Cathuboduâ

1. Meaning of Name: Olmsted translates the name as “Battle Crow”. Mackillop translates it similarly, “Raven of Battle”.1
2. Pronunciation: CAT-u-BAWD-waa, with the “a” like the “u” in “Gus”, and the “u” like in “put”.
3. Other Names and Epithets: Olmsted gives us Bodva, Ancasta, Boudiga, Boudina, Cassibodva, and Vercana, all of them similar battle-Goddesses.2
4. Interpretatio Romana: None.
5. Irish Equivalent: The name is a direct cognate of the Irish Badb Catha, who must therefore be an equivalent deity.3
6. Indo-European Equivalent: None.
7. Realm: Ueronadâ/Upper World Goddess
8. Iconography: No depictions are known. From the name and association with the Badb Catha, we can quite sure that she was associated with crows or ravens, especially three crows or ravens.
9. Significance: Above all else, Cathudobuâ is the Goddess of war and battle. She stirs up conflict, prophecies about battle, and incites warriors. She is of a consistently violent nature, delighting in death, conflict, and woe. She is intimately connected with heroes, helping to train them, inspire them, and bringing about their deaths in a suitable fashion. She uses and enjoys war poetry. Despite her essential harshness, she is not a demonic being as such, but rather the divine personification of war in all its horror and glory.4 Morpheus Ravenna, in The Book of the Great Queen sees Her, under several names, notably Boudiga and Cassibodva, as a bringer of victory, war-Goddess, and Chooser of the Slain, directly cognate to the Irish Badb Catha, and also possessing early Germanic equivalents. However, it should be noted here that I cannot do justice to Morpheus’ very complex, subtle, nuanced, and excellent arguments in a few sentences. Get the book and see for yourself.5

Syncretism and Signs of the Times

When we think of theological syncretism, we tend to think of phenomena which involve deities combining with other deities in either temporary or more persistent forms. This can also occur with deities and other varieties of divine being, including (in attested cases) hero/ines, deified rulers, and what (in hitherto unattested or unnoticed instances) one can imagine would be an endless string of further possibilities. The subject of this particular column is one such possibility, and my discussion of it stems from a larger conversation (if one can call it that) occurring amongst a few individuals in the polytheist and wider pagan communities recently.

The conversation, such as it is, began with an admittedly poorly-worded contribution by Jason Mankey asking if devotion to and the popularity of particular deities (in that specific blog post’s case, the Morrígan) can be considered a “fad.” Morpheus Ravenna, priestess of the Morrígan and founder of the Coru Cathubodua (a Morrígan priesthood), not surprisingly responded, drawing attention (usefully and appropriately) to the role of particular deities’ agency in situations where something seems to be (to use the poor wording of Jason Mankey) “faddish.” A third voice was introduced into this discussion when a self-professed atheist with no very good reason for discussing deities at all given such an adamant denial of their existence, muddied the waters considerably by suggesting the military-industrial complex of modern warfare may be due to the Morrígan, and that the rise of the Third Reich and the Nazis—according to the holy writ of Carl Gustav Jung—was due to the influence of Wotan/Woden/Odin.*

I would like to begin my own responses to some of these questions, in line with the main purpose of my essay on this occasion, with an easily-known word that could have saved some of the difficulty in this entire conversation which Jason Mankey could have used (and knows) without any sense of dismissiveness or disrespect. Perhaps what is going on in some instances—perhaps in the situations discussed here, but not exclusively so—is not a “fad,” but instead is a reflection of a zeitgeist, literally a “spirit of the times.” There is an active attempt, for example, in Catholic theological circles (since the time of Vatican II) to look for “signs of the times” that may be relevant to the ongoing revelation of their own deities in the world, though this explicit theological orientation has seemed to be ignored frequently and conveniently when some of their doctrines (particularly in their moral theologies) come face-to-face with scientific realities. (More will be said on this later.)

Nonetheless, it seems that “signs of the times” might often be a good place to look for the presence of identifiable zeitgeists, and not simply in the metaphorical sense that most people use it in today. As a polytheist who recognizes that the forms and types of divine being are nearly as numerous as the individual deities themselves, I think that historical eras, ages of time, and movements within particular societies do have actual animating spirits—whether deities, deified abstractions, hero/ines, iunones loci of particular lands, or any other category of divine being—which preside over and influence them to greater or lesser extents. To some degree, the spiritual category of zeitgeist might be usefully added as another variety of divine being to distinguish them and their effects (obvious and conscious as well as subtle and unconscious) on a wider populace—which seems a necessity to be truly considered a zeitgeist—from deities generally and strictly speaking, who may only be consciously influencing events through the acknowledged relationships they have with their devotees.

