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ASHERAH AND APHRODITE: A COINCIDENCE?*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2015

Howard Jacobson*
Affiliation:
University of Illinois, Urbana

Extract

It has long been known that there is a significant connection between Aphrodite and Semitic goddesses. In Walter Burkert's recent words, ‘Behind the figure of Aphrodite there clearly stands the ancient Semitic goddess of love, Ishtar-Astarte.’ This was already recognized by Herodotus (1.105, 131) and Philo of Byblos (Eus. Prep. evang. 1.812). I want here to note a curious and striking item of connection that has not been noticed.

Type
Shorter Notes
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 2015 

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Footnotes

*

I am indebted to Professors Dennis Pardee and Wayne Pitard for helpful readings of this note.

References

1 I refrain in this brief paper from getting into the vast Problematik surrounding the Canaanite (and Mesopotamian) goddesses.

2 Burkert, W., Greek Religion (Cambridge, MA, 1985)Google Scholar, 152.

3 Kretschmer, P., Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Sprachforschung 33 (1895), 267.Google Scholar

4 Dever, W.G., BASOR 255 (1984), 28.Google Scholar

5 Hadley, J.M., The Cult of Asherah in Ancient Israel and Judah (Cambridge, 2000)Google Scholar, 38.

6 Oden, R.A. Jr, Studies in Lucian's De Syria Dea (Missoula, MT, 1977)Google Scholar, 97.

7 See Hadley (n. 5), 9. For an elaborate discussion of Asherah and fertility gods, see Frevel, C., Aschera und der Ausschliesslichkeitsanspruch YHWHs (Weinheim, 1995), 570–88.Google Scholar

8 See Albright, W.F., Yahweh and the Gods of Canaan (Garden City, NY, 1968)Google Scholar, 121: ‘Asherah has a name which was originally part of a longer appellation, which appears in Ugaritic as Rabbatu athiratu yammi’; see also Hadley (n. 5), 40: ‘Her full title appears to be rbt atrt ym.’

9 The notion that ym here could be ‘day’ and refer to a solar deity (so T. Binger, Asherah [Sheffield, 1997], 42–5; also Watson, W.G.E., UF 25 [1993], 431–4Google Scholar) has no persuasive force. See also Hadley (n. 5), 40.

10 See del Olmo Lete, G. and Sanmartín, J., A Dictionary of the Ugaritic Language in the Alphabetic Tradition (Leiden, 2003)Google Scholar, 126.

11 See Köhler–Baumgartner (Leiden, 1995), 94.

12 See Albright (n. 8), 121, ‘The Lady Who Treads on the Sea’ or ‘The Lady Who Traverses the Sea’. See also Hadley (n. 5), 50 and Maier, W.A. III, Aserah: Extrabiblical Evidence (Atlanta, 1986), 194–5Google Scholar. But Wiggins, S.A., A Reassessment of ‘Asherah’ (Neukirchen-Vluyn, 1993), 192–3Google Scholar is somewhat sceptical.

13 The chronology of the development of the goddess' name in the Semitic and Greek versions I cannot determine.