- Please see the Hekate in Magna Graecia page for more information on this project
Morgantina
Morgantina was a province in Enna, Sicily, which is roughly in the east-center of the island. Morgantina was settled sometime around 1000 BCE and life continued there until around 50 CE. In present day, the area is known as “Aidone”. Morgantina was the site of a major sanctuary to Demeter and Persephone, and many statues, votives, pottery, and curse tablets have so far been recovered at the site. Sadly, much looting was done here and artifacts are still being recovered and returned to Italy in present-day.

Morgantina was home to a major sanctuary dedicated to Demeter and Persephone, the excavated remains of one may be seen in the above photo. Researchers discovered that there were actually five separate sanctuaries in Morgantina dedicated to Demeter and Persephone, and each one likely served different functions. They were located on each directional side (north, south, east, and west). Morgantina is near Pergusa, which is where Persephone was abducted by Hades. A main sanctuary, referred to as the “thesmophorion” to celebrate the Eleusinian mysteries, comprised of several different rooms, some of which were believed to be living quarters for the temple priestesses. Many different votive offerings were found surrounding the altars, and they mostly consisted of figurines and vases. Also found at the site were statues & busts of the goddesses, ritual clay lamps, and hair accessories. Some of the statues found show Persephone holding a piglet and torches. Other artifacts were found within the sanctuary, including items used for pressing oil and wine, and for grinding corn and other grains.
As seen in other sanctuaries to Demeter and Persephone, the main sanctuary at Morgantina has a propylon dedicated to a Chthonian goddess, possibly Hekate or Persephone. This propylon contains a pit in the ground for offerings (a “botros”), and a cylindrical stone altar. Animal bones (likely from pigs) and pottery votive offerings have been found within the botros.

Several lead curse tablets have also been found at Morgantina, and most have been unearthed from the offering pit in the sanctuary / propylon to the still-unnamed Chthonian goddess. One tablet, pictured below, is part of a group of four tablets all cursing a slave named Venusta, and asking the gods of the Underworld to take her to their realm of the dead.

I hope you enjoyed this short essay on Hekate in Magna Graecia: Morgantina. I will expand on this specific topic of Morgantina in the future.
© Melissa McNair / The Torch and Key
Sources:
- “The Sanctuaries Of Demeter And Persephone At Morgantina At The Getty Villa”, https://archaeonewsnet.com/2012/04/sanctuaries-of-demeter-and-persephone.html
- “Terracotta Figurines and the Acrolithic Statues of Demeter and Kore from Morgantina”, https://journals.openedition.org/acost/1101
- “Morgantina”, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morgantina
- Sjöqvist, Erik. “Excavations at Serra Orlando (Morgantina) Preliminary Report II.” American Journal of Archaeology, vol. 62, no. 2, 1958, pp. 155–164. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/502351
- “An Ancient Curse Revealed”, Alexandra Sofroniew, https://blogs.getty.edu/iris/an-ancient-curse-revealed/
- Smith, Jennifer Lynn, “The Thesmophoria of Morgantina” (2015). Art History Master’s Qualifying Papers. 7.
https://ir.stthomas.edu/cas_arthistory_mat/7