Goddess Artemis
Artemis is the goddess of the wild places—keeper of the woods, animals, moonlit paths, and women who gather in sisterhood. She is solitary yet nurturing, fierce yet protective, a huntress who defends the young and vulnerable. With her bow and arrow, she holds the power to heal or to strike, guiding those who honor her toward clarity, instinct, and purpose.
Call upon Artemis to support your ambitions, strengthen determination, and bring luck to athletes and goal‑setters.
Goddess Aradia
Aradia is one of the central Goddesses of Italian Witchcraft, the luminous teacher of Stregheria. Myth tells that her mother, Diana, sent her to Earth to restore the old ways—teaching the art of Witchcraft, reviving ancient pagan wisdom, and bringing freedom to the oppressed. Passed down through generations, Aradia’s story is one of empowerment, dignity, and harmony with nature. She guided peasants through seasonal rites and Full Moon rituals, helping them reclaim their self‑worth and reconnect with the sacred rhythms of the Earth. Today, Aradia stands as a symbol of transformation and the union of heaven, earth, moon, and cosmos.
Call upon her to strengthen your magic and safeguard your craft.
Goddess Athena
Athena carries an unwavering “I can do anything” spirit. As the goddess of wisdom and civilization, she champions knowledge, strategy, achievement, and the pursuit of excellence. Practical, intelligent, and deeply engaged with matters of education, culture, and social order, she inspires clarity and purposeful action.
Call upon Athena to bring refinement to chaotic situations and to support you in achieving your goals.
Goddess Brigid
Brigid is the revered patroness of healing, poetry, and smithcraft—arts that blend practical skill with inspired wisdom. As a solar deity, she embodies light, creativity, and the transformative power of fire. Though not the Sun itself, she is the benefactress of inner healing, vitality, and renewed spirit. Long honored as the Mistress of the Mantle, she represents the sister or maiden aspect of the Great Goddess. Brigid also presides over physicians, divination, and prophecy, guiding those who seek clarity and restoration.
Goddess Cerridwen
Cerridwen is the Celtic goddess of the underworld and the keeper of the cauldron of knowledge. She is often referred to as the Dark Moon Goddess and Goddess of Inspiration and Death. Cerridwen is considered the Celtic goddess of rebirth, transformation, and inspiration. She is the goddess of the underworld and the keeper of the cauldron of knowledge. She imparts wisdom and knowledge, and intuition. Cerridwen is a shapeshifter and is considered an enchantress. As well as the moon she is associated with herbology, fertility, science, prophecy, and poetry. Many witches include her among their patron deities.
Goddess Demeter
Demeter is the goddess of Earth, agriculture, and fertility—the ancient Corn Mother whose regenerative power sustains all living things. Her symbol, the ripe sheaf of wheat, speaks to abundance, nourishment,
and the turning of the seasons. As a matronly, seated figure, she embodies the nurturing mother archetype, finding fulfillment through creation, growth, and care.
Use her energy to attract prosperity, support the successful completion of your goals, and bring your dreams to fruition. Wear her symbol while planting to encourage a fruitful harvest and to attune yourself to the deep energies of the Earth.
Goddess Astarte
Astarte is a powerful goddess whose domains span both war and love. To the Egyptians, she was honored as a fierce deity of battle and endurance; to the Semitic peoples, she was revered as a goddess of love, sexuality, and fertility. Among the Greeks, her essence transformed into Aphrodite. Though later texts attempted to diminish her, her widespread devotion in ancient times speaks to her enduring strength and influence.
Call upon Astarte for workings of fertility, passionate love, or matters of fierce determination.
Goddess Danu
Danu embodies knowledge, wisdom, teaching, wealth, and abundance—carrying the airy gifts of inspiration, intellect, transformation, and transcendence. As a Goddess of Air, she is the living essence of Universal Wisdom and Divine Knowledge. She holds the secrets of Divine Alchemy and Magic, reminding us that through our oneness with the Divine Source, nothing is truly hidden. We are already connected to All‑Encompassing Wisdom.
Danu awakens the innate guidance of our Ascended Self, aligning our power with purity of purpose.
Use her energy to wash away discord and restore balance in your life.
Goddess Diana
In Roman mythology, Diana—whose name means “heavenly” or “divine”—is the goddess of the hunt, the moon, and the mysteries of birth. She roams the wildwood as guardian of animals and protector of all untamed places, gifted with the power to speak to and command the creatures of the forest. Diana is the eternal Mother of Creation, first to rise and last to fade, the Huntress whose heartbeat echoes through the trees. She is the call of the wild, the primal memory that urges us to remember where we come from.
