Triquetra

Triquetra

Triquetra (IPA2|ta'kwεt) 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 runestones 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. The fact that the triquetra very rarely stood alone in medieval Celtic has cast a reasonable doubt on its use as a symbol in context where it was used primarily as a space filler or ornament in much more complex compositions. But Celtic art lives on as both a living folk art tradition and through several revivals. This widely recognized knot has been used in for the past two centuries a sign of special things and persons that are threefold, such as Mother, Daughter and Grandmother - Past, Present and Future -and especially the "Holy Trinity", the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. [In Search of Meaning, Dalriada Magazine 2001, http://www.celtarts.com/in_search_of_meaning.htm]

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 of the Triquetra. The circle emphasizes the unity of the whole combination of the three elements.

Modern use

Neopaganism

Modern Pagans use the triquetra to symbolize a variety of concepts and mythological figures.

Germanic Neopagan groups who use the triquetra to symbolize their faith generally believe it is 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, for example, The Morrígan.

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

*The triquetra is often used artistically as a design element when Celtic knotwork is used. Many who identify as Modern Celts may use the symbol to display an identification with Celtic culture, whether they live in the Celtic Nations or the diaspora.
*In recent years, the symbol has become well-known due to its use on the cover of the "Book of Shadows" used by the three sisters on the American TV show "Charmed". It identifies the three sister witches working together as one.
*A triquetra is one of the four symbols on the cover of the Led Zeppelin album, "Led Zeppelin IV", where it used as the personal symbol of bassist John Paul Jones.
*The triquetra has recently been adopted as the logo of the Ontario New Democratic Party in Canada.
*The band Payable on Death (P.O.D.) uses this symbol on most of their CD covers.
*The triquetra is used to represent the Trinity on The New King James Version Bibles, published by Thomas Nelson, Inc.

Geometry

Topologically, the interlaced form of the plain triquetra is a trefoil knot.

Gallery of variant forms

ee also

*Triskelion
*Triquetrum
*Celtic knot

External links

* [http://mathworld.wolfram.com/JohnsonsTheorem.html Johnson's theorem on MathWorld]


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Triquetra — entrelacé En symbologie, un triquetra (mot dérivé du latin tri , « trois » et quetrus, « coins ») est un symbole constitué de trois vesicae piscis, parfois accompagné d un cercle intérieur ou extérieur[1] …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Triquetra — Die Triqueta, auch Triquetta oder Triquetra genannt, besteht aus drei verbundenen Kreisbögen. Der Name stammt aus dem Lateinischen und bedeutet dreieckig oder Knoten der Dreisamkeit oder einfach Dreieck. Dargestellt wird eine in Form eines… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • TRIQUETRA — Sicilia sic dicta. Horat. l. 2. Sat. 6. v. 55. Militibus promissa, Triquetrâ Praemia Caesar, an est Italâ tellure daturus? Hiuc Triquetrus ad iectivum. Lucret. l. 1. de Empedocle, v. 717. Insula quem Triquetris terrarum gessit in oris …   Hofmann J. Lexicon universale

  • Triquetra — (lat.), s. Dreischenkel …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Triquetra — (lat.), s. Dreischenkel [Abb. 452] …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Triquetra — Triquetrum Tri*que trum, n.; pl. {Triquetra}. [NL.] (Anat.) One of the bones of the carpus; the cuneiform. See {Cuneiform} (b) . [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • triquetra — triquetric /truy kwe trik/, adj. /truy kwee treuh, kwe /, n. a geometrical figure having three points, esp. one formed of three intersecting ellipses: The triquetra was often used in ancient art to symbolize a triune deity. [1580 90; < NL, n. use …   Universalium

  • triquetra — three fish or fish outlines interlinked. A symbol of the Holy Trinity (Father, Son, Holy Ghost) used by the Celtic Christian Church but dating before Christianity …   Dictionary of ichthyology

  • triquetra — noun A shape formed of three vesica piscis, sometimes with an additional circle, a symbol of things and persons that are threefold. See Also: triquetrum …   Wiktionary

  • triquetra — trì·que·tra, tri·què·tra s.f. TS stor. figura simbolica formata da tre gambe che partono da un centro comune, di origine orientale, frequente nella monetazione greca o romana {{line}} {{/line}} DATA: 1927. ETIMO: der. di triquetro …   Dizionario italiano

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