Matriarchal Paganism
Matriarchal Paganism
Matriarchal Paganism
Dusares at the time was the main male god with his feminine trinity:
Uzza, and Manat Allat. Dusares would be the son of Manat, the goddess
of fate, or the Virgin Chaamou (pronounced Kaamou ), no doubt a
transcription error for Kaabou , the Cube (shape of the sacred stone,
divine sacred stone, or the shape of the sanctuary).
Recall also that the gods born of a virgin are typical matriarchal cults
(fatherless society nor husband, but not without uncles): virgin being
synonymous with unmarried, and a child born of a virgin being a
fatherless child .
Arab goddess
Allat prominently in the Syro-Mesopotamian pantheon of the first
centuries of our era.Identified in the context of syncretism, to Athena,
she took martial paces. Identified Nemesis, it acquires a cosmic
dimension based, inter alia, on the Babylonian astronomical
An avatar of Ishtar
It has much in
common with Ishtar and Astarte, also goddesses of morning and
evening Star. They are all goddesses of love and war, and big cats were
sacred for them too. It is shown as an army bellatrix (Roman warrior),
standing near an acacia tree with a Caracal, or desert lynx. Ashtar
(Ashtar - Syria and Mesopotamia), it is a female deity ensuring
the reproduction in animals, in fact, this planet is known as
the "morning star - " and " the evening star - " is
visible in the sky for two periods of the year. During the first period, it
appears as a very bright star in the east before sunrise, and during the
second period, it is visible in the west after sunset. Precisely, these
periods correspond to the natural cycle of reproduction in many