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Deities of Winter Solstice
While it may be mostly Pagans and Wiccans who celebrate the Yule holiday,  nearly all cultures and faiths have some sort of winter solstice  celebration or festival. Because of the theme of endless birth, life,  death, and rebirth, the time of the solstice is often associated with  deity and other legendary figures. No matter which path you follow,  chances are good that one of your gods or goddesses has a winter  solstice connection.
Alcyone is the Kingfisher goddess. She nests every winter for two weeks, and while she does, the wild seas become calm and peaceful.
 
In feudal Japan,  worshippers celebrated the return of Ameratasu, the sun goddess, who  slept in a cold, remote cave. When the the other gods woke her with a  loud celebration, she looked out of the cave and saw an image of herself  in a mirror. The other gods convinced her to emerge from her seclusion  and return sunlight to the universe.
 Baldur is associated with the legend of the mistletoe. His mother, Frigga,  honored Baldur and asked all of nature to promise not to harm him.  Unfortunately, in her haste, Frigga overlooked the mistletoe plant, so Loki - the resident trickster  - took advantage of the opportunity and fooled Baldur's blind twin,  Hod, into killing him with a spear made of mistletoe. Baldur was later  restored to life.
 This fertility goddess was worshipped in a secret temple on the Aventine hill in Rome, and only women were permitted to attend her rites. Her annual festival was held early in December.
 In Scotland, she is also called Beira, the Queen of Winter. She is the  hag aspect of the Triple Goddess, and rules the dark days between Samhain and Beltaine.
 Through her daughter, Persephone, Demeter is linked strongly to the  changing of the seasons and is often connected to the image of the Dark Mother in winter. When Persephone was abducted by Hades, Demeter's grief caused the earth to die for six months, until her daughter's return.
 A festival called Brumalia was held every December in honor of Dionysus and his fermented grape wine. The event proved so popular that the Romans adopted it as well in their celebrations of Bacchus.
Frau Holle appears in many different forms in Scandinavian mythology  and legend. She is associated with both the evergreen plants of the Yule  season, and with snowfall, which is said to be Frau Holle shaking out  her feathery mattresses.
 Frigga honored her son, Baldur, by asking all of nature not to harm  him, but in her haste overlooked the mistletoe plant. Loki fooled  Baldur's blind twin, Hod, into killing him with a spear made of  mistletoe but Odin later restored him to life. As thanks, Frigga declared that mistletoe must be regarded as a plant of love, rather than death.
  The Holly King is a figure found in British tales and folklore. He is  similar to the Green Man, the archetype of the forest. In modern Pagan  religion, the Holly King battles the Oak King for supremacy throughout  the year. At the winter solstice, the Holly King is defeated.
 Horus was one of the solar deities of the  ancient Egyptians. He rose and set every day, and is often associated  with Nut, the sky god. Horus later became connected with another sun god, Ra.
This character from Italian folklore  is similar to St. Nicholas, in that she flies around delivering candy  to well-behaved children in early January. She is depicted as an old  woman on a broomstick, wearing a black shawl.
 The custom of appointing a Lord of  Misrule to preside over winter holiday festivities actually has its  roots in antiquity, during the Roman week of Saturnalia.
 Mithras was celebrated as part of a mystery religion in ancient Rome.  He was a god of the sun, who was born around the time of the winter  solstice and then experienced a resurrection around the spring equinox.
  
In some legends, Odin bestowed gifts at Yuletide upon his people,  riding a magical flying horse across the sky. This legend may have  combined with that of St. Nicholas to create the modern Santa Claus.
 
Every December, the Romans threw a week-long celebration of debauchery and fun, called Saturnalia  in honor of their agricultural god, Saturn. Roles were reversed, and  slaves became the masters, at least temporarily. This is where the  tradition of the Lord of Misrule originated.
 Soyal is the Hopi festival  of the winter solstice. It honors the Spider Woman and the Hawk Maiden,  and celebrates the sun's victory over winter's darkness.
Alcyone (Greek)
Ameratasu (Japan)
Baldur (Norse)
Bona Dea (Roman)
Cailleach Bheur (Celtic)
Demeter (Greek)
Dionysus (Greek)
Frau Holle (Norse)
Frigga (Norse)
Holly King (British/Celtic)
Horus (Egyptian)
La Befana (Italian)
Lord of Misrule (British)
Mithras (Roman)
Odin (Norse)
Saturn (Roman)
Spider Woman (Hopi)
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4 comments:
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Happy Yule!
Thank you!
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