Difference between revisions of "Pentagram" - New World Encyclopedia

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A '''pentagram''' (sometimes known as a '''pentalpha''' or '''pentangle''' or, more formally, as a '''[[star polygon|star pentagon]]''') is the shape of a [[five-pointed star]] drawn with five straight strokes. The word "pentagram" comes from the [[Greek language|Greek]] word πεντάγραμμον ''(pentagrammon)'', a [[noun]] form of πεντάγραμμος ''(pentagrammos)'' or πεντέγραμμος ''(pentegrammos)'', a word meaning roughly "five-lined" or "five lines."
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{{Images OK}} {{Submitted}} {{Approved}}{{Copyedited}}
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[[Image:Pentagram green.svg|right|230px|thumb|The pentagram is a figure formed using five line segments of identical length, arranged to produce five identical points surrounding a pentagram.]]
  
Pentagrams were used symbolically in [[ancient Greece]] and [[Babylonia]]. The pentagram has [[Magic (paranormal)|magical]] associations, and many people who practice [[Neopaganism|Neopagan]] faiths wear jewelry incorporating the symbol. [[Christianity|Christians]] once more commonly used the pentagram to represent the five wounds of [[Jesus]],<ref> "Pentagram" article in ''The Continuum Encyclopedia of Symbols'' Becker, Udo, ed., Garmer, Lance W. translator, New York:  Continuum Books, 1994, p. 230.</ref><ref>''Signs and Symbols in Christian Art'' Ferguson, George, Oxford University Press: 1966, p. 59.</ref> and it also has associations within [[Freemasonry]].
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A '''pentagram,''' a five sided, transparent star, often within a circle, is one of the oldest markings known to [[human]]kind. Dating back to Europe as far as 8000 years ago, the pentagram is a symbol fraught with mystery, intrigue, and meaning. It has been the symbol of various religions and nations, from [[Christianity]] and [[Islam]] to [[Morocco]] and [[Ethiopia]] to ancient [[Jerusalem]]. In modern times, the pentagram has been used by [[Wicca]]ns and distorted further for the use of Satanists (though one errs to presume a connection between the two). The five points of the pentagram usually have five different meanings; for example, for the Wiccans, the five points represent [[earth]], [[sky]], [[fire]], [[water]], and [[Spirit]], with Spirit occupying the top and most important point. However, these values change from culture to culture.
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{{toc}}
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The pentagram has been used for a wide variety of purposes over the course of human history. Pentagons have been used both to call forth evil and to ward it off.
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[[Image:Pentacle 2.svg|right|230px|thumb|A standard pentagram, enclosed within a circle.]]
  
The pentagram has long been associated with [[Venus|the planet Venus]], and the worship of [[Venus (mythology)|the goddess Venus]], or her equivalent. It is also associated with the [[Roman mythology|Roman]] word [[lucifer]], which was a term used for Venus as the Morning Star, associated with the bringer of light and knowledge. It is most likely to have originated from the observations of prehistoric astronomers.<ref>Liungman, Carl G. [http://www.symbols.com/encyclopedia/27/2721.html "Symbol 27:21"] in ''Symbols—Encyclopedia of Western Signs and Ideograms''</ref>
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==History==
When viewed from Earth, successive [[conjunction (astronomy and astrology)|inferior conjunction]]s of Venus plot a nearly perfect pentagram shape around the [[zodiac]] every eight years.<ref>Liungman, Carl G. [http://www.symbols.com/encyclopedia/29/2914.html "Symbol 29:14"] in ''Symbols—Encyclopedia of Western Signs and Ideograms''</ref>
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The pentagram is one of the oldest markings known to humankind, apparently discovered by astronomical research in the Tigris-Euphrates region of the [[Middle East]] as far back as 6000 B.C.E..E. <ref name=symbols>Symbols.com, [http://www.symbols.com/symbol/373 Pentagram], ''Symbols.com.'' Retrieved August 9, 2014.</ref> Isolated pentagrams have been found in Israel, in layers dating to 4000 B.C.E.<ref name=symbols/> It then shows up among the [[Sumer]]ians, with the five points believed by scholars to represent either the four corners of the earth and "the vault of heaven," or the five visible planets of the night sky: [[Jupiter]], [[Mercury (planet)|Mercury]], [[Mars]], [[Saturn]], and [[Venus]] (with Venus a representative of the Queen of Heaven). Most scholars tend to dismiss the first theory as far fetched, but it is difficult to ascertain exactly what the pentagram meant to ancient peoples due to the lack of thorough documentation. In fact, there is no clear evidence on how the pentagram was used, especially after Sumer, until around 400 B.C.E. and the rise of [[Pythagorean mysticism]].<ref name=symbols/>  
  
The word "[[pentacle]]" is sometimes used synonymously with "pentagram," although their technical usages are different, and their etymologies may be unrelated.<ref>"Pentacle," ''Oxford English Dictionary''.</ref>
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=== Pythagoreans ===
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The [[Pythagoreans]] called the pentagram, ύγιεια ''(Hygieia)'' ("health;" also the Greek goddess of health, [[Hygieia]]), and saw in the pentagram a mathematical perfection which would later come to be known as the [[Golden ratio]]. The Pythagoreans, named so after [[Pythagoras]] (fl 580-500, B.C.E.), a mathematician who encouraged his followers to seek out [[truth]] and [[knowledge]], were driven underground, and used the pentagram to identify themselves to each other, signing letters and communications with it.<ref name=tolerance>[http://www.religioustolerance.org/wic_pent.htm Symbols of Wicca, other Neopagan traditions, Satanism, etc.], ''Religious tolerance.org''. Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance. Retrieved August 9, 2014.</ref> During this time, the pentagram represented the five points of a human being: Two feet, two hands, and one head, although this seems to underestimate the knowledge of the Pythagoreans, as they were almost undoubtedly aware of its mathematical properties.<ref name=answers>[http://symboldictionary.net/?p=1893 The Pentagram in Depth], ''SymbolDictionary.net''. Retrieved August 9, 2014.</ref>
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What is known with a good amount of certainty, however, is that the pentagram was the main [[image]] in the [[logotype]], or official seal of the city of [[Jerusalem]] during the period of 300-150 B.C.E.<ref name=answers/>
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The ancient [[Pythagoras|Pythagorean]] pentagram was drawn with two points up and represented the doctrine of ''[[Pentemychos]].'' ''Pentemychos'' means "five recesses" or "five chambers," also known as the pentagonas—the five-angle, and was the title of a work written by [[Pythagoras]]'s teacher and friend, [[Pherecydes of Syros]].<ref>G. S. Kirk and J. E. Raven, ''The Presocratic philosophers; a critical history with a selection of texts.'' (Cambridge, UK: University Press, 1957, ISBN 9780521274555), 55</ref>
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===European occultism===
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[[Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa]], among others, perpetuated the popularity of the pentagram as a magical symbol, maintaining an attribution of [[four elements|element]]s (earth, fire, air, water) to the five points. By the mid-nineteenth century, a further distinction had developed amongst [[occultist]]s regarding the pentagram's orientation. With a single point upwards, it depicted spirit presiding over the four elements of matter, and was essentially "good." Conversely, a pentagram with two points up was considered [[evil]]. At other times also, especially during the Middle Ages, it came to represent devil worship.
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<blockquote>A reversed pentagram, with two points projecting upwards, is a symbol of evil and attracts sinister forces because it overturns the proper order of things and demonstrates the triumph of matter over spirit. It is the goat of lust attacking the heavens with its horns, a sign execrated by initiates.<ref>Éliphas Lévi. ''Transcendental magic: its doctrine and ritual.'' (London: Bracken, 1995, ISBN 9781858913797).</ref></blockquote>
  
[[Image:Venus pentagram.png|right|thumb|270px|Successive [[inferior conjunction]]s of Venus repeat very near a 13:8 [[orbital resonance]] (The Earth orbits 8 times for every 13 orbits of Venus), creating a [[pentagram]]mic precession sequence.]]
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However, in Nordic countries (such as [[Norway]] and [[Sweden]]), the pentagram was used to ward off [[troll]]s and evil, in general, and was drawn on doors and walls.
  
