Ancient Goddesses of Love and Fertility

These are goddesses of love, beauty (or attraction), promiscuity, fecundity, magic, and an association with death. Personifying abstract powers, gods and goddesses are held responsible for many of the mysteries of life. One of the most important mysteries to humanity is that of birth. Fertility and sexual attraction are key elements in the survival of a family or race. The very complex feeling we shorthand as love makes humans bond with each other. Ancient societies revered the goddesses held responsible for these gifts. Some of these love goddesses seem the same across national borders—with just a name change.

01
of 09

Aphrodite

Relief of the Birth of Aphrodite from Aphrodisias
Relief of the Birth of Aphrodite from Aphrodisias. Ken and Nyetta/Flickr/ (CC BY 2.0)

Aphrodite was the Greek goddess of love and beauty. In the story of the Trojan War, the Trojan Paris awarded Aphrodite the apple of discord after judging her to be the most beautiful of the goddesses. She then sided with the Trojans throughout the war. Aphrodite was married to the ugliest of the gods, the limp smithy Hephaestus. She had many affairs with men, both human and divine. Eros, Anteros, Hymenaios, and Aeneas are some of her children. Aglaea (Splendor), Euphrosyne (Mirth), and Thalia (Good Cheer), known collectively as The Graces, followed in the retinue of Aphrodite.

02
of 09

Ishtar

Lion passant from wall of the sacred way to the Ishtar Gate, Babylon (Iraq), c575 BC.
The lion was the cult animal of Ishtar, great goddess of the Sumero-Akkadian pantheon. Print Collector/Getty Images / Getty Images

Ishtar, the Babylonian goddess of love, procreation, and war, was the daughter and consort of the air god Anu. She was known for destroying her lovers, including a lion, stallion, and shepherd. When the love of her life, the farm god Tammuz, died, she followed him to the Underworld, but she was unable to retrieve him. Ishtar was the heir to the Sumerian goddess Inanna but was more promiscuous. She is called the Cow of Sin (a moon god). She was the wife of a human king, Sargon of Agade.

"In From Ishtar to Aphrodite," Miroslav Marcovich; Journal of Aesthetic Education, Vol. 30, No. 2, (Summer, 1996), pp. 43-59, Marcovich argues that since Ishtar was the wife of an Assyrian king and since warfare was the main occupation of such kings, Ishtar felt it was his marital duty to become a war goddess, so she went with her husband on his military adventures to assure their success.Marcovich also argues that Ishtar is​ queen of heaven and associated with the planet Venus.

03
of 09

Inanna

Part of front of Inanna temple of Kara Indasch from Uruk Vorderasiatisches Museum Berlin
Part of front of Inanna temple of Kara Indasch from Uruk Vorderasiatisches Museum Berlin. Marcus Cyron/Wikimedia Commons (CC-BY-SA-3.0)

Inanna was the oldest of the love goddess of the Mesopotamian region. She was a Sumerian goddess of love and war. Although she is regarded as a virgin, Inanna is a goddess responsible for sexual love, procreation, and fertility. She gave herself to the first mythological king of Sumer, Dumuzi. She was worshiped from the third millennium B.C. and was still worshiped in the 6th century as a goddess driving a 7-lion chariot.

"Matronit: The Goddess of the Kabbala," by Raphael Patai. History of Religions, Vol. 4, No. 1. (Summer, 1964), pp. 53-68.

04
of 09

Ashtart (Astarte)

An altar to Astarte from Syria
An altar to Astarte from Syria. QuartierLatin1968/Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0-3.0-2.5-2.0-1.0)

Ashtart or Astarte is a Semitic goddess of sexual love, maternity , and fertility, consort of El at Ugarit. In Babylonia, Syria, Phoenicia, and elsewhere, it used to be thought that her priestesses were sacred prostitutes.

