

Buy anything from 5,000+ international stores. One checkout price. No surprise fees. Join 2M+ shoppers on Desertcart.
Desertcart purchases this item on your behalf and handles shipping, customs, and support to South Africa.
At the crossroads of life, death and rebirth stands the Goddess Hekate. Honoured by men, women and gods alike, traces of her ancient provenance reach back through the millennia providing clues about her nature and origins along the way. Depictions of her as three-formed facing in three ways, sometimes with the heads of animals such as the horse, dog and snake hint at her liminal nature, as well as the powers she holds over the triple realms of earth, sea and sky. The sorcery of Medea and Circe, the witchcraft of the women of Thessaly, and the writings of philosophers such as Hesiod and Porphyry, all provide glimpses into the world of those who honoured her. Her magical powers were considered so great that even King Solomon became associated with her, she was incorporated into Jewish magic, and merged with other goddesses including Artemis, Selene, Bendis and the Egyptian Isis. Whilst for some she was the Witch Goddess, for others she was the ruler of angels and daimons, who made predictions about Jesus and Christianity. Wherever you look, be it in the texts of Ancient Greece and Rome, Byzantium or the Renaissance, the Greek Magical Papyri or the Chaldean Oracles, you will find Hekate. The magical whir of the strophalos and the barbarous words of the voces magicae carry her message; the defixiones, love spells and charms all provide us with examples of the magic done in her name. She was also associated with the magic of death, including necromancy and reanimation; as well as prophetic dreams, nightmares, healing herbs and poisons. The temples dedicated to her and the important role she played in the mysteries of Eleusis, Samothrace and Aigina all provide us with clues to her majesty. The popular shrines at the doorways of ordinary people, offerings left at the crossroads, and guardian statues of her at the entranceways to cities and temples all attest to her status in the hearts and minds of those who knew her mysteries. In this book the authors draw from a wide range of sources, bringing together historical research which provides insights into the magical and religious practices associated with this remarkable Goddess. In doing so they provide an indispensable guide for those wishing to explore the mysteries of Hekate today. About the Authors Sorita d'Este and David Rankine are esoteric researchers, mythologists and modern-day magicians who have between them authored more than twenty published books on magic, mythology, folklore and the occult. Sorita is the editor of the anthology "HEKATE KEYS TO THE CROSSROADS" and the author of Artemis: Virgin Goddess of the Sun & Moon. Together they have produced titles such as Visions of the Cailleach, The Isles of the Many Gods and The Guises of the Morrigan. Review: Rites of Hekate - To know Hekate is to love Hekate. Scholars David Rankine and Sorita d'Este do an excelent job of informing us about who Hekate is. This awesome book tells us the origins of Hekate and inform's us about the rituals that were dedicated to Hekate. The book comes fully armed with a bibliography and references. Hekate the liminal cthonian Goddess was extrmely popular in Greece. There were several temples dedicated to her and shrines dedicated to her in Temples dedicated to Demeter and Persephone. A common sacrifice tyo Hekate was dogs. Dogs were not usually sacrificed to Greek born deities but were regualarly sacrificed to deities who came from abroad. Where was Hekate from origninally? THe fact that she was often depicted with lions might hint that she came from the Middle East? In fact she did come from elsewhre. Her origins are Thracian mostly from the city of Caria. She was considered a Titan that was allowed to remain after Zeus and cohorts asserted their supremacy over the Titans. She is mentioned in several different texts and their are several different accounts of her parentage. The most commonly accepted is that her parents are Parceles and Arestia. Parceles is the Persian sun God and Aresstia is the star Goddess. He daughters or priestesses are Circe and Medea. They have the power the to draw lunar power from the sky. They also had the ability to work with Herbs and cast spells. In addition to these there were several pertinent follower, Emphedocles was a well known follower who urged vegetarianism as did several of his other followers. He is famous for having informed the world about the elements of air, fire,water and land in the use of magic. He also believed himself to be immortal and he tried to prove this by jumping into a volcano. He was never seen again and al that was left was a bronze sandal. Porphrys was another follower of Hekate who was of Phoenician descent. He alos advocated vegetarianism and he even changed or improvised some of the rituals and sacrifices for Hekate. He turned the worship away from the use of animals towards the use of incense atr certain times of the day. Hekate was usually invi=oked in loves spell and binding spells. Many spells involving her were used to call upon spirtits who had met a violent death. It was believed thpower for magic was extremely powerful. Poppets were used as were herbs. The withces of THessaly were often known for their root work and their devotion to Hekate. Hekate was linked to many Goddess and she also aborbed many Goddesses. She aborbed Brimo and Baubo as lunar Goddesses and many times she was summoned using these name. In certain other works she is linked to Isis, Erishkigal, Selene, Cybil and Diana just to name a few. When linked to another Goddess she is called upon using a hyphenated name like Isis-Hekate. Hekate is ofent called a three faced or three headed goddess. THe head in many of the illustrations were animals heads such as a dogs head,goat heador a snakle head to name a few. Hekate is also unique in that she is named in charms that invoke Hebrew names for deity and also angels and king Solomon. This is indicative of a crossover between Greek and Jewish Magic. THis is one incredible book one that I stongly advise getting. Review: A very in depth research and read - I have been curious about the Goddess Hecate for years. She isone of the transformative goddesses, and I wanted to really know her origins and this book gave me that. Thank you for the deep research done.
