Contamination: Corrupting Queens Body And Soul Now
In many traditions, a queen’s reproductive system was a sacred site. Monthly bleeding was a sign of her vitality. Pregnancy was a political event. But contamination of the womb—miscarriage, stillbirth, or the inability to conceive—was treated as a moral failing. It was believed that sin or impurity had entered her. The whispers would start: "She has been cursed. She has lain with a demon. Her blood is tainted." Her body, once the promise of succession, becomes a tomb.
The soul of a queen is supposed to rest in divine certainty. She is God’s regent. But contamination breeds doubt. Why would God allow this? If I am holy, why am I rotting? Perhaps the old gods were right. Perhaps I am cursed. In many narratives, the corrupted queen turns to forbidden magic—not for power, but for cleansing . She drinks blood. She consorts with witches. She offers a lock of her hair to a statue of Hecate. These acts are not evil by origin; they are the desperate prayers of a drowning woman. But the church calls them heresy. And so her soul is now officially contaminated, too. contamination: corrupting queens body and soul
In the grand tapestry of history, mythology, and fiction, few figures stand as purely symbolic as the Queen. She is the heart of the kingdom, the vessel of bloodlines, and the earthly mirror of divine order. When a kingdom prospers, the Queen is radiant. When it rots, the rot begins with her. In many traditions, a queen’s reproductive system was