuing Andromeda, Mars, and Venus. 

      There were several altars and niches as well. The Purgatorium, where the Nile water was kept, was located on ground level only a few meters from the temple. There was a subterranean Megaron or tomb below this, perhaps used for initiations. The Isian priesthood's quarters and the initiates' gathering place were at the back of the temple. 

      According to fresco paintings, men and women had equal status in the Isis priesthood. Priests were shown wielding the sistrum, or ancient rattle, and the caduceus, while the priestess was clutching a baton. Both priests and priestesses are shown carrying out religious obligations. 

      A cake-carrying priestess with a snake on her head is engraved on a cup, while the priest is seen holding a censer. A other goblet depicts the priestess wielding a sistrum and situla while encircled by a snake. Hydeion, a long-spouted pitcher often used to transport water from the Nile, is being carried by the priest. Stories of other gods and goddesses did not get outside of Egypt as the worship of Isis increased. 

      The story of Isis and Osiris persisted outside of Egypt, and via more widely celebrated Isian festivals, the general population was educated about Egyptian practices. One such open-to-the-public event was the Ploiaphesia, also known as the Isidis Navigium or Sailing of the Ship of Isis, which took place on March 5 every year. Although it started in Egypt, this holiday was also celebrated in cities like Pompeii. 

      This signaled the start of the sailing season. Large segments of the society, including the Isis priests, took part in the ceremonial procession. Isis, the goddess of the sea, was called upon to provide the sailors and merchants safe passage over the oceans, trade with friendly nations, and return home with the supplies they needed for everyday living.

       The ceremonial ship, known as the Ship of Isis, was sent out to sea as an offering to the Goddess in Pompeii, as in other locations honoring this event, after being laden with gifts and prayers. 

      At the beginning of the third century CE, Isis worship peaked. Secret rituals, regular services, and several festivals open to everybody were all part of the cult's secrets. She was revered as a goddess of knowledge who had magical abilities and understanding of the secrets of life and death. As shown by the following inscription from Capua, Una quae es omnia, dea Isis, or "Thou who, being one, art all, Goddess Isis," she came to be seen as the one Goddess by many, broadening the more original Egyptian notion of a transcendent monotheism. 

      The worship of Isis in Pompeii gradually and firmly gained hold of the aristocracy until it became the city's semi-official religion, while the cult of Isis developed among the slaves and families of freed men hired by the great mansions of the affluent. In homage to Isis, Roman emperors had sculptures made of themselves dressed in Egyptian garb. Daughters of regular people and prominent government figures dedicated their life to Isis as priestesses. Rich people honored her with shrines in their gardens. We know this because Pompeii was astonishingly well preserved for more than 1,700 years after Mount Vesuvius' explosion on August 24, 79 CE. 

      Modern archaeologists excavating the ruins came upon an almost flawlessly preserved window into a historical event. Numerous Goddesses and Divine Feminine temples may be found throughout the enormous metropolis of Pompeii. The Temple of Venus, Temple of Fortuna, and Villa of Mysteries have all undergone excellent restorations. Numerous bright frescoes provide a sense of the creativity and vibrancy of those early times. The bordellos are also fascinating, however there are a lot of depressing small cubicles and phallus symbols that symbolize fertility to be found there. 

      How to reach Pompeii. 

      The contemporary and welcoming city of Pompei lies next to the ancient city of Pompeii, which is best accessed via a guided trip. However, if one is prepared for the bother of navigating the Italian railroad system, one may also take the public train. The Pompeii-Villa dei Misteri station on the Circumvesuviana is roughly a 30-minute journey from Naples. You are dropped off outside the site's western entrance. The Circumvesuviana to Pompei-Santuario station, which is located at the eastern entrance to the sites, is another option. Daily trains and tours regularly depart from Rome for Pompei; the sight deserves a full day. The facility has a great café where you may get lunch or a refreshing beverage, and the toilets are maintained spotless. Bring a hat, sunscreen, and a guidebook. 


      Goddess Worship In Rome.


       It would be hard to choose just one place to worship the goddess throughout the whole city of Rome. How are you going to stop at one? You really can't. Readers will profit from the author's passion for all the locations that are going to be highlighted since so many places scream "Goddess." As tourists discover more than ten attractions in one, prepare to get a little something extra, or lagniappe, as they say in New Orleans! 

      Get on board as the bus leaves for a tour of Rome's holy places to the goddess! Starting point: Palatine Hill. The Palatine Hill, next to the Colosseum, previously housed affluent houses in ancient Rome.