Jason Mankey’s piece mentioned earlier suggests that the god Pan may have had a “fad” period in the late eighteenth/early nineteenth century, especially amongst some of the Romantic poets, which reframed him to a large extent as a god of wild nature in the context of the rise of industrialization, urbanization, and all of the early (and still extant) excesses of capitalism. It is not that Pan was not a deity associated with wild nature by the Greeks, though that association was not exclusive to him either, and he was as much a deity of shepherds and of hunting (both rustic in comparison to certain “civilized” pursuits, yet still not exactly natural in the sense many people mean it as non-human-based or human-beneficial) as of anything else. There was a zeitgeist at this time, thus, which made industrial capitalism a prevailing and successful force in global society (not necessarily for the good!), and Pan seems to have stepped forward to counter some of those excesses. What makes it essential, in my view, as to the question of whether Pan was part of the counter-zeitgeist of that era is whether or not he was worshipped by active cultists during the period, and it seems that this was the case, to whatever extent it was possible and feasible for them to do so, in the case of several of the English romantic poets. It could thus be said that Pan came to embody that particular zeitgeist, though I would suggest that he was not solely responsible for it, nor the originator of it, but instead became joined to it and syncretized with it, which caused certain changes to be witnessed in him that had not hitherto been attested in earlier Greek polytheist traditions related to him.

Pan was not the spirit of the age, and certainly not the only spirit of the age involved—industrial capitalism certainly had and continues to have its spirits as well—but Pan did became involved with it, and for some people, then as equally as now, Pan became synonymous with it. This is not the case of necessity, however, any more than would be the case in any other theological syncretistic combination—Dionysos is not Osiris, nor Osiris Dionysos, and one is not replaceable with the other nor are they synonymous, even though they syncretize with one another.

Another possible case of when a different class of divine being became syncretized with the spirit of an age—which is suggested to me based on some reflections by Sean Donahue about the iuno loci of the United States, Columbia—is Roma. Contrary to popular perception, Roma was not the goddess of the city of Rome from the very beginning; her cultus developed gradually as Rome’s reach became greater and greater, and she was initially worshipped only in the Eastern Empire, where certain Roman generals and leaders were also worshipped as divine (sometimes while still living) long before anyone ever heard of Julius Caesar or Augustus. It was not until Hadrian built the Temple of Venus and Roma in Rome itself in the early 120s CE that she was given an active state-sanctioned cultus in the city of Rome. It could be argued that at that point, the Roman Empire was at its height and in its florescence in the Antonine Era and dynasty which followed. Rome was pre-eminent in Europe, and thus the iuno loci of Rome itself became Rome Herself, the goddess Roma.

Something similar could be said for the post-polytheist phenomenon of Britannia during the period of the British Empire. Britannia became the iuno loci of the isle of Britain during the invasion and reconquest of Britain by Claudius, but her cultus was never widespread even in the province of Britannia. When Great Britain became one of the first true world powers, though, in the age of conquest and colonization, she was hymned with anthems by the military—with lyrics, ironically enough, written by a Scottish poet who was subject to the British Empire—and yet remains a symbol of the country in popular culture, with her hymn even sung at sporting events today.

Likewise with Columbia, who was first given name and form by a young African-American woman poet and slave named Phyllis Wheatley in 1775 in a poem she wrote in a letter to George Washington. Before the Declaration of Independence was written and signed, Wheatley’s poem became popular with Washington, was circulated more widely by Thomas Paine, and gave the cause of the American Revolution a divine face, which from the start was poised as a woman in need of defense from Britannia after first showing her might against the Gallic powers (of the French and Indian/Seven Years’ War). Two decades later, the song ”Hail, Columbia” was not only the song played for the President’s entry, but was also the unofficial national anthem of the United States until after World War I. Columbia’s name has been given to many things, from the capital city of the United States, to many colleges and universities and towns, to a major river in Oregon and Washington, and even to a province in Canada. For the age of manifest destiny, Columbia was the goddess. In this particular case, I think it is fair to say that the goddess was largely synonymous with the spirit of the age, for she had no existence before it.