| Best Sellers Rank | #40,000 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #5 in Paganism #20 in Witchcraft Religion & Spirituality #21 in Magic Studies (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 1,004 Reviews |
S**W
Rites of Hekate
To know Hekate is to love Hekate. Scholars David Rankine and Sorita d'Este do an excelent job of informing us about who Hekate is. This awesome book tells us the origins of Hekate and inform's us about the rituals that were dedicated to Hekate. The book comes fully armed with a bibliography and references. Hekate the liminal cthonian Goddess was extrmely popular in Greece. There were several temples dedicated to her and shrines dedicated to her in Temples dedicated to Demeter and Persephone. A common sacrifice tyo Hekate was dogs. Dogs were not usually sacrificed to Greek born deities but were regualarly sacrificed to deities who came from abroad. Where was Hekate from origninally? THe fact that she was often depicted with lions might hint that she came from the Middle East? In fact she did come from elsewhre. Her origins are Thracian mostly from the city of Caria. She was considered a Titan that was allowed to remain after Zeus and cohorts asserted their supremacy over the Titans. She is mentioned in several different texts and their are several different accounts of her parentage. The most commonly accepted is that her parents are Parceles and Arestia. Parceles is the Persian sun God and Aresstia is the star Goddess. He daughters or priestesses are Circe and Medea. They have the power the to draw lunar power from the sky. They also had the ability to work with Herbs and cast spells. In addition to these there were several pertinent follower, Emphedocles was a well known follower who urged vegetarianism as did several of his other followers. He is famous for having informed the world about the elements of air, fire,water and land in the use of magic. He also believed himself to be immortal and he tried to prove this by jumping into a volcano. He was never seen again and al that was left was a bronze sandal. Porphrys was another follower of Hekate who was of Phoenician descent. He alos advocated vegetarianism and he even changed or improvised some of the rituals and sacrifices for Hekate. He turned the worship away from the use of animals towards the use of incense atr certain times of the day. Hekate was usually invi=oked in loves spell and binding spells. Many spells involving her were used to call upon spirtits who had met a violent death. It was believed thpower for magic was extremely powerful. Poppets were used as were herbs. The withces of THessaly were often known for their root work and their devotion to Hekate. Hekate was linked to many Goddess and she also aborbed many Goddesses. She aborbed Brimo and Baubo as lunar Goddesses and many times she was summoned using these name. In certain other works she is linked to Isis, Erishkigal, Selene, Cybil and Diana just to name a few. When linked to another Goddess she is called upon using a hyphenated name like Isis-Hekate. Hekate is ofent called a three faced or three headed goddess. THe head in many of the illustrations were animals heads such as a dogs head,goat heador a snakle head to name a few. Hekate is also unique in that she is named in charms that invoke Hebrew names for deity and also angels and king Solomon. This is indicative of a crossover between Greek and Jewish Magic. THis is one incredible book one that I stongly advise getting.
M**N
A very in depth research and read
I have been curious about the Goddess Hecate for years. She isone of the transformative goddesses, and I wanted to really know her origins and this book gave me that. Thank you for the deep research done.
J**N
Print on demand dropped the ball.
The book is a great primer to summarize Hekate. It is filled with excerpts and historical examples providing detail without unnecessary bulk. This is not a work of prose and can be a little dry at times, but the information within is clearly written. My main gripe is with the print on demand service Amazon uses. You can see in my pictures that the book is poorly bound and some pages are literally falling out. I'm not going to knock stars off the review, because I do truly enjoy and value the book and the author doesn't deserve to get dinged because the print service can't do their job. Tl;dr Great book, highly recommended. Print on demand service needs to fix their quality control.
S**.
