Gods
ŽEl,
ŽIlu
Common
epithets of ŽEl
- Bull
El / God - thôru Žilu
- El
at the sources of the two rivers - Žilu mabbukê naharêmi
- El
in the midst of the springs of the two oceans - Žilu qirba
Žapigê tihamatêmi
- Father
of Humanity - Žabi Žadamu
- The
Creator of Creatures - baniyu banawati
- The
Ageless One who Created Us - dordoru dykeninu
- Kindly/Beneficent
ŽEl the Compassionate/Sympathetic - lutipanu Žilu du paŽidu
- The
King, the Father of Years/Time - malik Žabi shanima/shunemi
Biblical
titles include:
- Žabi
Žad = "eternal father"
- Žel
`olam, = "God/ ŽEl the Eternal One"
- `attiq
yomin/yomayyaŽ = "Ancient of Days,"
all of which clearly reflect the epithets of the Ugaritic
ŽEl.
The chief Canaanite god is ŽEl, which means simply
"God," familiar as one of the names of the single god of the
Bible. The linguistic root may mean "That" or "the One." He
is called "Creator of all Created Things," as well as "Father
of Humanity." ŽEl is therefore the prime creator god of the
pantheon, although we do not currently have a Canaanite creation
story. ŽEl is also the king and head of the divine assembly,
the council of the gods, although He is not necessarily 'biological'
father of all the deities.
Despite
His position as creator, ŽEl thereafter was comparatively
inactive. He is described as an old bearded man and, in most
stories we have, He is seated in His hall up on His mountain
- between the two rivers which are the source of the world
oceans. Although He is rather remote, and not usually directly
approached, ŽEl is strong, powerful and wise. He is Thoru
ŽIlu, the Bull God, identified with this animal for its strength
and steadfastness. Whatever happens, He conserves His dignity.
ŽEl
is a major figure in most of the Ugaritic myths, in the stories
of Ba`al, of Aqhat, of Keret, and of Shahar and Shalim. He
is also at or near the top of the offering lists at Ugarit,
figuring in all of them. Kings on Earth are referred to as
Sons of ŽEl. ŽEl is also the host of the ritual feast association,
the Marzeah, which among other events, sponsored an
annual Feast for the Dead.
If
we need His aid, we must first gain the assistance of another
deity who can go to His distant palace. Frequently this is
ŽAsherah, although `Anat is often not shy to approach Him
directly. But ŽEl is latipanu Žilu dupaŽidu, "the Compassionate
God of Mercy." He is not easily moved to anger. The Kindly
One, He blesses us and He forgives us when we do things we
shouldn't. If we say we are sorry, this is usually sufficient,
and He accepts this as atonement. He mourns for our pain and
rejoices in our happiness.
`Anat
says to ŽEl:
your decree, ŽEl,
is wise;
your wisdom is forever;
A life of good fortune is your decree.
ŽAsherah
says to ŽEl:
You are great, ŽEl,
indeed you are wise,
the grey hair of your beard indeed instructs you.
ŽAthirat
(Ugarit), ŽAsherah (Hebrew)
Common
epithets of ŽAthirat
- Goddess
- Želat
- Great
Lady She-Who-Treads-On-The-Sea - rabatu Žathiratu yammi
- Holiness,
Holy One - qdsh, qadashu
- Creatress/
Progenitress of the Deities - qnyt. ilm, qaniyatu Žilima
In
the original texts from Ugarit, Her name is ŽAthirat.
Her full title is Rabat ŽAthirat Yam, Great Lady She
who Treads on the Sea. After certain linguistic changes,
the pronunciation becomes ŽAsherah among the Ph|nicians
and the Hebrews. She is the Canaanite Mother of All, Progenitrix
of the Deities, and consort of ŽEl. She is goddess of
the sea, particularly along the shore, of the fertility
of humanity, flocks, and crops, and of great wisdom. ŽElat/
ŽAlat another of Her titles, means "Goddess," as ŽEl
means "God," so ŽAsherah is possibly related to the Arabian
goddess ŽAl-Lat. As ŽEl is the Bull, ŽAsherah is
the Lion.
