5.
2.
7.
II.Priests
Contents Listof I.PrefaceAbbreviationsGoddesses1.âAndtheWomen
9.At
3.
KneadDoughâ:TheWorshipoftheQueenofHeavenin Sixth-CenturyJudah Asherah,theWestSemiticGoddessofSpinningandWeaving? TheWomenoftheBibleandofAncientNearEasternMyth:TheCaseofthe Leviteâs pĂŽlegeĹĄ andProphets WhyIsMiriamAlsoamongtheProphets? IsZipporahamongthe Priests?) TheMotherofEshmunazor,PriestofAstarte:AStudyofHerCulticRole Priestesses,Purity,andParturition QueenMothers TheQueenMotherandtheCultin Israel TheQueenMotherandtheCultintheAncientNearEast andWorship HomewiththeGoddess
Ancient
(And
IV.Women
6.
8.
4.
III.
IndexIndexIndexBibliographyofAuthorsofSubjectsofScripture Ancient
10.WomenandtheWorshipofYahwehinAncientIsrael
andOther
Sources
ABD AnchorBibleDictionary. EditedbyDavidNoelFreedman.6vols. NewYork:Doubleday,1992.
ANET AncientNearEasternTextsRelatingtotheOldTestament. Edited byJamesB.Pritchard.3rded.withsupplement.Princeton: PrincetonUniversityPress,1969.
AOAT AlterOrientundAltesTestament ARM ArchivesroyalesdeMari AYB AnchorYaleBible
Abbreviations
AHw AkkadischesHandwĂśrterbuch
ANEP TheAncientNearEastinPicturesRelatingtotheOldTestament. EditedbyJamesB.Pritchard.Princeton:PrincetonUniversity Press,1954.
.WolframvonSoden.3vols. Wiesbaden:Harrassowitz,1965â81.
BASOR BulletinoftheAmericanSchoolsofOrientalResearch
BDB Brown,Francis,S.R.Driver,andCharlesA.Briggs. AHebrew andEnglishLexiconoftheOldTestament. Oxford:Clarendon, 1907. Bib Biblica BJS BrownJudaicStudies BN BiblischeNotizen BRev BibleReview BZAW BeiheftezurZeitschriftfĂźrdiealttestamentlicheWissenschaft
AYBRL AnchorYaleBibleReferenceLibrary BA BiblicalArchaeologist BAR BiblicalArchaeologyReview
CBC CambridgeBibleCommentary CBQ CatholicBiblicalQuarterly CBQMS CatholicBiblicalQuarterlyMonographSeries CIS Corpusinscriptionumsemiticarum
JAOS JournaloftheAmericanOrientalSociety
JEA JournalofEgyptianArchaeology
.EditedbyWilliamW.HalloandK. LawsonYounger,Jr.3vols.Leiden:Brill,2003.
COS TheContextofScripture
GKC GeseniusâHebrewGrammar. EditedbyE.Kautzsch.Translated byA.E.Cowley.2nded.Oxford:Clarendon,1910.
HUCA HebrewUnionCollegeAnnual ICC InternationalCriticalCommentary IEJ IsraelExplorationJournal
CANE CivilizationsoftheAncientNearEast. EditedbyJackM.Sasson.4 vols.NewYork:Scribner,1995.
ErIsr Eretz-Israel ExpTim ExpositoryTimes FCB FeministCompaniontotheBible
EditedbyIgnaceJ.Gelbetal.21vols.Chicago:The OrientalInstitute,1956â2010.
JNES JournalofNearEasternStudies
HAR HebrewAnnualReview HSM HarvardSemiticMonographs HTR HarvardTheologicalReview
HALOT Koehler,Ludwig,WalterBaumgartner,andJohannJakobStamm. TheHebrewandAramaicLexiconoftheOldTestament
. TranslatedandeditedunderthesupervisionofMervynE.J. Richardson.4vols.Leiden:Brill,1994â1999.
JBL JournalofBiblicalLiterature
CAD TheAssyrianDictionaryoftheOrientalInstituteoftheUniversityofChicago.
JESHO JournaloftheEconomicandSocialHistoryoftheOrient
JSOT JournalfortheStudyoftheOldTestament
SBLDS SocietyofBiblicalLiteratureDissertationSeries
HerbertDonnerand WolfgangRĂśllig.3vols.2nded.Wiesbaden:Harrassowitz,1966â1969.
KAR KeilschrifttexteausAssurreligiĂśsenInhalts
EditedbyManfriedDietrich,OswaldLoretz,and JoaquĂnSanmartĂn.3rded.MĂźnster:Ugarit-Verlag,2013.
LXX Septuagint MT MasoreticText NEA NearEasternArchaeology
JSOTSup JournalfortheStudyoftheOldTestament:SupplementSeries KAI KanaanäischeundaramäischeInschriften.
OBO Orbisbiblicusetorientalis OLP OrientaliaLovaniensiaPeriodica
Or Orientalia OTL OldTestamentLibrary PRU LepalaisroyaldâUgarit.
RS RasShamra
JeanNougayrolandCharlesVirolleaud. EditedbyClaudeF.A.Schaeffer.6vols.MissiondeRasShamra. Paris:Imprimerienationale,1955â1970. Qad Qadmoniot RA RevuedâassyriologieetdâarchĂŠologieorientale RB Revuebiblique RES RĂŠpertoiredâĂŠpigraphiesĂŠmitique
SBLWAW SocietyofBiblicalLiteratureWritingsfromtheAncientWorld
.ErichEbeling.2vols. Leipzig:J.C.Hinrichs,1919â1922.
SBLRBS SocietyofBiblicalLiteratureResourcesforBiblicalStudies
KTU DiekeilalphabetischenTexteausUgarit,RasIbnHaniundanderenOrten.
SBLMS SocietyofBiblicalLiteratureMonographSeries
KBL Koehler,Ludwig,andWalterBaumgartner. LexiconinVeteris Testamentilibros.2nded.Leiden:Brill,1958.
WomeninScripture:ADictionaryofNamedandUnnamedWomenintheHebrewBible,theApocryphal/DeuterocanonicalBooks,andtheNewTestament.
EditedbyCarolMeyers,withToni CravenandRossS.Kraemer.Boston:HoughtonMifflin,2000.
TA TelAviv UF Ugarit-Forschungen VT VetusTestamentum VTSup SupplementstoVetusTestamentum WdO DieWeltdesOrients WIS
ZAW
ZeitschriftfĂźrdiealttestamentlicheWissenschaft
Twiceinmydissertation,Ialsotouchedonissuesofwomenâsreligiouspractice:first, indiscussingtheprophetJeremiahâscensureofthoseIsraelites,includingwomen,who, inthelateseventhandearlysixthcenturiesBCEworshippedagoddesscalledtheQueen ofHeaven(Jer7:16â20;44:15â19,25);then,indiscussingtheprophetEzekielâs indictmentofwomenwhosatinthenorthgateofYahwehâstempleprecinctinJerusalem âmourningâoverTammuz,aMesopotamiangodoffertility(Ezek8:14).Issuesregarding womenandgenderhadbecome,moreover,anincreasinglyimportanttopicwithin colleges,universities,andotherinstitutionsofhigherlearningatthattime.Indeed,I earnedtheequivalentofaminorinwomenâsstudiesasanundergraduate,andafterI
Preface
In1980,whenIstartedgraduateschoolandbeganseriouslytostudytheHebrew Bible,Ididsowithtwomaininterestsinmind:aloveofancienthistory(aniconic momentofmychildhoodwasafamilytriptoStonehenge)andmyundergraduatemajor, religion.WhatappealedtomemostabouttheBible,itfollows,wasthewayitcould serveasawindowintoancientIsraelâspast(asopposed,say,tothewaytheBiblemight speaktomoderntheologicalconcerns),andespeciallythewayinwhichtheBiblecould helpilluminatetheworldofancient Israelitereligion(asopposed,say,tothewayit mightilluminateancientIsraelâspolitical,social,oreconomichistory).ButIalsobrought acertainfeistystreakto mystudyoftheBible(andtoalmosteverythingelse,butthatâsa differentstory!),andIthinkitisbecauseofthisfeistinessthatmyworkinbiblicalstudies cametofocusontheoutliersandeventherenegadesofancientIsraelitereligion:those ancientIsraeliteswhosereligiousbeliefsandpracticesthebiblicalwriterseitherignored (atbest)or,moreoftenthannot,denigrated.Inmydoctoraldissertation,forexample,I examined,amongotherthings,biblicaldenunciationsofchildsacrificeandcertain practicesconcerningdeceasedspirits,suchasnecromancy,andconsideredwhysome ancientIsraelitesmightseethese ritualactsaslegitimatereligiousundertakings,evenas thebiblicalwritersdisapproved.