==Early history==
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==Geometry==
=== Sumer ===
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The pentagram is the simplest [[regular polygon|regular]] [[star polygon]]. The pentagram contains ten points (the five points of the star, and the five vertices of the inner pentagon) and fifteen line segments. It is represented by the [[Schläfli symbol]] {5/2}. Like a regular pentagon, and a regular pentagon with a pentagram constructed inside it, the regular pentagram has as its [[symmetry group]] the [[dihedral group]] of order 10.<br clear="all">
The first known uses of the pentagram are found in [[Mesopotamia]]n writings dating to about 3000 B.C.E.
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[[Image:Golden ratio pentagram.jpg|right|250px|thumb|An illustration of the Golden ratio, specifically applied to a pentagram.]]
The [[Sumer]]ian pentagrams served as pictograms for the word "UB," meaning "corner, angle, nook; a small room, cavity, hole; pitfall," suggesting something very similar to the pentemychos (see below on the Pythagorean use for what pentemychos means). In René Labat's index system of Sumerian [[hieroglyph]]s/[[pictogram]]s it is shown with two points up.<ref>Labat, René. ''Manuel d'épigraphie akkadienne: Signes, Syllabaire, Idéogrammes''. The pentagram is symbol number 306 in this system.</ref>
 
In the [[Babylonia]]n context, the edges of the pentagram were probably orientations: forward, backward, left, right, and "above".{{Fact|date=March 2007}} These directions also had an [[astrology|astrological]] meaning, representing the five planets [[Jupiter (planet)|Jupiter]], [[Mercury (planet)|Mercury]], [[Mars (planet)|Mars]] and [[Saturn (planet)|Saturn]], and [[Venus (planet)|Venus]] as the "Queen of Heaven" ([[Ishtar]]) above.{{Fact|date=March 2007}}
 
  
=== Pythagoreans ===
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=== Construction ===
The [[Pythagoreans]] called the pentagram ύγιεια ''Hygieia'' ("health"; also the Greek goddess of health, [[Hygieia]]), and saw in the pentagram a mathematical perfection (see [[#Geometry|Geometry]] section below).
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The pentagram can be constructed by connecting alternate vertices of a [[pentagon]]. It can also be constructed as a [[stellation]] of a pentagon, by extending the edges of a pentagon until the lines intersect.
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=== Golden ratio ===
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The [[golden ratio]], φ = (1+√5)/2 ≈ 1.618, satisfying
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:<math>\varphi=1+2\sin(\pi/10)=1+2\sin 18^\circ\,</math>
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:<math>\varphi=1/(2\sin(\pi/10))=1/(2\sin 18^\circ)\,</math>
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:<math>\varphi=2\cos(\pi/5)=2\cos 36^\circ\,</math>
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plays an important role in regular pentagons and pentagrams. In mathematics, two quantities are in the golden ratio if the ratio between the sum of those quantities and the larger one is the same as the ratio between the larger one and the smaller. Thus, the golden ratio is approximately 1.6180339887. Each intersection of edges sections the edges in [[golden ratio]]: The ratio of the length of the edge to the longer segment is φ, as is the length of the longer segment to the shorter. Also, the ratio of the length of the shorter segment to the segment bounded by the 2 intersecting edges (a side of the pentagon in the pentagram's center) is φ. As the four-color illustration shows:
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[[Image:Pentagram-phi.svg|right|thumb|A pentagram colored to distinguish its line segments of different lengths. The four lengths are in [[golden ratio]] to one another.]]
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:<math>\frac{\mathrm{red}}{\mathrm{green}} = \frac{\mathrm{green}}{\mathrm{blue}} = \frac{\mathrm{blue}}{\mathrm{magenta}} = \varphi . </math>
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The pentagram includes ten [[Triangle#Types_of_triangles|isosceles triangles]]: Five acute and five obtuse isosceles triangles. In all of them, the ratio of the longer side to the shorter side is φ. The acute triangles are [[Golden triangle (mathematics)|golden triangle]]s. The obtuse isosceles triangle highlighted via the colored lines in the illustration is a golden gnomon.
  
The five vertices were also used by the medieval neo-pythagoreans (whom one could argue were not pythagoreans at all) to represent the five [[classical element]]s:
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===Trigonometric values===
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:<math>\sin \frac{\pi}{10} = \sin 18^\circ = \frac{\sqrt 5 - 1}{4}=\frac{\varphi-1}{2}=\frac{1}{2\varphi}</math>
  
* ύδωρ, ''hydor'', [[water]]
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:<math>\cos \frac{\pi}{10} = \cos 18^\circ = \frac{\sqrt{2(5 + \sqrt 5)}}{4} </math>
* γαια, ''[[Gaia (mythology)|gaia]]'' [[earth]]
 
* ίδέα, [[idea]] or ίερόν, ''Hieron'' "a divine thing"
 
* έιλή, ''heile'', [[heat]] ([[fire]])
 
* άήρ, ''aer'', [[air]]
 
  
The vertices were labeled in the letters of υ-γ-ι-ει-α. The ordering (clockwise or counter-clockwise) and starting vertex varied.
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:<math>\tan \frac{\pi}{10} = \tan 18^\circ = \frac{\sqrt{5(5 - 2 \sqrt 5)}}{5} </math>
  
The ancient Pythagorean pentagram was drawn with two points up and represented the doctrine of ''[[Pentemychos]]''. ''Pentemychos'' means "five recesses" or "five chambers," also known as the pentagonas—the five-angle, and was the title of a work written by [[Pythagoras]]'s teacher and friend [[Pherecydes of Syros]].<ref>This is a lost book, but its contents are preserved in [[Damascius]], ''[[De principiis]],'' quoted in Kirk and Raven, ''The Pre-Socratic Philosophers'', Cambridge Univ. Press, 1956, p. 55.</ref>  It was also the "place" where the first pre-cosmic offspring had to be put in order for the ordered cosmos to appear. The pentemychos is in [[Tartaros]], also known as "The Gates of Hell".{{Fact|date=March 2007}}
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:<math>\cot \frac{\pi}{10} = \cot 18^\circ = \sqrt{5 + 2 \sqrt 5} </math>
  
In very early Greek thought, Tartaros (or [[Chaos (mythology)|Chaos]], according to [[Hesiod]]) was the primordial Darkness from which the cosmos is born. While it was locked away after the emergence and ordering of the cosmos, it still continued to have an influence. In fact, it was known as "the subduer of both gods and men" ([[Homer]]), and it was from this that the world got its "psyche" (soul) and its "daimon." The Boundless Darkness held influence through [[Mychos]] or [[Krater]]. Apart from being the gateway from "there" to "here" it was also a way in the opposite direction, from "here" to "there," as is evident in the many tales about how Greek heroes, philosophers and mystics descended through Krater to [[Tartaros]]/[[Hades]] (the distinction between the two was very optional back then) in quest for Wisdom. The Underworld as the source of wisdom was the rule.
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:<math>\sin \frac{\pi}{5} = \sin 36^\circ = \frac{\sqrt{2(5 - \sqrt 5)} }{4}</math>
  
Tartaros was also later seen as the "chthonic realm" where all the enemies of the cosmic order were locked away, also called the "prison-house" of Zeus. It was said to lay outside of the aither over which Zeus had lordship; what we today would call space, back then called "Zeus' defense-wall," yet it was also beneath the earth. [[Plato]] (in ''[[Cratylus (dialogue)|Cratylus]]'') said that the aither had a penetrating power that permeates the whole world, and he found it both inside and outside of our bodies. The pentemychos is outside, or in-side, of the aither.
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:<math>\cos \frac{\pi}{5} = \cos 36^\circ = \frac{\sqrt 5+1}{4} = \frac{\varphi}{2}</math>
  
