Cast Iron Cauldron with Tripple Moon Symbols - X-Large


£90



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  • Cast Iron Cauldrons in Black
  • With Removable Lid and Carry Handle
  • Also available in a small, medium and large size.

Fabulous, alternative home decor or if you're brave enough with magic and potions and spells - then you can brew a potion inside - just be careful and keep out of reach of children.

If you've been stuck for years trying to be for the Witch in your friends or family, then we've got the answers here. See below for the meanings behind each design.

Dimensions: Height: 21cm | Width: 21.5cm |  Depth: 17cm | Weight: 4.5kg

The Triple Moon:

The triple moon symbol, depicting the three phases of the moon (waxing crescent, full moon and waning crescent), is often used to represent the Triple Goddess of Wicca and Neopaganism, where the Goddess is ascribed the three aspects of Maiden (representing youthful enthusiasm and the promise of new beginnings), Mother (representing ripeness, fertility, sexuality and power) and Crone (representing wisdom, repose, death and endings). These cauldrons are also available in a medium and large size! Perfect for all your charms and rituals.

The Triquetra:

The word "triquetra" originally meant simply triangle or any three-cornered shape, but it has come to refer exclusively to a three-pointed figure composed of three overlapping "vesicae piscis" (the shapes formed by the intersection of two circles with the same radius), sometimes with an added circle in or around it. The triquetra has been found on runestones in Northern Europe and on early Germanic coins (where it presumably had some Pagan religious meaning), as well as in early Celtic art. It was later used by Christians as a symbol of the Trinity (Father, Son and Holy Spirit). Nowadays, it is often used by Wiccans and other Neopagans to symbolize either the Wiccan Triple Goddess, the interconnected parts of our existence (Mind, Body and Soul), or many other concepts that seem to fit into this idea of a unity.

 

The Pentagram:

The five-pointed star known as the pentagram or pentangle, often circumscribed by a circle, symbolizes the five classical elements in Wicca (earth, air, fire, water and spirit), as well as the five appendages of the human body, the five senses and various other magical and symbolic associations. The pentagram was used symbolically in ancient Greece (particularly among the followers of Pythagoras), Mesopotamia and Babylonia, and was also used as a Christian symbol for the five senses or the five wounds of Christ. Cornelius Agrippa and others perpetuated the popularity of the pentagram as a magic symbol, keeping the Pythagorean attributions of elements to the five points. Six- and seven-pointed stars were also used with different symbolism. By the mid-19th Century, a further distinction had developed amongst occultists regarding the pentagram's orientation: it was considered essentially "good" when shown with a single point upwards (depicting spirit presiding over the four elements of matter), but Eliphas Lévi called it "evil" when it appeared inverted (point down). The inverted pentagram came to be associated, particularly by Christians, with Satanism and evil, and the modern Satanism movement adopted the inverted pentagram (often with the head of a goat inside it) as the Sigil of Baphomet.


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