Melinoë appears on a bronze tablet for use in the kind of private ritual usually known as
"magic". The style of
Greek letters on the tablet, which was discovered at
Pergamon, dates it to the first half of the 3rd century AD. The use of
bronze was probably intended to drive away malevolent spirits and to protect the practitioner. The construction of the tablet suggests that it was used for
divination. It is triangular in shape, with a hole in the center, presumably for suspending it over a surface. The content of the triangular tablet reiterates triplicity. It depicts three crowned goddesses, each with her head pointing at an angle and her feet pointing toward the center. The name of the goddess appears above her head:
Dione (ΔΙⲰΝΗ),
Phoebe (ΦΟΙΒΙΗ), and the obscure Nyche (ΝΥΧΙΗ).
Amibousa, a word referring to the phases of the moon, is written under each goddess's feet. Densely inscribed spells frame each goddess: the inscriptions around Dione and Nyche are
voces magicae, incantatory syllables ("magic words") that are mostly untranslatable. Melinoë appears in a triple invocation that is part of the inscription around Phoebe:
O Persephone, O Melinoë, O Leucophryne. Esoteric symbols are inscribed on the edges of the triangle. == In popular culture ==