
Jacob Rabinowitz
Author of Rotting Goddess: The Origins of the Witch in Classical Antiquity
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An examination of material relating to the goddess Hekate, and chronicling her descent from Anatolian deity who lights the path to a decaying goddess over magic. It's a very interesting examination of the source material. For those of you familiar with d'Este's books about Hekate, Rabinowitz points out something she fails to mention each time: that at one time, apparently black puppies were sacrificed to Her. If anyone has any other material about this along with philosophers claiming of show more Hekate as superior goddess because She does not ask for blood, please let me know.
It's a book well-worth reading, whether I completely agree with the author's premise remains to be seen. At the core, he seems to also be claiming that the image of the witch comes to us from this slow change in Hekate's image and that perhaps witches themselves were created by it. Thus, instead of Hekate being a Goddess over witches and witchcraft, Rabinowitz attempts to show that instead Hekate morphed into a witch Herself. show less
It's a book well-worth reading, whether I completely agree with the author's premise remains to be seen. At the core, he seems to also be claiming that the image of the witch comes to us from this slow change in Hekate's image and that perhaps witches themselves were created by it. Thus, instead of Hekate being a Goddess over witches and witchcraft, Rabinowitz attempts to show that instead Hekate morphed into a witch Herself. show less
how Hecate transformed from fertility goddess to patron of magic, not a compelling argument
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- 3.6
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