Trinity Special #1 will release in January 2024!
Elizabeth "Lizzie" Marston Prince is Trinity, the daughter of Wonder Woman from a possible future and the leader of the Justice League.
the origin of princess Diana Wonder Woman: Tempest Tossed (2020)
the birth of the amazons
Wonder Woman (1987) #1
Did a series of menacing & dangerous women sketches recently! Finished just one but feels I gotta move on. Yes I did pick all the colors from the visible spectrum so I could put them back together into a rainbow.
The author has indicated this post may contain content that may not be suitable for all audiences.
Nat meets Nubia and apparently they’re gamers and shit gets craaaaazy DC Pride 2023
Let's spend a few days looking at depictions of the Amazons, the mythical race of fierce female warriors that showed up a lot in Greek literature. You don’t exactly have to be Sigmund Freud to understand why a repressively patriarchal society like Greece would have spent so much time simultaneously entranced and horrified by the question, “What if women had political and military power?”
Here's an image from around 500 BCE of a beautiful (“kalos,” which you can see written in the upper right) Amazon:
And here’s a vase from 420 BCE on which Theseus fights the Amazons, who, it must be said, are decked out in some pretty nifty patterned clothing.
You can read the whole piece here (free friend link):
Citadel C30 Amazons, including the Goddess Rigg and her Koka-Kalim zealots, blending punk, Central & South American, and sci-fi influences, as pictured in The Second Citadel Compendium, 1984. Citadel eventually started photographing their miniatures, but illustrations remained common in many company's ads and catalogs throughout the 1980s.
Adventurers meet agents of the Amazon Sisterhood: "The Koka-Kalim are religious zealots, fanatically dedicated worshippers of the Goddess Rigg." The Amazons of Southern Lustria once lived at peace with the Slann, who taught them much about High Age magic and technology that they still use today. (John Blanche cover for The Second Citadel Compendium, 1984, featuring Richard Halliwell's Warhammer scenario "Rigg's Shrine," based on Citadel's C30 Amazon miniature range including the Koka-Kalim figure with High Age pistol) The Goddess Rigg, "the leading figure in the Amazon Pantheon," presumably was named for actress Diana Rigg.
You have been and always will be an inspiration to me.
Amazonomachy frieze at the Mausoleum of Halikarnassos 350 BCE. Images from British Museum, Carole Raddato's flickr, & Mary Harrsch's flickr.
"About the Sauromatae, the story is as follows. When the Greeks were at war with the Amazons (whom the Scythians call Oiorpata, a name signifying in our tongue killers of men, for in Scythian a man is “oior” and to kill is “pata”), the story runs that after their victory on the Thermodon they sailed away carrying in three ships as many Amazons as they had been able to take alive; and out at sea the Amazons attacked the crews and killed them. But they knew nothing about ships, or how to use rudder or sail or oar; and with the men dead, they were at the mercy of waves and winds, until they came to the Cliffs by the Maeetian lake; this place is in the country of the free Scythians. The Amazons landed there, and set out on their journey to the inhabited country, and seizing the first troop of horses they met, they mounted them and raided the Scythian lands.
The Scythians could not understand the business; for they did not recognize the women's speech or their dress or their nation, but wondered where they had come from, and imagined them to be men all of the same age; and they met the Amazons in battle. The result of the fight was that the Scythians got possession of the dead, and so came to learn that their foes were women.
Therefore, after deliberation they resolved by no means to slay them as before, but to send their youngest men to them, of a number corresponding (as they guessed) to the number of the women. They directed these youths to camp near the Amazons and to imitate all that they did; if the women pursued them, not to fight, but to flee; and when the pursuit stopped, to return and camp near them. This was the plan of the Scythians, for they desired that children be born of the women. The young men who were sent did as they were directed. When the Amazons perceived that the youths meant them no harm, they let them be; but every day the two camps drew nearer to each other.
Now the young men, like the Amazons, had nothing but their arms and their horses, and lived as did the women, by hunting and plunder. At midday the Amazons would scatter and go apart from each other singly or in pairs, roaming apart for greater comfort. The Scythians noticed this and did likewise; and as the women wandered alone, a young man laid hold of one of them, and the woman did not resist but let him do his will; and since they did not understand each other's speech and she could not speak to him, she signed with her hand that he should come the next day to the same place and bring another youth with him (showing by signs that there should be two), and she would bring another woman with her.
The youth went away and told his comrades; and the next day he came himself with another to the place, where he found the Amazon and another with her awaiting them. When the rest of the young men learned of this, they had intercourse with the rest of the Amazons. Presently they joined their camps and lived together, each man having for his wife the woman with whom he had had intercourse at first.
Now the men could not learn the women's language, but the women mastered the speech of the men; and when they understood each other, the men said to the Amazons, “We have parents and possessions; therefore, let us no longer live as we do, but return to our people and be with them; and we will still have you, and no others, for our wives.” To this the women replied: “We could not live with your women; for we and they do not have the same customs. We shoot the bow and throw the javelin and ride, but have never learned women's work; and your women do none of the things of which we speak, but stay in their wagons and do women's work, and do not go out hunting or anywhere else. So we could never agree with them. If you want to keep us for wives and to have the name of fair men, go to your parents and let them give you the allotted share of their possessions, and after that let us go and live by ourselves.” The young men agreed and did this.
So when they had been given the allotted share of possessions that fell to them, and returned to the Amazons, the women said to them: “We are worried and frightened how we are to live in this country after depriving you of your fathers and doing a lot of harm to your land. Since you propose to have us for wives, do this with us: come, let us leave this country and live across the Tanaïs river.” To this too the youths agreed; and crossing the Tanaïs, they went a three days' journey east from the river, and a three days' journey north from lake Maeetis; and when they came to the region in which they now live, they settled there. Ever since then the women of the Sauromatae have followed their ancient ways; they ride out hunting, with their men or without them; they go to war, and dress the same as the men. The language of the Sauromatae is Scythian, but not spoken in its ancient purity, since the Amazons never learned it correctly. In regard to marriage, it is the custom that no maiden weds until she has killed a man of the enemy; and some of them grow old and die unmarried, because they cannot fulfill the law."
-Herodotus, The Histories 4.110.1
I collected more images on my blog page than I can post here: https://paganimagevault.blogspot.com/2022/10/amazonomachy-frieze-at-mausoleum-of.html
Fantastic Adventures, June, 1940
Image: Hippolyta and the Amazons Defeating Theseus, sculpture, 1933 by Jean Broome-Norton
Curatorial Concept: All-female community of warriors who mate with males once a year.
*One artifact on show in the 2022 ‘Queer: Stories from the NGV Collection’ at the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne.
and the Amazons rejoiced! (most of them)
Wonder Woman #780
General Antiope by Carlos D'Anda Wonder Woman: Black and Gold #5
Trial of the Amazons
Well that tagline rather spoils the ending, doesn't it
WONDER WOMAN HISTORIA #1: THE AMAZONS
Today, WW Historia is finally available.
I haven't been this excited about a comic book in a very long time. Over three years of waiting for this project to come to life.
Forget everything you know about the Amazons. Written by Kelley Sue DeConnick with artwork by Phil Jimenez.
Clearly this is a passion project and Volume 2 can't arrive soon enough.