European goddesses spin the threads of
fate at the foot of
Yggdrasil, the tree of the world. The three Moirai are known in English as the
Fates. This derives from
Roman mythology, in which they are the
Parcae or Fata, plural of , meaning prophetic declaration, oracle, or destiny; euphemistically, the "sparing ones". There are other equivalents that descend from the
Proto-Indo-European culture. In Norse mythology the
Norns are a trio of female beings who rule the destiny of gods and men, twining the thread of life. They set up the laws and decided on the lives of the children of men. Their names were
Urðr, related with Old English
wyrd, modern
weird ("fate, destiny, luck"),
Verðandi, and
Skuld, and it has often been concluded that they ruled over the past, present and future respectively, based on the sequence and partly the etymology of the names, of which the first two (literally 'Fate' and 'Becoming') are derived from the past and present stems of the verb
verða, "to be", respectively, and the name of the third one means "debt" or "guilt", originally "that which must happen". In younger legendary sagas, the Norns appear to have been synonymous with witches (
völvas), and they arrive at the birth of the hero to shape his destiny. Many other cultures included trios of goddesses associated with fate or destiny. The
Celtic Matres and
Matrones, female deities almost always depicted in groups of three, have been proposed as connected to the Norns. In
Lithuanian and other
Baltic mythologies, the goddess
Laima is the personification of destiny, and her most important duty was to prophesy how the life of a newborn will take place. With her sisters Kārta and Dēkla, she is part of a trinity of fate deities similar to the Moirai. In
Hurran mythology the three goddesses of fate, the
Hutena, were believed to dispense good and evil, life and death to humans.
Later European culture In
Dante's
Divine Comedy, the Fates are mentioned in both
Inferno (XXXIII.126) and
Purgatorio (XXI.25-27, XXV.79-81) by their Greek names, and their traditional role in measuring out and determining the length of human life is assumed by the narrator. and Banquo meeting the three
weird sisters in a woodcut from ''Holinshed's Chronicles''. In
Shakespeare's
Macbeth, the
Weird Sisters (or
Three Witches) are
prophetesses who are deeply rooted in both the real and supernatural worlds. Their creation was influenced by
British folklore,
witchcraft, and the legends of the Norns and the Moirai.
Hecate, the
chthonic Greek goddess associated with magic, witchcraft,
necromancy, and three-way crossroads, appears as the master of the Three Witches. In
ancient Greek religion, Hecate as goddess of childbirth is identified with
Artemis, who was the leader (ηγεμόνη:
hegemone ) of the
nymphs.
Outside Europe '' showing the "Weighing of the Heart" in the
Duat using the feather of
Maat as the measure in balance. The notion of a universal principle of natural order has been compared to similar ideas in other cultures, such as
aša (
Asha) in
Avestan religion,
Rta in
Vedic religion, and
Maat in
ancient Egyptian religion. In the
Avestan religion and
Zoroastrianism, aša, is commonly summarized in accord with its contextual implications of "truth", "righteousness", "order". Aša and its
Vedic equivalent, Rta, are both derived from a
PIE root meaning "properly joined, right, true". The word is the proper name of the divinity Asha, the personification of "Truth" and "Righteousness".
Aša corresponds to an objective, material reality which embraces all of existence. This cosmic force is imbued also with morality, as verbal Truth, and Righteousness, action conforming with the moral order. In the literature of the
Mandaeans, an angelic being (
Abatur) has the responsibility of weighing the souls of the deceased to determine their worthiness, using a set of scales. In the Vedic religion, Rta is an ontological principle of natural order which regulates and coordinates the operation of the universe. The term is now interpreted abstractly as "cosmic order", or simply as "truth", although it was never abstract at the time. It seems that this idea originally arose in the
Indo-Aryan period, from a consideration (so denoted to indicate the original meaning of communing with the star beings) of the qualities of nature which either remain constant or which occur on a regular basis. The individuals fulfill their true natures when they follow the path set for them by the ordinances of
Rta, acting according to the
Dharma, which is related to social and moral spheres. The god of the waters
Varuna was probably originally conceived as the personalized aspect of the otherwise impersonal
Ṛta. The gods are never portrayed as having command over
Ṛta, but instead they remain subject to it like all created beings. Maat was the norm and basic values that formed the backdrop for the application of justice that had to be carried out in the spirit of truth and fairness. In
Egyptian mythology, Maat dealt with the weighing of souls that took place in the underworld. Her feather was the measure that determined whether the souls (considered to reside in the heart) of the departed would reach the paradise of afterlife successfully. In the famous scene of the
Egyptian
Book of the Dead,
Anubis, using a scale, weighs the sins of a man's heart against the feather of truth, which represents maat. If man's heart weighs down, then he is devoured by a monster. ==The three Moirai==