The
earliest known evidence of the worship of the Goddess
ŽAsherah goes back to Sumer, where an inscription dating
from 1750 BCE was found on a monument set up by an Amorite
official in honor of Hammurapi, on which She is mentioned
as Ashratum, bride of Anu, an Akkadian god who
corresponds to ŽEl as god of heaven at the source of the
rivers where the two world oceans meet. From Amarna in
Egypt, there is mention of ŽAthirat in the Akkadian letters
dating from 14th Century BCE. The Goddess is also mentioned
in Amorite form as Ashirta. And She was known in
Southern Arabia. Miners working for the Egyptians in the
Sinai called Her the Turquoise Lady, which was
also an epithet of Hathor, with whom She was later identified
by the Egyptians.
Small household deity figurines of clay used in personal
devotion, possibly teraphim, have been found by the thousands
in Palestine/ Israel, from the Israelite period, unmatched
by any male figurines. She is most commonly formed as
a nude torso, cupping Her hands under Her breasts, with
short curly hair. The lower part of the figure is hollow,
the exterior smooth with a slight flange at the bottom
so the figurine can stand up. Because of the commoness
of the finds, it can be assumed that She must have been
extremely popular in all segments of Hebrew society. It
was not unusual to seek Her aid in childbirth As companion
in Canaan of Kindly ŽEl the Compassionate and in Israel
of Yawhu/Yahweh the Compassionate and Merciful, it is
Her memory which is now disguised as the Shekhinah.
ŽAsherah
has long been associated with the sea, as seen in Her
epithet from the ancient Syrian city of Ugarit, Rabat
ŽAthiratu Yami - Great Lady She who Treads on the Sea.
From Phoenicia, She is known as protectress of sea travellers,
a guide of ships. In the form of Tanith,
both in Phoenicia and from North Africa in West Phoenician
cities such as Carthage, She is often depicted accompanied
by dolphins or fish.
ŽAsherah
is also called LabiŽatu, the Lion Lady. She was
represented as a lion with a human female head in the
Sinai, from an early find. Other leonine aspects include
Her representation as Qadasha, a human female standing
on a lion, from sites in the Levant, Egypt and North Africa,
and a lion-headed human female from a Punic temple at
Siagu. Her sons are referred to in the Ugaritic texts
as Her lions.
Again
from finds from the Sinai, She is called Dat
ba'thani, Lady of the Serpent. Another name of ŽAsherah
in the first milleneum BCE is Chawat, which is
Hawah in Hebrew and Eve in English. Her
full title is Rabat Chawat ŽElat, Great Lady
Eve the Goddess, and is associated with the serpent.
Thus, Chawa/ Eve is probably a form of ŽAsherah as a Serpent
Goddess. As a snake goddess, She was also represented
by bronze serpent forms, examples of which have been found
in archaeological excavations in the Levant. In fact the
Nehush-tan, literally the Bronze Serpent
which in traditional Jewish myth is associated with Moses,
is much more likely an emblem of ŽAsherah. It too was
removed from the Jerusalem temple the same time as the
Žasherah objects.
Tanith,
one of Her names in both Phoenicia and North Africa, means
Serpent Lady, from "tan" = serpent, with a feminine
ending "-it". Scholar Saul Olyan gives an especially cogent
argument concerning this later Punic/ Carthaginian goddess
as a form of ŽAsherah. One of the symbols of Tanith is
often referred to as a caduceus, what looks like two ribbons
on a pole. It is actually two serpents on or twined around
a tree or asherah-pole. A Punic stele has a complex grouping
of symbols. At the top is an up-turned crescent, representing
the heavens, and a wreath, possibly of snakes. Below is
Tanith in a triangular garment from shoulders to feet,
Her arms bent upward and outward, holding in each hand
a cornucopia, out of which come a pomegranate on Her left
and a bunch of grapes on Her right. On each side of Her,
below Her waist and arms, is a dove.