People worshipped Pan actively as a deity in the romantic era that Jason Mankey (and Ronald Hutton in Triumph of the Moon) discusses. While they may not have realized they were doing such, the devotees of Britannia and Columbia sang them hymns, made icons of them, and in the case of Columbia, built her almost literal temples, giving them cultus just as fervent and frequent as the ancient citizens and subject peoples of the Roman Empire praised Roma. It is this deliberate cultus—whether it is seen to be such or not—that I think makes it essential when a divine being and the spirit of a given era come together, syncretize, and support one another in accomplishing the features (whether positive or negative in the later views of history) of the era in question.

I thus wonder if Antinous might have a role to play in this as a contributing divine being to one or another of the spirits of particular ages. When his cultus first existed, it cannot be said to have been the spirit of the age more than any other deity worshipped in the ancient world, for that was an age of many deities (though, technically, every age is, too!). Antinous’ knowledge, and to an extent his cultus, never fully disappeared, and he seems to have had a heyday in the late nineteenth century amongst certain individuals like the Uranian Poets in Britain, a group which includes Oscar Wilde, who makes references to him in a variety of stories and poems. Some of these individuals, it seems, were not simply poets and scholars of the Greek world, but were active cultists of a number of deities, Antinous amongst them, and his statuary (both ancient originals and reproductions) were highly prized by some of these individuals. Some of these individuals were among the first to argue for queer acceptance, and though scandalized in Wilde’s case, became some of the first public queer figures.

Antinous’ devotion has existed in the modern polytheist and pagan world for decades, but really came to greater (though by far still quite limited) prominence in 2002 with his more public organized worship. Parts of the LGBTQIA+ communities have witnessed an increased visibility and have gained access to certain civil rights during this time. I cannot help but think that even though most of the recipients of those rights (far from comprehensive though they may be at this point) have not even heard of him, and certainly don’t worship him, that his active cultus amongst some people has both assisted and in its own way been a reflection of that particular spirit of this age which has allowed some of these advances to be made. No, Antinous is not the spirit of the age, even for various parts of the queer community, but I think his interests and the interests of those who are doing active cultus to him have merged enough with the incipient spirits of the age that these advances have started to take place. If a small handful of romantic poets doing ad hoc and guerilla cultus to Pan can be said to have played a role in the zeitgeist of the early nineteenth century which lead to a desire to preserve nature (and, in Hutton’s view, which contributed largely to the formation of modern paganism generally), then likewise a small number of devoted cultists coordinating their efforts toward Antinoan devotion can have had an impact on these legal advances for queer people. What Catholics are struggling with facing as a “sign of the times” in terms of the world and their own religion’s views on these matters is a de facto reality for many who have nothing to do with that religion, or with polytheist devotion to Antinous.

It is this active and deliberate cultic dimension, I think, which is necessary to the view that any particular deity has become involved with the zeitgeist of any given historical period or the prevailing ideals, and the intellectual and social movements, within it. This is why I find the reasoning (if, indeed, it can be called that) of certain atheists writing on religious topics such as this so lacking. It is not the use of theology to illuminate the signs of the times—for someone who has no theos cannot meaningfully be said to have a theology!—but instead is an ill-informed attempt to interpret certain negative historical occurrences and phenomena with equation to the most pejoratively-loaded aspects of complex and multi-faceted deities. The Morrígan is responsible for the military-industrial complex no more than Freyr and Freyja are responsible for HIV/AIDS; Odin is responsible for the Nazis no more than Hermes is responsible for the Bernie Madoff; and the list could go on and on. In each of these cases, active cultus is missing, and thus it cannot be said to fit the zeitgeist patterns already discussed. It is best not to take the opinions on deities made by people with no interest in deities seriously, in any case.

Of course, this makes me wonder if the ultimate irony behind the religious movement known as modern atheism, which many are adamant in denying is a religious movement at all (for reasons that so frequently rely on circular logic—a long-standing tactic of certain monotheistic religions—that it almost assures it is a religious movement!), is that it may not be “godless” at all. Perhaps it is instead motivated by something that could be considered a divine being, though it cannot attain the distinction of godhood because its devotees refuse to acknowledge it as such. This would account for all of the anger and frustration this divine being’s devotees evince when questions of religion come up. I suspect that the fact many (though, note, not remotely all) vocal atheists are cisgendered heterosexual and fairly affluent white men may also be a part of this deity’s character. Perhaps Snarkus, the daimon of atheism, is the child of Priapus and Eris, and tends to be the biggest and most disruptive dick in the room, and is in a constant state of arousal but is never allowed to actually have an orgasm. As the animating spirit of a particular modern movement, the unknowing devotees of such a being are indeed unfortunate, and it would be no wonder that their conduct in so many areas having to do with religion—including the insistence on being included in it despite saying they do not have it and are against it—is utterly reflective of this divine parentage and the status of the daimon.