In the play ''[[Medea]]'' by [[Euripides]], the sorceress Medea calls upon [[Hecate]] with the words, "By that dread queen whom I revere before all others and have chosen to share my task, by Hecate who dwells within my inmost chamber, not one of them shall wound my heart and rue it not." Note that she speaks of the Heart. The inmost chamber is the ''Mychos''. Normally, Hecate and [[Persephone]] are portrayed solely as the rulers of the Underworld. In Medea, however, Hecate is called the Lady of Tartaros, ''Phulada'' (Guardian), ''Propulaia'' (Before the Gates), ''Kleidophoros'' (Key-bearer) and ''Kleidoukhos'' (Key-holder, Priestess). This Underworld of the Greeks and Pythagoreans is also the "inmost chamber" and the Core of Inner Being.
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:<math>\tan \frac{\pi}{5} = \tan 36^\circ =  \sqrt{5 - 2\sqrt 5} </math>
  
===European occultism===
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:<math>\cot \frac{\pi}{5} = \cot 36^\circ = \frac{ \sqrt{5(5 + 2\sqrt 5)}}{5} </math>
[[Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa]] and others perpetuated the popularity of the pentagram as a magic symbol, keeping the Pythagorean attributions of elements to the five points. By the mid-19th century a further distinction had developed amongst occultists regarding the pentagram's orientation. With a single point upwards it depicted spirit presiding over the four elements of matter, and was essentially "good." However the other way up was considered evil.
 
:"A reversed pentagram, with two points projecting upwards, is a symbol of evil and attracts sinister forces because it overturns the proper order of things and demonstrates the triumph of matter over spirit. It is the goat of lust attacking the heavens with its horns, a sign execrated by initiates."<ref>{{cite book |last=Levi |first=Eliphas |authorlink=Eliphas Levi |title=Transcendental Magic, its Doctrine and Ritual |year=1855}}</ref>
 
:"Let us keep the figure of the Five-pointed Star always upright, with the topmost triangle pointing to heaven, for it is the seat of wisdom, and if the figure is reversed, perversion and evil will be the result."<ref>{{cite book |last=Hartmann |first=Franz |authorlink=Franz Hartmann |title=Magic, White and Black |year=c. 1895}}</ref>
 
  
<center><gallery>
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As a result, in an isosceles triangle with one or two angles of 36°, the longer of the two side lengths is φ times that of the shorter of the two, both in the case of the acute as in the case of the obtuse triangle.
Image:Pentagram and human body (Agrippa).jpg|Man inscribed in a pentagram, from [[Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa]]'s ''[[Libri tres de occulta philosophia]]''. The five signs at the pentagram's [[vertex (geometry)|vertices]] are  [[astrology|astrological]].
 
Image:Inverted pentacle.PNG|Another pentagram from Agrippa's book. This one has the Pythagorean letters inscribed around the circle.
 
Image:Pentagram (Levi).jpg|The [[occult]]ist and [[Magician (paranormal)|magician]] [[Eliphas Levi]]'s pentagram, which he considered to be a symbol of the [[Macrocosm and microcosm|microcosm]], or human.
 
</gallery></center>
 
  
 
== Religious symbolism ==
 
== Religious symbolism ==
 
=== Christianity ===
 
=== Christianity ===
[[Image:Bolzani XP Pentacle.JPG|thumb|right|[[Christ]] as a Pentagram, from [[Valeriano Bolzani]]'s ''Hieroglyphica'' (Basel, 1556)]]
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Connections between the pentagram and Christianity are many.<ref name=answers/> It adorned jewelry, amulets, and battle attire of early Christians, especially before the [[crucifix|cross]] was introduced. This was not only because the pentagram was associated with the five wounds of Christ, but also because it could be drawn in a single stroke, through one continuous movement of a pen, representing beginning and end ([[Alpha and Omega]]) as one.<ref name=answers/>
The pentagram is used as a Christian symbol for the five [[sense]]s,<ref>''Christian Symbols Ancient and Modern'', Child, Heather and Dorothy Colles. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1971, ISBN 0-7135-1960-6.</ref> and if the letters ''S'', ''A'', ''L'', ''V'', and ''S'' are inscribed in the points, it can be taken as a symbol of [[health]] (from [[Latin]] ''salus'').{{Fact|date=March 2007}}
 
  
Medieval Christians believed it to symbolise the five wounds of Christ. The pentagram was believed to protect against witches and demons.<ref name="altreligion_pentagram" />
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Some also theorize that the pentagram was an expression of an early, secret Gnostic heresy, found hidden here and there throughout Christianity's history, a symbol of Isis/Venus as the "secret goddess," or female principle.<ref name=answers/> This symbolism commonly shows up in the Arthurian Grail romances, which many see as Gnostic and in kabbalistic teachings disguised as knightly quests and their tales.<ref name=answers/> For example, a pentagram appears on the shield of [[Sir Gawain]] in the fourteenth century poem, "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight."
  
The pentagram figured in a heavily symbolic [[King Arthur|Arthurian]] romance:<ref name="altreligion_pentagram" /> it appears on the shield of [[Sir Gawain]] in the [[14th century]] poem ''[[Sir Gawain and the Green Knight]]''. As the poet explains, the five points of the star each have five meanings: they represent the five senses, the five fingers, the five wounds of [[Christ]],<ref>''Christian Symbols and How To Use Them'', Knapp, Justina; Milwaukee: The Bruce Publishing Company, 1955. Plate LXV, Plate LV (Imprimatur, Jos. F. Busch, Bishop of St. Cloud)</ref> the five joys that [[Mary, the mother of Jesus|Mary]] had of Jesus (the [[Annunciation]], the [[Nativity of Jesus|Nativity]], the [[Resurrection of Jesus|Resurrection]], the [[Ascension of Jesus Christ|Ascension]], and the [[Assumption of Mary|Assumption]]), and the five virtues of [[knighthood]] which Gawain hopes to embody: noble generosity, fellowship, purity, courtesy, and compassion.
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The pentagram was embodied as a symbol of this feminine principle by the five petaled rose, found in many gothic cathedral ornamentations—they are truly subtle, not quite secret pentagrams.<ref name=answers/>
  
Probably due to misinterpretation of symbols used by [[ceremonial magic]]ians, it later became associated with Satanism and subsequently rejected by most of Christianity sometime in the twentieth century.<ref name="altreligion_pentagram" />
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Possibly due to this, and to misinterpretation of symbols used by [[ceremonial magic]]ians, the pentagram later became associated with Satanism and subsequently rejected by most of Christianity sometime in the twentieth century.
  
 
=== Mormonism ===
 
=== Mormonism ===
[[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] has traditionally used pentagrams and five-pointed stars in [[Temple (Latter Day Saints)|Temple]] architecture, particularly the [[Nauvoo Illinois Temple]]<ref>See the [http://users.marshall.edu/~brown/nauvoo/nt-parent.html Nauvoo Temple] website discussing its architecture, and particularly the page on [http://users.marshall.edu/~brown/nauvoo/symbols.html Nauvoo Temple exterior symbolism]. Retrieved 13 December 2006.</ref> and the [[Salt Lake Temple]]. These symbols derived from traditional morning star pentagrams that are no longer commonly used in mainstream Christianity.<ref>http://www.fairlds.org/pubs/Stars.pdf</ref>
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[[Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] has traditionally used pentagrams and five-pointed stars in [[Temple]] architecture, particularly the [[Nauvoo Illinois Temple]]<ref>Marshall University, [http://users.marshall.edu/~brown/nauvoo/nt-parent.html Nauvoo Temple.] Retrieved July 20, 2008.</ref> and the [[Salt Lake Temple]]. These symbols derived from traditional morning star pentagrams that are no longer commonly used in mainstream Christianity.<ref>
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Matthew B. Brown, [http://www.fairlds.org/pubs/Stars.pdf Inverted Stars on LDS Temples], The Foundation for Apologetic Information and Research, Retrieved July 20, 2008.</ref>
  
 
=== Judaism ===
 
=== Judaism ===
The pentagram was the official seal of the city of [[Jerusalem]] for a time.<ref name="altreligion_pentagram">[http://altreligion.about.com/library/glossary/symbols/bldefspentagram.htm Pentagram, pentacle<!-- Bot generated title —>]</ref> Due to the similarity of the star shapes, it is occasionally confused with the [[Star of David]] by those unfamiliar with the symbols.
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The pentagram was the official seal of the city of [[Jerusalem]] during the period of 300-150 B.C.E..<ref name=symbols/> Due to the similarity of the star shapes, it is occasionally confused with the [[Star of David]] by those unfamiliar with the symbols. In the Jewish [[kabbalah|kabbalistic]] tradition, the pentagram represents justice, mercy, wisdom, understanding, and transcendent splendor.<ref name=answers/>
  
 
=== Satanism ===
 
=== Satanism ===
 
[[Image:Seal of Baphomet.svg|thumb|right|A goat's head inscribed in a pentagram, from ''La Clef de la Magie Noire'' by the [[Rosicrucian]] Stanislas de Guaita (1897).]]
 