Whathasbroughtmethegreatestpleasure,however,inrevisingtheseessaysfor republicationistopresentthemintheformofanarrativethatchartsthedifferentyet interrelateddirectionsmyanalyseshavetakenovertheyears.Inpart,thisnarrativeisput forwardintheshortintroductionsthatIhaveprovidedatthebeginningofalmostevery chapter,andsoIneednotreiteratethoseideashere.ButitisappropriatethatIcomment atthispointonthewaysthenarrativethatshapesthisvolumeisembeddedinthefourpartorganizationalstrategyIhavedeployed.
Part1ofthisvolumebeginsinthesameplaceIbeganallthoseyearsago,duringmy doctoralwork,withachapterabouttheQueenofHeaven,thegoddesswhoseworshipby women(amongotherIsraelites)resultsinJeremiahâscensureinJer7:16â20and44:15â19,25.Therethenfollowchaptersthatconcerntwoothergoddesses:Asherah,thegreat mothergoddessoftheCanaaniteworld,andTiamat,theprimordialseagoddessof
completedmydoctoratein1987andbeganmyacademiccareer,Ifoundmyselfmoreand moreengagedinconversationsaboutwomenandthereligionofancientIsrael.Iwas oftenaskedtospeakorwriteaboutissuesrelatedtoIsraelitewomenâsreligiouslivesand experiences,forexample,andIalsooftenfoundmyselfworkingonissuesregarding womenâsreligiousculturewithoutbeingasked.
Theresultsofthisworkendedupinmanydisparateplaces,someeasilyobtained (suchasmy1998monograph, Warrior,Dancer,Seductress,Queen:WomeninJudges andBiblicalIsrael),somenotasreadilyaccessed.Itisthusapleasuretohavethe opportunitytorepublishsomeofmylessaccessibleessayshere,inordertomakethem moreavailable.Evenmoreso,itisapleasuretoofferupdatedversionsofcertainaspects ofthesepreviouslypublishedworks.Insomecases,thishasmeantdeletingmaterials aboutwhichInolongerfeelasconfidentorwithwhichInolongeragree;inothercases, ithasmeantupdatingsomekeyargumentsinthetextandsomekeyitemsinthe bibliography.Inoneinstance,moreover,Ihaveaddedaâ2022Postscript,ârespondingto a2020challengetomyoriginalarticleâsthesis;inanother,Ihaverewrittenamajor sectionofmyoriginalessaytoreflectmyupdatedthinking.Ihave alsotriedtopolishmy originalprose,andIhave,inaddition,modifiedsystemsofcitationandotherstylistic featuresusedintheoriginalpublicationstomaketheessaysaspresentedinthisvolume harmoniousintermsofformat.
Finally,inthetwochaptersinpart4ofthisvolume,Iseektobringtogethermanyof theideasthatIintroduceinthechaptersinparts1,2,and3,firstbylookingintandemat severaloftheinstancesofwomenâsgoddessworshipthatIdocumentinearlierchapters, andsecondbyaskingwhattherelationshipisbetweenthesevariousinstancesof womenâsgoddessworshipthatIhavedocumentedandwomenâsengagementinthecult ofIsraelâsnationalgod,Yahweh.Indeed,thisvolumeâsfinalchapter,whichconsidersthe cultofYahweh,goddessworship,andwomenâsparticipationinbothYahwisticand goddesstraditions,aimstobringtogetherthethreeaspectsofIsraelitereligionthat comprisethisbookâstitle, Gods,Goddesses,andtheWomenWhoServeThem.Assuch, thechapterseemsafittingconclusiontothisvolumeand,Ihope,afittingsummaryofthe thirtyyearsofmyscholarlyworkpresentedinthesepages.
Mesopotamianmythology.Ineachofthesechapters,Iconsiderhowthesegoddess figuresmightbeassociated(explicitlyorimplicitly)withportrayalsofwomencharacters foundinthebiblicaltext.
Next,inpart2,Ipresent threechaptersregardingthetwomajortypesofreligious functionariesattestedinthebiblicalrecord,priestsandprophets,exploringfirstthe storiesofthefewwomenintheBiblewhoaredesignatedasprophets(nÄbĂŽââ)inorderto askwhythesedesignationsaresorare,especiallywhencomparedtoallthemenwhom theBibleidentifiesasprophets.Evenmoreurgently,Iaskinallthreechapters,and especiallyinthethird,why,whencomparedtootherculturesoftheancientNearEast, thereisnoancientIsraelitetraditionofwomenpriests.Idomaintain,however,thatin IsraelâsSouthernKingdomofJudah,thequeenmother(thatis,themotherofthereigning kingor,asin1Kgs15:9â10,amotherfigurewho fulfilledthisrole)playedanimportant roleasareligiousfunctionarywithintheroyalcourt.Thetwochaptersinpart3ofthis volumearedevotedtothattopic,describing,first,theevidencethatIsuggestsupportsmy contentionthatthequeenmotherservedasanofficialreligiousfunctionarywithinthe royalcourtinJerusalemandexploring,second,evidenceregardingthequeenmotherâs religiousroleelsewhereinbiblicaltraditionandintheancientNearEast.
PartI Goddesses
Chapter1
âAndtheWomenKneadDoughâ1
1
IalsoretainmyinterestinthequestionthatIhopedidentifyingtheQueenofHeaven mighthelpanswer:WhywastheworshipofthisgoddessespeciallyappealingtoJudean women?Tobesure,itwasnotonlywomenwhoparticipatedinthecultoftheQueenof Heaven;rather,accordingtoJer7:18,entirefamilies(men,women,andchildren) contributedtoahouseholdritualofbakingbreadcakesthatwereofferedtothegoddess, andaccordingtoJer44:17â18,husbandsandwivesaffirmedtogethertheirintenttoburn incenseandpouroutlibationstotheQueenofHeaven,despiteJeremiahâscondemnation.
ThischapterisbasedonthefirstarticleIeverpublished,in1989.Atthattime,very littlescholarshiphadbeengeneratedabouttheQueenofHeaven,thegoddesswho appearsintheBibleinJer7:16â20and44:15â19,25andwhoissaidbytheprophet Jeremiahtohavebeenworshippedbysomeoftheinhabitantsofsixth-centuryBCE Judah,especiallywomen.Indeed,althoughshortdiscussionsabouttheQueenofHeaven hadappearedinvariouscommentariesonthebookofJeremiahandinstandardBible dictionaries,encyclopedias,andkindredreferenceworks,thegoddesshadbeenthe subjectofonlyfivestand-alonestudies(asixthappearedjustasmyessaywasgoingto press).MyresearchthusfocusedonwhatItooktobeafundamentalissueforfurthering thenascentscholarlydeliberations:Whowasthegoddessreferredtoonlybytheepithet âQueenofHeavenâ?Severalotherscholarshavesincetakenupthisquestion,andwhile theanswerstheyhaveproposedhavebeendiverse,Istillstandbymyoriginal conclusion:thattheQueenofHeavenisagoddesswhocombinescharacteristicsofthe EastSemiticgoddessIshtarandtheWestSemiticgoddessAstarte.
TheWorshipoftheQueenofHeaveninSixth-CenturyJudah
Jeremiah44:17alsoidentifiesJudahâsâkingsâandâprincesâasbeingamongthosewho hadatsomepointmadeofferingstothegoddess.Still,itiswomenalonewhospeakof
Anearlierversionof thischapterappearedinPeggyL.Day,ed., Gender and Difference in Ancient Israel (Minneapolis:Fortress,1989),109â24.UsedherebypermissionofFortressPress.
Inshort,althoughthischapterfirstappearedinprintalittleoverthreedecadesago, thequestionsitraiseshavecontinuedtooccupymy(andotherscholarsâ)attention,andit isthusapleasuretore-presentmyanalysishere.Ihaveusedthisopportunitytopolish myoriginallanguagealittle,toaugmentandrefinesomeofmyarguments,andtoupdate key(butbynomeansall!)bibliographicreferences.Butmycontinuedcommitmenttomy priorconvictionsmeansthatinmostrespects,thischapterstandsasitwaspreviously published. ThetypicalhistorianofancientIsraelitereligion,especiallythehistorianofIsraelite religionoftheso-calledpreexilicperiod(ca.1200â586BCE),reliesheavily,ifnot exclusively,ontheBible.Thisisunavoidable,sincetheBibleisinessencetheonly writtensource(andindeedtheonlysignificantsourceofanykind)thatdescribesthe religionofpreexilic IsraelandJudah.Yetithasbecomeincreasinglyobviousto
pouringoutlibations,burningincense,andbakingbreadcakesfortheQueenofHeaven inJer44:19.AndwhiletheHebrewtextofJer44:25isgrammaticallyconfused,the ancientGreektranslationoftheBible(theLXX)makesclearthatinthisverse,Jeremiah specificallydenounceswomenwhohaveâspokenâandâvowedâtomakeincenseand libationofferingstotheQueenofHeaven.Inaddition,inJer7:18,theprophet specificallyidentifieswomenaskneadingthedoughusedforthebreadcakesthatareto beofferedtotheQueenofHeaven,and,presumably,thesewomenbakedthecakesas wellâactsthatweresurelymoreintegraltoafamilyâsfulfillingitsritualcommitmentsto thegoddessthanwerethecontributionsofthechildrenandfathers(gatheringwoodand kindlingfiressothecakescanbebaked).