ŽAsherah is the Tree of Life, a
life-giving goddess of well-being. The palm tree, particularly
the female date palm which bears clusters of dates, is
the tree of life in the arid Near Eastern desert - having
shallow roots, it must grow near a source of water; it
provides shelter from the sun; its leaves make thatch
for roofs; its trunk can be used for building; its sap
can make sugar (like maple syrup) and even be fermented
into an alcoholic beverage; and the fruit of the date,
both fresh and dried, is a commonly eaten food. ŽAsherah
was honored as a sacred tree and worshipped in sacred
groves, sometimes depicted in a tree of life stance between
two animals. Since She is "upright" and "straight," upright
posts or living trees represent Her. On the lid of an
ivory pixus from Minet el-Beida (see illustration), Ugarit's
sea port, She is depicted in Mycenaeo-Cretan style. She
is seated on a decorated stool wearing only a full, Cretan-style
layered skirt. Her hair is up on top of Her head. She
holds a bunch of plants in each hand, with a rampant ibex
on each side facing Her.
She
is also called the Lady of of the Stars of Heaven
and the Queen of Heaven, Dea Coelestis
in Latin. Associated symbols include the solar disk and
the crescent, which can appear either with both points
up or down. In this form it may represent the canopy of
the Heavens, rather than the moon.
A
prayer to Her found in Egypt from a Levantine burial:
Praise Qadashu,
Lady of of the Stars of Heaven, Mistress of All the
Gods,
May She grant life, welfare, prosperity, and health.
Mayest thou grant that I behold thy beauty daily.
She
is also sometimes shown curly haired, riding a lion, holding
lilies and serpents in upraised hands, as Qadashu,
as She was known in Egypt. In Egypt representations show
Her with Hathor-style hair standing on a lion holding
a serpent and/or a flower, either a lotus or a lily, in
each hand. An Ugaritic representation on a gold
foil pendant shows Her as a full frontal nude with
Hathor style hair - shoulder length and flipped up at
the bottom - standing on a lion, holding a lily or lotus
in each hand, and girded with serpents. She was served
by oracular magician-priests and may orignally have been
worshipped with joyful orgiastic rites. She was later
merged in Ph|nicia with ŽAshtartu/ Astarté.
ŽAsherah
and Her cult symbols were legitimate, not only in popular
Yahwism, but in the official cult as well, both of the
north and south, in Jerusalem, Samaria, and Bethel, and
in conservative circles as well. She was worshipped as
consort of Yahweh, represented by Her sacred tree or pole
in the temple at Jerusalem for about 240 of the 360 years
of its existence until the temple's final destruction
in 70 CE. While Hosea criticized the bull icons of Bethel,
which were associated with ŽEl/Yahw, the bamot (High Places),
the matstsebot (the sacred standing stones), it is only
in Deuteronomy, which was written in the exilic and post-exilic
periods, that the symbol of ŽAsherah attacked.
Some
scholars have misunderstood ŽAsherah's relationship with
Ba`al, especially in the early days of analysis of the
Canaanite myths. She is not His mother, although when
He petitions Her aid He addresses Her as such. In many
cultures, calling one's elders "mother" and "father" is
a sign of respect. Other scholars believed that ŽAsherah
left ŽEl to become the consort of Ba`al, partly based
on false information propagated by the Bible. Again, a
careful reading of the myths does not support this; rather,
it is an assumption on the part of those who believe that
Ba`al was attempting to overthrow ŽEl. Also there is a
fragmentary story in which it is possible that She has
sexual relations with Ba`al. This is in keeping with Her
ecstatic and loving character, but does not mean She transfered
Her allegiance. While She enjoys a certain amount of freedom
in Her actions, She remains ŽEl's consort and His primary
intermediary with those who wish to petition His aid.