[[Image:Seal of Baphomet.svg|thumb|right|A goat's head inscribed in a pentagram, from ''La Clef de la Magie Noire'' by the [[Rosicrucian]] Stanislas de Guaita (1897).]]
[[Satanists]] use a pentagram with two points up, often inscribed in a double circle, with the head of a goat inside the pentagram. This is referred to as the [[Sigil of Baphomet]]. They use it much the same way as the Pythagoreans, as Tartaros literally translates from Greek as a "Pit" or "Void" in Christian terminology (the word is used as such in the Bible, referring to the place where the [[fallen angel]]s are fettered). The Pythagorean Greek letters are most often replaced by the [[Hebrew alphabet|Hebrew]] letters לויתן forming the name [[Leviathan]]. Less esoteric [[LaVeyan Satanism|LaVeyan Satanists]] use it as a sign of rebellion or religious identification, the three downward points symbolising rejection of the holy Trinity.
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[[Satan#Satanism|Satanists]] use a pentagram with two points up, often inscribed in a double circle, with the head of a goat inside the pentagram. This is referred to as the [[Sigil of Baphomet]] (Greek, ''baphe'' and ''metis,'' meaning "absorption of knowledge").<ref name=tolerance/> The Pythagorean Greek letters are most often replaced by the [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] letters, לויתן forming the name [[Leviathan]]. Less esoteric [[LaVeyan Satanism|LaVeyan Satanists]] use it as a sign of rebellion or religious identification, the three downward points symbolizing rejection of the holy Trinity.
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Some pinpoint this symbol's first appearance to the brutal interrogations of the [[Knights Templar]] during the Christian [[Inquisition]]. However, there was no consensus as to the symbol's description.<ref name=tolerance/>
  
 
=== Neopaganism ===
 
=== Neopaganism ===
[[Image:Pentacle 2.svg|thumb|right|A typical Neopagan pentagram (circumscribed).]]
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Many [[Neopaganism|Neopagans]], especially [[Wicca]]ns, use the pentagram as a symbol of faith similar to the [[Christian]] [[cross]] or the [[Jewish]] [[Star of David]]. It is not, however, a universal symbol for Neopaganism, and is rarely used by [[Polytheistic Reconstructionism|Reconstructionists]]. [[Image:Pentacle.jpg|left|250px|thumb|A woman wears a pentacle as an amulet.]] Its religious symbolism is commonly explained by reference to the neo-Pythagorean understanding that the five points of the pentagram represent the four [[classical elements|elements]] (earth, fire, air, water) with the addition of Spirit as the uppermost point. As a representation of the elements, the pentagram is involved in the Wiccan practice of summoning the [[elemental]] spirits of the four directions at the beginning of a ritual.  
Many [[Neopaganism|Neopagans]], especially [[Wicca]]ns, use the pentagram as a symbol of faith similar to the [[Christian]] [[cross]] or the [[Jewish]] [[Star of David]]. It is not, however, a universal symbol for Neopaganism, and is rarely used by [[Polytheistic Reconstructionism|Reconstructionists]]. Its religious symbolism is commonly explained by reference to the neo-Pythagorean understanding that the five vertices of the pentagram represent the four [[classical elements|elements]] with the addition of Spirit as the uppermost point. As a representation of the elements, the pentagram is involved in the Wiccan practice of summoning the [[elemental]] spirits of the four directions at the beginning of a ritual.  
 
  
The outer circle of the circumscribed pentagram is sometimes interpreted as binding the elements together or bringing them into harmony with each other. The Neopagan pentagram is generally displayed with one point up, partly because of the "inverted" goat's head pentagram's association with Satanism; however, within traditional forms of [[Wicca]] a pentagram with two points up is associated with the Second Degree [[Initiation]] and in this context has no relation to Satanism.  
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The outer circle of the circumscribed pentagram is sometimes interpreted as binding the elements together or bringing them into harmony with each other. The [[Neopaganism|Neopagan]] pentagram is generally displayed with one point up, partly because of the "inverted" goat's head pentagram's association with Satanism; however, within traditional forms of [[Wicca]] a pentagram with two points up is associated with the Second Degree [[Initiation]] and in this context has no relation to Satanism.  
  
Because of a perceived association with Satanism and also because of negative societal attitudes towards Neopagan religions and the "[[occult]]," many United States schools have sought to prevent students from displaying the pentagram on clothing or jewelry.<ref>[http://www.religioustolerance.org/sch_clot5.htm "Religious Clothing in School"], Robinson, B.A., Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance, 20 August, 1999, updated 29 April, 2005. accessed 10 February, 2006.</ref><ref>[http://aclumich.org/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=26 "ACLU Defends Honor Student Witch Pentacle"] press release, American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan, 10 February, 1999. accessed 10 February, 2006.</ref><ref>[http://www.post-gazette.com/magazine/20000927witch2.asp "Witches and wardrobes: Boy says he was suspended from school for wearing magical symbol"] Rouvalis, Cristina; Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 27, 2000. accessed 10 February, 2006.</ref> In public schools, such actions by administrators have been determined to be in violation of students' [[First Amendment to the United States Constitution|First Amendment]] right to [[Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment|free exercise of religion]].<ref>
+
Because of a perceived association with Satanism and also because of negative societal attitudes towards Neopagan religions and the "[[occult]]," many United States schools have sought to prevent students from displaying the pentagram on clothing or jewelry.<ref>B. A. Robinson, [http://www.religioustolerance.org/sch_clot5.htm Religious Clothing & Jewelry in School], ''Religious tolerance.org''. Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance. Retrieved July 20, 2008.</ref> In public schools, such actions by administrators have been determined to be in violation of students' [[First Amendment to the United States Constitution|First Amendment]] right to [[Freedom of religion|free exercise of religion]].<ref>Associated Press, May 1, 2000, [http://www.firstamendmentcenter.org//news.aspx?id=7234 Federal judge upholds Indiana students' right to wear Wiccan symbols], ''First Amendment Center'', Retrieved July 20, 2008.</ref>
{{cite web
 
|url= http://www.firstamendmentcenter.org//news.aspx?id=7234
 
|title= Federal judge upholds Indiana students' right to wear Wiccan symbols  
 
|publisher= Associated Press
 
|date= May 1, 2000
 
|accessdate= 2007-09-21
 
}}</ref>
 
  
 
=== Bahá'í Faith ===
 
=== Bahá'í Faith ===
 +
The pentagram is the official symbol of the [[Bahá'í Faith]].<ref>Bahá'í Reference Library,
  
{{main|Bahá'í symbols}}
+
[http://reference.bahai.org/en/t/se/DG/dg-141.html 141: NINE (Number)], ''Directives from the Guardian,'' (Bahá'í International Community), 51-52, Retrieved July 20, 2008.</ref> In the Bahá'í Faith, the pentagram is known as the '''Haykal''' ([[Arabic language|Arabic]]: "Temple"), and it was initiated and established by the [[Báb]]. Both Báb and [[Bahá'u'lláh]] wrote various works in the form of a pentagram.
The pentagram is the official symbol of the [[Bahá'í Faith]].<ref>[http://reference.bahai.org/en/t/se/DG/dg-141.html Bahá'í Reference Library - Directives from the Guardian, Pages 51-52<!-- Bot generated title —>]</ref> In the Bahá'í Faith, the pentagram is known as the '''Haykal''' ([[Arabic language|Arabic]]: "temple"), and it was initiated and established by the [[Báb]]. Both Báb and [[Bahá'u'lláh]] wrote various works in the form of a pentagram.
 