Intheconcludingparagraphsofmy1989article,Iofferedsomethoughtsaboutwhy theworshipoftheQueenofHeavenmighthavespecialappealforwomen,andIhave returnedtothattopicwithmorefullyfleshed-outideaselsewhere:forexample,inmy 2006essayâWomenandtheWorshipofYahwehinAncientIsrael,âwhichisincludedin thisvolumeaschapter10.Overtheyears,Ihavealsobecomeincreasinglyinterestedin anothermatterthatIraisedonlybrieflyinmyoriginal1989article:not who theQueenof Heavenwasand why heradherentswereattractedtohercultbutrather where this goddesswasworshipped.Again,someofmymoredevelopedthoughtsonthissubjectare addressedinthisvolumeâschapter9,âAtHomewiththeGoddess,âwhichwasoriginally publishedin2003.
Indeed,althoughtheprophetJeremiahmakesthewomenofJudahandJerusalemthe 2PhyllisBirdâsprogrammaticarticle, âPlaceofWomen,â 397â419,offersagoodintroductiontothis subject.
historiansofIsraelitereligionthattheBibleâsdescriptionsofthepreexiliccultarehighly selective.Forexample,thebiblicalmaterials,whichcomepredominantlyfromthehands ofpriestsandprophets,presentpriestlyandpropheticreligionasnormativeandorthodox inancientIsrael,whilenonpriestlyandnonpropheticreligiousbeliefsandpracticesare condemnedasheterodoxanddeviant.Amorenuancedreconstructionofthereligionof ancientIsraelsuggests,however,thatdespitethebiblicalwitness,neitherthepriestlynor propheticcultwasnormativeinthereligionofthepreexilicperiod.Rather,adiversityof beliefsandpracticesthrivedandwereacceptedbytheancientIsraelitesaslegitimate formsofreligiousexpression. UncoveringthisdiversecharacterofancientIsraelitereligionrequiresspecial methodologies.First,wemusttrainourselvestosupplementcontinuallythebiblical pictureofIsraelitereligionbyreferringtoothersources.Archaeologicalremainsfrom Israelarecrucial,asarecomparativedatafromtheancientNearEastandfromelsewhere intheMediterraneanworld.Yetthisevidenceisoftensparseandnoteasily interpreted.It isthusequallyimportantthatwelearntotreatourmajorsource,theBible,differently.
Wemustexaminethebiblicalpresentationsoftheorthodoxwithaneyetotheheterodox, seeking,forexample,tolookwithoutprejudiceatthoseculticpracticesthatthebiblical writerssoharshlycondemn.Onlywhenweacknowledgethepolemicalnatureofmany biblicaltextscanwesee, underlyingtheirwords,evidenceofthemultifacetednatureof ancientIsraelitereligion. Thissecondmethodologicalpointespeciallyhelpsilluminateanoftenoverlooked aspectofancientIsraelitereligion:womenâsreligion.Theall-malebiblicalwriterstreat thisissuewith,atbest,silenceand,atworst,hostility;still,acarefulreadingofthe biblicaltextsuggeststhatthewomenofJudahandIsraelhadarichreligioustradition.2 Someofthewomenofearlysixth-centuryBCEJudah,forexample,devotedthemselves totheworshipofagoddesscalledtheQueenofHeaven(Jer7:16â20;44:15â19,25).
3Thegrammarofthisverseisconfused.Theverbswith whichJeremiah,speakingforGod,condemns hisaudiencerefertothosewhohaveâspokenâandâvowedâtomakeofferingsandpouroutlibationstothe QueenofHeavenusing feminine pluralforms,suggestingthatJeremiahâssubjectistheassemblyâswomen. Butwhenitcomesto nouns,theâmouthsâwithwhichtheassemblyhasarticulateditsintentions,the âvowsâregardingtheofferingsandlibationsto whichithascommitted,andtheâhandsâwithwhichthese commitmentshavebeenfulfilledcarry masculine suffixes.ThishasdriventheHebrewtextasithascome downtoustodirectthewordsofopprobriuminv.25tobothâyouâ(masculineplural;presumablythe assemblyâshusbands)andâyourwives,âevenastheLXXgivesprioritytothefeminineverbformsandso renderstheverseasaddressedtotheassemblyâswomenalone.
objectsofhisspecialscornduetotheirdevotiontotheQueenofHeaven(Jer44:25),3 the womenaresteadfastintheirworshipofthegoddess:bakingbreadcakesâinherimageâ asofferings(Jer7:18;44:19)andpouringoutlibationsandburningincensetoher(Jer 44:15,19).4 Thisdevotioninthefaceofpersecutionindicatesthattheworshipofthe QueenofHeavenwasanimportantpartofatleastsomewomenâsreligiousexpressionin thesixthcenturyBCE.Here,byestablishingtheidentityofthegoddesswhomtheBible callstheQueenofHeaven,5 IproposetoexplorewhythewomenofJudahfoundthis goddessâscultsoappealing.
TheconsonantalHebrewtext,indescribingthedeitytowhomvenerationwasoffered,reads lmlkt, âfortheQueenof [Heaven]â(Jer7:18;44:17,18,19,25),buttheMTvocalizes limleket,asif theword were lmlâkt,âfortheworkof[heaven],âmeaning,presumably,âtheheavenlyhostâthatisreferredtoinJer 8:2.ManyHebrewmanuscriptsinfactread lmlâkt in7:18and44:17,18,19,25,whichissupportedbythe TargumandPeshittaandbytheLXXinJer7:18(tÄ stratia tou ouranou,âthearmyoftheheavensâ). Butas iscommonlyrecognized(seeR.P.Gordon,âAlephApologeticum,â 112),theMasoreticpointingisan attempttoremoveanyhintthatthepeopleofJudahworshippedtheQueenofHeaven.Thecorrectreading, lÄmalkat,âfortheQueenof[Heaven],âissupportedbytheGreektranslationsofAquila,Symmachus,and Theodotion;bytherenderingof44:17,18,19,and25intheLXX;andbytheLatinVulgate.
4ThegrammarinJer44:19is,asin44:25(above,n.[[2]]),confused,astheMTdoesnotexplicitly identifythosewhospeakofmakinglibation,incense,andbreadcakeofferingsfortheQueenofHeaven, althoughtheseworshippersusemasculinepluralverbstorefertothemselves.However,theversionofthe LXXrepresentedintheLucianicminuscules(thoughttodatebacktothethirdcenturyCEandtobebased onoldertraditionsstill)reads kai hai gynaikes eipon,âandthewomensaid,âinidentifying theverseâs speakers,andthereferencelaterintheversetothespeakersââhusbandsâmakesclearthattheGreek readingisnecessaryforthesense.
5
9ForĹ apĹĄu,seeDahood,âLaReginadelCielo,â166â68.Otherscholarlysuggestionsinclude identifyingtheQueenofHeavenwiththeEgyptiangoddessHathor(Avaliani,âEgyptianandCanaanite ReligiousConvergence,â47â51;Avaliani,âWhichGoddessCouldBeHiddenBehindtheTitleâQueenof Heaven?â,â239â48)andidentifyingtheQueenof HeavenasââpartofâthecategoryofYhwh,âsothat, whiletheQueenofHeavenisânotidenticaltoYhwh,worshippingheris...anaspectofworshipping Yhwhâ(Ellis,âJeremiah44,â482,486).
6See,e.g.,Bright, Jeremiah,56;Held,âStudiesinBiblicalLexicography,â76â77;Pope, Song,149(but cf.[[n. 6]]below);Rast, âCakesfor theQueenofHeaven,â167â80;Rudolph, Jeremia,55;Weinfeld, âWorshipofMolechandtheQueenofHeaven,â148â54;andWeiser, Buch des Propheten Jeremia, 70.See alsotheextensivebibliographycompiledbyHadley,âQueenofHeaven,â46â47n88.
