Cybele is the primary goddess associated with transformed priestesses,
but there are many similar traditions in the ancient Mediterranean world
and beyond.
Isis:
Gender-variant priestesses, often self-emasculated, danced and performed
magic rites with the other women devotées. Such a dance can be viewed
on a marble relief at Ariccia, near Rome on the Appian Way.
Ecstatic dancing, lifting of skirts, shaking of buttocks, tossing
of heads and raising of arms reveal the enthusiasm of the dancers.
It also reveals that some are clearly male-born. Such as these were
called cinaedi.
Hêra:
Athenaeus, in his third-century text, Deipnosophistoi, describes
the traditional dress of Hera's gender-variant priestesses:
"snowy tunics that swept the floor of wide earth",
cunningly-wrought arm bracelets, long tresses braided with gold
ribbons and crowned with ornate tiaras of gold. They dwelt on the
beautiful island of Samos, source of the pottery shards
frequently used in the emasculation rituals of Cybele's
gallae.
Hekátê:
Known as semnotatoi or demosioi the "revered ones
of the Goddess" told fortunes, practiced magic, and cared for Her
sacred places. Physically changed by ritual, they served the
patron-goddess of the temenos (sacred threshold), of
magic, and of all those who live "on the edge."
Ma-Enyo:
At Comana, in Asia Minor, this war Goddess was served by a
community of thousands of hierodules known as fanatici.
Among these were gallae attired in heavy black robes, garland
necklaces, and tiaras over dyed-blond braids. They carried
double-axe emblems in procession and used a whirling dance to
achieve states of ecstasy. The latter fragment of tradition remains today
in the dervishes of Konya. The Roman Goddess Bellona
became syncretized with Ma-Enyo in late Roman times, though practices
changed little. Patriarchists among the Greek population
condemned Comana as a city of effeminacy and un-manly
luxuries.
Demeter:
The Eleusinian Mysteries celebrated this ancient agrarian goddess
and her daughter Persephone. One part of the mystery rites was
the "joking at the bridge", gephryismos, conducted by a
galla playing the role of Baubo-Iambe. What did the worshippers
see when she lifted her skirts in mockery? Many were drawn to
initiation in these rites, including the Emperor Hadrian and his
lover, Antinous.
Kotys and Sabazius:
This Thracian Goddess and her consort parallel Cybele and Attis
in numerous ways, particularly in association with music,
healing, and variant gender expression. Followers were called
baptai owing to their rites of ritual baptism before
communion. They would chant in unison, "I have fled the evil, I
have found a better way." The term "baptai" among the Romans,
came to designate effeminacy and licentiousness for those of
homophobic mindset.
Asherah:
She is the Queen of Heaven, in other languages and ages
identified as Ashtoreth, Athirat, Astarte, and
Ishtar. Yahweh, the Hebrew God elevated to become
the sole deity , was Her consort. Her "male" priestesses were known as
kelabim, the faithful "dogs" of the Goddess, who practiced
divinatory arts, danced in processions, and served as hierodules,
qedeshim, in the company of other priestesses. Elements
of the goddess worship were largely erased in a cultural purge c. 630
BCE by King Yosiah, at the behest of Yahweh's priests, who required
supremacy.
Aphrodite:
The Cyprian Goddess of love was sometimes depicted in a
gender-mixed form, as in the beautiful statue of Hermaphrodite in
the Capitoline Museum. Her son/consort was Adonis,
celebrated at Aphaca in what is now Lebanon. The annual rites of
the Adonia vividly recall those of Attis. Offerings of gold,
silver, flowers, and clothing were cast into the Adonis River
(Nahr Ibrahim) by priestesses including many who had crossed the
boundary between the sexes. A ball of fire was said to appear
above the temple as a sign of reunion with the Goddess. Venus
Castina became the patroness of Roman males who were born with
a woman's soul.
Atargatis/ Derketo/ Dea Syria:
The Syrian Goddess at Hierapolis had a consort
named variously as Hadad or Attah. Attah committed
self-castration in repentance for an infidelity. The pair, depicted in the
garb of Egyptian women, are also served by gallae and priestesses. Eunus,
a follower, led a massive four-year rebellion of slaves in 135
BCE, almost thirty hears after thousands of worshippers of
Atargatis were slain at Carnaim.
Diana:
The cultus of the Roman Diana eventually merged with that of the
Hellenic Artemis, goddess of the moon and of the legendary
Amazons. She was worshipped in Ephesus as a black meteoric stone
fashioned by the Ionians into the many-breasted image of the same
Great Mother revered throughout Asia Minor. Even the Christian
scriptures jealously echoed "...Great is Diana of the Ephesians"
(Acts 19:28). Diana is quintessentially the Goddess
of the Antianeirai, female warriors, lovers of the hunt,
who refused marriage and the typical feminine roles of the age.
Antianeirai, having little regard for men, favored the
companionship of women ... and welcomed gallae as sisters. Diana
was served by two kinds of priestess: the melissai, "honeybees" ,
and the remarkable male-to-female megabyzes, the title
of Persian origin. The megabyzes, attired in gold-embroidered
actaea of Tyrrhian purple, were famed throughout the known world
for twin attributes of wisdom and beauty. They carried the image
of the Goddess in grand processions on her local festival in late May.
These gender-variant priestesses commonly served as makers of
magic amulets... telling fortunes through casting of Ephesian "runes".
The Great Temple, one of the famed Seven Wonders, met final
destruction in the year 405 CE. Constantinople's Hagia Sophia was
raised from the profits of this pillage, though many feared that
its stones might yet be tainted by the presence of the Ancient
Goddess.