Use her energy to support the accomplishment of goals and as a powerful ally for anyone working with animals.
Goddess Freya
Freya is the moon‑kissed goddess of passion, enchantment, and seiðr—the ancient Norse art of spellcraft and prophecy. She moves between worlds with ease, gathering the fallen in battle and blessing the living with love, pleasure, and abundance. Freya embodies the full spectrum of feminine power: soft as silk, sharp as a blade, and radiant as the rising moon.
Use her energy for: calling in love, deepening intimacy, enhancing magical skill, boosting confidence, attracting beauty, and empowering feminine strength.
Goddess Gaia
Gaia is the primordial Mother—the first stirring of creation and the living soul of the Earth. From her body rise mountains, forests, and oceans; from her breath comes wind; from her pulse, the rhythm of all life. Beneath the moon’s silver glow, Gaia moves through root and river, stone and seed, reminding us that we are shaped from her body and held within her eternal embrace.
Use her energy for grounding, stability, healing, renewal, and reconnecting with the Earth’s wisdom. Burn to anchor your energy, nurture growth, bless new beginnings, and call in harmony with nature.
Goddess Hecate
Hecate is the goddess of magic, witchcraft, the night, the moon, and the restless spirits who walk between worlds. Her power moves through heaven, earth, and sea, granting mortals wisdom, victory, prosperity, and protection—yet withholding such blessings when they are not deserved. She is the torch‑bearer at the crossroads, the keeper of mysteries, and the guardian of those who seek her counsel.
Use her energy in defensive magic and during the waning moon. Invoke Hecate for guidance, wise counsel, and protection when facing challenges too heavy to carry alone.
Goddess Ishtar
Ishtar stands at the crossroads of opposites—passion and conflict, creation and destruction, tears and triumph. She is both flame and water, both lover and warrior. Her lion companion marks her as a goddess of unmatched strength, one who fiercely guarded her people and upheld divine order. Called the Lady of Battles and the Queen of Victory, she was also a bringer of dreams, visions, and secret knowledge.
Invoke Ishtar when you need to blend the energies of love and war, or when seeking prophetic insight through dreams.
Goddess Isis
Isis embodies the full strength of the Divine Feminine—the depth of emotion, the power of creation, and the instinct to nurture, protect, and sustain life. A clever enchantress, she wields her magic through intuition, devotion, and subtle wisdom rather than force. Isis teaches us to use our innate gifts to shape the life we desire, guiding us toward transformation through grace rather than resistance.
Use her energy to increase determination, willpower, personal strength, and the ability to focus.
Goddess Kali Ma
Kali embodies the raw pulse of transformation—rebirth, cleansing, courage, and the turning of life’s great wheel. Her symbols speak to her dual nature: the sweetness of honey, the sharpness of iron, the beauty of flowers, and the power of the sword. As the ancient Mother of Time, she governs the forces that create and destroy, teaching that even in the darkest moments, renewal is possible. When despair threatens, Kali births hope; when fear rises, she dances strength into the soul.
Invoke Kali when danger surrounds you or when every other protective effort has been exhausted.
Goddess Lilith
Lilith’s themes are freedom, courage, playfulness, passion, pleasure, and unapologetic sexuality. Her symbol is the apple—an emblem of choice, knowledge, and the boldness to claim one’s own path.
She urges us to stand fiercely for what we believe in, to live unrestrained by fear or shame, and to seek equality for all people. Lilith challenges us to confront our own biases, make amends where needed, and live with integrity and fire. To internalize her fairness, bravery, and exuberant zest for life, eat an apple and take a daring step toward joy without guilt. Use her energy to strengthen your confidence, reclaim your power, and stand your ground with clarity and courage.
Goddess Morrigan
The Morrigan, one and three, is a multifaceted Irish goddess whose power flows through war, death, rebirth, and the mysteries of fate. As a shapeshifter, she appears in many forms—crow, maiden, warrior, phantom—each carrying wisdom, prophecy, and the raw magic of the land. She stands at the threshold of endings and beginnings, guiding those who dare to face their shadows.
Invoke her aid in battle, in overcoming obstacles or enemies, in prophetic work, and in waning‑moon or banishing rites.
Goddess Oshun
Oshun’s themes are divination, love, beauty, and pleasure. Her symbols—flowing water, seashells, and amber beads—reflect her radiant, generous nature. A beautiful and oracular goddess, she opens her golden gaze to reveal what the future may hold for the heart.