I would add one final note on what I have suggested above, not only as a general matter, but one which I think is very important in the considerations given here. I have emphasized the necessity of deliberate and conscious cultus as a component in much of what I discussed previously. I find that this comes into direct conflict with the statement that many people in modern paganism (though not so much modern polytheism) often say—particularly amongst the more monistic and humanistic voices in those groups—namely, that the deities don’t need humans to fight their battles for them nor to defend them. It does not take subtle theological ingenuity to see, however, that direct and obvious actions by deities in the world (outside of certain natural disasters, perhaps) are pretty thin on the ground these days. The key in a deity becoming involved in a zeitgeist is that the spirit of the times and of the deities possibly involved with those times move in groups of people influencing the course of events in the world. The movements of the deities and their divine wills are only perceptible in the presence of actual movement and (social) movements, thus. There is nor needs to be no difficulty nor inherent contradiction in this, nor is there a raising up of what is human to a divine level, nor is there a lowering of divine will to simple equation with human activity either. As I have tried to make clear in interpreting the phenomena of zeitgeists as separate from but occasionally syncretized with deities, the two are separate, and human activities and their results are a yet a further separate phenomena again.

This is important to the present discussion, certainly, but I also find that it is a piece that is sadly missing from many modern engagements with deities, including by polytheists. I may not “need” someone to stand up to someone who bullies me, but it certainly is damn nice when it happens that someone does stand up to them with me. Collaboration is great when it can happen between any varieties of person, whether a group of individual humans, a group of deities, or humans and deities together (amongst many other possibilities). It is astonishing how often some modern pagans refuse to say that they “worship” deities but instead they prefer to say that they “work with” them, and on occasions their deities may even be defending and protecting them, yet this collaborative personhood does not seem to apply in situations where a deity’s good name might need defense or protection. (And yes, names and the honor associated with them are important, and should rank as more important than they often do in the modern world.) It also amazes me how often people in paganism and polytheism may take some amount of pride in being an ally to socially marginalized groups of people and acting in ways that support this alliance with both individuals from those groups and the wider groups as well, and yet they refuse to act in similar ways where their individual or collective deities are concerned.

Thus, I think those who suggest that humans don’t need to defend their deities are demonstrating a serious lack of significance attributed to their own actions, and human actions generally. In many cases, I suspect they are actually excusing very bad behavior in themselves and often in others as well, and in some instances are using this explanation as an excuse for their own cowardice or laziness. If human cultus is at all effective and useful to deities, then human actions must be useful in some sense. Further, how else will the work of particular deities come about in the world without humans actively taking part in it and largely doing it in directly material manners? And if this is the case, then humans coming to the defense of their deities against the foolish and slanderous words of other humans who have little understanding of the subjects they discuss is not an inconsequential thing. It does not require institutional or legal sanctions, threats of physical harm, or coercion of any sort (often associated with the excesses of creedal monotheism’s approach to such matters) to say to someone that their words and actions are ill-advised or are inappropriate. If someone claims to be pious but does not actually defend the name and honor of the deities of their devotion, it is a victory for nothing but the disconnected nihilism and hipsterish irony of pseudo-liberalism that says “anything goes” and ultimately nothing really matters. The spirits motivating such behavior are attempting to reign supreme in the present age, and are one of the few (pseudo-) intellectual viewpoints that have been given public sanction and space in recent years. As a group of individuals who are against such things on the whole, I would think polytheists would have a much different approach to this matter than they have often demonstrated in their actions or words.

In conclusion, I would suggest that when looking for the spirit of a given age, and the many different animating spirits active amongst varied communities in any historical period, it is thus important to realize that just as a human can change residences or professions, and likewise that deities also shift in character and emphasis based on the localities of their cultus, so too can deities change their interactions with humans based on the context of a given space of time and the ways in which they can combine with the spirits found within those temporal spaces. Both deities and humans are multi-dimensional, and thus just as humans move in three dimensions of space and one of time, so too can deities manifest themselves differently in time, space, and space-time, even if they also transcend those limited number of dimensions. Just as there is more attention being given now to the intricacies of place in relation to divine cultus, so too does there need to be attention given to time in this process as well.

*: If my disdain for certain viewpoints within this discussion is obvious in my phrasing here, I do not apologize for it. Just as I know they do not respect my own opinions here and elsewhere, I likewise do not respect theirs, though I do fully acknowledge that I respect their personhood and their agency in holding and expressing their opinions as they wish. The divine beings motivating them are just as divine as the ones who motivate me, and I try to remember that always in dealing with them, even though I may not feel they are always interpreting their divine motivations—if and when they are directly divine—in ways that are the most productive.