Scholars,unfortunately,havereachednoconsensusontheidentityoftheQueenof Heaven.ThegreatEastSemiticgoddessIshtar,6 IshtarâsWestSemiticcounterpart, Astarte,7 theWestSemiticgoddessesAnatandAsherah,8 andeventheCanaanitegoddess Ĺ apĹĄuhavebeensuggested.9 Otherscholarsmaintainthatitisimpossible,giventhe availabledata,todeterminetowhichgoddessoftheSemiticworldtheQueenofHeaven corresponds.10 Finally,therearesomewhobelievethattheQueenofHeavenisnotone
8ForAnat,see,e.g.,Albright, Yahweh and the Gods of Canaan,130;Cogan, Imperialism and Religion, 85;Kapelrud, The Violent Goddess,13,16;McKay, Religion in Judah under the Assyrians,110â11n19; Porten, Archives from Elephantine,165,177;andvanderToorn,âGoddessesinEarlyIsraelite Religion,â83â88.ForAsherah,see,preeminently,Koch,âAscheraalsHimmelskĂśnigin,â97â120;seealso, for otherreferences,Fidler,âWritingandRewriting,â155n61;Hadley,âQueenofHeaven,â45n80.
7See,e.g.,BrescianiandKamil, Le lettre aramaiche di Hermopoli,400;Culican,âVotiveModelfrom theSea,â121â22;Fitzmyer,âPhoenicianInscriptionfromPyrgi,â287â88;Herrmann,âAĹĄtart,â29n67; Holladay, Jeremiah,1:254â55; MesnilduBuisson,ĂtudessurlesdieuxphĂŠniciens,126â27;Olyan, âSomeObservationsConcerningtheIdentityoftheQueenofHeaven,â161â74;Pope, ââAttart, âAĹĄtart,Astarte,â251(butcf.above,[[n.5]]);andSilverman,ReligiousValuesintheJewishProper NamesatElephantine,225n6.Seealso theextensivebibliographycompiledbyHadley,âQueenof Heaven,â48â49n97.
10E.g.,Gray, âQueen of Heaven,â 975. A somewhat similar position is put forward by Hadley, âQueenofHeaven,â50â51,whosuggeststhetextofJeremiahdeliberatelyobscurestheQueenofHeavenâs identityinorderthatdifferentgoddessesmightbeidentifiedwiththeQueenofHeavenindifferentplaces and/oratdifferenttimes;seelikewiseFidler,âWritingandRewriting,â156,discussingtheviewsof Houtman,âQueenofHeaven,â678,andofLeuchter,âCultofPersonality,â95â115,esp.106â7.
11
Myownsympathiesliewiththislatterposition,whichseesintheQueenofHeaven characteristicsofbothWestSemiticAstarteandEastSemiticIshtar.TheQueenof HeavenasdescribedintheBiblecertainlyshareswithAstartemanyfeatures:first,the titleofâQueenâorsomerelatedepithet.Forexample,intextsfromtheEgyptianNew Kingdom(ca.1539â1075BCE),AstarteiscalledâLadyofHeaven.â12 Morenotably,in thefirstmillenniumBCE,AstartebearsthetitleâQueen.âOntheobversefaceofthe fifth-centuryBCEKitiontariffinscription,whichliststhemonthlyexpendituresforthe PhoeniciantempleofAstarteatKition,Cyprus,AstarteisreferredtoasâtheholyQueenâ andâtheQueen.â13 Inhis PhoenicianHistory,PhiloofByblos,citingthehierophant
13See CIS 86 A/KAI 37 A, mlkt qdĹĄt (line 7) and mlkt (line 10),following the line numbers of KAI; see further Peckham,âNotesona Fifth-CenturyPhoenicianInscriptionfromKition,â 304n2. Although Astarteisnotmentionedbynameinlines7and10,thetitleâQueenâinaninscriptionconcernedwith the cultandtempleofAstartecanrefertonoother.This isacknowledgedbyalmostallcommentators:seeas representativeGibson, Textbook of Syrian Semitic Inscriptions,3:128; Healey,âKitionTariffs,â55; Masson andSznycer, Recherches sur les phĂŠniciens, 44;andPeckham,âNotesona Fifth-Century PhoenicianInscriptionfromKition,â312â13.The suggestion ofDonnerandRĂśllig (KAI 2:55)that mlkt is amistakefor mlâkt,âservice,â inline7 (theydonotcommentonline10)issurelynotcorrect,asthescribe demonstratesinline13thatheknowstheproperspellingof mlâkt,withan âalep (seeMassonandSznycer, Recherches sur les phĂŠniciens,44).
12Egyptian nbt pt. Redford,âNewLightontheAsiaticCampaigningofHoremheb,â37,findsthis epithetonastonebowloftheEighteenthDynasty(ca.1539â1292 BCE); thebowlisalso discussedby Delcor,âLacultedela âReineduCiel,ââ114. ForinscriptionsfromtheNineteenth Dynasty(ca.1292â1190BCE)withtheepithetâLadyofHeaven,âseeMaspero,âNotesde Voyage,â131â32,andPetrie, Memphis 1,19;also Delcor,âLacultedela âReineduCiel,ââ114;Helck, Die Beziehungen Ăgyptiens zu Vorderasien,457â58;Leclant,âAstartĂŠĂ cheval,â 10â13and fig. 1; and Stadelmann, SyrischPalästinensische GĂśttheitin in Ăgypten,104,106.
deitybutratheragoddesswhocombinesthecharacteristicsofEastSemiticIshtarand WestSemiticAstarte.11
NotethecommentsofFitzmyer,âPhoenicianInscriptionfromPyrgi,â287,andRast,âCakesfor theQueenof Heaven,â170;seealsoBright,Jeremiah,56.MarvinH.Popemayalsoindirectlyindicate hissupportforsuchathesis,sinceheidentifiestheQueenofHeavenasAstartein ââAttart,âAĹĄtart, Astarte,â251,butasIshtarinSong,149(above,[[nn.5â6]]).OtherscholarswhoevokebothIshtarand AstartewhenproposinganidentificationfortheQueenofHeavenarecitedin Hadley,âQueenof Heaven,â46â47n88,48â49n97.
17KAI 54.PhoenicianâbdâĹĄtrt âsqlny;Greek Aphrodisiou AskalĹnitÄs.
Sakkunyaton,alsoatteststoAstarteâsqueenlyrole infirst-millenniumBCEPhoeniciaby describingAstarteastheco-regentofKingZeus Demarous(CanaaniteBaalHaddu)and remarkingthatshewearsonherheadabullâsheadasanemblemofâkingshipâ (basileias).
16PhiloofByblos, Phoenician History,asquotedinEusebius, Praeparatio evangelica 1.10.32, trans. AttridgeandOden,Philo of Byblos,55.
14
ThebiblicalQueenofHeaveninadditionshareswithAstarteanassociationwiththe heavens.Astarteâsastralfeatures,alreadyindicatedinthesecondmillenniumBCEbythe EgyptiantitleâLadyofHeaven,âareabundantlyattestedwithinfirst-millenniumBCE sources.InboththeEshmunazorandtheBodashtartinscriptionsfromPhoenicia, AstarteâssacredprecinctinSidoniscalledâthehighestheavens.â15 Elsewhereinthe Mediterraneanworld,Astarteâsassociationswiththeheavensaresuggestedbyher identificationwithGreekAphrodite,thegoddessofVenus,theMorningandEvening Star:asPhiloofBybloswrites,âthePhoenicianssaythatAstarteisAphrodite.â16 This identificationisalsomadeclearalsobyafourth-centuryBCEGreek/Phoenicianbilingual inscriptionfromAthensthattranslatesthePhoeniciannameââAbdâaĹĄtart[âServantof Astarteâ]theAshkeloniteâasâAphrodisios[âDedicatedtoAphroditeâ]the Ashkelonite.â17 Notably,moreover,theAstarteorAphroditeworshippedby âAbdâaĹĄtart/AphrodisiosandotherAshkelonitesisexplicitlyknownasAphroditeofthe Heavens (AphroditÄourania),asismadeclearbybothHerodotus(1.105)andPausanias 14PhiloofByblos, Phoenician History,asquotedinEusebius, Praeparatio evangelica 1.10.31.In addition,inconnectionwithAstarteâs royalroleaccordingtoPhoeniciantradition,seetheTyrianâThrone ofAstarteâ(KAI 17) andtheinscribedâthronesâ likeit,asdiscussedinMilik,âLespapyrus aramĂŠens dâHermoupolis,â572,withreferences;also,theinscribedthronededicatedtoAstarteḤordescribedby AbousamraandLemaireinâAstarteinTyre,â155â56.
