(Art) Cailleach, The Queen of Winter by Judith Shaw

The Cailleach (KAL-y-ach), which literally translates as the “Veiled One” is an ancient Goddess whose origins are unknown.  When the Celts arrived in Ireland and Scotland she was there. Over time Her name came to mean “old wife” or “old woman”.  And yet she was thought to never grow old, an all powerful, ageless, Goddess of transformation.

In one of her stories, Cailleach, as an old hag, seeks love from the hero.  If he accepts Her, She then transforms into a beautiful young woman, symbolizing the transformation occurring in the depths of winter when the seeds lay dormant in the earth.  Yet alive within this dormancy is the promise of rebirth in the spring.  She is the guardian of the life force, finding and nourishing the seeds, commanding the power of life and death.  As the final phase of the Triple Goddess, she rules the eternal wheel of reincarnation. Cailleach personifies death and the transformative power of darkness.  She leads us through death to rebirth.

The Cailleach by Judith Shaw

The Cailleach, a Dark Goddess of nature, is clearly one with the land.  Sometimes depicted with one eye, She sees beyond duality peering into the Oneness of all Being.  She is the embodiment of winter, clothing the land with the whiteness of snow.  The sacred stones are Her special places.  She leaps from mountaintop to mountaintop, dropping rocks to create sacred hills, the Sidhe.  She carries a slachdam, the Druidic rod or a hammer with which she wields power over the seasons and the weather, unleashing powerful and cleansing storms.

Read the rest of this post in Feminism and Religion.

Published with the permission by Judith Shaw. Read Meet Mago Contributor, Judith Shaw.


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