      The English word "palace" is sprung from the word palatine. There is a lot of history on the Palatine Hill. Roman historians claim that the Emperor Caligula was stabbed here, for example. The Sibyls' decrees that Rome would not be victorious against Hannibal until the Cybele meteorite reached the city led to the construction of the Temple of Cybele, which was consecrated here in 191 BCE. 

      The Roman populace delighted in the experience of wild and bizarre celebrations in honor of Cybele when she arrived at Palatine Hill and caused Hannibal to lose. In the years that followed, Rome's conservatives condemned the wild festivals honoring both Cybele and Attis. According to certain ancient authors, the Sibylline On the hill, there were prophetic books, but they were destroyed by fire. 

      The renowned playwrights Terence and Plautus debuted several of their most well-known comedies on a wooden stage set up in front of the Temple of Cybele during the yearly theatrical games. Located south of the Farnese Gardens and immediately west of the House of "Livia," this shrine to the Great Mother still has its tufa platform standing. 

      The hill is also graced with the foundation of temple stones dedicated to Victory and Victoria Virgo ("Maiden Victory"). The shrine formerly had magnificent flooring made of red and white breccia rosa, pink-grey Chian marble, and black slate, as well as tall, thin Corinthian columns.

      A throne in the middle, reclining people holding tympana, and cats on each corner of the triangle made up the pediment's decoration. A headless goddess who had originally been flanked by lions was one among the discoveries at the site. Under the foundation of this temple complex, a tunnel led to the historic Street of Victory. Tertullian (160–225 CE) said that the Magna Mater sanctuary was also located in the center of the renowned Circus Maximus, just below the southern brow of Palatine Hill. An enormous statue of Diana on the spina of this circus, dressed in a mural crown, riding sidesaddle, and flanked by lions, is shown on ancient coins. 

      The Palatine Hill is a maze-like complex of ruins honoring several gods and goddesses. The Basilica or Aula of Isis and a Venus Temple may also be found on Palatine Hill. Simply carry a map, since the location is not well-marked and the personnel is not very helpful. 

      The Roman Forum is located across the street from Palatine Hill and has several partially preserved Goddess temples, including the Temples of Venus, Vesta, and the House of the Vestals. Vesta might be thought as as Rome's divine soul or the vital feminine flame. Since 575 BCE, votive gifts have been made to Vesta, Goddess of the Hearth. The once circular building is said to be a representation of a prehistoric Latin hut where princesses of prehistoric tribes maintained the tribe's fire. 

      The embers of Her temple in Troy were said to have ignited the flames of the Roman Temple of Vesta in antiquity. For one hundred years, temple vestal priestesses were responsible for maintaining the flames of Rome. The Seven Holy of Holies of Rome were safeguarded and maintained by the vestal priestesses. 

      The ashes of Orestes, a needle used by the Mother of Gods, the shields of Salii, the 12 Leaping Priests of Mars, the scepter of Priam, and the veil of Ilione were among these holy relics. The Palladium, a wooden statue of Pallas Athena that was thought to have fallen from heaven and been brought to Rome from Troy, was another. 

      The Romans believed that the city would suffer if the fires weren't kept going or these artifacts weren't protected. Failure to do these chores may result in flogging, exile, or even death as a punishment. 

      Although the word "virgin" goddess is often used to describe an unmarried female who is autonomous and unto herself rather than a chaste condition, virginity was a literal necessity for Vestal Virgins. "Nor will it be said that under (the emperor's) leadership any priestess violated her sacred fillets, and none shall be buried alive in the ground. 

      It is thus that an unchaste (Vesta) perishes because that (Earth) which she violated, in that earth she is interred; and indeed Earth and Vesta are the same deity," wrote the ancient writer Ovid of the punishment for a Vestal Virgin who lost her virginity: " Roman society's value of chastity is explained by scholar Miriam Robbins Dexter. 

      Chastity was regarded as unchangeable, though they did allow for parthenogenesis, or childbirth through a mother without male involvement. It was the duty of chaste Vestal Virgins to channel their divine energy for the benefit of Rome since they were a reservoir of untapped potential, similar to a charged battery. If a woman was neither virginal nor married, Dexter writes, "she constituted an independent challenge to the patriarchal, patrilinear system. 

      In Rome, like in other male-dominated communities, any woman who asserted her own sexual identity was despised and dreaded. Two still-standing temples to the Feminine Divine, the Temples of Vesta and Fortuna, can be found off the beaten path as you move from the Forum toward the Tiber River. The Goddess of Destiny, Fortuna, who is sometimes confused with Isis, is worshipped in a temple that resembles a miniature Parthenon only a few yards from the circular Temple of Vesta. These two Goddess temples in Rome are among the best preserved. 

