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Other Wiccan/Pagan Figures

View our range of Sacred Statues and Icons of other Wiccan/Pagan figures below, all available to purchase online with secure ordering. If you would prefer to speak to a member of the Bell, Book and Candle team, please email us and we'll get straight back to you.

Amazon Archer 5"

Amazon Archer 5"

Legend says these warrior maidens ruled over a large part of Asia Minor. They worshipped Mare Goddess Demeter and wolf-running Artemis, may have been the first culture to tame horses, and were much feared by the post-patriarchal Greeks. Most Amazon images were destroyed to instill the subordination of women. Reclaim her!

[Etruscan, British Museum, c. 480 BCE]

Cold cast bronze.  


Price:   £39.00

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Baal Plaque 7"

Baal Plaque 7"

Baal, Lord of the High Places. So omnipresent was worship of this wild god of the hilltop that his name was carried across prehistoric Europe. The Irish feast Beltain and the Norse god Balder are but two inheritors of this bull-horned deity's potency. Here he is depicted on the Ras Shamra (Syria) stella, wielding thunder-club & lightening bolt spear. Represented as an upright stone or lingam, Baal was consort to Astarte at least 1700 BCE.

[Louvre, 1400 BCE]  


Price:   £20.00

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Gilgamesh with Lion 8"

Gilgamesh with Lion 8"

This Babylonian demi-god made a famous quest. But when he finally found the sacred rose guaranteeing eternal life, it was stolen from him by a serpent, namely the Goddess. He met her disguised as Siduri, an incarnation of Ishtar who bears the sacred beer (or wine) of ecstasy. She taught him to "live for today," enjoying the good things of life such as children, lovemaking with his wife, good food and drink. This "carpe diem" theme becomes an underlying value of later Pagan belief, and is in distinct contrast to our modern Hebrew-Christian inheritance. Note this god's lion and serpent totem animals.

Natural, unpainted Ganges clay.  


Price:   £22.00

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Stag Deer God 7.5" pewter

Stag Deer God 7.5" pewter

Like Bull Gods, the Stag God has symbolized fertility and abundance since Neolithic times. This famous image comes from Anatolian goddess culture (the Alaca Hoyuk site, in central Turkey, dating to c. 5500 BCE) and is called the "Stag of Seven Tines." Since antler tines are fast-growing, they are a metaphor for plant fertility as well. This is one of the first sacred images that was cast in iron.

Pewter with marble base.  


Price:   £30.00

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Standing Male Worshipper 7 1/4"

Standing Male Worshipper 7 1/4"

This Sumerian figure was placed before the devotional image of a Mesopotamian deity. His supplicating pose, with clasped hands and wide-eyed gaze, is meant to serve as a constant reminder of the requests made by the person who placed him there. Serving the same purpose as a votive candle, he kept the prayers active in the mind of Deity.

This standing worshiper, was found in the "Square Temple" at Tell Asmar, perhaps dedicated to the god Enlil, considered the most powerful Mesopotamian god during most of the third millennium B.C.E. Similar statues were often inscribed with the names of rulers and their families in order to pray perpetually on behalf of the person it represented.

[Eshnunna, Sumer, 2750 B.C.E. central Mesopotamia]

Antique stone color resin. 


Price:   £24.00

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Anahita, Lady of the Beasts 9"

Anahita, Lady of the Beasts 9"

Anahita, the Lioness Lady, Queen of Beasts...was associated with Mithraism, with fertility, and is a direct link to Hindu Durga. If cats are your specialty, then this is your Lady!

[British Museum, 500 BCE]

Midnight blue/bronze colored Ganges clay.  


Price:   £25.00

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Al Lat plaque 6"

Al Lat plaque 6"




Price:   £22.00


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Allat - Arabian Moon Goddess

She is the Arabian Supreme goddess; The universal source of nourishment, Mother Earth and her fruits. A triple goddess with Al-Uzza and Menat, oaths were sealed with the vow "By the salt, By the fire, and by Al-Lat who is the greatest of all."

An ancient mother and fertility goddess of the pre-Islamic Arabs and mentioned by Herodotus under the name of Alilat, her name means "the Goddess."

In the trinity of desert goddesses, Al-Uzza "the Mighty" represents the virgin warrior facet. She is the desert goddess of the morning star who had a sanctuary in a grove of acacia trees to the south of Mecca where she was worshipped as a sacred stone in the form of a great uncut block of white granite. Menat, the crone facet, ruled fate and death. Her shrine was between Mecca and Medina where she was worshipped in the form of a black uncut stone.