"Recent research on the institution of sacred prostitution, however, shows that this practice did not exist at all in the ancient Mediterranean or Near East.19 The concept of selling sex for the profit of a deity was invented by Herodotos in Book 1.199 of his Histories...."

—"A Reconsideration of the Aphrodite-Ashtart Syncretism," by Stephanie L. Budin; Numen, Vol. 51, No. 2 (2004), pp. 95-145

Ashtart's son is Tamuz, whom she suckles in artistic representations. She is also a war goddess and is associated with leopards or lions. Sometimes she is two-horned.

There has been what is called "interpretatio syncretism" or one-to-one correspondence between Ashtart and Aphrodite, according to Budin.

05
of 09

Venus

The Venus de Milo with an arch above.
The Venus de Milo. Corbis via Getty Images / Getty Images

Venus was the Roman goddess of love and beauty. Usually equated with the Greek goddess Aphrodite, Venus was originally an Italic goddess of vegetation and patron of gardens. The daughter of Jupiter, her son was Cupid.

Venus was a goddess of chastity, although her love affairs were patterned after Aphrodite's, and included a marriage to Vulcan and an affair with Mars. She was associated with the arrival of spring and bringer of joy for humans and gods. In the story of Cupid and Psyche, from "The Golden Ass," by Apuleius, Venus sends her daughter-in-law to the Underworld to bring back a beauty ointment.

06
of 09

Hathor

Mural Painting in Tomb of Bannantiu Depicting Solar Barque with Egyptian Gods and Goddesses
Mural Painting in Tomb of Bannantiu Depicting Solar Barque with Egyptian Gods and Goddesses. Corbis via Getty Images / Getty Images

Hathor is an Egyptian goddess who sometimes wears a sun disk with horns on her head and sometimes appears as a cow. She can destroy mankind but is also a patron of lovers and a goddess of childbirth. Hathor nursed the infant Horus when he was being hidden from Seth.

07
of 09

Isis

Egyptian deities: Ptah, Isis nursing Horus, Imnhotep
Egyptian deities: Ptah, Isis nursing Horus, Imnhotep. Wellcome Images/Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 4.0)

Isis, an Egyptian goddess of magic, fertility, and motherhood, was the daughter of the god Keb (Earth) and the goddess Nut (Sky). She was the sister and wife of Osiris. When her brother Seth killed her husband, Isis searched for his body and reassembled it, making her also a goddess of the dead. She impregnated herself with Osiris' body and gave birth to Horus. Isis is often depicted wearing cow horns with a solar disk between them.

08
of 09

Freya

The goddess Freya
The goddess Freya. Carl Emil Doepler [Public domain] via Wikimedia Commons

Freya was a beautiful Vanir Norse goddess of love, magic, and divination, who was called upon for help in matters of of love. Freya was the daughter of the god Njord, and the sister of Freyr. Freya herself was loved by men, giants, and dwarfs. By sleeping with four dwarfs she acquired the Brisings necklace. Freya travels on a gold-bristled boar, Hildisvini, or a chariot pulled by two cats.

09
of 09

Nügua

Nügua and Fuxi on a mural on a wall in Peterborough, East Anglia.
Nügua and Fuxi on a mural on a wall in Peterborough, East Anglia. CC Flickr User gwydionwilliams

Nügua was primarily a Chinese creator goddess, but after she populated the earth, she taught mankind how to procreate, so she wouldn't have to do it for them.

Format
mla apa chicago
Your Citation
Gill, N.S. "Ancient Goddesses of Love and Fertility." Learn Religions, Apr. 5, 2023, learnreligions.com/top-love-goddesses-118521. Gill, N.S. (2023, April 5). Ancient Goddesses of Love and Fertility. Retrieved from https://www.learnreligions.com/top-love-goddesses-118521 Gill, N.S. "Ancient Goddesses of Love and Fertility." Learn Religions. https://www.learnreligions.com/top-love-goddesses-118521 (accessed March 28, 2024).