- For the metal band, see Atargatis (band).
Atargatis, in Aramaic
‘Atar‘atah, was a
Syrian deity, "the great mistress of the North Syrian lands"
Rostovtseff called her,
[1] commonly known to the Greeks by a shortened form of the name,
Derceto or
Derketo (
Strabo 16.785;
Pliny,
Nat. Hist. 5.81), and as
Dea Syria ("Goddess of Syria", rendered in one word
Deasura). She is often now popularly described as the mermaid-goddess, from her fish-bodied appearance at
Ascalon and in
Diodorus Siculus — a widely accessible source — but which is by no means her universal appearance.
[2]
As
Ataratha she may be recognized by the self-mutilation of her votaries, recorded in a perhaps sensationalist Christian passage from the
Book of the Laws of the Countries, one of the oldest works of Syriac prose, an early-third-century product of the school of
Bar Daisan (Bardesanes):
- "In Syria and in Urhâi [Edessa] the men used to castrate themselves in honor of Taratha. But when King Abgar became a believer, he commanded that anyone who emasculated himself should have a hand cut off. And from that day to the present no one in Urhâi emasculates himself anymore." —Chapter 45.
Her name
At
Ugarit,
cuneiform tablets attest a fecund "Lady Goddess of the Sea" (
rabbatu at̪iratu yammi), and three Canaanite goddesses —
Anat,
Asherah and
Ashtart — shared many traits and might be worshipped in conjunction or separately during 1500 years of cultural history.
[3]
The name appears in the
Talmud ("Ab. Zarah" 11b, line 28) as
tr‘th. The full name
‘tr‘th appears on a bilingual inscription found in
Palmyra and on coins.
This name
‘Atar‘atah is a compound of two divine names: the first part (
Atar) is a form of the Ugaritic
‘Athtart, Himyaritic
‘Athtar, the equivalent of the
Old Testament ‘Ashtoreth, the Phoenician
‘Ashtart rendered in Greek as
Astarte. The feminine ending
-t has been omitted. Compare the cognate
Akkadian form
Ishtar. The second half (
atis) may be a
Palmyrene divine name
Athe (i.e.
tempus opportunum), which occurs as part of many compounds.
Alternatively, the second half (
gatis) may relate to the Greek
gados "fish". (For example, the Greek name for "sea monster" or "whale" is the cognate term
ketos). So
Atar-Gatis may simply mean "the fish-goddess Atar".
Cult centers and images
As a consequence of the first half of the name, Atargatis has frequently, though wrongly, been identified as ‘Ashtart. The two deities were probably of common origin and have many features in common, but their cults are historically distinct. We find reference in
1 Maccabees 5.43 to an Atargateion or Atergateion, a temple of Atargatis, at Carnion in
Gilead, but the home of the goddess was unquestionably not
Israel or
Canaan, but Syria itself: at
Hierapolis Bambyce she had a great temple. At
Palmyra she appears on the coinage with a lion, or her presence is sgnalled with a lion and the crescent moon: an inscription mentions her. In the temples of Atargatis at Palmyra and at
Dura-Europos[4] she appeared repeatedly with her consort,
Hadad, and in the richly syncretic religious culture at Dura-Europos, was worshipped as
Artemis Azzanathkona.
[5]In the 1930s numerous
Nabatean bas-relief busts of Atargatis were identified by Nelson Glueck at Khirbet et-Tannûr, Jordan, in temple ruins of the early first century CE;
[6] there the lightly veiled goddess's lips and eyes had once been painted red, and a pair of fish confronted one another above her head. Her wavy hair, suggesting water to Glueck, was parted in the middle. At
Petra the goddess from the north was syncretised with a North Arabian goodess from the south
al-Uzzah, worshipped in the one temple. At Dura-Europus among the attributes of Atargatis are the spindle and the sceptre or fish-spear.
[7]
At her temples at
Ascalon,
Hierapolis Bambyce, and
Edessa, there were fish ponds, whose fish only her priests might touch.
[8] Glueck noted in 1936 that "to this day there is a sacred fish-pond swarming with untouchable fish at Qubbet el-Baeddwī, a
dervish monastery three kilometres east of
Tripolis, Lebanon."
[9]


On the reverse of a coin of
Demetrius III Eucaerus, a fish-bodied veiled Atargatis, flanked by barley stalks, holds a flower.
From Syria her worship extended to
Greece and to the furthest West.