Lugus

1. Meaning of Name: Kondratiev gives us “Lightning Flash”. Green suggests “Shining One”. Olmsted suggests “Bright” or else “God of Oaths”. Mackillop suggests “Raven”. Olmsted is supported by John Koch, who presents a strong argument not only for the name meaning “Oath”, but for Lugus being a deity of oaths and destinies necessary to the cohesion of early Celtic society. 1
2. Pronunciation: Lug-us, with the “u” like in “put”.
3. Other Names and Epithets: Green gives us Artaios, Arvernus, Cissonius, Gebrinus, and Moccus. Olmsted gives us Arverniorix, Clavarigiatis, Dumiatis, and Vassocaletis.2
4. Interpretatio Romana: Mercury. Ovist also suggests Hercules, but is unsupported by other scholars. C. Lee Vermeers has made a good case in various discussions with me and in the Gaulish Polytheism Community that Lugus can be identified with the Wind Wolf, an Indo-European original from which Apollo ultimately derives. These arguments are ultimately based on arguments made in Daniel Gershenson’s Apollo the Wolf God. 3
5. Irish Equivalent: Lugh. 4
6. Indo-European Equivalent: None.
7. Realm: Both Ueronados/Upper World God, and, in some aspects, Andernados/Underworld God.
8. Iconography: Kondratiev gives us the spear, raven, horse, lynx, and wren, as well as high places and tricephaly. The Greco-Roman iconography of Mercury, especially the sack, is also important. 5
9. Significance: Kondratiev regards Lugus as the Master of All the Arts, a God of many skills, much as in Irish myth. Kondratiev also presents a complex analysis of Irish myth, in which he interprets Lugus as the killer of a giant much like the Irish Balor, by which act he wins the harvest from the control of the chaotic nature spirits. According his analysis, the Spear of Lugh represents the lightning bolt, visible in the storms of autumn, which end the hot weather in time for the harvest. Michael Enright sees Lugus quite differently, regarding him as a “mysterious figure linked with fertility, seasonal change, and the underworld”. He presents an interesting list of characteristics of figures linked to Mercury among the Gauls and Celtiberians, “one-eyedness, raven as cult animal, spear-bearing prophet stabbed by a spear, sacrifice by hanging and stabbing, disguised appearance, dedication of a hostile force by spear-throw, leadership of a band of warriors sworn to die for him, association with a prophetess with ties to a cult of the dead”. The links of this picture with the Germanic Woden should be obvious. Ovist sees Lugus in still different but related terms – as the Stranger King, who comes to the Gods from a mixed parentage, and who overthrows and kills a tyrannical giant, thereby winning freedom for his people. She also sees him as a god of art or skill. There are obvious commonalities to all three images: the mysterious nature of Lugus, his patronage of art or skill, his use of a spear, his use of it to kill a giant, associations with ravens, prophecy, and war. It should be noted that Lugus is definitely part of a divine couple with Rosmertâ, who in both Enright’s and Ovist’s view has associations with prophecy. Gershenson, while never mentioning Lugus, has in his Wind Wolf a deity associated with wind and breath, the harvest, weather, death, wolves, and the leadership of the warband, a band of young, unmarried warriors sworn to his worship and that of other warrior deities. John Koch sees Lugus as above all the Oath made manifest, the protector of the sworn word, and of the social ties that come from oaths. Insofar as he the word for Oath is relaterd to the word for Destiny, Lugus is the deity of destiny as well, swearing destinies on all things in cooperation with Rosmertâ. 6