15ĹĄmm âdrm in KAI 14 (Eshmunazor),lines16 and17; ĹĄmm rmm in KAI 15(Bodashtart).Onthese inscriptions,seefurtherGibson,Textbook of Syrian Semitic Inscriptions,3:112,and Milik,âLespapyrus aramĂŠensdâHermoupolis,â561,561n2;also597â98.On KAI 14,seealsoTeixidor, ThePagan God, 39;on KAI 15, seealsoCross, Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic,142,and, especially,Eissfeldt, âSchamemrumim âHoher Himmel,ââ62â67(no. 14).
AnotherdatumshowingAstarteâsassociationwiththeheavenscomesfromPyrgi,a siteonthewestcoastofItalyaboutfiftykmwest-northwestofRome.Thebilingual inscriptionfoundthere,fromca.500BCE,isdedicatedinitsPhoenicianversionto AstarteandinitsEtruscanformtothegoddessUni.JosephA.Fitzmyernotesthat EtruscanUniisRomanJuno,and,significantly,thatUniisâcloselyassociatedâwith âJunooftheHeavensâ(Junocaelestis)inRomanAfrica.20 PhiloofByblos,too,remarks onAstarteâsheavenlyassociations:âWhentravelingaroundtheworld,she [Astarte] discoveredastarwhichhadfallenfromthesky.ShetookitandconsecrateditinTyre, theholyisland.â21 Stillmoreevidencecomesfrom Herodian,who,inhissecond-century CE HistoryoftheRomanEmpire (5.6.4),reportsthatthePhoeniciansreferredto AphroditeoftheHeavens(=Astarte)asâQueenofStarsâ(astroarchÄ).22 Alsointhe secondcenturyCE,Apuleius,inhis Metamorphoses (11.2),callsCaelestisVenusofthe CypriotcityofPaphosâQueenofHeavenâ(reginacaeli).23 Latin CaelestisVenus isa simpletranslationofGreek AphroditÄourania,AphroditeoftheHeavens,whomIhave identifiedwithPalestinianAstarte. 18NotealsoinHerodotus1.131;3.8.
19AstartÄpalaistinÄ, AphroditÄ ourania.SeeRousselandLauney,Inscriptions de DĂŠlos,no.2305. Also see inscription no.1719andthediscussionsof Delcor, âLacultedelaâReineduCiel,ââ117;Macalister, ThePhilistines,94;andMcKay,Religion inJudah,51. 20Fitzmyer,âPhoenicianInscriptionfromPyrgi,â288.TheidentificationofAstartewithJuno,rather thanwithEtruscan Turan,RomanVenus,theusualequivalentofGreekAphrodite,neednotgivepause, giventhegeneralfluidityofthegreatCanaanitegoddessesinthefirstmillenniumBCE 21PhiloofByblos, Phoenician History,asquotedinEusebius, Praeparatio evangelica 1.10.31, trans. AttridgeandOden, Philo of Byblos,55 22Pointed outby Delcor,âLacultedelaâReineduCiel,ââ115. 23PointedoutbyTeixidor, The Pagan God,36. RES 921,which reads[âĹĄ]trt pp[s],confirmsthatthe cultofPalestinian AstartewasknownatPaphos.SeeDupont-Sommer, âLesPhĂŠniciensĂ Chypre,â93â94.
(1.14.7),whoremarkonthecultofAphroditeoftheHeavensinAshkelon.18 This correspondenceofAstartewithGreekAphroditeoftheHeavensisfurtherconfirmedbya second-centuryBCEinscriptionfromDelosdedicatedtoâPalestinianAstarte,thatis, AphroditeoftheHeavens.â19
AthirdcharacteristicAstarteshareswiththebiblicalQueenofHeavenisherclose associationswithfertilityandwithwar.ThefertilityaspectsoftheQueenofHeavenare madeclearinJer44:17,wherethepeopleofJudahclaimthatwhentheyworshippedthe QueenofHeaven,âwehadplentyoffood,andweprospered.âConversely,âsincewe stoppedworshippingtheQueenofHeavenandstoppedpouringoutlibationstoher,we havelackedeverythingandbeenconsumed...byfamineâ(44:18).Atthesametime,the QueenofHeavenseemstohaveanassociationwithwar:accordingtoherfollowersas quotedinJeremiah,herproperworshipguaranteedthatthepeopleâsawnoevilâ(44:17), butwhenhercultwasabandoned,âwewereconsumedbytheswordâ (44:18).
Petrie, Memphis 1,8,andpl.15 no.37. See also Leclant,âAstarteĂ cheval,â10â13,andfig.1. 26Leclant, âAstarteĂ cheval,â1â67.Seealsotheso-calledLadyGodivaplaquefoundatLachish (Ussishkin,âExcavationsatTelLachishâ1973â1977,â21,andpl.8),whichshowsagoddess(Astarte,I wouldargue)standingastrideahorse.
27Carter andNewberry, Tomb ofThoutmosis IV,27,andpl.10;alsoJ.A. Wilson,âEgyptiansandthe GodsofAsia,â250,250n16.
28
Astarte,too,hasfertilityattributesinadditiontoassociationswithwar.Themost strikingevidenceforAstarteâsroleasaguarantoroffertilityisfoundintheHebrew Bible,wherethenoun âaĹĄtÄrĂ´t,whichJudithM.HadleyhasdescribedasaâdedeificationâofthedivinenameAstarte(âaĹĄtart),meansâincrease,progenyâ(Deut7:13; 28:4;28:18,51).24 AsforAstarteâsassociationswithwar:anEgyptianNewKingdom steleofPharaohMerenptah(r.1213â1204BCE)depictsthegoddesswithshieldand spear,25 andotherEgyptianrepresentationsofAstarteshowheronhorsebackcarrying weaponsofwar.26 Inaddition,PharaohThutmoseIV(r.1400â1390BCE)isdescribedas beingmightyinthechariotlikeAstarte,27 andalongwithAnat,Astarteiscalledapartof athirteenth-centuryBCEkingâswarchariot.28 Sheisalso,togetherwithAnat,calleda shieldtoPharaohRamesesIII(r.1187â1156BCE).29 Furthermore,duringtheNew 24Hadley,âDe-deificationofDeitiesinDeuteronomy,â157â74;Hadley,âFertilityoftheFlock?,â115â33.
25
DawsonandPeet,âSo-CalledPoemontheKingâsChariot,â169(verso,lines12â14);alsoJ.A. Wilson,âEgyptiansandtheGodsofAsia,â 250,250n17. 29Edgerton andJ.A.Wilson, Historical Records of Ramses III,75;alsoJ.A.Wilson,âEgyptiansand theGodsofAsia,â250,250n18.
Kingdom(ca.1539â1075BCE),shecarriestheepithetâLadyofCombat.â30 A millenniumlater,anEgyptiantextfromthePtolemaicperiod(305â30BCE)likewise describesherasâAstarte,MistressofHorses,LadyoftheChariot.â31 IntheCanaanite realm,AstarteactsasawargoddessinconcertwithHoroninUgariticmythology,32 and inlaterPhoeniciantradition,KingEsarhaddonofAssyriadecreesinatreatytextfrom 670BCEthatAstarteshouldâbreakthebowâofKingBaalofTyreâinthethickof battleâandcauseKingBaaltoâcrouchatthefeet ofyourenemyâshouldheviolatethe treatyâsterms.33 Moreover,intheBible,accordingto1Sam31:10,thearmorofthedead SaulistakenbythePhilistinestothetempleofAstarte,whichmayalsoindicateAstarteâs associationswithwar.
36Culican,âVotiveModelfromtheSea,â119â23.
30Leclant, âAstarte Ă cheval,â 25. 31Leclant, âAstarte Ă cheval,â54â58,esp.57,andpl.4(oppositep.49);alsoJ.A.Wilson,âEgyptians andtheGodsofAsia,â250n16. 32KTU 2.1.7â8;16.6.54â57.Herrmann,âAĹĄtart,â7â16,haspointedoutthattheobverseof PRU 5.1 (19.39)alsodescribesUgariticAstarteasawargoddess;inaddition,Schmitt, âAstarte,Mistressof Horses,â215â16,andSmith, Poetic Heroes,195â208,discusswarrioraspectsofUgariticAstarte.
33Bloch-Smith,âArchaeologicalandInscriptionalEvidenceforPhoenicianAstarte,â192.