Muhammad once commanded his followers offer prayers to these three "Allah's daughters." Allat was also said to have been the moon goddess of North Arabia. As the crescent and star Allat and Al-Uzza survive on the flags of Arab countries today. Their names are feminine forms of Allah.

At Petra, the Nabataeans venerated a four-sided stone named after Allat, whose son Dusura (in their system) is a version of Tammuz, the vegetation god characterised by a seasonal death and resurrection, who dwells in the underworld for half the year.

Seven priestesses of Allat served at site of the Black Stone in Mecca, who circled it seven times, naked. Today, the tawaf, the sevenfold counterclockwise circuit of the Ka'bah, is a memory of that ancient practice. The polished black stone in Mecca is said to be set in a large solid silver mount which resembles the vulva of the goddess. Abraham begat his son, Ishmael, the ancestor of all Arab peoples, by the goddess on the Black Stone of the Ka'bah.

Pre-Islamic Arabia was quite female-centered and matrilineal. The clan who worshiped Allat credited her with inventing the camel saddle which allowed them to dominate a large area.

[1st Century CE -- Khanaser, Syria]

6" green quartz color resin 

Asherah 5"

Asherah 5"

Asherah, often represented as a tree, was the ruling queen of the Semitic pantheon. Her "Tree of Knowledge" bore fruit not only to feed the body, but also to nourish the spirit. As the Holy Communion Goddess, she gives sacred purpose to your baking and cooking. Worship of this Hebrew fertility goddess ensured that matrilineal descent patterns would be protected from patriarchy. After harvest, women molded bread loaves shaped just like this figure, which were then blessed. This was the origin of the communion ritual we still celebrate today. Asherah's name means "holy place." Invite her simple form into your kitchen and your heart.

[Israel Museum, Tel Aviv, c.1400 BCE]

Black fired Ganges Clay.  


Price:   £18.00

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Astarte 9" statue

Astarte 9" statue

Astarte was another name for Asherah, the consort of Baal, and one of the most deeply venerated fertility goddesses of ancient Babylon. Gracefully swirling her patterned skirt, the goddess waves sheaves of grain while dancing ecstatically. Rise up and call her name!

[Ras Shamra, 1900 BCE]

Golden-sand colored Gypsumstone statue.  


Price:   £30.00

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Dreaming Goddess of Malta 7"

Dreaming Goddess of Malta 7"

Dreaming Goddess of Malta is Goddess of the Shamanic Journey. Following the influence of dream imagery is one of the most ancient techniques of spiritual growth. Native American "vision quests" and Tibetan "dream yoga" are but two traditional examples of a practice whose modern champions include Karl Jung and Joseph Campbell. On the Mediterranean island of Malta, underground temple chambers shaped like the body of the goddess facilitated this practice. Invite this inspirer and fulfiller of dreams to your altar or bedside.

[National Museum, Valetta, Malta; c. 3200 BCE]  


Price:   £27.00

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 Gaia Blessing Earth 8"

Gaia Blessing Earth 8"

The Mother Goddess archetype, throne-seated and giving birth to all creation, dates to at least 6500 BCE. The Greeks venerated her as Gaia, "the Deep-Breasted One, Oldest of the Old," and dedicated the Erechtheion, a temple adjoining the Parthenon at Athens, to this regal image. Gaia creates all things terrestrial, so we have added our holy planet Earth (removable) for her to cradle to her bosom in the New Millenium. Her sphinx-like human-headed lions symbolize Gaia's role as Alpha and Omega.

[Greek, 7th cent. BCE]

Green bronze color Gypsumstone.  


Price:   £42.00

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Hebat 8.5"

Hebat 8.5"

Hebat, Hittite Isis. The Hittites had a complex culture ranging across what is now Turkey. Their Great Goddess Hebat represented the sun-mother as ruler of heavenly enlightenment. Her dying and reborn consort, Teshub, parallels the Egyptian Isis/Osiris/Horus legend. Her headdress suggests the fountain of life and cup of immortality. The peaceful lion shows she is interconnected with the animal world. Her nursing baby is the numinous ever-coming child of Light. Hebat also parallels the Hebrew Goddess Ashtoreth who was frequently shown flanked by lionesses or standing on top of a lion. Threshing floors were dedicated to Hebat, possibly even the one David purchased on Mount Moriah where King Solomon built his Temple.

[from a bronze statue, 1500 BCE]

Bronze colored resin.  