Rosmertâ

1. Meaning of Name: There is no scholarly consensus. Green translates her name as “Great Provider”, as does Mackillop. Olmsted, on the other hand, translates her name as “The Highly Foresighted”. Michael Enright translates it as “Great Prophetess”. 1
2. Other Names and Epithets: Olmsted gives us Atesmertis, Cantismerta, Braciaca, Nemetona, and Riga as by-names for Rosmertâ. 2 A British scholar named Stephen Yeates presents evidence supporting an identification of her with the “Mater Dobunnorum”, the tribal Goddess of the Dobunni people. 3
3. Interpretatio Romana: Fortuna. Note that she is paired with Mercury/Lugus in a Gaulish divine couple. 4
4. Irish Equivalent: Medb and other Irish Sovereignty Goddesses. 5
5. Indo-European Equivalent: None known.
6. Realm: Ueronadâ/Upper World Goddess
7. Iconography: Green sees her iconography in terms of a wooden, iron-bound bucket with ladle, torches, patera, and cornucopia. 6 Enright sees it slightly differently, emphasizing the wine bucket, cornucopia, and weaver’s beam. 7
8. Significance: According to Enright, Rosmertâ denotes “fertility, fate, or both”. He connects her with the Matres, and sees her as a Goddess of fate, and prophecy. Through her patronage of a seeress termed a welitâ, who was used by ambitious Continental Celtic and Germanic rulers to give legitimacy to their rule, she is connected with sovereignty and with warband culture. In this role, Rosmertâ was seen as a Queen. She was associated with a complex of related ideas, encompassing women, liquor, feasting, sovereignty, sexuality, and weaving. 8 Through her role as a mead-Goddess, Noémi Beck sees her as spiritual initiator. Krista Ovist, in her dissertation, sees her a little differently. 9 She states that Rosmertâ’s “name and plastic representations suggest the accumulation, transformation, and re-circulation of related manifestations of value”. She sees her as Goddess of sovereignty as well as terrestrial plenty, which she associates with the sack or bag, found in her cult as well that of the Gaulish Mercury. 10

Gender and Syncretism:  Rarely the Twain Doth Meet?!?

Theological syncretism takes many forms in a variety of cultures.  It can include such things as the fusing of two (or more) different deities in Egyptian or Graeco-Egyptian culture, as is the case with Amun-Re, Re-Harakhte, Sobek-Re, Zeus-Ammon, Hermanubis, Bawy (Set and Horus combined), and Pataikos/Ptah-Sokar-Osiris, for example.  It can involve the subsuming of many deities into the overarching folds of one deity, as is the case with Isis and many goddesses from Egyptian, Greek, Near Eastern, and other cultures.  It can involve the identities, names, attributes, or epithets of one deity being adopted by another in particular localized forms, as is the case with Jupiter Optimus Maximus Dolichenus (who was, in any case, worshipped far outside of the sphere of Roman Asia Minor!).
 
But, no matter how many distinct or indistinct types of theological syncretism occur, and no matter how wide an array of examples can be cited, one matter does tend to hold sway in almost every culture where it is found:  theological syncretistic combinations tend to occur amongst deities of the same gender.   While it is tempting to suggest, therefore, that syncretism can be a way to imagine polyamorotheism allowing deities of the same gender to produce (syncretized) offspring, the prevalence of this pattern instead prompts me at present to observe that the impermeability of the boundaries various cultures have observed between the binary genders is something noteworthy.  For all of the gender-variance that can and does occur with some deities in some pantheons, the majority do not seem to partake in such transgressions of the norms (insofar as any premodern culture has a concept of normativity—see Karma Lochrie’s Heterosyncrasies for more on this topic) of gender.
 
While my knowledge of all world mythologies and polytheistic cultures is quite limited, I can think of only five definite examples of syncretism which involve deity-forms that originate out of not only separate deities, but deities of different genders.  The final result of such combinations is not always a being that is non-binary gendered, either.  I will also discuss a further example that some might cite as favoring the multi-gender syncretism approach, but which on further and deeper reflection does not involve this at all; and finally, I will suggest some possibilities for the future as well.
 
I can think of two examples—both from Indian/Hindu mythology—where a new deity-form comes into existence and is accompanied by a narrative explaining how this came to be, and both of them involve the god Shiva.  In one, Shiva and Parvati are enjoying a bout of lovemaking, and become so enthralled with one another that they decide to fuse into one, and thus become Ardhnarishvara.  That hypostasis persists as its own deity afterwards, not unlike many other deities in Hinduism who originate as an avatar, aspect, or alternate (often utilitarian) form of deities that already existed.  Another instance of a fused male-and-female deity in Hinduism is Harihara, who originates in the love which Shiva had for Vishnu in Vishnu’s feminine form, Mohini, which results in the fusion of Shiva and Mohini.  Shiva also takes feminine form on some occasions—by choice or otherwise!—but these feminine forms do not tend to persist as discrete entities the way that Mohini appears to have done in relation to Vishnu.
 