Ba`al
Common
epithets of Ba`al
- Most
High Prince/Master - ŽalŽiyn. b`l, ŽalŽiyanu ba`lu
- Conqueror
of Warriors - ŽalŽiy. qrdm, ŽalŽiyu qarradima
- Mightiest,
Most High, Supreme, Powerful, Puissant - ŽalŽiyn, ŽalŽiyanu,
aleyin, eleyin, aliyin, eliyan, elioun
- Warrior
- dmrn, damaron, Demarous (Greek)
- Hadd,
Haddad, Hadad, Hadu, Adad, Addu - hdd
- Prince,
Master of the Earth - zebul ba`al Žaretz or zubulu ba`lu
Žaretsi
- Pidar,
uncertain meaning, possibly Bright, Flash - pdr, Pidar
- Rider
on the Clouds - rkb `rpt, rakab arpat or rakibu `arpati
- Thunderer
- r`mn, rimmon or re`amin
Gapen
& Ugar, Vineyard and Field, Baal's pages or messengers
- gepanu wa ugaru
Ba`al is the god most actively worshipped
in Canaan and Phoenicia, the Storm God, source of the
winter rain storms, spring mist, and summer dew which
nourish the crops. Therefore He is considered responsible
for fecundity, particularly of the Earth, for the growth
of vegetation, and for the maintenance of life. None the
less, He is NOT a god of vegetation. While the word "ba`al"
means simply "master" or "owner," He is considered a prince.
Among His other epithets are Rider of the Clouds,
Prince, Master of the Earth ( c.f. the Qabalistic
phrase Melek haŽAretz, King of the Earth). Ba`al is an
executive force, dynamic, and able to accomplish what
He sets out to do. Ba`al is often depicted striding forward,
wearing a horned helmet and short wrap kilt, carrying
a mace and spear or lightning-bolt staff. Another of His
names is Re`ammin, meaning Thunderer. He
is also called ŽAleyin, meaning "Most High," "Mightiest,"
"Most Powerful," or "Supreme," which some scholars have
misinterpreted as the name of a son of Ba`al. As a weather
god, His home is in the Heights of Tsaphon, Mount of
the North. Remnants of His worship survive in the
Jewish prayerbook in late spring prayers for dew and late
fall prayers for rain.
In
fact Ba`al is the son of Dagan/Dagnu, Himself
a god of agriculture and storms, and not actually a son
of ŽEl. Through a series of conflicts and competitions
with other gods, Ba`al achieves a position subordinate
only to ŽEl among gods. However, He defers to ŽAsherah
and often enlists Her favors when He must approach ŽEl.
He also relies upon His sister `Anat, who is may be His
mate, although not His wife. At times He transforms into
a bull and She into a heifer, to stress their fertility,
and together they "bring forth seventy, even eighty calves,"
i.e., many progeny. He is never called "The Bull," however,
which title is limited to ŽEl. Ba`al's assistants are
Gapen and Ugar, whose names mean, respectively, "Vineyard"
and "Grain Field," again stressing Ba`al's relationship
with the fertile, life-giving earth.
While
embodying royal power and authority, Ba`al is not aloof
nor beyond the menace of evil. He is continually threatened
yet triumphant, as in the story of His continual conflict
to sustain Order against Chaos with the god Yahm and to
sustain Life against Death with Mot (Mawet/ Mavet in Hebrew),
the god of drought, blight, sterility, and decay.
Ba`al
is also identified as Hadad, an Akkadian and Babylonian
god of the sky, clouds, and rain, both creative, gentle
showers and destructive, devastating storms and floods.
Like the Canaanite Ba`al, Hadad holds and hurls thunder-bolts.
Haddad rides a bull.
His
home, the Mountain Divine Tsapan, is known in Hittite
as Mount Hazzi dkhursân khazi, in Akkadian
as ba`litsapûna, in Greek as Kasios and in Latin as mons
Casius, in modern Arabic as Jebel Žel-Aqra` and in Modern
Turkish as Keldag. It stands 5660 feet (1780 meters) in
height, the peak lying about 25 miles to the north of
Ugarit and 2.5 miles from the coast. Tsapan is well-suited
as home of the great storm-god, as this mountain receives
the heaviest annual rainfall on the Levantine coast at
over 57 inches. Being close to the holy mountain was so
important that there were other Mount Tsaphons near distant
Phoenician settlements in Egypt and in Spain.