AfourthreasonforidentifyingAstartewiththebiblicalQueenofHeavenisthatthe cultofAstartehasasacrucialelementtheofferingofbreadcakes,aritualthatalsoplays animportantroleintheworshipoftheQueenofHeaven(Jer7:18;44:19).TheKition Tariffinscriptioncitedaboveisagainnoteworthy,forline10ofthatinscriptionmentions âthetwobakerswhobakedthebasketofcakesfortheQueenâ;34 theQueen,Ihave argued,mustbeAstarte.35Inaddition,WilliamCulicanhasdrawnattentiontoa HellenisticvotivemodelfoundoffthePhoeniciancoast.36 Themodelshowssixfigures
34Forthereading lâpm // âĹĄâpâyt ášn â Ḽlt andthetranslation adoptedhere,seePeckham,âNotesona Fifth-CenturyPhoenicianInscriptionfromKition,â305â6.PeckhamisfollowedbyGibson,Textbook of Syrian Semitic Inscriptions, 3:124â25,andbyMassonandSznycer, Recherches sur les phĂŠniciens,26â27, 28â29.Healey(âKitionTariffs,â54)offersanalternativereconstruction,lâpm // âĹĄâp mntspâ Ḽlt lmlkt, âForthetwobakers, whobakedchoicefood,loavesfor theQueen.â
35Those whoassociate thereference inthe Kition inscription withtheworship of theQueen of Heaven include Culican,âVotiveModelfromtheSea,â122;Delcor,âLacultedelaâReineduCiel,ââ110â12; andPeckham, âNotesona Fifth-CenturyPhoenicianInscriptionfromKition,â 314â15, 315n2.
AfifthandfinalfactorthatsuggeststhebiblicalQueenofHeavenisAstarteisthe popularityofthegoddessAstarteintheWestSemiticrealmduringthefirstmillennium BCE.HundredsofPhoenicianandPunicpersonalnamesincorporatethedivineelement âĹĄtrt,Astarte.Thegoddessâsnamealsoappearsin manyPhoenicianandPunic inscriptions,bothfromthePhoenicianmainlandandfromtheMediterraneanworldand NorthAfrica;likewise,accordingtoPhiloofByblos,AstarteisanimportantPhoenician goddess,wifeofKronos,and,asnotedabove,aco-regentwithZeusDemarous/Baal Haddu.37 Thesecond-orfirst-centuryBCEinscriptionofPaalaĹĄtartfromMemphis(KAI 48),inadditiontootherfirst-millenniumBCEEgyptianmaterialcitedabove,atteststo thepopularityofAstarteinEgypt.AndinIsrael,theDeuteronomisticHistoriansaccuse thepeopleofworshippingAstarteinJudg2:13;10:6;1Sam7:3â4;12:10;1Kgs11:5, 33;and2Kgs23:13.38
AstarteisthusaworthycandidatefortheQueenofHeaven.Yetcertainelementsof theworshipoftheQueenofHeavenremainunexplainedifweinterpretthecultofthe QueenofHeavenonlyasacultofWestSemiticAstarte.Forexample,thewordusedin Jer7:18and44:19forthecakesbakedfortheQueen, kawwÄnĂŽm,isusednowhereinthe extrabiblicalmaterialsthatpertaintoAstarte.Similarly,thebiblicalreferencetobaking cakesâinherimageâ(Jer 44:19)cannotbeunderstoodbyreferencetotheworshipof WestSemiticAstarte.Third,WestSemiticevidenceatteststonospecialroleforwomen
37PhiloofByblos, Phoenician History,asquotedinEusebius, Praeparatio evangelica 1.10.22,24,31. 38The LXX, in addition, reads AstartÄ for MT âÄĹĄÄrâ in 2 Chr 15:16 and Astartais forMT âÄĹĄÄrĂŽm in2Chr24:18.
positionedaroundadomedobject.Culicanidentifiesfouridenticalseatedfemalesas votaresses.Anotherfemalefigurestandsandispregnant;Culicanbelieveshertobe Astarte.Thisidentificationcannotbecertain,butAstarteâswell-attestedpopularityinthe PhoenicianandPunicrealminthelatefirstmillenniumBCE(seebelow)makes Culicanâshypothesisattractive.Culicanidentifiesthesixthfigureonthemodel,amale, asapriestofthegoddess.Thedomedobjectaroundwhichthesixfiguresclusteris interpretedasabeehiveoven.Culicanproposesthesceneisacake-bakingritualinhonor ofAstarte.Thisisaspeculativesuggestion,butinlightoftheKitionTariffinscription andJer7:18and44:19,itisappealing.
Indeed,theancientSumeriannameofIshtar,Inanna,wasthoughtbythesubsequent inhabitantsofMesopotamia,theAkkadians,tomeanâQueenofHeavenâ(reading [N]IN.AN.NA[K]),andthusthenameInannaisroutinelyrenderedinAkkadiantextsas âQueenofHeavenâ(ĹĄarratĹĄamĂŞ)orâLadyofHeavenâ(bÄletĹĄamĂŞ).39 Ishtarisalso calledbyrelatedepithets:âQueenofHeavenandtheStars,ââQueenofHeavenand Earth,ââLadyofHeavenandEarth,ââSovereignofHeavenandEarth,âandâRulerof HeavenandEarth.â40 Inthewest,too,IshtarisknownasâLadyofHeaven.â Inan EgyptianNewKingdom inscriptionfromMemphis,IshtarofNineveh(whomtheancient scribecallsHurrianAstarte)isgiventhistitle.41 Ishtarhasotherastralfeaturesinaddition toherepithets.42 InMesopotamia,forexample,IshtarisequatedwithSumerian DIL.BAT, theSumeriannameoftheplanetVenus. Also,Ishtarisafertilitygoddess,astheMesopotamianstoriesofDumuzi/Tammuz andInanna/Ishtarshow.Thesestoriestelloftheyoungfertilitygod,Tammuz,asymbol ofprosperityandyield,andhiscourtingandwooingofthemaidenIshtar,whorepresents 39Edzard,âInanna,IĹĄtar,â81;Falkenstein, Inschriften Gudeas von LagaĹĄ 1: Einleitung,78â79;Helck, Betrachtungen zur grossen GĂśttin,73;Held,âStudiesinBiblicalLexicography,â80n24;Kramer, The Sumerians,153. 40ĹĄarrat ĹĄamĂŞ u kakkabÄni, ĹĄarrat ĹĄamĂŞ u erᚣeti, bÄlet ĹĄamĂŞ (u) erᚣeti, etellet ĹĄamĂŞ (u) erᚣetim, malkat ĹĄamÄmÄŤ u qaqqari. SeeTallqvist, Akkadische GĂśtterepitheta,39,64,129,239â40;cf.333â34.
IshtarisagoddesswhoappropriatelybearsthetitleâQueenofHeaven.â
inthecultofAstarte.However,aswewillsee,theseelementsintheworshipofthe QueenofHeavencanbeexplainedifweexaminethecultoftheEastSemiticgoddess, Ishtar.Certainly
41
OnthetitleHurrianAstarte,seeAlbright, Yahweh and the Gods of Canaan,143n88;Cross, âOld PhoenicianInscriptionfromSpainDedicatedtoHurrianAstarte,â192;Helck, Die Beziehungen Ăgyptiens zu Vorderasien,459â60;Helck, Betrachtungen zur grossen GĂśttin,213â16;andStadelmann, SyrischPalästinensische GĂśttheitin in Ăgypten,107.For theMemphisinscription,seevonBergmann, âInschriftlicheDenkmäler,â196;alsoseethecommentsofCulican,âVotiveModelfromtheSea,â122; Ranke,âIĹĄtaralsHeilgĂśttin,â412â18;Stadelmann, Syrisch-Palästinensische GĂśttheitin in Ăgypten,107; andJ.A.Wilson,âEgyptiansandtheGodsofAsia,â250n19.Note,too,asecondMemphisinscriptionin whichHurrianAstarte(=IshtarofNineveh)iscalledLadyofHeaven.SeeMadsen,âZweiInschriftenin Kopenhagen,â114,andthecommentsof Culican,âVotiveModelfromtheSea,â122.
42SeeEdzard, âInanna,IĹĄtar,â 85â86.
Lexicographersgenerallyagreethat kawwÄnĂŽm,thewordusedforthecakesbakedfor theQueenofHeaveninJer7:18and44:19,isaloanwordfromAkkadian kamÄnu, âcake.â45 InAkkadiantexts, kamÄnu cakesareoftenassociatedwiththecult ofIshtar.A hymntoIshtarreadsasfollows: OIshtarmercifulgoddess,Ihavecometovisityou, Ihavepreparedforyouanoffering,puremilk,apurecakebakedinashes (kamÄn tumri), Istoodup for youavesselforlibations,hearmeandactfavorablytowardme!46
46ThetextcanbefoundinCraig, Assyrian and Babylonian Religious Texts,1:15â16,lines20â22.For transcription,translation,andnotes,seeEbeling, Quellen zur Kenntnis,2:4(lines20â22),12.