Lucian[10] and
Apuleius give descriptions of the beggar-priests who went round the great cities with an image of the goddess on an ass and collected money. The wide extension of the cult is attributable largely to Syrian merchants; thus we find traces of it in the great seaport towns; at
Delos especially numerous inscriptions have been found bearing witness to her importance. Again we find the cult in
Sicily, introduced, no doubt, by slaves and mercenary troops, who carried it even to the farthest northern limits of the Roman Empire. The leader of the rebel slaves in the
First Servile War, a Syrian named
Eunus, claimed to receive visions of Atargatis, whom he identified with the
Demeter of
Enna. In many cases Atargatis, ‘Ashtart, and other goddesses who once had independent cults and mythologies became
fused to such an extent as to be indistinguishable.
This fusion is exemplified by the Carnion temple, which is probably identical with the famous temple of ‘Ashtart at Ashtaroth-Karnaim. Atargatis generally appears as the wife of
Hadad. They are the protecting deities of the community. Atargatis, wearing a
mural crown, is the ancestor the royal house, the founder of social and religious life, the goddess of generation and fertility (hence the prevalence of
phallic emblems), and the inventor of useful appliances. Not unnaturally she is identified with the Greek
Aphrodite. By the conjunction of these many functions, despite originating as a sea deity analogous to
Amphitrite, she becomes ultimately a great nature-goddess, analogous to
Cybele and
Rhea: In one aspect she typifies the protection of water in producing life; in another, the universal of other-earth;
[11] in a third (influenced, no doubt, by
Chaldean astrology), the power of Destiny.
Atargatis mythology
The legends are numerous and of an astrological character. A rationale for the Syrian dove-worship and abstinence from fish is seen in the story in
Athenaeus 8.37, where
Atargatis is naively explained to mean "without Gatis", the name of a queen who is said to have forbidden the eating of fish. Thus
Diodorus Siculus (2.4.2), quoting
Ctesias, tells how Derceto fell in love with a youth and became by him the mother of a child and how in shame Derceto flung herself into a lake near
Ascalon and her body was changed into the form of a fish though her head remained human. Derceto's child grew up to become
Semiramis, the
Assyrian queen. In another story, told by
Hyginus, an egg fell from the sky into the
Euphrates, was rolled onto land by fish, doves settled on it and hatched it, and
Venus, known as the Syrian goddess, came forth.
The author of
Catasterismi explained the constellation of
Piscis Austrinus as the parent of the two fish making up the constellation of Pisces; according to that account, it was placed in the heavens in memory of Derceto's fall into the lake at
Hierapolis Bambyce near the Euphrates in Syria, from which she was saved by a large fish — which again explains the Syrian abstinence from fish.
Ovid in his
Metamorphoses (5.331) relates that Venus took the form of a fish to hide from
Typhon. In his
Fasti (2.459-.474) Ovid instead relates how
Dione, by whom Ovid intends Venus/Aphrodite, fleeing from
Typhon with her child
Cupid/
Eros came to the river Euphrates in Syria. Hearing the wind suddenly rise and fearing that it was Typhon, the goddess begged aid from the river nymphs and leapt into the river with her son. Two fish bore them up and were rewarded by being transformed into the constellation
Pisces — and for that reason the Syrians will eat no fish.
A recent analysis of the cult of Atargatis is the essay by Per Bilde, in
Religion and Religious Practice in the Seleucid Kingdom (in series "Studies in Hellenistic Civilization") Aarhus University Press (1990), in which Atargatis appears in the context of other Hellenized Great Goddesses of the East.
Notes
1.
^ M. Rostovtseff, "Hadad and Atargatis at Palmyra",
American Journal of Archeology 37 (January 1933) , pp 58-63, examining Palmyrene stamped
tesserae.
2.
^ The modern repertory of literary allusions to her is Paul Louis van Berg,
Corpus Cultus Deae Syriae (C.C.D.S.): les sources littéraires, Part I:
Répertoire des sources grecques et latines; Part II:
Études critiques des sources mythologiques grecques et latines (Leiden:Brill) 1973.
3.
^ Robert A. Oden, Jr, "The Persistence of Canaanite Religion"
The Biblical Archaeologist 39.1 (March 1976, pp. 31-36) p. 34.
4.
^ She is intended at Dura-Europos in the guise of the
Tyche of Palmyra, accompanied by the lion, in a fresco from the sanctuary of the Palmyrene gods, removed to the Yale Art Gallery.
5.
^ Rostovtseff 1933:58-63;
Dura-Europos III.
6.
^ Nelson Glueck, "A Newly Discovered Nabataean Temple of Atargatis and Hadad at Khirbet Et-Tannur, Transjordania"
American Journal of Archaeology 41.3 (July 1937), pp. 361-376.
7.
^ Baur,
Dura-Europos III, p. 115. For
Pindar (
Sixth Olympian Ode), the Greek sea-goddess
Amphitrite is "goddess of the gold spindle".
8.