Price:   £25.00

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Labrys Goddess of Crete 8"

Labrys Goddess of Crete 8"

Labrys Goddess of Crete, Dictynna, dances into our universe. Dressed in nets, She is neither naked nor clad, and lines of force surround Her. Double axes, or labryses, exclaim her active Feminine Energy. Worshippers, in the original palace fresco, throw their arms up in amazement at her appearance.

The labrys is also a symbol of the female community of Lesbos who worshipped only the Goddess in nature and in each other.

The original "She who must be obeyed," Dictynna lived on top of Mount Dicta. Her powerful name lives on in our words "dictate" and "edict."

[From Knossos mural, 2000 BCE]

Handpainted Resin.  


Price:   £29.00

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Lady of Beasts Plaque 5.5"

Lady of Beasts Plaque 5.5"

Lady of the Beasts. In this statue, surrounded by members of the animal kingdom, this Goddess displays her role in supporting life on earth. Her kinship with animal totems shows she is a driving force for fertility in the natural world and able to assume animal form herself. The lions link Her with an arc of Great Goddesses from Sekmet to Lilith, Cybele, Anahita, across to Durga. The alternating rabbits show the union of opposites and the beginning of the spiral of life.

[From a pre-Roman bronze hydria found in Switzerland, 600 BCE]

Bronze colored Gypsumstone.  


Price:   £25.00

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Siduri 5"

Siduri 5"

Give a Cheer for the Goddess of Beer! The Babylonian goddess of barley-beer with brewing pot was known as Ishtar Siduri, and her secret craft provided beverages for special rituals. The ancient recipe has been lost, but scholars suggest that certain mushroom and poppy extracts may have given it a special kick.

[Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, 8th-9th cent. BCE]

Terra Cotta Ganges Clay.  


Price:   £12.00

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Vesta with Pales statue 7"x8"

Vesta with Pales statue 7"x8"

Vesta turns Housework, or any Chore, into Worship. Vesta, Roman Goddess of Household Harmony (whose Greek name Hestia means "hearth"), is accompanied by the donkey-god Pales, a symbol of creative labor and fertility throughout the ancient world. The serpent represents Vesta's generative function, while her scepter and headdress signify her rank. Harmony will reign in your hearth and home as you meditate on this image.

[Berlin Staatliche Museum, 2nd cent. CE]

Brown/gray Gypsumstone statue.  


Price:   £20.00

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Aradia 8.5" statue

Aradia 8.5" statue

The Dianic Goddess. Strong, lovely and charismatic, Aradia (her name is derived from Herodias, queen of witches) was the daughter of moon goddess Diana. She is a timeless spiritual entity, embodying Kore in her power, Aphrodite in her beauty, and Diana in her courage and love of wild places. She was sent to Earth as prophetess of the religion of witchcraft, with the mission of protecting women from the oppressions of feudalism.

With her broomstave of power, her cloak of mystery, and her knowledge of every plant, she gave fright to the Inquisition. Aradia taught women how to invoke the full moon at midnight, sprinkling salt from a red bag while asking favors of the Goddess. With quiet authority she proclaims "Never Again the Burning!" Note the small pentacle on reverse of Aradia's cloak-hem.

Antique stone colored Gypsumstone statue.  


Price:   £30.00

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Lord and Lady 8" statue

Lord and Lady 8" statue

Lord and Lady, Goddess and God. From this union all creation flows. The Shiva/Shakti of the western magic tradition, the Horned One and Moon Maiden are shown embracing before or after their Great Rite. May their loving partnership spread harmony throughout the world

Moonlight complexion, golden hair; handpainted resin statue.  


Price:   £35.00

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Serpent 4.5" pewter

Serpent 4.5" pewter

The ultimate symbol of the Divine Feminine, the snake represents the flash of intuition. A perfect altar-piece.

Solid pewter.  


Price:   £14.00

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Tree of Life Goddess 7.5"

Tree of Life Goddess 7.5"

Sprung from the Earth, she is the spirit of growth, insight and sustenance. Her branches stretch to the heavens, her roots penetrate the dark humus, and her leaves create the air we breathe; thus she is the Tree of Life itself. In this shape we can venerate her as Artemis, as Gaia, as the healing power of our Planetary Mother. Her forests grace the back of this beautiful "Turtle Island." Among her branches, the Snake of rebirth and renewal uncoils from its sacred spiral in the ever-changing cycle.

Hand painted Gypsumstone.  


Price:   £22.00

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