 
 
<center><gallery>
 
Image:Haykal-Bab-2.gif|An unidentified work of the [[Báb]].
 
Image:Haykal2.gif|An unidentified work of the [[Báb]].
 
</gallery></center>
 
  
 
=== Thelema ===
 
=== Thelema ===
[[Aleister Crowley]] also made use of the pentagram and in his [[Thelemic]] system of [[magick]]: an adverse or inverted pentagram represents the descent of spirit into matter, not the triumph over matter which was considered [[evil]] as taught by the [[Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn]].
+
[[Aleister Crowley]] also made use of the pentagram and in his [[Thelemic]] system of [[magic|magick]]: An adverse or inverted pentagram represents the descent of spirit into matter, not the triumph over matter which was considered [[evil]], as taught by the [[Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn]].
  
 
=== Samael Aun Weor ===
 
=== Samael Aun Weor ===
[[Samael Aun Weor]] used the Pentagram to represent man's [[Atman (Hinduism)|Atman]], or Internal [[Christ]]. When a man's limbs are outstretched thus that his feet are planted on the ground while his head is situated atop his body it creates the omnipotent symbol of the pentagram. Through the [[Mantra]] "Klim, Krishna, Govindaya, Gopijana, Vallebayah, Swahah" one's inner being is said to be awakened and come to the initiate's aid. Aun Weor stated that no demon could resist the power of this mantra, since one's [[Logos]] cannot be overcome by a demon of any stature.
+
[[Samael Aun Weor]] used the Pentagram to represent humanity's [[Atman (Hinduism)|Atman]], or Internal [[Christ]]. When a human's limbs are outstretched thus that his feet are planted on the ground while his head is situated atop his body it creates the omnipotent symbol of the pentagram. Through the [[Mantra]], "Klim, Krishna, Govindaya, Gopijana, Vallebayah, Swahah," one's inner being is said to be awakened and come to the initiate's aid. Aun Weor stated that no demon could resist the power of this mantra, since one's [[Logos]] cannot be overcome by a demon of any stature.
 +
 
 +
In contrast to representing one's Logos, the inverted pentagram represents one's Umbral Guardian, the malignant antithesis of the divine father. Similar to many other uses of the symbol, when the pentagram's inferior rays point upwards, it represents Satan.
  
In contrast to representing one's Logos, the inverted pentagram represents one's Umbral Guardian, the malignant antithesis of the divine father. When the pentagram's inferior rays point upwards, it represents Satan. This symbol is therefore shown above as the goat of the [[Witches' Sabbath]], which serves as a call to the vast columns of demons.
+
===Asia===
 +
In [[Japan]]ese culture, the pentagram (五芒星 ''gobōsei'') is a symbol of magical power, associated with the [[onmyoji]] [[Abe no Seimei]]; it is a diagram of the "overcoming cycle" of the five [[Chinese elements]], earth, air, water, wood, metal. As a predominantly non-Christian country, with a different set of associations attached to the symbol, there is no social stigma associated with it.
  
 
== Political symbolism ==
 
== Political symbolism ==
 
=== Flags ===
 
=== Flags ===
While a solid [[five-pointed star]] is found on many flags, the pentagram is relatively rare. It appears on two national flags, those of [[Ethiopia]] and [[Morocco]] and in some coats of arms.
+
While a solid [[five-pointed star]] is found on many [[flag]]s, the pentagram is relatively rare. It appears on two national flags, those of [[Ethiopia]] and [[Morocco]], and in some coats of arms.
  
According to Ivan Sache, on the [[Moroccan]] flags, the pentagram represents the link between [[God]] and the nation.<ref>[http://flagspot.net/flags/ma.html Moroccan flag on Flagspot.net]  accessed on 10 February, 2006.</ref> It is also possible that both flags use the pentagram as a symbol of [[King Solomon]] (see [[Seal of Solomon]]), the archetypal wise king of [[Jewish]], [[Christian]] and [[Muslim]] lore.
+
According to Ivan Sache, on the [[Moroccan]] flags, the pentagram represents the link between [[God]] and the nation.<ref>Flags of the World, [http://flagspot.net/flags/ma.html Moroccan flag], ''Flagspot''. Retrieved July 20, 2008.</ref> It is also possible that both flags use the pentagram as a symbol of [[King Solomon]], the archetypal wise king of [[Jewish]], [[Christian]], and [[Muslim]] lore.
  
 
<center><gallery>
 
<center><gallery>
Image:Flag of Morocco.svg|[[Morocco]]'s flag
+
Image:Flag of Morocco.svg|Flag of [[Morocco]]
Image:Flag of Ethiopia.svg|[[Ethiopia]]'s flag
+
Image:Flag of Ethiopia.svg|Flag of [[Ethiopia]]
 
</gallery></center>
 
</gallery></center>
  
 
== Other organizations ==
 
== Other organizations ==
[[Image:OrderEasternStar logo from saucer.jpg|thumb|140px|[[Order of the Eastern Star]] emblem]]
+
[[Image:OES.jpg|right|250px|thumb|Order of the Eastern Star symbol.]]
 
=== Order of the Eastern Star ===
 
=== Order of the Eastern Star ===
The [[Order of the Eastern Star]], a fraternal organization associated with [[Freemasonry]], has employed a point-down pentagram as its symbol, with the five [[isosceles triangle]]s of the points colored red, blue, yellow, white and green. This is an older form of the order's emblem and it is now more commonly depicted with the central pentagon rotated 36° so that it is no longer strictly a pentagram.
+
The [[Order of the Eastern Star]], a fraternal organization associated with [[Freemasonry]], has employed a point-down pentagram as its symbol, with the five [[Triangle#Types_of_triangles|isosceles triangles]] of the points colored red, blue, yellow, white, and green. This is an older form of the order's emblem and it is now more commonly depicted with the central pentagon rotated 36° so that it is no longer strictly a pentagram.
 
 
==In literature==
 
In the [[medieval]] romance of ''[[Sir Gawain and the Green Knight]]'', the pentagram on [[Gawain]]'s shield is given a Christian interpretation (see [[#Christian use|above]]).
 
  
In [[Goethe]]'s ''[[Faust]]'', the pentagram prevents [[Mephistopheles]] from leaving a room.
+
==In Literature==
 +
In [[Goethe]]'s ''[[Faust]],'' the pentagram prevents [[Mephistopholes]] from leaving a room.
  
 
:''Mephistopheles'':
 
:''Mephistopheles'':
Line 134: Line 138:
 
::Could such a spirit aught ensnare?
 
::Could such a spirit aught ensnare?
  
In [[H. P. Lovecraft]]'s [[Cthulhu Mythos]] stories, the version of ''The Elder Sign'' devised by [[August Derleth]] is a warped pentagram with a flaming eye or pillar of flame in the center. It was first described in Derleth's novel, ''The Lurker at the Threshold''. (This was, however, different from the symbol that Lovecraft himself had envisaged.)
+
In American [[gothic fiction]] writer [[H. P. Lovecraft]]'s [[Cthulhu Mythos]] stories, the version of ''The Elder Sign'' devised by [[August Derleth]] is a warped pentagram with a flaming eye or pillar of flame in the center. It was first described in Derleth's novel, ''The Lurker at the Threshold.'' (This was, however, different from the symbol that Lovecraft himself had envisaged.)
  