^ Lucian,
De Dea Syria;
Diodorus Siculus II.4.2.
9.
^ Glueck 1936: p. 374, note 4
10.
^ Lucian,
De Dea Syria.
11.
^ Macrobius.
Saturn, 1.23.
References
- Moshe Weinfeld, "Semiramis: her name and her origin." In: Mordechai Cogan/Israel Eph’al (ed.), Ah, Assyria...:Studies in Assyrian history and ancient Near Eastern historiography presented to Hayim Tadmor (series Scripta Hierosolymitana 33), (Jerusalem 1991), 99-103.
External links
Ancient Semitic religion spans the polytheistic religions of the Semitic speaking peoples of the Ancient Near East. Its origins are interwtined with earlier (Sumerian) Mesopotamian mythology.
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Mesopotamian mythology is the collective name given to Sumerian, Akkadian, Assyrian, and Babylonian mythologies from the land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in Iraq.
..... Click the link for more information. In the Levantine pantheon, the Elohim are the sons of El the ancient of days (olam) assembled on the divine holy place, Mount Zephon (Jebel Aqra). This mountain, which lies in Syria, was regarded as a portal to its heavenly counterpart.
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Arabian mythology comprises the ancient, pre-Islamic beliefs of the Arabs. Prior to the arrival and initial codification of Islam on the Arabian Peninsula in 622, year one of the Islamic calendar, the physical centre
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Ancient Southwest Asian deities
Levantine deities
Adonis | Anat | Asherah | Ashima | Astarte | Atargatis | Ba'al | Berith | Dagon | Derceto | El | Elyon | Eshmun | Hadad | Kothar | Mot | Moloch | Qetesh | Resheph | Shalim | Yarikh | Yam
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Haddad - בעל הדד - حداد (in Ugaritic Haddu) was a very important northwest Semitic storm and rain god, cognate in name and origin with the Akkadian god Adad.
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Adonis (Greek: Άδωνης, also: Άδωνις) is an archetypal life-death-rebirth deity of Semitic origin, and a central cult figure in various mystery religions.
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Anat, also ‘Anat (in ASCII spelling `Anat and often simplified to Anat), Hebrew or Phoenician ענת (‘Anāt), Ugaritic ‘nt, Greek Αναθ (transliterated Anath
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The Palmyran god of the evening star. He is usually portrayed as riding a camel with his twin brother Azizos. In pre-Islamic Arabia, he is known as Radu.
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Encyclopedia Mythica
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Asherah (from Hebrew אשרה), generally taken as identical with the Ugaritic goddess
Athirat (more accurately transcribed as
ʼ..... Click the link for more information. Astarte (from Greek Αστάρτη (Astártē)) is the name of a goddess as known from Northwestern Semitic regions, cognate in name, origin and functions with the goddess Ishtar in Mesopotamian texts.
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In ancient Levantine mythology, Azizos or Aziz is the Palmyran god of the morning star. He is usually portrayed as riding a camel with his twin brother Arsu. He was venerated separately in Syria as god of the morning star, in company with the astral god Monimos.
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Ba'al (baʕal;Arabic,بعل; Hebrew: בעל) (ordinarily spelled Baal
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Ba‘alat Gebal, 'Lady of Byblos', was the goddess of the city of Byblos, sometimes known to the Greeks as Baaltis.
She was generally identified with the pan-Semitic goddess ‘Ashtar and so equated with the Greek goddess Aphrodite.
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"Other deities worshipped at Ugarit were El Shaddai, El Elyon, and El Berith. All of these names are applied to Yahweh by the writers of the Old Testament.
Scientific speculation on this, and other, apparent references to multiple deities in the Old Testament is that
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In the Levantine pantheon, the Elohim are the sons of El the ancient of days (olam) assembled on the divine holy place, Mount Zephon (Jebel Aqra). This mountain, which lies in Syria, was regarded as a portal to its heavenly counterpart.
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Eshmun (or Eshmoun, less accurately Esmun or Esmoun) was a Phoenician god of healing and the tutelary god of Sidon.
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Ancient Mesopotamia
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Kish ' Lagash ' Nippur
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Assyria: Assur Nineveh
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- Ministry of Transport (United Kingdom), now known as the Department for Transport
..... Click the link for more information. name of God is more than a distinguishing title. It represents the Jewish conception of the divine nature, and of the relation of God to the Jewish people. To show the sacredness of the names of God, and as a means of showing respect and reverence for them, the scribes of sacred
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See also
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Yam, from the Canaanite word Yam, meaning "Sea", is one name of the Ugaritic god of Rivers and Sea. Also titled Judge Nahar ("Judge River"), he is also one of the 'ilhm (Elohim) or sons of El, the name given to the Levantine pantheon.
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