Announcing Scholar Salon 95: Register for Februrary 19

Let the Ancient Gods and Goddesses Organize Your Year

with Dr. Normandi Ellis

Thursday,  February 19, 2026 at 3:00 PM Eastern Time  

REGISTER HERE

 

Dr. Normandi Ellis at Alexandria

Across the ancient world, the Seven Sacred Planets were understood not as distant spheres of rock and gas, but as living intelligences—cosmic powers shaping destiny, consciousness, and your unfolding of life.  The five visible planets and the sun and moon ruled each day of the week. Used correctly, they provide inspiration for effectively engaging in our life tasks, performing the important activities of life at the right time. Not a HUGE astrological teaching, this talk will offer a simple way to look at and organize your daily/yearly calendar based on the intelligences of the planets.

Be sure to bring your planner and calendar to the talk!

Dr. Normandi Ellis

Dr. Normandi Ellis is an ordained clairvoyant Spiritualist minister and priestess of Isis. She is also an astrologer, numerologist, and teacher of metaphysics in a number of venues online and in person. Her books include Awakening Osiris: The Egyptian Book of the Dead, The Union of Isis an Thoth: Magic and Initiatory Practices of Ancient Egypt, Hieroglypic Words of Power, and The Ancient Tradition of Angels. She leads trips to Egypt and trains other priestesses of Isis through her lyceum, Per Ankh Het Seshet. Normandi has been a member of ASWM’s Advisory Board since the beginning of our work. Visit her website for  more information on her trips and teachings.

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Upcoming Scholar Salons (3pm Eastern Time):

Thursday March 5, with Dr. Carla Ionescu: She Who Endures: The Cult and Iconography of Artemis of Ephesus

Benefit of Membership - ASWM

This Salon recording will also be available to members when processed after the event. 

 

Scholar Salon 93 (Recording now available)

Scholar Salon #93: Laura Shannon sheds light on indigenous value systems honouring mothers and childbirth, and to offer grounds for placing the Holy Mother at the heart of the Nativity story, as the one for whom the Magi's sacred gifts were intended.

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Announcing Scholar Salon 94: Register for January 22

Women of Ancient Western Asia and (Questioning) Their Stereotypes

with Dr. Pinar Durgun

Thursday,  January 22, 2026 at 3:00 PM Eastern Time  

REGISTER HERE

Statuette of a Woman, “Lady with the Aryballos”, about 2200 – 2000 B.C., Akkadian or Neo-Sumerian, painted alabaster. Musée du Louvre, Département des Antiquités orientales. Image © Musée du Louvre, dist. RMN-Grand Palais / Thierry Ollivier / Art Resource, NY.

Modern perceptions of women in ancient Mesopotamia (or ancient Western Asia) are often shaped by persistent stereotypes: that women were universally oppressed, legally invisible, and confined to domestic or sexualized roles. This talk explores how our understanding of ancient women’s lives shifts when we challenge these assumptions and examine evidence across legal, economic, religious, and visual sources. Each category of evidence carries its own biases, privileging certain narratives while silencing others.

Carnelian cylinder seal (and modern impression) with mother and child attended by women, Akkadian period (ca. 2334–2154 BC), from Ur (modern Tell el-Muqayyar, Iraq). PG 871. Image © Courtesy of University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.

While patriarchal structures shaped Mesopotamian society and law codes emphasized control and restriction, other sources reveal women owning and managing property, participating in economic transactions, and holding significant religious offices within temple and palace institutions. Rather than seeking a single “status of women” in Mesopotamia, this presentation highlights the variety of lived experiences shaped by class, historical period, and institutional context. By bringing these fragmented forms of evidence into conversation, the talk invites us to reconsider not only women in the ancient world, but also how women’s histories are constructed, obscured, and reclaimed through material culture and its study.

Dr. Pinar Durgun

Dr. Pinar Durgun is an art-historically trained archaeologist with a strong background in anthropology. She has a Ph.D. in Archaeology and the Ancient World from Brown University’s Joukowsky institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World. Her interests center around death and burial, image and identity making, materials and making in the ancient world. Her current research focuses on seals and seal making, and copies and copying in ancient Western Asia. With fifteen years of experience teaching and working in museums, Dr. Durgun is interested in how museums help us engage with the past and how they can better serve our communities today. She is currently the Jeannette and Jonathan Rosen Associate Curator and Department Head of Ancient Western Asian Seals and Tablets Department at the Morgan Library and Museum in New York City.

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Upcoming Scholar Salons (3pm Eastern Time):

Thursday February 5, with Dr. Joan Marler,  Topic: the legacy of Marija Gimbutas

Benefit of Membership - ASWM

This Salon recording will also be available to members when processed after the event. 

 

Announcing Scholar Salon 93: Register for January 8

The Gifts of the Magi Were Meant for the Mother
with Laura Shannon
Thursday,  January 8, 2026 at 3:00 PM Eastern Time  

   Facebook Live Promo Interview on 1/5/26:

Adoration of the Magi, Albrecht Dürer, 1504

In the Christian Nativity story, the Magi brought gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh, symbolising Christ’s kingship, divinity, and death. In this presentation, I suggest that the gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh were actually meant for the new mother, Mary. I will also consider the theory that the Magi were not only three, and were not only men, but may have included women healers and midwives among their number.

The original gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh – now preserved on Mt. Athos – take the form of gold filigree pendants and beads of blended frankincense and myrrh. These elements are now divided into smaller segments, but originally would have been joined together in one long loop, in the style of North African bridal necklaces of scented paste beads and flat gold filigree lockets.

Frankincense nuggets

The flat gold lockets were known as meskiyah, and were intended to contain fragrant substances. The beads, called skhab, are also powerfully fragrant, formed from resins and spices such as cloves and roses, or indeed frankincense and myrrh. These were ritually blended for a bride before her wedding in a custom which is still practiced today in North Africa.

With this and other artistic, iconographic, and medical evidence, I hope to shed light on indigenous value systems honouring mothers and childbirth, and to offer grounds for (re)placing the Holy Mother at the heart of the Nativity story, as the one for whom the sacred gifts were intended.

Laura Shannon

Laura Shannon has been researching and teaching traditional women’s circle dances worldwide for 40 years. With degrees in Intercultural Studies, Dance Movement Therapy, and Myth, Cosmology and the Sacred, she is currently a PhD candidate researching the roots of women’s ritual dance. A faculty member of the Findhorn Foundation Sacred Dance Department since 1998, Laura is also Founding Director of the Athena Institute for Women’s Dance and Culture; Director of the Ariadne Institute for the Study of Myth and Ritual and the Goddess Pilgrimage to Crete, following Carol Christ; and an Honorary Lifetime Member of the Sacred Dance Guild in recognition of her ‘significant and lasting contribution to dance as a sacred art’. Laura has published numerous articles and chapters on ritual dance in multiple languages, and as a musician and singer, has produced several recordings of traditional dance music. Laura lives in Greece and the UK.

See related article in Feminism and Religion

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Upcoming Scholar Salons (3pm Eastern Time):

Thursday January 22 “Women of Ancient Western Asia” “with Dr. Pinar Durgun

Thurday February 5, with Dr. Joan Marler, on the legacy of Marija Gimbutas

Benefit of Membership - ASWM

This Salon recording will also be available to members when processed after the event.