In [[Dan Brown]]'s novel ''[[The Da Vinci Code]]'', the pentagram represents Venus, based on the successive inferior conjunctions of Venus against the [[Zodiac]].
+
In [[Dan Brown]]'s novel ''[[The Da Vinci Code]],'' the pentagram represents the planet [[Venus]], based on the successive inferior conjunctions of Venus against the [[Zodiac]].
  
In [[Japan]]ese culture, the pentagram (五芒星 ''gobōsei'') is a symbol of magical power, associated with the [[onmyoji]] [[Abe no Seimei]]; it is a diagram of the "overcoming cycle" of the five [[Chinese elements]]. As a predominantly non-Christian country, with a different set of associations attached to the symbol, there is no social stigma associated with it.
+
==See also==
 
+
* [[Polygon]]
==Geometry==<!-- This section is linked from [[Golden ratio]] —>
+
* [[Star of David]]
[[Image:Complete graph K5.svg|right|thumb|150px|[[Complete graph]] K<sub>5</sub>]]
+
* [[Symbol]]
The pentagram is the simplest [[regular polygon|regular]] [[star polygon]]. The pentagram contains ten points (the five points of the star, and the five vertices of the inner pentagon) and fifteen line segments. It is represented by the [[Schläfli symbol]] {5/2}. Like a regular pentagon, and a regular pentagon with a pentagram constructed inside it, the regular pentagram has as its [[symmetry group]] the [[dihedral group]] of order 10.
 
 
 
=== Construction ===
 
The pentagram can be constructed by connecting alternate vertices of a [[pentagon]]; see [[Pentagon#Construction|details of the construction]]. It can also be constructed as a [[stellation]] of a pentagon, by extending the edges of a pentagon until the lines intersect.
 
 
 
=== Golden ratio ===
 
[[Image:Pentagram-phi.svg|right|thumb|A pentagram colored to distinguish its line segments of different lengths. The four lengths are in [[golden ratio]] to one another.]]
 
The [[golden ratio]], φ = (1+√5)/2 ≈ 1.618, satisfying
 
:<math>\varphi=1+2\sin(\pi/10)=1+2\sin 18^\circ\,</math>
 
:<math>\varphi=1/(2\sin(\pi/10))=1/(2\sin 18^\circ)\,</math>
 
:<math>\varphi=2\cos(\pi/5)=2\cos 36^\circ\,</math>
 
plays an important role in regular pentagons and pentagrams. Each intersection of edges sections the edges in golden ratio: the ratio of the length of the edge to the longer segment is φ, as is the length of the longer segment to the shorter. Also, the ratio of the length of the shorter segment to the segment bounded by the 2 intersecting edges (a side of the pentagon in the pentagram's center) is φ. As the four-color illustration shows:
 
 
 
:<math>\frac{\mathrm{red}}{\mathrm{green}} = \frac{\mathrm{green}}{\mathrm{blue}} = \frac{\mathrm{blue}}{\mathrm{magenta}} = \varphi . </math>
 
 
 
The pentagram includes ten [[isosceles triangle]]s: five [[acute triangle|acute]] and five [[obtuse triangle|obtuse]] isosceles triangles. In all of them, the ratio of the longer side to the shorter side is φ. The acute triangles are [[Golden triangle (mathematics)|golden triangle]]s. The obtuse isosceles triangle highlighted via the colored lines in the illustration is a golden gnomon.
 
 
 
[[Image:PentagramFractal.PNG|right|thumb|Fractal pentagram drawn with a [[vector]] [[iteration]] program]]
 
 
 
===Trigonometric values===
 
 
 
::''See [[exact trigonometric constants#36° - Pentagon|Exact trigonometric constants: Pentagon]]''
 
 
 
:<math>\sin \frac{\pi}{10} = \sin 18^\circ = \frac{\sqrt 5 - 1}{4}=\frac{\varphi-1}{2}=\frac{1}{2\varphi}</math>
 
 
 
:<math>\cos \frac{\pi}{10} = \cos 18^\circ = \frac{\sqrt{2(5 + \sqrt 5)}}{4} </math>
 
 
 
:<math>\tan \frac{\pi}{10} = \tan 18^\circ = \frac{\sqrt{5(5 - 2 \sqrt 5)}}{5} </math>
 
 
 
:<math>\cot \frac{\pi}{10} = \cot 18^\circ = \sqrt{5 + 2 \sqrt 5} </math>
 
 
 
:<math>\sin \frac{\pi}{5} = \sin 36^\circ = \frac{\sqrt{2(5 - \sqrt 5)} }{4}</math>
 
 
 
:<math>\cos \frac{\pi}{5} = \cos 36^\circ = \frac{\sqrt 5+1}{4} = \frac{\varphi}{2}</math>
 
 
 
:<math>\tan \frac{\pi}{5} = \tan 36^\circ =  \sqrt{5 - 2\sqrt 5} </math>
 
 
 
:<math>\cot \frac{\pi}{5} = \cot 36^\circ = \frac{ \sqrt{5(5 + 2\sqrt 5)}}{5} </math>
 
 
 
As a result, in an isosceles triangle with one or two angles of 36°, the longer of the two side lengths is φ times that of the shorter of the two, both in the case of the acute as in the case of the obtuse triangle.
 
 
 
=== Three dimensional figures ===
 
:''See [[Uniform polyhedron#Icosahedral symmetry|Uniform polyhedron: Icosahedral symmetry]]''
 
Several [[polyhedron|polyhedra]] incorporate pentagrams:
 
 
 
<gallery>
 
Image:Pentagrammic prism.png|[[Pentagrammic prism]]
 
Image:Pentagrammic antiprism.png|[[Pentagrammic antiprism]]
 
Image:Pentagrammic crossed antiprism.png|[[Pentagrammic crossed-antiprism|Pentagrammic crossed antiprism]]
 
Image:Small_stellated_dodecahedron.png|[[Small stellated dodecahedron]]
 
Image:Small ditrigonal icosidodecahedron.png|[[Small ditrigonal icosidodecahedron]]
 
Image:Small dodecahemicosahedron.png|[[Small dodecahemicosahedron]]
 
Image:Snub dodecadodecahedron.png|[[Snub dodecadodecahedron]]
 
Image:Sixteenth stellation of icosidodecahedron.png|[[List of Wenninger polyhedron models#Stellations of icosidodecahedron|16th stellation of icosidodecahedron]]
 
</gallery>
 
{{-}}
 
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
Line 203: Line 151:
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
*Grünbaum, B., and G.C. Shephard. ''Tilings and Patterns.'' New York: W.H. Freeman & Co., 1987. ISBN 0-7167-1193-1.
+
* Grünbaum, B. "Polyhedra with Hollow Faces," ''Proc of NATO-ASI Conference on Polytopes,'' Edited by T. Bisztriczky et al. Kluwer Academic, 1994, 43-70. {{OCLC|197470331}}
*Grünbaum, B. Polyhedra with Hollow Faces, ''Proc of NATO-ASI Conference on Polytopes.'' Edited by T. Bisztriczky et al. Kluwer Academic, 1994. p. 43-70.
+
* Grünbaum, Branko, and G. C. Shephard. ''Tilings and patterns. A Series of books in the mathematical sciences.'' New York: W.H. Freeman, 1987. ISBN 978-0716711933.
 +
* Kirk, G. S., and J. E. Raven, ''The Presocratic Philosophers: A critical history with a selection of texts.'' Cambridge, UK: University Press, 1957, ISBN 978-0521274555.
 +
* Lévi, Éliphas. ''Transcendental magic: its doctrine and ritual.'' London: Bracken, 1995, ISBN 978-1858913797.
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
All links retrieved July 1, 2008.
+
All links retrieved November 23, 2022.
*{{Mathworld | urlname= Pentagram | title= Pentagram }}
+
 
*[http://www.cs.utk.edu/~mclennan/BA/PP.html The Pythagorean Pentacle] from the Biblioteca Arcana.
+
*Eric W. Weisstein. [http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Pentagram.html Pentagram]. ''MathWorld—A Wolfram'' Web Resource.
*[http://jwilson.coe.uga.edu/emt669/Student.Folders/Frietag.Mark/Homepage/Goldenratio/goldenratio.html In-depth analysis of the Golden Ratio]
+
*Apollonios Sophistes. [http://opsopaus.com/OM/BA/PP/index.html The Pythagorean Pentacle]. ''Biblioteca Arcana''.  
*[http://freemasonry.bcy.ca/anti-masonry/pentagram.html The pentagram and Freemasonry]
+
*Mark Freitag. [http://jwilson.coe.uga.edu/emt669/Student.Folders/Frietag.Mark/Homepage/Goldenratio/goldenratio.html In-depth analysis of the Golden Ratio], Professor Jim Wilson's Mathematics page, University of Georgia.
 +
*Grand Lodge of British Columbia and the Yukon. [http://freemasonry.bcy.ca/anti-masonry/pentagram.html The pentagram and Freemasonry].
  