      The circular temple, which was surrounded by Corinthian columns, was only preserved because it was transformed into a church in 1132 CE and given the name "Saint Stephen of the Carriages." The basilica where nuns used to distribute food to the needy is the Church of Santa Maria in Cosmedin, which is located across the street. 

      Since the eighth century, the church has been connected to the Greek community in Rome, and the name "Cosmedin" may be a reference to the city of "Constantinople." This building formerly served as a temple for the Roman goddess Ceres, who gave us the term "cereal." Goddess enthusiasts claim that the church, which is said to have a subterranean passageway going to the Temple of Vesta across the street, emanates a noticeable "Goddess energy" that makes it seem cozy, secure, and almost like stepping inside a real Sheila-na-Gig, or womb.

      The clean and basic architectural lines of this basilica suggest a mysterious, "out-of-the-way" vibe, almost as if this site was a neglected step-child of the Church, because it lacks the gold plating and crowded façade that often clutter many Christian churches in Europe. 

      Large chandeliers with candle holders hang from the ceiling, and the walls are practically bare but for a few faded flower paintings. The noises and hectic energies of the city are believed to vanish as one enters this church's calm, dark, silence, and one may feel the Goddess' presence. Sacred geometry-like symbols are visible in the church's floor design, and some people also perceive the four basic elements and the spirit. An depiction of what looks to be wheat, representing the goddess Ceres, may be seen behind the main altar. 

      On April 19, the day of her festival, the Cerealia, she was worshipped in Rome. The Circus Maximus, which is close to Palatine Hill, also hosted celebrations for her. Rufus and Lawson claim that it seems like a portion of the old Ceres temple is still there in the church, but hidden from view. San Nicola in Carcere, which is situated right across from Tiber Island and not far from Santa Maria in Cosmedin, is definitely worth a visit if travelers have the time. On the site of the Juno Sospita temple lies this 11th-century church (the Savior). 

      On the south side of the temple from the first century BCE, seven of the original columns still stand, together with a portion of the entablature above them. The ancient pedestal, where Juno Sospita was hailed as a warrior goddess, is in superb shape. 

      The Temple of Juno Regina was the most well-known sanctuary devoted to Goddess in Rome, roughly located where Santa Sabina is now (as confirmed by two dedicatory inscriptions found nearby). The antique wooden statue was transferred to this location on Aventine Hill by the Roman ruler Furius Camillus after the fall of the last Etruscan fortress of Veii in 396 BCE. 

      Two sculptures of Juno Regina made of cypress wood were were erected at the temple in 207 BCE. Juno Regina is often seen next to Jupiter on coins, wielding a long scepter and patera. She typically appears as a queen with a veil, a diadem, and a peacock at her side. 

      The majority of her gifts were made by women, including a bronze figure and a golden bowl in 218 BCE (in 207 BCE). Her direct affiliation with Diana, the Goddess of the Moon and Hunt, which was undoubtedly inspired by her Etruscan origins, was peculiar to Juno Regina on the Aventine hill. 

      Because of this, Diana was transformed into Juno's hostess and the goddess in charge of the asylum (a role that was alien to the Latin Diana but not to the Diana/Artemis of Asia Minor). Meanwhile, Juno herself becomes a rescuer and a protector via this relationship. 

      The little Santa Sabina Church was built here in 422 CE, but the majority of magnificent basilica, with its lovely white Corinthian columns along the nave, is from the ninth century. In the 13th century, the church was taken over by the Dominicans. Without seeing Santa Maria Maggiore, the magnificent church honoring Mary as the "Mother of God," no journey to Rome is complete.

      Legend has it that the Virgin Mary visited Pope Liberius and told him to erect a church exactly where he saw a spot of snow the following day. It was considered a wonder when he discovered snow at the top of the Esquiline Hill the next morning (August 5th), given that Rome was now going through one of their normal scorching summers. 

      Each year, thousands of white petals are released from the church's roof to "snow" on the waiting crowd as a way of remembering this occasion. These were were rose petals, but they are now often dahlia petals. Pope Sixtus III (reigned from 431-440 CE) erected a new basilica there after the church council in Ephesus in 431, during which Mary was acknowledged as bearing God (theotokos). 

      This basilica dates back to the fifth century and has a triple nave. The Virgin Mary is the subject of the majority of the mosaics in the apse, which were created by Jacopo Toritti circa 1295. His obsession with natural themes—birds nesting, flowers blooming, animals crawling, and an abundance of lush vegetation—is peculiar. A medallion showing the Coronation of Mary by Christ amid a canopy of golden stars sits in the middle of this cornucopia of natural beauty. 