45Seeasrepresentative AHw 1:430,s.v. kamÄnu; HALOT 2:466,s.v. kawwÄn;andKBL,428,s.v. kawwÄn.SeealsoHeld,âStudiesinBiblicalLexicography,â76â77;Jeremias, Das Alte Testament im Lichte des Alten Orients,611â12;andZimmern, Akkadische FremdwĂśrter,38.
Ishtaralsohasassociationswithwar.Intheepiloguetotheeighteenth-centuryBCE CodeofHammurapi,HammurapicallsIshtarâtheladyofthebattleandofthefightâ(col. 50[rs.27],92â93).Herpowersonthebattlefieldareclearlyindicatedbythecursesheis toinflictonHammurapiâsenemy(col.51[rs.28],2â23): Maysheshatterhisweaponatthebattlesite.Maysheestablishforhimconfusion(and) rioting.Mayshecausehiswarriorstofail.Mayshegivetheearththeir bloodtodrink. Mayshepile upeverywhereontheplainheapsofcorpsesfromhisarmy.Mayshenot takepity.Asforhim,mayshegivehimintothehandsofhisenemies.Maysheleadhim, bound,tothelandofhisenemies!
ThemythofInannaandEbeh,inwhichInanna/IshtarassaultsthemountainEbeh,also atteststoIshtarâswarringnature.44
thecommunalstorehouseinwhichharvestedfoodstuffswerekept.Tammuzissuccessful inhiscourtship,andtheyoungfertilitygodandgoddessmarry.Withtheir sexualunion, theyguaranteefruitfulnessinthelandandbountyinthestorehouse.Thisissymbolizedin themythbythefactthatTammuz,ashisweddinggifttoIshtar,bringstoIshtarproduce tobeplacedinherstorehouse.43 TheidentificationofIshtarwiththegrainstorehousein thesemythsandelsewheredemonstratesherroleinguaranteeingcontinualprosperityand preventingfamine,anattributeassociatedwiththeQueenofHeaveninJer44:17â18.
44SeeKramer, Sumerian Mythology,83.
43SeeJacobsen, Treasures of Darkness,23â73.
AnothertextdescribesahealingritualassociatedwiththeIshtarcult,inwhichacake bakedinashes(kamÄntumri)ispreparedinhonorofthegoddess.47 Finally,inthe Gilgameshepic(tabletVI,lines58â60),GilgameshdescribeshowTammuzbroughtash cakes(tumru)tohisloverIshtar.Althoughtheterm kamÄnu isnotusedinthispassage, mostcommentatorsassumethatthereferenceto tumru isashorthandexpressionfor kamÄntumri,âcakebakedinashes,âthecakeassociatedwiththeIshtarcultinourfirst twoexamples.48 ScholarswhohavecommentedonthebiblicalcultoftheQueenofHeavenare generallypuzzledbythephraseâcakesinherimageâ(kawwÄnĂŽmlÄhaâÇᚣčbÄh;Jer 44:19).49 ThoseholdingthattheQueenofHeavenisIshtarsometimesexplainwhatâin herimageâmeansbypointingtoseveralclaymoldsfoundatMari,asiteinnorthwest Mesopotamia.Thesemoldsportrayanudefemalefigurewhoholdsherhandscupped underherbreasts.Herhipsarelargeandprominent.50 Ithasbeensuggestedthatthe moldsrepresentIshtarandthattheywereusedtoshapecakesbakedintheimageofthe goddess.Thesecakeswerethenofferedto Ishtaraspartofhersacrificialcult.51 Although thereareproblemswiththissuggestion,52 theproposaltorelatetheMarimoldstothe Bibleâs kawwÄnĂŽmlÄhaâÇᚣčbÄh isstillworthnoting.
Finally,weobservethatwomenseemtohave aspecialplaceintheIshtarcult.In Mesopotamianmythology,asnotedabove,thelargestcomplexofstoriesaboutIshtar dealswithhercourtshipandmarriagetotheyoungfertilitygodTammuz.Inthemyths, 47Thetextcanbefoundin KAR 42,line25.Fortranscription,translation,andsomenotes,see Ebeling, Quellen zur Kenntnis,2:22(line25),27. 48
So,forexample, AHw 3:1370,s.v. tumru(m);Oppenheim,âMesopotamianMythologyII,â36n6; Saggs, Greatness That Was Babylon,395;SchottandvonSoden, Das Gilgamesch-Epos,52;andSpeiser, âEpicofGilgamesh,â84. 49ReadinglÄhaâÇᚣčbÄhforMTlÄhaâÇᚣčbâ Onsuffixal hÄ without mappiq,see GKC56g; cf.91e 50ThemoldswerefirstpublishedbyParrot, Mission archĂŠologique de Mari 2: Le palais-documents et monuments,37â38,andpl.19.Forareadilyaccessiblephotographofthelargestandbest-preservedmold, seeMalamat,âMari,âfig.9(p.21);Pope, Song,pl.1(oppositep.360).
51ThisisproposedbyPope, Song,379,andbyRast,âCakesfortheQueenofHeaven,â171â74.See alsoHolladay, Jeremiah,1:254. 52Vriezen,âCakesandFigurines,â262.
56See CAD 8:111,s.v.kamÄnu:âBakedinashes,the k.-cakeseemstohavebeenadishofthe shepherdâ;alsonotethereferenceslistedthere.
54See,forexample,thelamentscollectedinJacobsen, Treasures of Darkness,49â50,53â54.
55Althoughfacileequationsofmythandritualmustbeavoided(see,e.g.,Hendel, Epic of the Patriarch, 69â71;in additiontoHendelâsreferences,noteBurkert, Homo Necans,29â34),itisacknowledgedby all commentatorsthattheMesopotamianmythof Tammuzistosomedegreereflectiveofandatthesametime reflectedinMesopotamianritualandcult.
Tammuzsymbolizesthespringseasonofprosperityandyield,aseasonwhendatesand grainwereharvested,calvesandlambswereborn,andmilkran.Butwhenthespring harvestseasonended,themythologyperceivedthatthegodTammuzhaddied.53 The deathofTammuzwasanoccasionofsorrowforhisyoungbride,Ishtar,andAkkadian mythologypreservesmanyofherlamentsoverherdeadlover.54 Andasawoman(Ishtar) lamentsthedeathofherloverinmyth,itiswomen(devoteesof Ishtar)wholament TammuzâspassingintheritualsoftheMesopotamianTammuzcult.55 Indeed,womenâs roleintheselamentationritualsisvividlyillustratedintheBibleinEzek8:14,whereitis womenwhoarespecificallyidentifiedasthosewhositatthegateoftheJerusalem templeâsinnercourtâmourningoverTammuz.âIsuggestthatitisthisspecialplaceof womeninthecultofTammuzthatisreflectedinthebiblicalmaterialsabouttheQueen ofHeaven.Atfirstglance,itmayseemalongjumpfromtheroleofwomenâmourningover TammuzâtotheroleofwomeninbakingcakesfortheQueenofHeaven.But,infact,the twoarecloselyrelated.The kamÄnu cakesassociatedwiththeIshtarcult(kawwÄnĂŽm bakedasofferingstotheQueenofHeaven)werea staplefoodofMesopotamian shepherds,56 andTammuzwastheprototypicalandpatronshepherdofMesopotamia.
Moreover,asInotedabove,intheGilgameshepic (tabletVI,lines58â60),Gilgamesh describesTammuzastheonewhoheapsupashcakesforhislover,Ishtar.Thecultof TammuztheshepherdisthuscloselytiedtotheIshtarcultthatinvolvesthebakingof offeringcakes,andtheculticparticipantswhomournedthedeathofTammuzarethusthe worshipperswhobakedcakesforIshtar,theQueenofHeaven.Andaswomenplayeda 53AlthoughseasonalinterpretationsofancientNearEasternmythsareoftenunwarranted,themythsof Tammuzdoseembestunderstoodashavingagriculturalconcernsastheir main(butnotexclusive)focus.