Because,
as with ŽEl, the name Ba`al is a title more than a name,
there are numerous "Ba`al's." Among them are:
Ba`al
Lebanon, Master of the Cedars
Ba`al Tsaphon, Master of the North or northern
districts
Ba`al Adir, Master-of-Help
Ba`al Kaneph, Winged Ba`al
Ba`al Moganim, Master of the Shields
Ba`al MarpahŽa, Master of Healing
Ba`al Shamim, Master of the Heavens.
During
the long period of trade and exchange between the Canaanites/
Phoenicians with the Egyptians, Ba`al was associated with
several Egyptian gods. One is Amon, the ram headed
god of fertility, agriculture, air or breath of life,
whose name means "hidden," just as Ba`al is sometimes
hidden among the clouds. There may also be a relationship
between Amon and Ba`al Hammon. As Ba`al Hammon/Khamon,
He is the chief Carthaginian god of sky and vegetation,
depicted as a bearded older man with curling ram's horns,
perhaps a merging of ŽEl and Ba`al. As Ba`al Qarnaim/
Karnayin, Master of the Horns or the Two-Horned
Ba`al, He is a ram-horned god of twilight and the
setting sun.
Some
scholars related Ba`al to the Egyptian Osiris,
considering both as dying-resurrecting gods. While Osiris
has an effect on this world with the annual fertilizing
floods of the Nile, He is never quite resurrected, rather
going to the Netherworld where He reigns. More importantly,
while Osiris was known to the Canaanites - the head of
Osiris after His dismemberment was said to have floated
to the Phoenician city of Byblos - there is no evidence
that the Egyptians or Canaanite-Phoenicians ever equated
the two.
Another
Egyptian god scholars sometimes associate with Ba`al is
Ra/ Re, solar god, creator, and sovereign lord
of the sky; as Ra-Horakte He is chief god of the
Ennead, the nine most high deities. Reborn each dawn in
the East, He dies at dusk after sailing westward across
the sky in His boat. However, Ba`al was NEVER a solar
god, even though faulty attributions of the Victorian
and Edwardian eras have assigned Him this association,
perpetuated by some Neopagans. Some of the confusion is
attributable to a late Hellenistic syncretic deity worshipped
as Heliogabalus, a blending of Ba`al with the Greek
sun god Helios and some Persian deities.
In
fact, the deity with whom the Egyptians themselves particularly
identified Ba`al was Seth/ Set, whose position
varied during Egypt1s long history. Most of the time He
was not evil personified, but a turbulent desert storm
god, and there were pharaohs who bore His name. The Greeks
on the other hand, called Ba`al Zeus Demarous kai Adodos,
while ŽEl was equated instead with Kronos.
The
name Ba`al is cognate with Bel, a Babylon and Assyrian
deity. The Sumerian god Enlil became incorporated with
Bel, which eventually became a title of Marduk, defeater
of Tiamat whose name is possibly cognate with Yam, the
Sea Serpent who Ba`al defeats.
Early
in Canaanite studies, some scholars believed that ŽEl
and Ba`al were in conflict for control of the pantheon.
A careful reading of the myth shows that this is not true,
which is current scholarly thought. There is conflict,
as Ba`al must vanquish those in competition with Him for
the important executive position. But ŽEl remains throughout
the ultimate authority, whom Ba`al must petition for permission
to build His palace. ŽEl has dominion over all Creation,
while Ba`al controls the fertility of the Earthly realm.
Yea, also Ba`al
will make fertile with His rain,
with water He will indeed make fertile harrowed land;
and He will put His voice in the clouds,
He will flash His lightning to the earth.
`Anat,
`Anath, `Anatu, `Anata (Ugarit);
Anta, Antu (Akkadian);
Anit, Anti, Antit, Anant (Egypt.)