      The Temple of Juno Lucina was located on the minor Cispian Hill, just to the north of Santa Maria Maggiore on the Esquiline Hill. At once a holy forest, the precinct ultimately acquired a temple consecrated in 375 BCE. Two old lotus trees that were in the gardens before the temple, according to Pliny the Elder, were revered there. 

      The Feast of the Matronalia was observed here on March 1st. On this day, all wives were expected to receive gifts from their husbands. Although Juno Lucina was strongly linked to a birth cult, nothing more is known about her. Some even believe that Hallmark invented Mother's Day! 

      The Church of Santa Maria in Aracoli, which is located on a historic location that was formerly a temple to Juno Moneta and Cybele, has several goddess emblems. On the marble floor is a bull (associated with Osiris and Adonis) crowned with a star, and three bees are depicted in stained glass high up on the church's entrance wall. 

      Bees were connected to Cybele, Persephone, Demeter, and Artemis, and the number three was considered sacred. Demeter's priestesses were also referred to as melissae, or bees. During the Roman ruler Furius Camillus's battle with Aurunci in 345 BCE, he made a promise to erect the Temple of Juno Moneta in her honor. It was finally completed the following year on June 1st. In 273 BCE, a mint was erected within the temple, hence the epithet "Moneta." 

      The future Roman Emperor Octavian, also known as Augustus, is said to have seen an appearance of a "beautiful lady" here who requested that he construct a shrine for her, according to Anneli Rufus and Kristan Lawson. And the rest is history, as he did. Later on, Augustus had unparalleled success and power. Even though the vision occurred prior to the birth of Jesus, the Church later asserted that the woman he saw was the Virgin Mary. 

      A chapel dedicated to the Christ child is located within the church. On the altar, there are cards and letters from devoted people pleading for their requests to be granted. Goddess worshipers who enter the church believe that the Christ is Horus, the son of Isis, or a young Attis, the son of Cybele, who once had a temple here. In the late 13th century, the entire church façade was rebuilt, and in 1348, the grand steps in front of the basilica were constructed as a gesture of thanks for averting a terrible plague. 

      There are 22 antique columns on each side of the nave, some of which were carved from Aswan granite. The renowned graded ramp going up to the Piazza del Campidoglio, located at the top of the old Capitoline Hill and previously dominated by a large temple devoted to Jupiter, is located just to the south of the stairs leading to the Church of Santa Maria in Aracoli. 

      Two black granite crouching lions that stand up at the foot of this ramp from the sixteenth century are of great importance. The two lions were brought to Rome by the emperor Domitian (81-96 CE) to be used as decorations for the Temple of Isis on the Field of Mars. 

      They were originally from Egypt and may date to the 4th or 3rd century BCE. Both the ordinary people and the aristocracy in Rome maintained a fervent devotion to the Egyptian goddess Isis. She was so admired that there was some debate as to whether the Isian faith or Christianity would become the dominant religion for a while. 

      Several factors contributed to Isis' appeal. Her success was mostly due to her accessibility, but her Egyptian riddles also promised immortality beyond death. Instead of being seen as a hostile and distant masculine deity, her attributes as a strong mother and wife who had experienced adversity in her life alongside those of her devotees led her followers to think that she would empathize with them and hear their pleas. Emperor Domitian, who constructed Isis temples and shrines in and around Rome, was a significant Isis admirer. In about the location of the present-day Piazza del Collegio Romano, Domitian constructed an Iseum of Isis because he was preoccupied with his own afterlife disposition. 

      Three obelisks from the Iseum Campestre, which was once as significant as Saint Peter's Basilica, may be seen at Piazza della Rotunda in front of the Pantheon, Piazza Navona, and Piazza della Minerva on top of an elephant. In the Piazza della Minerva, an obelisk on an elephant dates back to the year 6 BCE. Interestingly, a Christian cross is perched atop every obelisk, including the one in Saint Peter's Square in the Vatican. Since there is no official explanation for the placement of these crosses, some have speculated that it represents Christianity's ambition to symbolically dominate paganism. 

      There is still an Iseum Campestre of Isis and a Temple of Minerva beneath the Santa Maria Sopra Minerva and Saint Ignazio churches. Ironically, this Mary-focused church still uses the name of the goddess who was once worshipped there. 

