Hecate (English: Hecate; Greek: Ἑ κάτη) It is an important Titan goddess of the former Olympus in Greek mythology. She is a great goddess introduced from the Near East. She is the three-phase goddess of opportunity, the goddess of magic, the queen of ghosts and the goddess of hell. According to Bacchylides, she is the daughter of Knicks. There are other sayings that she is the daughter of Zeus and Astria, or astraeus, or Demeter.
Hecarte is always associated with night, ghosts, hell, magic, witchcraft and witchcraft. She is the famous irresistible God of death, the invincible or unmatched queen, the creator or manager of hell, the goddess of witchcraft, witches, spells and witches, and very few unmarried goddesses. She once helped Zeus defeat the Cyclops, so she has the power of a giant. Even Zeus should fear her.
In the early days, hecat was the great goddess of the sky, the earth and the sea.
In the late period, hecat was regarded as the goddess of the underworld, symbolizing the dark side of the world.
Among the powers assigned by Zeus to the gods, Hecate enjoyed a special position. The goddess does not clearly belong to the God of heaven or the God of earth. In the world of gods classified by attributes, she represents some kind of game, happiness and chance, and the randomness of fate. She can be good or bad for someone, but the other party doesn't know why. Hecarte gave away luck or bad luck at will. She can make the fish in the water diverse or extinct, as well as the birds in the air and the livestock on the ground. In God's world, she represents an accidental factor and adds a little luck. Zeus and Gaia pulled out time. They could predict how time would work; Hecarte put a little lubricating oil on the gear, leaving some unpredictable room, which will make the world run more freely. Her privileges are unrestricted.
She intervened in the birth of babies, children's education, wealth creation, fishing, hunting and navigation. In later times, it was said that except Helios, she was the only one who saw Hades steal Persephone. She helped Demeter find her daughter and became the protector (godmother) of the underworld. Ghosts and ghosts and ghosts of the underworld. She is also the protector of magic and witchcraft. Her name can be seen everywhere in the spell. On a moonlit night, she often haunts the three fork roads and cemeteries with ghosts and three dogs. Therefore, on the last day of each month, people always sacrifice eggs and fish to her at the fork of the road.
In Roman mythology
Hecarte's alias is triotis, which was translated into Latin trivia by the Romans. Trivia was nicknamed Diana in Rome. Therefore, in Roman mythology, hecarte is confused with Diana. There were many moon goddesses in Roman mythology. Such as the new moon goddess juventas, the full moon goddess Juno, the curved moon goddess Minerva, the moon god Phoebe in the sky, the moon goddess Diana, the moon goddess pasifae, and the moon goddess Luna.
Hecarte's corresponding goddess in Roman mythology is Diana, the goddess of the moon. Besides hecarte, Diana also corresponds to Artemis.
Hector is a very important god in the esoteric religion of ORPs.
According to the divine spectrum, she is the sister of the feeding goddess Leto, the only daughter of the meteor goddess Asteria and the destruction god Perses. According to Bacchylides, she is the daughter of night noumenon Knicks. According to the Oedipus prayer, Hecate was the daughter of Demeter. According to mousaios, she is the daughter of Zeus and Astria, and according to phrecydes, she is the daughter of Astria.
In the early days, Hecate was regarded as a great goddess who enjoyed respect in heaven, earth and sea. In the late period, it was regarded as the goddess of the underworld and the witchcraft goddess symbolizing the night.
The queen of the underworld, Hector, is the goddess of the underworld, night, ghosts, and magic. She is also associated with fork roads. It is the goddess in charge of the three fork road. The image is three heads, three bodies and six arms, facing three different directions respectively.
She is the goddess in charge of ghosts, magic and spells. She often haunts the cemetery and hunts at night. Only dogs can see her and bark to indicate her arrival. The three sided statue of hecat shows a wolf, a lion (or snake) and a mare on one side and is placed at the intersection of the three roads. It is said that she will appear when the moon is about to eclipse, accompanied by the ghosts of two wolves. From her parents Perseus and Astria, she inherited her power over the earth, the sea and the sky. She helped Demeter search for Persephone and settled in Hades after their reunion. She is usually depicted carrying a torch.
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