 +
[[Category:Symbols]]
 +
[[Category:Geometry]]
  
 
{{Credits|222252239}}
 
{{Credits|222252239}}

Latest revision as of 07:21, 23 November 2022

The pentagram is a figure formed using five line segments of identical length, arranged to produce five identical points surrounding a pentagram.

A pentagram, a five sided, transparent star, often within a circle, is one of the oldest markings known to humankind. Dating back to Europe as far as 8000 years ago, the pentagram is a symbol fraught with mystery, intrigue, and meaning. It has been the symbol of various religions and nations, from Christianity and Islam to Morocco and Ethiopia to ancient Jerusalem. In modern times, the pentagram has been used by Wiccans and distorted further for the use of Satanists (though one errs to presume a connection between the two). The five points of the pentagram usually have five different meanings; for example, for the Wiccans, the five points represent earth, sky, fire, water, and Spirit, with Spirit occupying the top and most important point. However, these values change from culture to culture.

The pentagram has been used for a wide variety of purposes over the course of human history. Pentagons have been used both to call forth evil and to ward it off.

A standard pentagram, enclosed within a circle.

History

The pentagram is one of the oldest markings known to humankind, apparently discovered by astronomical research in the Tigris-Euphrates region of the Middle East as far back as 6000 B.C.E. [1] Isolated pentagrams have been found in Israel, in layers dating to 4000 B.C.E.[1] It then shows up among the Sumerians, with the five points believed by scholars to represent either the four corners of the earth and "the vault of heaven," or the five visible planets of the night sky: Jupiter, Mercury, Mars, Saturn, and Venus (with Venus a representative of the Queen of Heaven). Most scholars tend to dismiss the first theory as far fetched, but it is difficult to ascertain exactly what the pentagram meant to ancient peoples due to the lack of thorough documentation. In fact, there is no clear evidence on how the pentagram was used, especially after Sumer, until around 400 B.C.E. and the rise of Pythagorean mysticism.[1]

Pythagoreans

The Pythagoreans called the pentagram, ύγιεια (Hygieia) ("health;" also the Greek goddess of health, Hygieia), and saw in the pentagram a mathematical perfection which would later come to be known as the Golden ratio. The Pythagoreans, named so after Pythagoras (fl 580-500, B.C.E.), a mathematician who encouraged his followers to seek out truth and knowledge, were driven underground, and used the pentagram to identify themselves to each other, signing letters and communications with it.[2] During this time, the pentagram represented the five points of a human being: Two feet, two hands, and one head, although this seems to underestimate the knowledge of the Pythagoreans, as they were almost undoubtedly aware of its mathematical properties.[3]

What is known with a good amount of certainty, however, is that the pentagram was the main image in the logotype, or official seal of the city of Jerusalem during the period of 300-150 B.C.E.[3]

The ancient Pythagorean pentagram was drawn with two points up and represented the doctrine of Pentemychos. Pentemychos means "five recesses" or "five chambers," also known as the pentagonas—the five-angle, and was the title of a work written by Pythagoras's teacher and friend, Pherecydes of Syros.[4]

European occultism

Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa, among others, perpetuated the popularity of the pentagram as a magical symbol, maintaining an attribution of elements (earth, fire, air, water) to the five points. By the mid-nineteenth century, a further distinction had developed amongst occultists regarding the pentagram's orientation. With a single point upwards, it depicted spirit presiding over the four elements of matter, and was essentially "good." Conversely, a pentagram with two points up was considered evil. At other times also, especially during the Middle Ages, it came to represent devil worship.

A reversed pentagram, with two points projecting upwards, is a symbol of evil and attracts sinister forces because it overturns the proper order of things and demonstrates the triumph of matter over spirit. It is the goat of lust attacking the heavens with its horns, a sign execrated by initiates.[5]

However, in Nordic countries (such as Norway and Sweden), the pentagram was used to ward off trolls and evil, in general, and was drawn on doors and walls.

Geometry

The pentagram is the simplest regular star polygon. The pentagram contains ten points (the five points of the star, and the five vertices of the inner pentagon) and fifteen line segments. It is represented by the Schläfli symbol {5/2}. Like a regular pentagon, and a regular pentagon with a pentagram constructed inside it, the regular pentagram has as its symmetry group the dihedral group of order 10.

An illustration of the Golden ratio, specifically applied to a pentagram.

Construction

The pentagram can be constructed by connecting alternate vertices of a pentagon. It can also be constructed as a stellation of a pentagon, by extending the edges of a pentagon until the lines intersect.

Golden ratio

The golden ratio, φ = (1+√5)/2 ≈ 1.618, satisfying

plays an important role in regular pentagons and pentagrams. In mathematics, two quantities are in the golden ratio if the ratio between the sum of those quantities and the larger one is the same as the ratio between the larger one and the smaller. Thus, the golden ratio is approximately 1.6180339887. Each intersection of edges sections the edges in golden ratio: The ratio of the length of the edge to the longer segment is φ, as is the length of the longer segment to the shorter. Also, the ratio of the length of the shorter segment to the segment bounded by the 2 intersecting edges (a side of the pentagon in the pentagram's center) is φ. As the four-color illustration shows:

A pentagram colored to distinguish its line segments of different lengths. The four lengths are in golden ratio to one another.

The pentagram includes ten isosceles triangles: Five acute and five obtuse isosceles triangles. In all of them, the ratio of the longer side to the shorter side is φ. The acute triangles are golden triangles. The obtuse isosceles triangle highlighted via the colored lines in the illustration is a golden gnomon.

Trigonometric values

As a result, in an isosceles triangle with one or two angles of 36°, the longer of the two side lengths is φ times that of the shorter of the two, both in the case of the acute as in the case of the obtuse triangle.

Religious symbolism

Christianity

Connections between the pentagram and Christianity are many.[3] It adorned jewelry, amulets, and battle attire of early Christians, especially before the cross was introduced. This was not only because the pentagram was associated with the five wounds of Christ, but also because it could be drawn in a single stroke, through one continuous movement of a pen, representing beginning and end (Alpha and Omega) as one.[3]

Some also theorize that the pentagram was an expression of an early, secret Gnostic heresy, found hidden here and there throughout Christianity's history, a symbol of Isis/Venus as the "secret goddess," or female principle.[3] This symbolism commonly shows up in the Arthurian Grail romances, which many see as Gnostic and in kabbalistic teachings disguised as knightly quests and their tales.[3] For example, a pentagram appears on the shield of Sir Gawain in the fourteenth century poem, "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight."

The pentagram was embodied as a symbol of this feminine principle by the five petaled rose, found in many gothic cathedral ornamentations—they are truly subtle, not quite secret pentagrams.[3]

Possibly due to this, and to misinterpretation of symbols used by ceremonial magicians, the pentagram later became associated with Satanism and subsequently rejected by most of Christianity sometime in the twentieth century.