Common
epithets of `Anat
- Virgin/
Maiden - btlt `nt, batulatu `Anatu
- Adolescent
Girl - rhm `nt, Rachmaya
- The
Lady - sht (sitt Arabic)
- lovely/
charming/ fairest daughter, the sister of Ba`al - n`mt.
bn. Žaht. b`l
- Strength
of Life - `az chayim
- Anat
The Destroyer - `nt chbly
- ybmt
l`mm, yabamat liŽimim - the meaning of this is uncertain,
some possibilities are:
-
- the
Kindred of the Peoples (of Ugarit)
- Mistress
of (the) Peoples
- Mother/
Progenitress of Nations
- (Widowed)
'Sister in Law' of Heroes
- Sister-in-law
of the Thousand (Deities)
Other
names of `Anat found in Egypt:
- `Anat-her
(Anat agrees) - 1700 BCE on a Hyksos scarab
- Herit-`Anta
(Terror of Anat) - 1700 BCE on a Hyksos scarab in Aramaic
- the
daughter of Ptah - 1555-1200 BCE, 18th & 19th dynasties,
in Memphis
- Anati
- 14th century BCE, Amarna Tablets
- Anatbethel
(means: Anat-house-of-god) - 6th & 5th century BC, Elephantine
Island in the Nile
Linguistic
fusions of `Anat & `Athtartu
- Antit
- at Beth-Shan
- `Antart
- in Egypt
- Anatanta
- at Tanis in Egypt, period of Ramses II
- `Anat-`Ashtart
- in later Syria
- `Attar`atta
= Atargatis (Gr.) - in Aramaic language
`Anat is a compex Ugaritic goddess: Maidenly, Sexual,
War-like, whose abode is the Mountain of Žinbib. Her most
common epithet in Ugarit is the Maiden (batalat), meaning,
not virgo intacta, but spouse of no one, perhaps
a perpetually impetuous adolescent. At the same time She
is sister and possibly lover of Ba`al, seemingly appearing
as a heifer to Ba`al's bull and possibly mother of some
of Ba`al's offspring as calves, although never His wife;
for, at times, He transforms into a bull and She into
a heifer, to stress their fertility, and together they
bring forth seventy, even eighty, i.e., many progeny.
Mark
Smith synopsizes Her etomology as follows: In the Ugaritica
V deity-list, Her name is written as da-na-tu4,
vocalized as `anatu. Gray compares Arabic `anwat, "violence";
McCarter connects it with Akkadian ittu, "sign," hence
the goddess is the sign of the presence of the god; Deem
relates it to a putative BH root *`nh, "to love, to make
love" and with an agricultural term m`nh/m`nt, "a turn
of the plow, a furrow." Finally, there is a secondary
connection between it and `n, "spring."
As
Ba`al's companion and help-mate, She is goddess of dew
and the fertility that it brings. One of Her epithets
is Strength of Life - `az chayim. Her grace and
beauty were considered among the acme of perfection. She
is sometimes described carrying distaff and spindle. She
is also a warrior, armed with spear and shield, a goddess
of the hunt and of war, aiding Ba`al in His battle with
Yahm and avenging Ba`al's death by slaying Mot. Another
common epithet for Her is Yabamat Li1imim, which
meaning, although not entirely clear, may be "progenitress
(of heroes)" or "protector of Her people." And She is
sometimes called a "wanton." In fact, She is a female
who freely enjoys the pleasures of sex as sacred. She
is sometimes identified as the Qadashu,
the "Holy One," goddess of love and desire.
Embodying
a motif common of goddesses throughout the Middle East,
`Anat thus personifies a high level of energy which can
find its outlet in sexuality or combat, the passionate
ecstacy of sex and war. While probably unrelated, She
has affinities with the Indian goddess Kali Ma,
the Black Mother, who is bringer of life and death, love
and fear.
`Anat
is reminiscent of Sekhmet, the Egyptian lioness-headed,
solar disc crowned warrior goddess. Sekhmet fights as
defender or to right a wrong and can be benign or uncompromisingly
just. She lives on the Mountain of the Setting Sun. `Anat's
myths include a story much like one of Sekhmet's, how
in a heightened state brought about by the slaying of
an entire army, after wading hip deep in blood, `Anat
enters Her palace and in joyful ecstacy annihilates the
furniture imagining it to be another army, until the gods
and their assistants succeed in calming Her, as the gods
subdue Sekhmet with a blend of pomegranate juice and beer
which She quaffs thinking it is blood.
