Gathered From Many Different
Sources
The
pentagram has long been associated with mystery and magic. It is the simplest
form of star shape that can be drawn unicursally, with a single line, hence it is
sometimes called the Endless Knot. Other names are the Goblin's Cross, the
Pentalpha, the Witch's Foot, the Devil's Star and the Seal of Solomon (more
correctly attributed to the hexagram).
It has long been believed to be
a potent protection against evil and demons, hence a symbol of safety, and was
sometimes worn as an amulet for happy homecoming. The old folk-song :
"Green Grow the Rushes, O!" refers to the use of the pentagram above
doors and windows in the line: " Five is the symbol at your door."
The potency and associations of
the pentagram have evolved throughout history. Today it is an ubiquitous symbol
of Neo-Pagans with much depth of magickal and symbolic meaning.
The
Pentagram Through History
The
pentagram symbol today is ascribed many meanings and deep significance, though
much of this is very recent. However, it has been used throughout history and
in many contexts:
The
earliest known use of the pentagram dates back to around the Uruk period around
3500BC at Ur of the Chaldees in Ancient Mesopotamia where it was found on
potsherds together with other signs of the period associated with the earliest
known developments of written language. In later periods of Mesopotamian art,
the pentagram was used in royal inscriptions and was symbolic of imperial power
extending out to "the four corners of the world". Amongst the
Hebrews, the symbol was ascribed to Truth and to the five books of the
Pentateuch. It is sometimes, incorrectly, called the Seal of Solomon (see
Hexagram) though its usage was in parallel with the hexagram. In Ancient
Greece, it was called the Pentalpha, being geometrically composed of five A's.
Unlike earlier civilizations, the Greeks did not generally attribute other
symbolic meanings to the letters of their alphabet, but certain symbols became
connected with Greek letter shapes or positions (eg Gammadion, Alpha-Omega).
The geometry of the pentagram and its metaphysical associations were explored
by the Pythagoreans (after Pythagoras 586-506BC) who considered it an emblem of
perfection. Together with other discovered knowledge of geometric figures and
proportion, it passed down into post-Hellenic art where the golden proportion
may be seen in the designs of some temples.
Early Christians attributed the pentagram to
the Five Wounds of Christ and from then until medieval times, it was a
lesser-used Christian symbol. Prior to the time of the Inquisition, there were
no evil associations to the pentagram. Rather its form implied Truth, Religious
Mysticism and the work of The Creator. The Emperor Constantine I who, after
gaining the help of the Christian church in his military and religious takeover
of the Roman Empire in 312 AD, used the pentagram, together with the chi-rho
symbol (a symbolic form of cross) in his seal and amulet.
However,
it was the cross (a symbol of suffering) rather than the pentagram (a symbol of
truth) that was used as a symbol by the Church which subsequently came to power
and who's manifest destiny was to usurp the supreme power of the Roman Empire.
The
annual church feast of Epiphany, celebrating the visit of the three Magi to the
infant Jesus as well as the Church's mission to bring truth to the Gentiles had
as its symbol the pentagram, (although in present times the symbol has been
changed to a five-pointed star in reaction to the Neo-Pagan use of the
pentagram).
In
the legend of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, the pentagram was Sir Gawain's
glyph, inscribed in gold on his shield, symbolizing the five knightly virtues -
generosity, courtesy, chastity, chivalry and piety.
In
Medieval times, the Endless Knot was a symbol of Truth and was a protection
against demons. It was used as an amulet of personal protection and to guard
windows and doors. The pentagram with one point upwards symbolized summer; with
two points upwards, it was a sign for winter.
During
the long period of the Inquisition, there was much promulgation of lies and
accusations in the interests of orthodoxy and elimination of heresy. The Church
lapsed into a long period of the very diabolism it sought to oppose. The
pentagram was seen to symbolize a Goat's Head or the Devil in the form of
Baphomet and it was Baphomet whom the Inquisition accused the Templars of
worshipping.
The
Dominicans of the Inquisition moved their attention from the Christian heretics
to the Pagan Witches, to those who only paid lip- service to Christianity but
still followed an Old Religion and to the wise- ones amongst them. In the purge
on Witches, other horned Gods such as Pan became equated with the Devil (a
Christian concept) and the pentagram, the folk symbol of security, for the
first time in history, was equated with evil and was called the Witch's Foot.
The Old Religion and its symbols went underground, in fear of
the Church's persecution, and there it stayed, gradually withering, for
centuries.
After
The Inquisition
In
the foundation of Hermeticism, in hidden societies of craftsmen and scholarly
men, away from the eyes of the Church and its paranoia, the proto-science of
alchemy developed along with its occult philosophy and cryptical symbolism.
Graphical and geometric symbolism became very important and the period of the
Renaissance emerged.
The
concept of the microcosmic world of Man as analogous to the macrocosm, the
greater universe of spirit and elemental matter became a part of traditional
western occult teaching, as it had long been in eastern philosophies, As Above,
So Below. The pentagram, the 'Star of the Microcosm', symbolized Man within the
microcosm, representing in analogy the Macrocosmic universe.
