The Pomegranate is more than a (truly beautiful) fruit.
Biologically speaking, the ‘fruit’ that we eat is actually the ripened, seed-bearing ovary of the flowering plant – a botanical structure which is technically classified as ‘berry’.
Nature is just so clever! As it very often shows us – when resembling the condition or body part – what it supports.
This is referred to as the Doctrine of Signatures or Doctrine of Correspondences.
As such, the pomegranate, when cut open to reveal its seed-filled chambers–strikingly mirrors the female ovary and its function is that it nourishes the reproductive system.
The Pomegranate is an archetype – an ancient symbol of fertility and divine remembrance, encoded in its ripe, juicy seeds. You may recall that Persephone ate pomegranate seeds and subsequently had to spend one third of the year in the Underworld with Hades. This myth highlights the cyclical nature of the female body, a continuous wheel of death and rebirth.
The pomegranate represented both death and fertility, it fits perfectly into this myth about the changing of seasons, as well as the duality of Persephone herself as the Queen of the Underworld and the Goddess of Springtime