Everything about Triquetra totally explained
Triquetra is a word derived from the Latin
tri- ("three") and
quetrus ("cornered"). Its original meaning was simply "
triangle" and it has been used to refer to various three-cornered shapes. Nowadays, it has come to refer exclusively to a certain more complicated shape formed of three
vesicae piscis, sometimes with an added circle in or around it.
Ancient usage
Germanic paganism
The triquetra has been found on
rune stones in Northern Europe and on early
Germanic coins. It presumably had
pagan religious meaning and it bears a resemblance to the
Valknut, a symbol associated with
Odin.
Celtic art
The triquetra is often found in
Insular art, most notably metal work and in
illuminated manuscripts like the
Book of Kells. While it's uncertain what the symbol may have meant to the
Celts, it's often found as a design element in larger drawings of
triskeles or
triple spirals.
Christian use
The symbol was later used by
Christians as a symbol of the
Trinity (
Father,
Son and
Holy Spirit). This appropriation was particularly easy because the triquetra conveniently incorporated three shapes that could be interpreted as Christian
Ιχθυς symbols.
A common representation of the symbol is with a circle that goes through the three interconnected loops in the Triquetra. The circle emphasizes that through the combination of the three elements, a 'whole' is created, and the latter is influenced by each of the elements. It stresses unity, which is one of the most fundamental ideas of Christianity.
Modern use
Neopaganism
Modern
Neopagans use the triquetra under a variety of circumstances and purposes.
Germanic Neopagan groups who use the triquetra to symbolize their faith generally believe it's originally of Norse and Germanic origins.
Celtic Reconstructionist Pagans use the triquetra either to represent one of the various triplicities in their cosmology and theology (such as the tripartite division of the world into the realms of Land, Sea and Sky), or as a symbol of one of the specific triple Goddesses, most notably the
Morrígan. Triplicities were in Celtic myth and legend, one of the possible reasons Christian beliefs were so easily adopted by the Celtic people.
The symbol is also sometimes used by
Wiccans and some
New Agers to symbolize either the Wiccan
triple goddess, the interconnected parts of our existence (Mind, Body, and Soul), or many other concepts that seem to fit into this idea of a unity.
Popular culture
Geometry
Topologically, the interlaced form of the plain triquetra is a
trefoil knot. It is made by overlapping three
vesica pisces, all at one corner, with each individual vesica piscis 120 degrees away from both other vesica pisces.
Gallery of variant forms
Image:Triquetra-Interlaced-Triangle-Circle.png|Triquetra in blue as part of an interlaced Christian Trinitarian decorative symbol.
Image:Triquetra-Vesica.png|Triquetra composed exactly of three overlapping Vesica piscis symbols.
Image:Triquetra-tightly-knotted.svg|Tightly-knotted form of triquetra.
Image:Triquetra-Double.svg|An interlaced double Triquetra.
Image:Triquetra-circle-interlaced.svg|Triquetra interlaced with circle as Christian Trinitarian symbol (a "Trinity knot").
Image:Triquetra-Cross.png|The cross of triquetras or Carolingian Cross.
Image:Trikvetra.JPG|Triquetra on one of the Funbo Runestones, located in the park of Uppsala university.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Triquetra'.
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