The upright pentagram bears some resemblance
to the shape of man with his legs and arms outstretched. In Tycho Brahe's
Calendarium Naturale Magicum Perpetuum (1582) occurs a pentagram with human
body imposed and the Hebrew for YHSVH associated with the elements. An
illustration attributed to Brae's contemporary Agrippa (Henry Cornelius Agrippa
von Nettesheim) is of similar proportion and shows the five planets and the
moon, at the center point, the genitalia. Other illustrations of the period by
Robert Fludd and Leonardo da Vinci show geometric relationships of man to the
universe.
Later, the pentagram came to
be symbolic of the relationship of the head to the four limbs and hence of the
pure concentrated essence of anything (or the spirit) to the four traditional
elements of matter, earth, water, air and fire - spirit is The Quintessence.
In
Freemasonry, Man as Microprosopus was and is associated with the five-pointed
Pentalpha. The symbol was used, interlaced and upright for the sitting Master
of the Lodge. The geometric properties and structure of the Endless Knot were
appreciated and symbolically incorporated into the 72 degree angle of the
compasses, the Masonic emblem of virtue and duty. The origins of freemasonry
are lost in the depths of history, obscured by the traditional Craft secrecy of
the order, but there are signs throughout history of the associations of
craftsmanship and ritual and symbolism that have remained known only to a few,
and the history of the pentagram has remained occluded in the same kind of
mystery. The women's branch of freemasonry uses the five pointed Eastern Star
with two points up as its emblem. Each point commemorates a heroine of biblical
lore.
No
known graphical illustration associating the pentagram with evil appears until
the nineteenth century. Eliphaz Levi Zahed (actually the pen name of Alphonse
Louis Constant, a defrocked French Catholic Abbé) illustrates the upright
pentagram of microcosmic man beside an inverted pentagram with the goat's head
of Baphomet. It is this illustration and juxtaposition that has led to the
concept of different orientations of the pentagram being good and evil.
Against
the rationalism of the 18th century came a reaction in the 19th century with
the growth of a new mysticism owing much to the Holy Qabalah, the ancient oral
tradition of Judaism relating the cosmogony of God and the universe and the
moral and occult truths of their relationship to Man. It is not so much a
religion as a system of understanding based upon symbolism and the numerical
and alphabetical interrelationships of words and concepts, the Gematria.
The
Golden Dawn did much to advance and disseminate the roots of modern Hermetic
Qabalah around the world in its time of strength (from 1888 to around the start
of the First World War), and through the writings and work of a number of its
adepts and adherents have come some of the most important ideas of today's
Qabalist philosophy and magick.
In
the 1940's Gerald Gardner adopted the pentagram with two points upward as the
sigil of second degree initiation in the newly emergent, Neo-Pagan rituals of
Witchcraft, later to become known as Wicca. The one-point upward pentagram
together with the upright triangle symbolized third degree initiation. (A point
downwards triangle is the symbol of First Degree Initiates)
Today
It
was not until the late 1960's that the pentagram again became an amuletic
symbol to be worn. Co-incidentally with the rise of popular interest in
Witchcraft and Wicca and the publication of many books (including several
novels) on the subject, there was a reaction to the Church.
In
its extreme, one aspect of that reaction was in the establishment of the
satanic cult - The Church of Satan - by Anton LaVay. For its emblem, this cult
adopted the inverted pentagram after the Baphomet image of Eliphas Levi. The
reaction of the Christian church was to condemn as evil all who took the pentalpha
as a symbol and even to condemn the symbol itself, much as had been the
post-war attitude to the swastika.
The
distinction between the point-upwards and point-downwards pentagram forms
became accentuated in the minds of Pagans and led to the concepts of white
Witchcraft and black. Those who took on board the strong personal ethical code
of Wicca, the Wiccan Rede of "An it harm none, do what you will" did
not wish to be tarred with the same brush as the Satanists who's philosophy is
one of the domination of the spirit by the physical body - the priority of
matter and physical existence.
Hence,
despite the use and the different meaning of the inverted pentagram as a symbol
of Gardnerian initiation, other Wiccans, notably in the USA where the fundamentalist
Christians are particularly aggressive to those who do not share their beliefs,
are against any usage of the symbol. It is sad to say that even the use of the
upright pentagram gives rise to social discrimination against Pagans in some
communities.
Otherwise,
the pentagram or pentacle has become firmly established as a common Neo-Pagan
and Wiccan symbol, acquiring many aspects of mystique and associations that are
today often considered to be ancient folk-lore !
The
antiquity of the pentagram is certain; its meanings and associations have
evolved and richened throughout its history. Its use within modern Neo-Paganism
as a group symbol is as important as the cross has been in the history of
Christianity and it is in the ubiquity and the attributed meanings of the
symbol that its potency lies rather than in its antiquity. From the Earth aware
attitudes and respect of life of modern Pagans has already come the movement
towards protecting and conserving the ecology and resources of our planet. Perhaps
they will see the dawn of a real new age of hope or perhaps just the end of an
age of humanity.