I can also think of two East Asian deities that are the result of multi-gender theological syncretism, but no accompanying narrative or myth indicates how this took place; it was much more of a historical and, in the first case, a methodological syncretistic development (i.e. the result of several different religious systems comingling) than one which takes place on a mytho-theological level.  The first of these, Guanyin (also sometimes written as Kwan Yin), is a Chinese goddess in  traditional Chinese polytheism and Taoism, and is a bodhisattva in Buddhism, with variations in name and local languages throughout several East Asian cultures.  Her name is a Chinese translation of the name of the Sanskrit Avolakiteshvara, “the lord who looks down [to hear the cries of the suffering],” and in the original Chinese Mahayana Buddhist writings, Guanyin does appear as male and simply as a translation of the Sanskrit name.  As time goes on, an androgynous or feminine form becomes more common for Guanyin, and eventually the feminine form prevailed.  The feminine form and attributes, as well as many of the mythological accounts of her, certainly derive from indigenous Chinese polytheist sources rather than from Buddhist traditions about the bodhisattva.
 
The second deity—widely acknowledged as a “composite” deity, though the names and number of identities of the composition vary greatly—is the Shinto Inari-Okami, one of the most popular and widely-venerated kami, with over 32,000 shrines of the 80,000+ known shrines in Japan being devoted to this particular divine being.  Inari-Okami is known to appear in male, female, and androgynous forms of varying ages, as well as in the form of foxes (particularly white foxes), snakes, dragons, and on one occasion, a spider.  Inari-Okami is usually understood to be a singular entity, but on occasion, Inari-Okami is considered to be Inari-Sanza (“three-part” Inari) or Inari-Goza (“five-part” Inari).  The various other kami who might be identified with Inari-Okami, or with the constituent parts of this three- or five-part versions, include Ukanomitama, Ogetsu-Hime, Toyouke, Izanagi-Okami, Izanami-Okami, Ninigi, Wakumusubi, Ukemochi, Omiyanome, Tanaka, Shi, and Sarutahiko-no-Okami, or (in the specifically female form) the Buddhist Daikiniten or Benzaiten of the Seven Lucky Gods.  Very interestingly, Inari-Okami’s shrines are the only ones that are “official” but are, yet, not maintained by the Jinja Honcho that oversees all other Shinto activities in Japan (and elsewhere), but instead are maintained by everyday laypeople.  That such variation is observed in Inari-Okami’s worship, down to the level of gender, may thus be a reflection of this grassroots and individualized, localized, and community-specific veneration of the kami.
 
We have briefly examined two examples of multi-gender syncretism with mythological narratives of the etiology of such forms in Hinduism; we have also examined historical methodological syncretism leading to new deity-forms that span several gender categories in Chinese and Japanese polytheistic religions.  What about situations in which a fusion occurs between separate deities of different genders, but which has little historical context and no grounding in mythological narrative?  This is precisely what we have in the example of Hermekate, a fusion of (the male) Hermes and (the female) Hekate, attested in the lines of the Greek Magical Papyri (PGM) III, lines 45-47:  “I call upon you, Mother of all men, you who have brought together the limbs of Meliouchos, even Meliouchos himself, OROBASTRIA NEBOUTOSOUALETH, Entrapper, Mistress of corpses, Hermes, Hekate, […], Hermekate, LETH AMOUMAMOUTERMYOR…”  Based on the notes to the text, this name “Hermekate” may also occur in a few other defixiones, but I have not been able to confirm this at present.  In any case, what we have here is a magical formula, and such magical contexts are fertile grounds for novel syncretistic formations.  Though the formula before Hermekate’s appearance seems to indicate a feminine divinity is being addressed, clearly the combination of Hermes and Hekate, intended by the spell-writer to be in the mind of the one who reads it and uses it since the individual forms are given beforehand, complicates the picture of the “Mother of all men” and “Mistress of corpses” considerably.  Hermes and Hekate are perhaps a “natural match,” in any case, due to their similar functions and associations, though their mythology does not often overlap.  Also, given the Graeco-Egyptian context, double theophoric names (e.g. Sarapammon, Hermantinous, etc.) are also not uncommon, so even if a permanent multi-gendered syncretism was not intended, nonetheless the combination of the powers of both deities on this occasion were drawn upon in a manner that would have not been unusual, despite the unexpected divine gender mixing.
 