      Domitian reconstructed the Temple of Isis after the fire of 80 CE, and it is said that Alexander Severus magnificently decorated it with sculptures. The Temple of Isis once stood where the Jesuit Saint Ignazio currently stands (222-235 CE). Four Corinthian columns supported a facade of stairs leading up to the main entrance, which was topped by a deep lunate pediment with a statue of Isis Sothis perched on a dog that was running to the right. 

      A standing figure of Isis may be seen within the inner shrine. The Serapeum, or Temple of Serapis, her spouse, stood near by and was situated immediately beyond a wide gateway split into bays by three columns. 

      The Serapeum was a distinct structure that was rectangular in design and had grand entrances along the square where the Temple of Minerva had stood. The Serapis temple's hallowed area was referred as as the libertines' hangout. A huge marble foot may be seen near the intersection of Via S. Stefano del Cacco to the right of the church if one makes a small detour along Via del Pie' di Marmo. It is believed that this sandaled foot belonged to the adjacent Iseum or Serapeum and may have even belonged to Serapis.

      The Isis religion was well-established in Rome by the reign of Caligula, despite efforts to suppress it by earlier rulers including Augustus, Agrippa, and Tiberius. Although it is difficult to confirm, Tiberius is said to have taken a picture of Isis and thrown it into the Tiber River. Isis rose to become a worldwide deity revered by those who cherished their Mistress of Magic and Wisdom and were seen as their rescuer. 

      Te Isis, te salus ad tuos, which translates to "Thou Isis, thou art salvation to thy followers," was written on a graffito from an Isian shrine in Rome. A sensation of Isis' scarlet chord of life linking them to the web of life and her devotion, past and present, close and distant, is reported by modern Isis devotees who travel the same winding stone alleys that ancient devotees did centuries before. 

      The Vatican Museum should not be missed because of all the rumors and gossip regarding what could be kept in the vaults. Goddess artifacts are so numerous and diverse that they are almost as delicious as going to the Louvre in Paris. 

      The tourist will find hundreds of sculptures of Asian, Greek, and Roman goddesses as well as paintings in the Borgia Apartments dedicated to the Goddess Isis. Particularly lovely is the Egyptian exhibit, which has one-of-a-kind statues not present in other museums. Sekhmet sculptures in a seated position may be seen in outdoor gardens and carelessly positioned in front of gift stores. 

      How to Get to the Goddess Sites in Rome. 

      It's simple to get about Rome. Non-tourists may use the subway, which makes stops at important landmarks and popular tourist attractions, many of which were previously mentioned. For instance, the Coliseum station makes it simple to reach Palatine Hill and the Roman Forum. 

      With the right footwear and a decent map, pilgrims may easily navigate the city on foot. Keep an eye out for pickpockets. It is advised that travelers allot a whole day to the Forum, Palatine Hill, as well as the close-by Temples of Vesta, Fortuna, and the Church of Santa Maria in Cosmedin, all of which are accessible on foot. A whole day is also easily need to see the Vatican Museum. The historic city of Ostia Antica, Tivoli Gardens, and the Villa of Hadrian are a few quick and advised day trips outside of Rome if time permits. All three have links to goddesses.

      ~Kiran Atma

      You may also want to discover and learn more about Female Divinities of the Roman empire here.

      Goddess Zara, Zaria, Or Zorya

       




      Slavic goddess of beauty, also known as Zaria, Zoria, and Zorya.

      Zaria rules the morning and the dawn.

      She is the heavenly bride, the perfect mortal wife's symbol, because she is pure, honorable, and beautiful.

      The morning star is depicted as Zaria.

      In Slavic tradition, Zorya (which means "Dawn" and has various variations including Zarya, Zara, Zaranitsa, Zoryushka, etc.) represents dawn in a feminine form. 

      Depending on the myth, she could manifest as a single being known as "The Red Maiden" or as two or three sisters simultaneously. Zorya has many traits with the Proto-Indo-European goddess of the morning *H2éwss, despite their etymological dissimilarity. 

      She is often shown as Zvezda, the Morning Star, the Sun, the Moon, and Zvezda, the Moon's sister. 

      She resides in the Palace of the Sun, protects his white horses, opens the entrance for him every morning so he may go across the sky, and is also said to be a virgin. She stands in for the ultimate power invoked by a practitioner in the Eastern Slavic tradition of zagovory.

      The all-Slavic term zora, which means "dawnaurora," and its forms (from Proto-Slavic *zoà), have a common linguistic ancestor with the all-Slavic word zrti, which means "to see, observe" but may have originally meant "shine." 