Place shells beneath your pillow to dream of future loves, or carry amber—or wear amber tones—when seeking harmony and problem‑solving in relationships. Her sacred number is five, echoing her sweetness and grace. Use her energy in workings of love, marriage, beauty, and pleasure.
Goddess Persephone
Persephone is the radiant Goddess of Spring and the Harvest, yet also the revered Queen of the Underworld—a duality that reveals her depth and strength. Her return from the shadowed realm each spring brings life back to the land, marking her as a symbol of rebirth and the eternal cycle of nature.
Goddess Rhiannon
Rhiannon, the radiant Celtic goddess of horses and the moon, embodies movement, communication, fertility, and the mysteries of the spirit world. Riding her white mare, she brings leadership and the power to shift what has become stuck or stagnant. Her swift mount and moonlit presence mark her as a goddess who moves between realms with ease.
Her legendary birds sing songs that can awaken the dead or soothe the living into gentle slumber.
Use her energy for: dream protection, peaceful sleep, underworld connection, bird magic, and advancing magical work that needs momentum.
Her myth speaks of a young goddess whose choices were made for her, yet who ultimately grows into her own authority. Persephone teaches us to rise from darkness, to rediscover our voice, and to refuse to disappear into the expectations of others.
Use her energy for: transformation, emerging from difficult periods, empowerment, seasonal rites, and cultivating inner strength.
Goddess Venus
Venus’s themes are love, passion, romance and sexuality. Her symbols are doves, flowers, berries, trees and pine cones. Venus was originally an Italic Goddess of blossoms; heart and flowers have slowly become attributed to Her loving, passionate energies. In fact, Her name became the root for the word venerate – to lift up, worship or esteem. So it is that Venus greets pre-spring efforts for uplifting our hearts with positive relationships.
Mary Magdalene
Mary Magdalene stands as patron saint of penitents and perfumers, a reminder that transformation is possible for every soul. Penitence, at its heart, is simply the willingness to acknowledge our missteps and choose a better path. Mary accepts us in our imperfections and guides us toward healing.
As the Myrrh Bearer, she is a keeper of mysteries, offering insight to those seeking deeper spiritual truths. She is remembered as warm, wise, sensual, courageous, and fiercely devoted. In the Gnostic tradition, she is honored as the “Mother of All,” embodying the sacred balance of divine feminine and masculine.
Her magic helps: release body shame, heal patriarchal wounds, awaken sacred sexuality, transform our relationship with death, and embody the full divine feminine and masculine within.
Yemaya
Yemaya is the sovereign of oceans and lakes, the great Mother whose waters give birth to all life. Her name, from Yey Omo Eja, “Mother Whose Children Are the Fish,” reflects the truth that her children are beyond counting.
Just as life emerged from the sea, each of us begins our journey floating in the sacred waters of the womb, evolving through fluid stages before becoming human. Yemaya embodies this ancient lineage of creation, transformation, and protection.
In Yoruba cosmology, she is linked with Olokun, the vast and mysterious force of the deep ocean and the source of immeasurable wealth and power. Together they represent the full spectrum of the sea—from its nurturing surface to its hidden depths.
Yemaya is revered as the ultimate feminine force, the oceanic mother who nourishes, shelters, and guides all beings.
Black Madona
The Black Madonna is the Dark Mother who shelters the Golden Child within her womb, guiding us through the shadowed seasons of life. She nourishes our hidden dreams in the quiet dark, preparing them to take form in the world. Known as She Who Is Forged in the Fiery Furnace, she stands at the crossroads of transformation, where we pause—sometimes willingly, sometimes through pain—and look in every direction before choosing our path. She invites us to explore the unseen, the intuitive, the deeply felt. In her embrace, past, present, and future weave together: ancestral memory, present love, and the promise of what is yet to come.
She carries the Divine Child, and in doing so, she carries us—our prayers, our grief, our resilience. She is the one who has been scarred and bloodied but never defeated. She rises from the ashes with unwavering strength. She is Our Lady of the Holy Blood, the Woman Who Knows, the Mother who walks with us through fire and brings us out transformed.
Santa Muerta
Santa Muerte—Holy Death—is the robed guardian who walks beside the living and the dead. Revered in Mexican folk tradition, she offers healing, protection, and safe passage through life’s most difficult thresholds. Her roots may reach into pre‑Columbian death traditions, echoing the ancient reverence for the feminine force that governs endings and rebirth.
Devotees seek her aid in matters of the heart, in prosperity, in justice, and in shielding themselves from danger. She is a saint of the overlooked and the outcast, the one who answers all who call upon her with equal compassion.
To honor Santa Muerte is to honor truth, transformation, and the inevitability that binds all beings.