`Anat
also has characteristics of Bast/Bastet, the Egyptian
goddess commonly represented as a seated cat. As deity
of fertility, Bast may appear surrounded by Her kittens.
As protectress or wife of the sun She is sometimes depicted
killing a snake, Apep/Apophis, the serpent who devoured
the Sun. [There is some difference of opinion concerning
this reference. If anyone can clarify this, i would appreciate
e-mail] Here are strong parallels, as
`Anat helps slay the sea-serpent Yahm in His battle with
Ba`al and kills Mot who devoured Ba`al. Bast also appears
as a standing cat-headed woman in a red patterned dress
carrying a sistrum, as giver of the comforts of life:
joy, music, dance, and sexual pleasure, as does the Qadashu.
Bast is the Lady of the East, as Sekhmet is of the West.
She is identified with spring and gentle early summer,
when the vegetative world is dependent on dew, another
characteristic shared with `Anat. This again relates to
`Anat, for typically many Middle Eastern goddesses are
both warrior and lover, morning star and evening star,
such as Ishtar.
`Anat
was recognized by the Egyptians similar to Neith/Net
an ancient goddess from the Nile delta, with whom they
identified Her. Neith is a skilled weaver and guardian
of domestic life, as well as a goddess of war, whose symbols
include crossed arrows on an animal skin or shield and
a weaver's shuttle. `Anat is interpreted as being depicted
with a spindle as well as Her spear, and as the Canaanites/
Phoenicians were famed for their weaving, She may well
have been a patroness of that skill, perhaps also of the
famed dye, later known as Tyrian purple, which could also
be a blood red color. In some descriptions, `Anat adorns
Herself with something translated by some as murex, the
snail from which the purple dye comes.
In
Egypt during the 18th and 19th Dynasties, `Anat was regarded
as one of the great goddesses, particularly as a powerful
goddess and goddess of war. An Egyptian stela from the
northern temple of Beth-shan shows the figure of the Canaanite
warrior goddess identified as Antit. She wears
on Her head a plumed crown and holds in Her left hand
the Egyptian was sceptre of "happiness"
and in Her right hand the ankh sign of "life."
During the time of Ramses II, the 13th C. BCE, She is
represented as seated on a throne and holding weapons.
Two lines of text describe the goddess thus: Anti,
the Queen of Heaven and Mistress of all the gods.
A man stands opposite the goddess, and above him other
text lines tell how he is bringing an offering "to Antit,
that She may give all life, prosperity and health to the
ka of Hesi-Nekht." Both temples in the level
continued in use until at least the time of the Philistines
and are evidently mentioned in the Old Testament. References
to Her continue in later periods. During the Hellenistic
period, Egyptians identified `Anat with Hathor
and Isis, while the Greeks identified Her with
Athena, their virgin warrior goddess, while the
Phoenicians often merged Her with `Athtartu/Astarté.
Another
of `Anat's responsibilities is to oversee the ritual sacrifices
to make sure they are properly carried out so as to ensure
immortality of the deities. She frequently anoints Herself
with what is sometimes translated as ambergris. More likely
She anoints Herself with some form of balsam, from any
number of conifers or fragrant resin-producing shrubs
from the Middle East. The fragrant creamy paste which
is currently called "amber," a resin with a somewhat vanilla-like
scent, is a good substitute today in Her rites.
`Anat
may also share origins with the Persian goddess Anahita,
Anaïtis in Greek, the Immaculate One who
embodies the fertilizing properties of water and thus,
by extension, of semen. Anahita is a tall powerful maiden,
both mother and warrior, healer and protector, riding
a chariot drawn by four white horses who are Wind, Clouds,
Rain, and Hail. She is honored with offerings of fragrant
green branches and white heifers, and worshipped with
sacred sexuality, much like `Anat, although the scholars
say it is mere coincidence that their names and characteristics
are so similar.
An
actual praise:
`Anat, the Victorious
Goddess,
the woman who acts like a warrior,
who wears a kilt like men and a sash like women.
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