AssvTia
AssvTia refers to a sacred plant or its juice, venerated in ancient Heliopolis and linked to the Tree of Life, bestowing immortality. Its trefoil form symbolizes the "three-in-one mystery" and represents Spirit, Soul, and Life.
Where the word comes from
The term "AssvTia" appears to be a transliteration or corruption from ancient Egyptian, possibly related to "Isis" or "Hathor," deities associated with Heliopolis. Its precise linguistic root is obscure, but it evokes concepts of sacred plants and their life-giving properties, analogous to Soma in Vedic traditions.
In depth
It was sacred to Ilathor at Ileliopolis; and is now sacred in the same place to the Virprin ^lai-y. Its juice was precious by virtue of its occult powers, as the Soma is with Bralnnans, and Ilaoma with the Parsis. "The fruit and sap of the Tree of Life bestow immortality." A larpre volume miprht be written upon these sacred trees of antiquity, the reverence for some of which has survived to this day. without exhaustinp: the subject. Trefoil Tjke th<- Irish sliamroek. it has a svmbolic meanin<i, "the thrco-iii-ono mystery" as an author calils it. It crowned the liead of Osiris, and the wreatli fell off when Typlion killed the radiant jrod. Some see in it a pliallie sifrriificanee. but we deny this idea in Occultism. Tt was the plant of Spirit. Soul and Life. Treta Yuga fSk.). The second aprc of tin- world, a pi-riod of 1 .'JfKi.OOO years. Triad, or the Thnr. The ten Sephiroth are contemplated as a proup of three triafls : Ketlier, C'hochmah and Binah form the supernal triad:
How different paths see it
What it means today
Blavatsky’s entry on AssvTia, though brief and somewhat fragmented, offers a potent glimpse into the archaic reverence for plants as conduits of spiritual power and immortality. The association with Hathor at Heliopolis, and its parallel to the Vedic Soma, underscores a near-universal human impulse to find the divine in the natural world. Mircea Eliade, in his seminal works on shamanism and the sacred, often highlighted the role of psychoactive plants in ecstatic rituals, serving as bridges between the mundane and the transcendent. AssvTia’s juice, described as having "occult powers," aligns with this ancient understanding of botanical sacraments.
The symbolic interpretation of the trefoil as the "three-in-one mystery" is particularly illuminating. This resonates with numerous cosmological and theological frameworks. In Christian mysticism, the Trinity is the ultimate expression of this divine unity in multiplicity. In Hinduism, the Trimurti (Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva) embodies a similar concept of cosmic function. Even in Taoism, the interplay of Yin and Yang, often conceptualized with a third, emergent principle, hints at a fundamental triad. The notion that this plant represented "Spirit, Soul, and Life" suggests a sophisticated ancient psychology, positing a layered human constitution that, when harmonized, could achieve a state of enduring existence. The idea that the "fruit and sap of the Tree of Life bestow immortality" is a potent, archetypal image, appearing in the Garden of Eden narrative and in countless myths of heroes seeking eternal life. AssvTia, in this context, becomes a tangible representation of that elusive, life-affirming essence sought across cultures and epochs. It invites contemplation on how we, in our modern, often desacralized world, might rediscover the vital energies inherent in nature and within ourselves.
RELATED_TERMS: Soma, Tree of Life, Elixir of Life, Sacred Plants, Triad, Divine Unity, Archetypes ---
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