# Pentacle of the Goddess Pendant | Wiccan Pewter

## Pentacle of the Goddess Pendant in Pewter

This **pentacle goddess pendant** places a female figure at the center of a pentacle — a five-pointed star inscribed within a circle. The goddess stands with her arms raised above her head, her hands meeting at the top point of the star, her lower body enveloped in a flowing cloak that tapers to a point at the base. The pose is immediately recognizable in Wiccan and Neopagan practice as the goddess position: arms and legs spread to mirror the five points of the pentagram, the body itself becoming the symbol. The pendant is cast in fine lead-free pewter and comes on a 33-inch black cord with a legend card. It is part of the Wiccan Collection by Nirvana.

-   **Material:** Fine pewter, lead-free
-   **Size:** 2 3/4 in L x 1 1/8 in W x 1/16 in thick
-   **Weight:** 0.4 oz
-   **Cord:** 33 in black cord
-   **Includes:** Legend card
-   **Collection:** [Wiccan and Pagan Collection](/collections/wiccan-and-pagan)
-   **Product Number:** WIC-168

## The Pentacle and the Five Elements

The **pentacle — the five-pointed star within a circle — is one of the central symbols of contemporary Wicca and broader Neopagan practice**. Its five points correspond to **five elements: Earth, Water, Fire, Air, and Spirit**, the last of which distinguishes the Wiccan model from the classical four-element framework. The enclosing circle binds these elements together and is understood to represent wholeness or the cycle of existence. As a ritual tool, the pentacle appears on altars and in protective work; as a worn symbol, it functions as a statement of alignment with these principles. The pentacle differs from the pentagram — the star without a circle — though the two terms are often used interchangeably in popular usage.

## Drawing Down the Moon and the Goddess Position

The **pose of the figure** on this pentacle goddess pendant — arms raised, body elongated — is associated with one of Wicca's central ritual acts: drawing down the moon. In this practice, a priestess invokes the Goddess into herself, adopting a specific posture that mirrors the pentagram: head at the top point, arms at the upper two points, legs at the lower two. The ritual was formalized in mid-20th century Wicca by Gerald Gardner and Doreen Valiente, though the underlying idea — invoking divine presence into a human body — has parallels in older religious traditions. The legend card for this pendant quotes a phrase associated with Starhawk and the feminist spirituality movement of the 1970s and 1980s: "The Goddess is alive, and Magic is afoot."

## For More Reading

-   [Pentacle | Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentacle)
-   [Drawing Down the Moon (Ritual) | Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drawing_down_the_Moon_\(ritual\))
-   [A Goddess Arrives: Nineteenth-Century Sources of the Triple Moon Goddess | Wiccan Rede](https://wiccanrede.org/2020/07/a-goddess-arrives-nineteenth-century-sources-of-the-new-age-triple-moon-goddess/)

## Details

- **Price:** 13.5 USD
- **Vendor:** Nirvana
- **Type:** Museum Jewelry
- **Tags:** interest-wicca-wiccan-sorcery, museum-jewelry, museum-jewelry-necklaces

## Variants

| Variant | Price | Available |
|---------|-------|-----------|
| Default Title | 13.50 USD | In stock |

## Images

- entacle goddess pendant WIC-168 with quarter for scale, showing size approximately 2.75 inches long, lead-free pewter, goddess position figure in pentagram circle
- wiccan pentacle pendant amidst wiccan items celebrating femininity
- Pentacle of the Goddess pewter pendant WIC-168 on Wiccan Collection legend card by Nirvana, goddess figure in pentacle circle, 33-inch black cord
- Pentacle of the Goddess pendant front view, lead-free pewter, female figure with arms raised inside five-pointed star circle, Wiccan Collection WIC-168

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> Source: [Museumize.com](https://www.museumize.com/products/pentacle-goddess-pendant-charm)
> Updated: 2026-06-29