One ambiguous divine figure (and the ambiguity is in the divine status, not the gender) that many might consider as an example of multi-gender syncretism in the Greek world is Hermaphroditos.  The origins of a possible cultus to Hermaphroditos may date back to a Cyprian form of Aphrodite that was portrayed as bearded, and thus was called Aphroditos, which dates at least back to the 7th century BCE.  The philosopher Theophrastus writes of Hermaphroditos in the 3rd century BCE, and both Diodorus Siculus and Ovid write of this figure in the 1st century BCE, with only Ovid giving the story of the male child of Hermes and Aphrodite becoming fused with the nymph Salmacis into the multi-gendered form familiar from ancient depictions of a breasted, feminine-like figure with male genitals.  Hermaphroditos is also discussed by Macrobius as late as the 5th century CE.  Whether Hermaphroditos was ever worshipped as a full deity, or only as a particular form of Cyprian Aphrodite, is not as clear, and thus their situation is quite ambiguous on a theological level.  But, additionally, Hermaphroditos is never portrayed, under that name, as a theological syncretistic fusion of Hermes and Aphrodite, but instead as the child of the two deities, which is quite different than most of the multi-gendered syncretistic examples we have discussed here.
 
Based on these various examples, it is obvious that while not by any means common, such multi-gendered syncretisms could be possible.  Edward Butler, in “Polycentric Polytheism and the Philosophy of Religion“ (available here), argues that every deity, by virtue of being a deity, has the potential to embody or act in the role of any other deity, and in arguing this, he makes no caveats on the gender of the deities involved.  Given that this is the case, it is perhaps strange that such multi-gendered syncretisms are not more common than the few examples given here, and the likely limited number of others out there as well.  (If I have missed any, please inform me of them in the comments below!  I’m always happy to learn more in this area!)
 
It may be, to an extent, inherent in Egyptian tradition already, since the various “Eye of Re” goddesses (e.g. Hathor, Sekhmet, Tefnut, Wadjet, Mehit, Sia, Bast, Qadesh, etc.) are, obviously, feminine in comparison to Re himself, and thus are often considered to be his daughters; though perhaps an interpretation whereby they are not only instantiations of Re’s power, but instead are multi-gendered syncretisms of Re with various goddesses, would be beneficial.  The possibility of multi-gendered Greek syncretisms also seems intriguing and potentially revelatory, especially in the context of magic and the historiolae (short mythic narratives) that accompany and empower magical utterances and operations.  Would it be possible, for example, for a syncretism of Hermes and Persephone—Persephermes?—to assist mystery initiates in returning from the underworld with the blessings of its queen but the guidance of the psychopomp?  It seems possible, but then again, anything is possible where deities are concerned.

Taranis

  1. Meaning of Name: Pretty much all authorities are agreed that the name means “Thunder” 1
  2. Pronunciation: Tuh-RUN-is.
  3. Other Names and Epithets: Olmsted gives us Tanaros and Taranus as alternate forms. Green identifies him with different forms of the Celtic Jupiter, among them Bessirissa, Brixianus, Ladicus, Parthinius, Poeninus, and Uxellinus. 2
  4. Interptretatio Romana: Jupiter. 3
  5. Irish Equivalent: The Daghda. 4
  6. Indo-European Equivalent: Serith equates him to Perkwūnos, the Indo-European Thunder God. I think he also shares much with Dyēs Pter, the Indo-European Sky God. Olmsted implicitly supports this by terming Taranis a “Sky Father”. 5
  7. Realm: Ueronados/Upper World God, par excellence.
  8. Iconography: The most important symbols of Taranis are the thunderbolt and the wheel, which he often bears as a shield. Kevin Jones has performed a useful analysis of the Celtic wheel symbol in his dissertation, A Consideration of the Iconography of Romano-Celtic Religion with Respect to Archaic Elements of Celtic Mythology. According to Jones, Celtic wheels come with various numbers of spokes, but the highest numbers statistically have four, six, eight, and twelve. Jones is able to use this distribution to get at the meaning of the different wheels, showing that the Celtic wheel symbol is a symbol of the turning heavens, and therefore of cosmic law and truth. 6
  9. Significance: Taranis is the Sky-Father and the Thunder God. As Jones shows us, he is the protector of cosmic law, and of the cosmos itself. He represents Truth and Virtue, which were conceived of as a kind of fiery power. The Jupiter-Giant columns, a kind of Romano-Gaulish monument found in the Rhineland, show us a kind of dragon-slayer myth, in which Taranis kills a giant, often depicted with serpents for arms and legs. Calvert Watkins, in his seminal book on Indo-European poetry and dragon slayer myths, How to Kill a Dragon: Aspects of Indo-European Poetics, unpacks the Indo-European versions of this myth, and lets us see its elements. He is also able in an appendix to present one Irish version that gives us a good idea what the Gaulish myth must have looked like. From this, it is possible to see that the myth represented the victory of order over chaos, Truth over falsehood, the Upper World over the Underworld, Samos over Giamos, and so on. Given its representation in the form of great monuments, it was clearly a myth of central importance in understanding the Gaulish soul. 7