      The term "zara" may have been influenced by the word "ar" (PS *ar), which means "hot." PS *zoà is derived from the unclearly etymological Proto-Balto-Slavic *ori (see Lithuanian 'arà, 'arijà).

      *H2éwss is the hypothesized Proto-Indo-European name for the dawn goddess. Her name was reconstructed using a comparative method based on the names of Indo-European goddesses of the dawn, such as Greek Eos, Roman Aurora, or Vedic Ushas

      Likewise, the characteristics of the Proto-Indo-European goddess were reconstructed based on the characteristics of the goddesses of the dawn.



      Even though the Zorya religion is only known through folklore, it has origins in Indo-European antiquity and the Zorya exhibits the majority of *H2éws' traits. Most goddesses of the dawn share the same traits with Zorya:

      She makes an appearance with Saints George and Nicholas (interpreted as divine twins)

      hues red, gold, yellow, and rose

      She resides abroad on the Buyan Island.

      opens the Sun's entrance.

      A golden boat and a silver oar belonged to her.



      Zarubin compared Slavic mythology with the Indo-Aryan Rigveda and Atharvaveda, which both include representations of the Sun and its partners, the Dawns. 

      These pictures have their roots in ancient ideas, ranging from the first fetishistic (the Sun as a ring or circle) to the later anthropomorphic. A miniature of two ladies may be found in the late 13th-century Chludov's Novgorod Psalter. 

      One of them, a fiery red woman identified as "dawn zora," holds a red sun in her right hand in the shape of a ring while holding a torch in her left hand that ends in a box from which a bright green stripe extending into a dark green stripe emerges. 

      This stripe is marked "evening zora" in green on the right hand of another lady, who is holding up her left sleeve to reveal a bird. This may be understood as the Morning Zorya setting the Sun on its course for the day and the Evening Zorya waiting for the Sun to rise. 

      In a cave temple from the second or third century AD in Nashik, India, a very similar design was discovered. 

      The bas-relief shows two ladies, one holding a torch to illuminate the Sun's circle and the other waiting for it to set. Ushas and Pratyusha, two morning deities, are seen in other bas-reliefs, and the Sun is often accompanied by dawns in hymns. 



      In the Norse Edda or the Indo-Aryan Rigveda, as well as in folklore, the Sun is depicted as a wheel. During the Germanic and Slavic peoples' yearly festivities, they burned a wheel that, according to medieval writers, represented the sun.

      Images like the Psalter and Nashik's may be seen across Slavic regions, including: On a carved and painted gate of a Slovak peasant estate (village of Oová), the Morning Zora is depicted on one of the pillars with a golden head, a glow above her, and even higher is the Sun, which rolls along an arched road. 

      The Evening Zora is depicted on the other pillar with a setting sun above it. On this relief, there are also darker suns that may represent dead suns from Slavic legend. The Russian proverb "The sun will not rise without the Morning Zoryushka" also supports these themes. 

      A similar design may also be seen on the back of a 19th-century sled, where two Zoryas are shown standing in the doorway and the Sun is depicted as a circle, and on a peasant rushnyk from the Tver area, where two Zoryas are depicted riding up to the Sun, one in red and the other in green.



      The Zorya In Norse mythology

      The luminary goddesses Vakarine and Ausrine are said to have a similar dual function in Lithuanian folklore: Vakarine, the Evening Star, made the bed for the sun goddess Saul, while Aurin, the Morning Star, kindled the fire for her as she prepared for another day's voyage. 

      According to various legends, Ausrine and Vakarine are the daughters of the male Moon (Meness) and female Sun (Saule), who take care of their mother's castle and her horses.



      The Zorya In Russian Mythology. 

      In Russian mythology, they often take the form of two virgin sisters, Zorya Vechernyaya (Evening Aurora, from véer "evening") as the goddess of twilight, and Zorya Utrennyaya (Am Zorya, from tro "morning"). 

      Each was to occupy a separate side of the Sun's throne made of gold. 

      When the Sun rose in the morning, the Morning Zorya opened the entrance of the celestial palace, and the Evening Zorya shut the gate when the Sun went to sleep. Buyan Island intended to serve as the home of Zorya's administration.



      A later tale describes three Zoryas and their unique mission:

      Three small sisters, or little Zorya, may be found in the sky: the morning, the evening, and the midnight. Their responsibility is to watch after a dog that is attached to the Little Bear constellation by an iron chain. The end of the world will occur when the chain snaps.

      As shown by her frequent presence in wedding chants, Zorya also supported weddings and facilitated unions amongst the gods. She is specifically given credit for doing the following task in one of the Malo-Russian ballads when the Moon encounters Aurora while roving in the sky:

      Ah, dawn, dawn! Where have you been, exactly?

