A Cypriot Dea Gravida figure circa 8-5th century B.C.E. (Louvre Museum)
Major cult center
Phoenician Mediterranean
Symbol
Pregnant woman
Dea Gravida or Dea Tyria Gravida (Latin for "pregnant goddess") was either a goddess or representation of mortal women that were associated with procreation and fertility deriving from Phoenician culture and spreading within the Phoenician circle of influence. Although not much is known about the cult surrounding Dea Gravida, votive terracotta statues have been found throughout the Mediterranean, most notably in Phoenicia and Cyprus. The figure differs from kourotrophic figures that hold babies and are not visibly pregnant.[1]
^Budin, Stephanie Lynn (2014). Images of Woman and Child from the Bronze Age: Reconsidering Fertility, Maternity, and Gender in the Ancient World. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. p. 221. ISBN 9781107660328.
DeaGravida or Dea Tyria Gravida (Latin for "pregnant goddess") was either a goddess or representation of mortal women that were associated with procreation...
empire. There is a connection to the Phoenician goddess of pregnancy DeaGravida. Although Ipet (aka Apet or Aptet) is mentioned in the Old Kingdom Pyramid...
connected with fertility and child care. Kourotrophos is similar to the DeaGravida, which are figures representing either a goddesses or woman who is visibly...