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"Manah" redirects here. For the place near Mecca, see Mina, Saudi Arabia. Manāt (Arabic: منات) was one of the three chief goddesses of Mecca.[1] The pre-Islamic Arabs believed Manāt to be the goddess of fate. She was known by the cognate name Manawat to the Nabataeans of Petra, who equated her with the Graeco-Roman goddess Nemesis and she was considered the wife of Hubal.[2] She is also mentioned in the Qur'an (Sura 53:20) that pre-Islamic Arabs believed as one of the daughters of Allāh along with Allāt and Al-‘Uzzá, however it is stated in the Qur'an that God has no progeny. According to Grunebaum in Classical Islam, the Arabic name of Manat is the linguistic counterpart of the Hellenistic Tyche, Dahr, fateful 'Time' who snatches men away and robs their existence of purpose and value. There are also connections with Chronos of Mithraism and Zurvan mythology.[3] The Book of Idols describes her:
The Quraysh (the ruling tribe of Mecca) and other Arabs continued to worship Manat until the time of Muhammad. [edit] Notes
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[edit] External links
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