      Where have you been, exactly? Where do you plan to reside?

      Where do I plan to call home? Why there at Pan Ivan's?

      Located at Pan Ivan's Court

      Both at his court and residence

      And he enjoys two things in his home:

      Getting his kid married is his first delight;

      And the second pleasure was to marry his daughter.


      In several iterations of the same zagovory storylines, Maria (Mother of God) and Zara-Zaranitsa (also known as "Dawn the Red Maiden") both make appearances as the ultimate power that a practitioner invokes.

      In addition, she was prayed to as Zarya for fruitful crops and wellbeing:

      Hey, you morning and evening Zaryas! fall onto my rye so that it might become as strong as an oak and as tall as a forest!

      Mother Zarya of dawn, evening, and midnight [presumably twilight here]! As you softly fade away and vanish, may my illnesses and sorrows—those of the morning, evening, and midnight—quietly go from me, the servant of God!

      According to Professor Bronislava Kerbelyt, the Zoryas were also summoned in Russian tradition to aid in birthing (under the name "орки арноки") and to cure the infant (by calling upon "ар-дeвиа," or "утренн ар араскаве" and "веерн ар оломоне").



      Additionally, Zarya was summoned as a protectoress and to banish dreams and insomnia:

      Заря, зарница, васъ три сестрицы, утренняя, полуденная, вечерняя, полуночная, сыми съ раба Божія (имя) тоску, печаль, крикъ, безсонницу, подай ему сонъ со всѣхъ сторонъ, со всѣхъ святыхъ, со всѣхъ небесныхъ.


      Another spell calls for Zarya-Zarnitsa, a "morning Irina," and a "midday Daria" to vanquish a child's sorrow and carry it "beyond the blue ocean."

      In his book The Ancient Faith of the Serbs and the Croats, Croatian historian Natko Nodilo stated that Zora was known as a "shining maiden" ("svijetla" I "vidna" djevojka) by ancient Slavs, and that Russian riddles depicted her as a woman who resided in the sky ("Zoru nebesnom djevojkom").



      Regarding the Dawn's parents, she is referred to as the "Sister of the Sun" and "sweet little Dawn" in a Russian hymn.

      She is referred to as Zaranitsa (арана) or Zara-zaranitsa (ара-арана) in Belarusian folklore. In one of the sections, St. George and St. Nicholas, who in Indo-European myths are often brothers of the dawn goddess and, according to comparative mythology, serve as divine twins, meet Zaranica: "Saint George was traveling with Saint Nicholas and encountered Aurora."



      She also takes the shape of a riddle in folklore:

      Zara-zaranitsa, a stunning virgin, lost her keys as she was walking through the air. The moon saw them but made no comment. When the sun saw them, it raised them.

      This has to do with the dew, which the moon ignores and which vanishes when the sun is present. Zaranica is a diminutive name that may be used to show reverence for Zara, who is most likely just the morning goddess and may be rendered as "Dawn."

      The stars are sometimes referred to as zorki and zory in Belarusian culture. For example, Polaris is called Zorny Kol ('star pole') and polunochna zora ('star of midnight').

      The three sister Zoras (Trzy Zorze) of Polish folklore are the Morning Zorza (Polish: Zorza porankowa or Utrenica), Midday Zora (Zorza poudniowa or Poudnica), and Evening Zora (Zorza wieczorowa or Wieczornica). These three Zoras occur in Polish folk charms and, according to Andrzej Szyjew Additionally, they serve as Rozhanitsy.


      Zarzyce, three sisters, and zarze.



      The Mother of God gathered golden foam while sailing on the sea;

      When St. John saw her, he asked her, "Mother, where are you going?"

      My little boy will be healed by me.

      The zorzyczki, the zorzyczki

      You three are here.

      her in the morning

      she of noon,

      she of the night.

      Take away my child's cries,

      give him his sleep back.

      Zorzeczeki, zorzecze!


      All of you are my sisters!

      Mount your crow horse.

      also ride for my friend (lover).

      He can't go without me, therefore

      neither eats nor sleeps,

      neither chat nor sit down.


      In order for me to stand, work, and willingly satisfy him.

      so that I may be grateful and amiable to both God and others,

      together with my partner.


      The Zorya In Polish Mythology. 

      Another popular Polish proverb goes like this: "Arze, zarzyczki, jest was trzy, zabierzcie od my daughter pakanie, przywrócie mu spanie."