Good information but some organization and grammar issues
For purely information-related concerns, I can't fault Luminal Rites. I learned a wide array of fascinating facts, and I enjoyed finding out the history surrounding Hekate, her potential origins, and her worshipers. I am almost tempted to give the book five stars. However, d'Este and Rankine have a problem as writers: they need help with their grammar and occasionally their organization. As an English instructor and freelance editor, I couldn't help noticing the grammatical errors, most of which were comma errors. These ranged from the occasional fused sentence or comma splice to the often random, misplaced comma (e.g., a comma randomly thrown in before a verb, like this: I, stopped my car). There were enough such errors to distract me. Seeing as how I live in the U.S. and not the UK, I won't make any judgments on what I experienced as diction oddities. I'm well aware that American English and British English are drifting further and further apart in word choice and word use. However, I don't believe for a moment that British English puts commas between subjects and verbs, such as "I, ran." I suppose my frustration--other than the result of having to reread several sentences in order to make sense of them--is in part due to the fact that the publisher, Avalonia, should have editors on staff, and yet they clearly don't. Or, if they do, they should be fired. The other problem I experienced was misplaced information in a chapter, which resulted in confusion, and even one chapter that changed topics and never finished discussing the topic in its title. Several paragraphs contained two or more topics, which for the reader leads to confusion or to a sense that the writer is rambling. An editor could have fixed that in short order, especially in the case of the chapter that didn't cover its proposed topic. All the critiques aside, I'm not sorry I bought this book. d'Este and Rankine are clearly passionate about their work, and they provided me with a wide berth of knowledge about Hekate. For that, I'm profoundly grateful.
E**A
Lots of Information, Keep a Pencil Handy
If you ever wanted to know everything you didn't really want to know about the Goddess Hecate ( and more ) this is the book for you. Sorita d'Este has a unique talent of blasting through the mythology that surrounded this unique Goddess and providing the source of where the mythology came from, without ever becoming preachy, and allowing the reader to reach his or her own conclusions regarding what to keep, and what to throw out of a contemporary practice. I found the quotations from many of the ancient manuscripts to be a huge eye-opener, and much more enlightening than I expected. From the first chapter through the end of the book I kept an editing pencil handy, basically crossing out any information that was upsetting or that I did not wish to encounter while honoring a respected Goddess. We can't change history, but we can learn and change our attitudes about what is acceptable and not acceptable in personal practice. Highly recommended for serious research, with the reservation that much of the material is not to be used for contemporary practitioners. If you are like me, you may be surprised to learn that most of the correspondences we've grown accustomed to associating with Hecate may be based on things which have little to do with the most polite ways of honoring this Goddess. Highly recommended reading.
A**0
Great book for history and symbolism of Hekate
Really great book for understanding the history and symbolism behind Hekate. Doesn’t describe how to practice as much, but it has a huge emphasis on understanding Hekate’s place in history. It was the first book I got for her study, and I would highly recommend it.
M**'
In my opinion it is the best historical crash-course on Hekate that there is.
When people ask me what book they should read to learn more about Hekate, Sorita d’Este and David Rankine’s Hekate Liminal Rites: A Study of the Rituals, Magic and Symbols of the Torch-Bearing Triple Goddess of the Crossroads is always my first recommendation. In my opinion it is the best historical crash-course on Hekate that there is. Coming in at only 194 pages, the book is short but packed with accurate information. The authors cover Hekate throughout the ages from some of her pre-Greek origins to the Hekate of the Classical Era to Hekate Soteira of the Chaldean Oracles to Hekate of the Greek Magical Papyri. The power of this book is it’s broad scope and the authors’ ability to easily convey areas of research in an extremely understandable manner with a clear writing style. The book covers some of her main symbols and animals and their significance, historical spells and offerings as well as devotes of hers both historical and mythical. Diving into the Greek Magical Papyri or the Chaldean Oracles can be difficult for someone new to Hekate. Works that focus on Hekate in one era of history like Hekate Soteira: A Study of Hekate’s Roles in the Chaldean Oracles and Related Literature by Sarah Illes Johnston or Hekate in Ancient Greek Religion by Robert Von Rudloff, while fantastic as well, can be a bit inaccessible, complicated and confusing for someone completely new to Hekate. The authors do a great job of providing a quick, accurate and informative platform for the seeker to have enough of a crash-course in these areas to start exploring other texts that dive a bit deeper on Hekate.
L**T
A wealth of historical religious information
Get this book! This is an excellent book and helps to bridge your knowledge. Just buy the book!
M**N
Impressed.
Was sent real fast which is good because I needed it for a reading group. Really informative book on Hekate.
D**U
LE livre
Perfect book. I'm reading it and that's a real joyce. Sources, explications, all everything about Hecate is in this book. Really.
M**L
Must read!
A book full of passion and love for the subject! It mainly gives the reader historical backround. From there one can easily take off into more and deeper research. Great book for witches, mages and people interested in greek mythology and magic.
A**Z
Genial 👌😉
Llegó mucho antes de lo previsto!!☺️💪✨
G**S
Me encanta
Muy interesante y completo. Me ayudó mucho a conocer más a fondo a Hekate.
Trustpilot
2 days ago
3 days ago