Mormonism

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has traditionally used pentagrams and five-pointed stars in Temple architecture, particularly the Nauvoo Illinois Temple[6] and the Salt Lake Temple. These symbols derived from traditional morning star pentagrams that are no longer commonly used in mainstream Christianity.[7]

Judaism

The pentagram was the official seal of the city of Jerusalem during the period of 300-150 B.C.E.[1] Due to the similarity of the star shapes, it is occasionally confused with the Star of David by those unfamiliar with the symbols. In the Jewish kabbalistic tradition, the pentagram represents justice, mercy, wisdom, understanding, and transcendent splendor.[3]

Satanism

A goat's head inscribed in a pentagram, from La Clef de la Magie Noire by the Rosicrucian Stanislas de Guaita (1897).

Satanists use a pentagram with two points up, often inscribed in a double circle, with the head of a goat inside the pentagram. This is referred to as the Sigil of Baphomet (Greek, baphe and metis, meaning "absorption of knowledge").[2] The Pythagorean Greek letters are most often replaced by the Hebrew letters, לויתן forming the name Leviathan. Less esoteric LaVeyan Satanists use it as a sign of rebellion or religious identification, the three downward points symbolizing rejection of the holy Trinity.

Some pinpoint this symbol's first appearance to the brutal interrogations of the Knights Templar during the Christian Inquisition. However, there was no consensus as to the symbol's description.[2]

Neopaganism

Many Neopagans, especially Wiccans, use the pentagram as a symbol of faith similar to the Christian cross or the Jewish Star of David. It is not, however, a universal symbol for Neopaganism, and is rarely used by Reconstructionists.

A woman wears a pentacle as an amulet.

Its religious symbolism is commonly explained by reference to the neo-Pythagorean understanding that the five points of the pentagram represent the four elements (earth, fire, air, water) with the addition of Spirit as the uppermost point. As a representation of the elements, the pentagram is involved in the Wiccan practice of summoning the elemental spirits of the four directions at the beginning of a ritual.

The outer circle of the circumscribed pentagram is sometimes interpreted as binding the elements together or bringing them into harmony with each other. The Neopagan pentagram is generally displayed with one point up, partly because of the "inverted" goat's head pentagram's association with Satanism; however, within traditional forms of Wicca a pentagram with two points up is associated with the Second Degree Initiation and in this context has no relation to Satanism.

Because of a perceived association with Satanism and also because of negative societal attitudes towards Neopagan religions and the "occult," many United States schools have sought to prevent students from displaying the pentagram on clothing or jewelry.[8] In public schools, such actions by administrators have been determined to be in violation of students' First Amendment right to free exercise of religion.[9]

Bahá'í Faith

The pentagram is the official symbol of the Bahá'í Faith.[10] In the Bahá'í Faith, the pentagram is known as the Haykal (Arabic: "Temple"), and it was initiated and established by the Báb. Both Báb and Bahá'u'lláh wrote various works in the form of a pentagram.

Thelema

Aleister Crowley also made use of the pentagram and in his Thelemic system of magick: An adverse or inverted pentagram represents the descent of spirit into matter, not the triumph over matter which was considered evil, as taught by the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Samael Aun Weor

Samael Aun Weor used the Pentagram to represent humanity's Atman, or Internal Christ. When a human's limbs are outstretched thus that his feet are planted on the ground while his head is situated atop his body it creates the omnipotent symbol of the pentagram. Through the Mantra, "Klim, Krishna, Govindaya, Gopijana, Vallebayah, Swahah," one's inner being is said to be awakened and come to the initiate's aid. Aun Weor stated that no demon could resist the power of this mantra, since one's Logos cannot be overcome by a demon of any stature.

In contrast to representing one's Logos, the inverted pentagram represents one's Umbral Guardian, the malignant antithesis of the divine father. Similar to many other uses of the symbol, when the pentagram's inferior rays point upwards, it represents Satan.

Asia

In Japanese culture, the pentagram (五芒星 gobōsei) is a symbol of magical power, associated with the onmyoji Abe no Seimei; it is a diagram of the "overcoming cycle" of the five Chinese elements, earth, air, water, wood, metal. As a predominantly non-Christian country, with a different set of associations attached to the symbol, there is no social stigma associated with it.

Political symbolism

Flags

While a solid five-pointed star is found on many flags, the pentagram is relatively rare. It appears on two national flags, those of Ethiopia and Morocco, and in some coats of arms.

According to Ivan Sache, on the Moroccan flags, the pentagram represents the link between God and the nation.[11] It is also possible that both flags use the pentagram as a symbol of King Solomon, the archetypal wise king of Jewish, Christian, and Muslim lore.

Other organizations

Order of the Eastern Star symbol.

Order of the Eastern Star

The Order of the Eastern Star, a fraternal organization associated with Freemasonry, has employed a point-down pentagram as its symbol, with the five isosceles triangles of the points colored red, blue, yellow, white, and green. This is an older form of the order's emblem and it is now more commonly depicted with the central pentagon rotated 36° so that it is no longer strictly a pentagram.

In Literature

In Goethe's Faust, the pentagram prevents Mephistopholes from leaving a room.

Mephistopheles:
I must confess, my stepping o'er
Thy threshold a slight hindrance doth impede;
The wizard-foot doth me retain.
Faust:
The pentagram thy peace doth mar?
To me, thou son of hell, explain,
How earnest thou in, if this thine exit bar?
Could such a spirit aught ensnare?

In American gothic fiction writer H. P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos stories, the version of The Elder Sign devised by August Derleth is a warped pentagram with a flaming eye or pillar of flame in the center. It was first described in Derleth's novel, The Lurker at the Threshold. (This was, however, different from the symbol that Lovecraft himself had envisaged.)

In Dan Brown's novel The Da Vinci Code, the pentagram represents the planet Venus, based on the successive inferior conjunctions of Venus against the Zodiac.

See also

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Symbols.com, Pentagram, Symbols.com. Retrieved August 9, 2014.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Symbols of Wicca, other Neopagan traditions, Satanism, etc., Religious tolerance.org. Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance. Retrieved August 9, 2014.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 The Pentagram in Depth, SymbolDictionary.net. Retrieved August 9, 2014.
  4. G. S. Kirk and J. E. Raven, The Presocratic philosophers; a critical history with a selection of texts. (Cambridge, UK: University Press, 1957, ISBN 9780521274555), 55
  5. Éliphas Lévi. Transcendental magic: its doctrine and ritual. (London: Bracken, 1995, ISBN 9781858913797).
  6. Marshall University, Nauvoo Temple. Retrieved July 20, 2008.
  7. Matthew B. Brown, Inverted Stars on LDS Temples, The Foundation for Apologetic Information and Research, Retrieved July 20, 2008.
  8. B. A. Robinson, Religious Clothing & Jewelry in School, Religious tolerance.org. Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance. Retrieved July 20, 2008.
  9. Associated Press, May 1, 2000, Federal judge upholds Indiana students' right to wear Wiccan symbols, First Amendment Center, Retrieved July 20, 2008.
  10. Bahá'í Reference Library, 141: NINE (Number), Directives from the Guardian, (Bahá'í International Community), 51-52, Retrieved July 20, 2008.
  11. Flags of the World, Moroccan flag, Flagspot. Retrieved July 20, 2008.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Grünbaum, B. "Polyhedra with Hollow Faces," Proc of NATO-ASI Conference on Polytopes, Edited by T. Bisztriczky et al. Kluwer Academic, 1994, 43-70. OCLC 197470331
  • Grünbaum, Branko, and G. C. Shephard. Tilings and patterns. A Series of books in the mathematical sciences. New York: W.H. Freeman, 1987. ISBN 978-0716711933.
  • Kirk, G. S., and J. E. Raven, The Presocratic Philosophers: A critical history with a selection of texts. Cambridge, UK: University Press, 1957, ISBN 978-0521274555.
  • Lévi, Éliphas. Transcendental magic: its doctrine and ritual. London: Bracken, 1995, ISBN 978-1858913797.

External links

All links retrieved November 23, 2022.

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