      In a Polish magical love charm, the girl begs the dawn (or morning-star) to visit her lover and compel him to adore her alone:

      Let's go now

      Good morning, morning star.



      The Zorya In Ukrainian Mythology. 

      Additionally, there are terms in the Ukrainian language that are derived from "Zorya," such "zrka" (dialectal "zira" and "ziry") and "zirnitsa" (or "zirnytsi," a lyrical phrase that means "tiny star," "aurora," and "dawn."

      There are many stars (рок) in the sky, but only two Zori: the morning one (свтова) and the evening one (верн), according to a proverb gathered in "арквин" (Kharkiv Oblast).

      The mourner declares in an orphan's lament that he will steal the "keys of the dawn" ("о в ор кл вла").

      The girl calls upon the "three star-sisters" (also known as the "dawn-sisters") in a magical love charm:

      You have three options: one nudna, one pryvitna, and one pechal'na.

      You three sisters in the sky, the boring one, the inviting one, and the somber one, you dawn-stars.


      The Zorya In Slovenian Mythology. 

      In the Slovene folk ballad "Zorja prstan pogubila," the singer requests that her mother ("majko"), brother ("bratca"), sister ("sestro"), and beloved ("dragog") search for her missing ring.

      According to professor Monika Kropej, the sun rises in the morning accompanied by the morning dawn known as Sonica (from the Slovene word for sun) and sets in the evening followed by the evening dawn known as Zarika (from the Slovene word for dawn, zarja). 

      Additionally, a Slovenian narrative folk song about their rivalry features these female characters. In addition, F. S. Copeland described another lyric with the name Ballad of Beautiful Zora and understood both characters as the legendary Sun and Dawn. 

      In his book on Slovene myths and folktales, Slovene folklorist Jakob Kelemina (sl) claimed that a Zora emerges as the Snake Queen's daughter (perhaps a manifestation of the night) in the so-called Kresnik Cycle.

      Professor Daiva Vaitkevien claims that the Virgin Mary undoubtedly took the role of the goddess Zaria in East Slavic charms. In Russian charms, the Virgin Mary is often referred to as "Zaria."

      The announcer mentions "Maria-the-Dawn" and "Maremiyaniya-the-Dawn" in a charm that was compiled in Arkhangelsky and published in 1878 by historian Alexandra Efimenko (ru).

      Another charm uses the "Evening Star Mariya" and "Morning Star Maremiyana" to banish insomnia.

      Additionally, charms for health are said to summon Goddess Zaria (or, alternatively, a group of three goddesses called Zori). This "is a very common theme of the Slavic charms," claims professor Daiva Vaitkevien.

      As the name of a song performed by Colinda tori and the Romanian word for dawn, "zori," the term "Zorya" has become a loanword (zorile).

      Other names for The Morning Star include Dennica, Zornica, and Zarnica.



      The Zorya In Croatian Mythology. 

      Venus is referred to as Zornjaa in Serbo-Croatian languages when it rises in the morning and Veernjaa when it sets.

      The Dawn/Morning Star is portrayed as the bride of a masculine Moon in a folk song.

      In several Croatian folk songs, which Rikardo Ferdinand Plohl-Herdvigov gathered and published in 1876, a "zorja" is used with the word "Marja" in the phrase "Zorja Marja prsten toi," and it is referred to as "Zorja, zorija" in the phrase "Marija sinku nainila koulju."



      Frequently Asked Questions:


      Who is Zorya, the goddess?

      In Slavic tradition, Zorya (which means "Dawn" and has various variations including Zarya, Zara, Zaranitsa, Zoryushka, etc.) represents dawn in a feminine form. Depending on the myth, she could manifest as a single being known as "The Red Maiden" or as two or three sisters simultaneously.


      In American Gods, who is Zorya's god?

      One of the Old Gods, Zorya Polunochnaya, is a figure from Slavic mythology. Zorya Vechernyaya, who symbolizes the Morning Star, and Zorya Utrennyaya, who represents the Midnight Star, are her sisters (Evening Star). They form the Zorya collectively.


      Who are the American Gods' Zorya sisters?

      In American Gods, three sisters are introduced. Zorya Vechernyaya (Evening/Twilight) Dawn/Morning Zorya Utrennyaya Zorya Polunochnaya (Midnight).


      What is the origin of the name Zorya?

      Origin and Meaning of Zorya: Zorya is a girl's name that means "star." The morning and evening stars, respectively, are referred to by the names Zorya Utrennyaya and Zorya Vechernyaya of the two star goddesses in Slavic mythology. In Russia and other nations with Slavic-based languages, it is used as a name.


      ~Kiran Atma