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The Moon<br />

Latin word for moon is luna, from <strong>the</strong> word leuk, meaning “bright” or “shining.” The<br />

Moon is visible because it reflects light from <strong>the</strong> Sun. A bright full Moon can cast<br />

shadows. Modern words that come from luna include lucid, luminous, and lunatic.<br />

The Sun and <strong>the</strong> Moon are paired in most mythologies throughout <strong>the</strong> ages.<br />

Pairings have included husband and wife, fa<strong>the</strong>r and mo<strong>the</strong>r, and bro<strong>the</strong>r and sister.<br />

The European culture that developed from Hellenistic Greece believed <strong>the</strong> Moon was<br />

a female deity. However <strong>the</strong> early European, Oriental, and indigenous American cultures<br />

often choose to portray <strong>the</strong> Moon as male in gender. In all cultures <strong>the</strong> Moon is<br />

linked with fertility and conception. The female menstrual cycle is clearly linked to<br />

moon cycles and <strong>the</strong> period of <strong>the</strong> month when a woman is able to conceive. Farmers<br />

often sow <strong>the</strong>ir crops during specific times of <strong>the</strong> Moon’s cycle in order to reap <strong>the</strong><br />

most beneficial harvest. Just as crops require <strong>the</strong> Sun to grow, it was <strong>the</strong> Moon that<br />

ensured that <strong>the</strong> seed would germinate. While <strong>the</strong> Sun rules <strong>the</strong> day, <strong>the</strong> Moon rules<br />

<strong>the</strong> night.<br />

In Sumerian mythology, <strong>the</strong> Moon is <strong>the</strong> son of Enlil (Saturn) and Ninlil.<br />

Ninlil’s mo<strong>the</strong>r had warned her daughter not to ba<strong>the</strong> in <strong>the</strong> irrigation canal. Ninlil<br />

did not obey her mo<strong>the</strong>r and washed herself in <strong>the</strong> water. Enlil, <strong>the</strong> god of air, saw <strong>the</strong><br />

beautiful and naked girl, and quickly took advantage of her. His punishment for <strong>the</strong><br />

rape was exile to <strong>the</strong> underworld. He left <strong>the</strong> city, but Ninlil followed. Enlil knew that<br />

<strong>the</strong> girl carried his son, <strong>the</strong> Moon god Sin. Enlil wanted a bright child (Full Moon)<br />

and not a dark child born in <strong>the</strong> underworld (New Moon). In one version of <strong>the</strong> myth,<br />

he impregnates Ninlil several more times to effect <strong>the</strong> order and timing of <strong>the</strong> birth, or<br />

appearance, of <strong>the</strong> Moon. Sin is <strong>the</strong> bright Moon and his bro<strong>the</strong>rs are <strong>the</strong> dark and<br />

waning Moon. In Sumerian mythology, <strong>the</strong> Moon is best known as <strong>the</strong> fa<strong>the</strong>r of<br />

Innana, <strong>the</strong> planet Venus.<br />

In ancient Greece <strong>the</strong> Moon was associated with three different female deities:<br />

Selene, Artemis, and Hecate, known collectively as <strong>the</strong> Three-faced Goddess. Selene<br />

is <strong>the</strong> goddess in <strong>the</strong> sky, Artemis is <strong>the</strong> earthly form, while Hecate is <strong>the</strong> goddess of<br />

<strong>the</strong> underworld. These manifestations represent <strong>the</strong> phases of <strong>the</strong> Moon: Selene is <strong>the</strong><br />

waxing Moon growing in brightness, Artemis is <strong>the</strong> full Moon illuminating <strong>the</strong> Earth,<br />

and Hecate is <strong>the</strong> waning or dark Moon, lessening in light until it is not visible. This<br />

is symbolic of <strong>the</strong> phases of human life: childhood, adulthood, and old age.<br />

Selene is one of <strong>the</strong> ancient Greek gods, born of <strong>the</strong> primordial gods called <strong>the</strong><br />

Titans. She is associated with sleep. Artemis is also ancient, and <strong>the</strong>re is evidence that<br />

she was worshipped in Minoan Greece, although she must date from far earlier. She is<br />

called a virgin goddess, but this is misleading. She is properly called <strong>the</strong> unmarried<br />

maiden and governed female rites of passage such as reproductive maturation, marriage,<br />

childbirth, etc. She is called <strong>the</strong> Goddess of <strong>the</strong> Hunt and Mistress of <strong>the</strong> Animals.<br />

Her animal is <strong>the</strong> deer. If Selene is <strong>the</strong> expression of <strong>the</strong> Moon in <strong>the</strong> heavens,<br />

and Artemis is <strong>the</strong> expression in <strong>the</strong> physical world, <strong>the</strong>n Hecate is <strong>the</strong> expression of<br />

<strong>the</strong> Moon in <strong>the</strong> underworld. She is a chthonic goddess belonging to <strong>the</strong> graveyard.<br />

Hecate is <strong>the</strong> goddess of <strong>the</strong> dark Moon and rules witchcraft, potions, crossroads, and<br />

death. She is Persephone’s attendant during her yearly stay in Hades known as <strong>the</strong><br />

season of winter. In all her forms, <strong>the</strong> Greek Moon goddesses are connected with fer-<br />

[460] THE ASTROLOGY BOOK

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