Manat (goddess)
| Manāt | |
|---|---|
| Goddess of fate, fortune, time, death, and destiny | |
| Major cult center | Mecca | 
| Abode | Al-Mushallal | 
| Symbols | Waning moon, cup of death | 
| Region | Arabia | 
| Genealogy | |
| Siblings | Al-Lat, Al-‘Uzzá | 
| Consort | Hubal | 
| Equivalents | |
| Greek | Ananke | 
| Part of the myth series on Religions of the ancient Near East | 
| Pre-Islamic Arabian deities | 
|---|
| Arabian deities of other Semitic origins | 
Manāt (Arabic: مناة, pronounced [maˈnaːh] (pausa) or [maˈnaːt], Old Arabic: [manaˈwat]; also transliterated as Manāh) was a pre-Islamic Arabian goddess worshipped in the Arabian Peninsula before the rise of Islam and the Islamic prophet Muhammad in the 6/7th century. She was among Mecca's three chief goddesses, alongside her sisters, Al-Lat and Al-‘Uzzá, and among them, she was the original and the oldest.