Candy
Masks, covering the face, were used in sacred drama and other ceremonies to represent the presence of deity. To put on the mask, in ancient times, was often interpreted as a literal assumption of the divine spirit that the mask embodied. The animal-headed deities of ancient Egypt began as priests and priestesses wearing totemic animal masks. The wolf and bear clans of northern Europe wore masks of the appropriate animals for religious rites and considered themselves inwardly possessed by their sacred beasts. Such traditions gave rise not only to common surnames like Wolf and Baer, but also to legends of werewolves (“man-wolves”) and berserkers (warriors who became possessed by battle-frenzy when wearing the “bear sark” or bearskin).
Though Hecate was popular in Greco-Roman culture, she actually originated in Egypt as the Crone Goddess Hekat, an amalgam of the seven obstetrical Hathors who daily delivered the newborn sun….
The name of Lilith first appears on a 4,000-year-old tablet from Ur containing the “Sumerian version of the Gilgamesh epic” called “Gilgamesh and the Huluppu-Tree.” She was known in Sumeria and Babylon as Belit-Ili, the Lily Goddess…. Such she-demons were also called Night-Hags or Night-Mares, recalling the black, mare-headed form of Demeter/Persephone as Crone (Demeter Chthonia, “Underground Demeter”).
Shakespeare’s Macbeth shows the three Weird Sisters dancing around their sacred cauldron, singing “Round About the Cauldron Go.” They are none other than the old Saxon Triple-Goddess Wyrd, whose name means “Fate” and who took all creatures into her fatal cauldron to bring them forth again in new forms. That she was the death-bringing and life-giving spirit of the earth is indisputable. Some form of the Cauldron seems to have accompanied most of mythology’s Crone figures.
Source:
https://stillnessinthestorm.com/2013/10/the-origins-of-halloween-season-of-crone/

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