Citations:triple goddesses

Noun: "plural form of triple goddess"

 * 1989 — Miranda Green, Symbol & Image in Celtic Religious Art, Routledge (2001), ISBN 0415034191, page 190:
 * We should not forget that the Roman world knew triple goddesses — the three Fates and the three Nymphs are examples.
 * 1995 — Prudence Jones & Nigel Pennick, A History of Pagan Europe, Routledge (1995), ISBN 0415091365, page 86:
 * Romano-Celtic shrines, like later Celtic myths, tell of triple goddesses such as the Proximae (kinswomen), Dervonnae (oak-sprites) and Niksai (water-goddesses).
 * 1999 — Jean Markale, The Great Goddess: Reverence of the Divine Feminine from the Paleolithic to the Present (trans. Jody Gladding), Inner Traditions International (1999; originally published in French in 1997), ISBN 0892817151, page 95:
 * They make us think again of those "triple goddesses" of the Gaelic tradition in Ireland, those famous triads sometimes called "triple Brigit" or "triple Macha."
 * 2007 — Kris Waldherr, Goddess Inspiration Oracle, Llewellyn Publications, ISBN 9780738711676, page 100:
 * The universal presence of these triple goddesses suggest the strength and authority of the Divine Feminine everywhere.
 * 2008 — Michelle Skye, Goddess Afoot!: Practicing Magic With Celtic & Norse Goddesses, Llewellyn Publications (2008), ISBN 9780738713311, page 250 (footnote):
 * While triple goddesses can be found in many cultures (Celtic, Roman, Greek, Hindu, and Mesopotamian, for example), the classification of the triplicity into a maiden-mother-crone format is distinctly modern.