IsubmitthattheQueenofHeavenisadeitywhosecharacterincorporatesaspectsof WestSemiticAstarteandEastSemiticIshtar.Thissynthesisprobablyoccurredearlyin Canaanitereligioushistory,wellbeforethesixthcenturyBCE.Certainlythepeopleof Judah,inJer44:17,andJeremiahhimself,inJer44:21,describethecultasonepracticed bypastgenerations.Moreover,weknowthatthecultofIshtarofNinevehisattestedin EgyptduringtheNewKingdomandasfarwestasSpainbytheeighthcenturyBCE.57 ThiswouldsuggestthatthecultsofAstarte andIshtarwereexposedtoeachotherand beganinterminglingsometimeduringthelastcenturiesofthesecondmillenniumBCE. ThisinterminglingthencontinuedthroughoutthefirstmillenniumBCE.Indeed,thecult oftheQueenofHeavenprosperedinthefirsthalfofthefirstmillenniumBCE,in particularattractingthewomenofsixth-centuryBCEJudahandJerusalem. Butsurprisingly,thiswomenâscultdidnotprosperonlyinthosesphereswherewe mightexpecttofindwomenâsreligiouspractice,suchasthehomeandthefamily.Tobe sure,thereisastrongdomesticcomponenttothecult,seenespeciallyinJer7:18,where âthesonsgatherwood,thefatherskindlefire, andthewomenkneaddoughtomakebread cakesfortheQueenofHeaven.â58 ButifJer44:17istobetakenatallseriously,thenthe âkingsandprincesâofJudahare alsoamongthose whoworshippedtheQueen.Andifthe worshipoftheQueenofHeavenwasapartofthereligionofthemonarchy,theQueenâs cultmayalsohavebeenathomeinwhatwasessentiallythemonarchâsprivatechapel, thetemple.ThisiscertainlysuggestedbyEzek8:14,wherethewomenwhoparticipatein therelatedcultofwailingovertheQueenâsdeceasedlover,Tammuz,sitatthenorth
57FortheEgyptianmaterials,seethereferencescitedin[[n.40]]above;alsoHelck, Die Beziehungen Ăgyptiens zu Vorderasien,458â60;Helck, Betrachtungen zur grossen GĂśttin,213â16.ForIshtarof NinevehinSpain,seeCross,âOldPhoenicianInscriptionfromSpainDedicatedtoHurrianAstarte,â 189â95.
58Jeremiah7:18isusuallytranslatedâthechildrengather wood,ârenderingtheHebrew bÄnĂŽm (the pluralof bÄn,âsonâ)asagenericratherthanasgenderspecific.ButacomparisonwithLam5:13,a compositioncloselyrelatedtothebookofJeremiahthatdescribesyoung boys (nÄâÄrĂŽm)carryingloadsof wood,suggeststhatwood-gatheringwasataskmoretypicallyassignedtomales.
crucialroleintheritualmourningoverTammuz,theyalsoplayedanimportantroleinthe cultinvolvingthebakingof kamÄnu cakes.
Sinceitiswinnerswhowritehistory,theimportanceofthiswomenâscultinthe historyofthereligionofIsraelhasbeenobscuredbyoursources.Theultimateâwinnersâ inthereligionofearlysixth-centuryBCEJudahweremen:theDeuteronomistic Historians,thepriest-prophetEzekiel,andtheprophetJeremiah.Thebiblicaltextsthese menwrotemalignnon-Deuteronomistic,nonpriestly,andnonpropheticreligion,andin thecaseofthecultoftheQueenofHeaven,theymalignthereligionofwomen.But fortunatelyforus,thesourceshavenotcompletelyignoredsomewomenâscults.The losershavenotbeentotallylost.IfhistoriansofIsraelitereligioncontinuetopushbeyond biblicalpolemic,weshouldhearmoreandmorethevoicesofthewomenofIsrael witnessingtotheirreligiousconvictions.
JoAnnHacketthasarguedthatwomeninancientIsraelitesocietyhadahigherstatus andmoreopportunitiestoholdpublicandpowerfulpositionsintimesofsocial dysfunction.59 Certainly,thecalamitousyearsofthelateseventhandearlysixthcenturies BCE,whichwitnessedthesenselessdeathofKingJosiah,theDavid revividus,in609 BCE,theBabylonianexilesof597BCEand586BCE,thefinaldestructionofthetemple bytheBabyloniansin586BCE,andthesimultaneousendofJudahitepolitical independence,qualifyasaperiodofseveredysfunction.Thereis,admittedly,little evidencefromthisperiodforwomenwieldingpoliticalpower.Butthebiblicaldataabout theQueenofHeavendosuggestthatthewomenoflateseventh-andearlysixth-century BCEJudahandJerusalemexercisedreligiouspower.60 Theyworshippedagoddess whoseculttheyfoundparticularlyappealingandwentsofarastointroducethecultâs ritualsthatrelatedtoTammuzlamentationintothetemplecompounditself.
gatesofthetempleâsinnercourt.ThepresenceofatemplededicatedtotheQueenof Heaveninfifth-centuryBCEEgypt,acenturyafterJeremiahberatestheJudahiteswho havefledtoEgyptfortheirworshipoftheQueenofHeaven(Jer44),isalsosuggestive.
59Hackett, âIntheDaysofJael,â15â38.
60ItisperhapsnotcoincidentalthatHulda,thefirstwomanprophetreportedbythebiblicalwriters sincethepremonarchicperiod,isactiveatapproximatelythesametime,thelastquarteroftheseventh centuryBCE(2Kgs22:14â20).
Asherah,theWestSemiticGoddessofSpinningandWeaving?1
ThischapterhaditsoriginsinmyinterestinoneverseoftheBible,2Kgs23:7,and itsdescriptionofwomenwhowerehousedinthetemplecompoundinJerusaleminKing Josiahâsday(ca.640â609BCE)âweavingforAsherah.âWhenIstartedworkingonthis text,myconcernwasitshumansubjects.Whatdidthewomenâstaskofweavingfor Asherah,thegreatmothergoddessoftheCanaanitepantheon,entail?Whatdiditmean forthesewomenandfortheirweavingenterprisewhenJosiah,aspartofhissweeping programofreligiousreformation,toredownthehousesintheJerusalemtemple compoundwherethewomendidtheirwork?Howdidlosingtheirtempleworkshop affectthesewomenâsroleasreligiousfunctionarieswhowoveclothforculticpurposes?I detailedsomemyanswerstothesequestionsinmy2006articleâWomenandthe WorshipofYahwehinAncientIsrael,âwhichappearsinthisvolumeaschapter10. Butmyinquiriesregardingthefateofthewomenweaversof2Kgs23:7alsoledme toquestionsaboutAsherah,thegoddessforwhomthewomenwove.Morespecifically, inthechapterthatfollows,IhypothesizethatAsherahmightplayaroleintheWest Semiticpantheonasthepatrondeityofspinningandweaving.Paradoxically,though,2 Kgs23:7âeventhoughitinspiredmyquestionsregardingAsherahâsrelationshipto textileproductionâdoesnotultimatelyprovideevidenceinsupportofmythesis.Instead, Iconcludethatthewomenâsweavingdescribedin2Kgs23:7wascharacteristicofthe kindsoftextile-makingactivitiesthatcouldbefoundinthecultsandculticvenuesof manyancientNearEasterngods,notAsherahinparticular.Nevertheless,Isuggestthat textsfromthebookofProverbs,aswellasmythsfromLateBronzeAgeUgaritandthe HittiteworldandcertainarchaeologicaldatafromIronAgeIsrael,dopointtoAsherahâs roleasthepatrongoddessofspinningandweavingintheWestSemiticworld. Still,whenIoriginallypublishedâAsherah,theWestSemiticGoddessofSpinning andWeaving?âin2008,Iconcludedbycommentingonthequestionmarkinmytitle, notingthatIhaddeemedthispunctuationappropriatebecausenoneoftheevidenceIhad
1
Anearlierversionof thischapterappearedin JNES 67 (2008):1â29.Usedherebypermission.
Chapter2
assembledinsupportofmythesiswasironclad.Thus,Ifeltitnecessarytosignalthatmy conclusionsweretentative.However,ittookoveradecadeforanyonetopushback againstthem:TheodoreJ.Lewisinhis2020book, The Origin and Character of God: Ancient Israelite Religion through the Lens of Divinity,andina2020article,âUgaritic AthtartuĹ adi,FoodProduction,andTextiles:MoreDataforReassessingtheBiblical PortrayalofAĹĄtartinContext.âAsthetitleofLewisâsarticlesuggests,hisaimisto highlightUgaritictextsthatsuggestanassociationbetweentheUgariticgoddess Athtartu/Athtart(biblicalAĹĄtart/Astarte)andtextileproduction.Below,inapostscript appendedtothischapter,IconsiderLewisâsarguments,whichIproposemightaugment, yetneednotnecessarilycontradict,mypreviouslypublishedhypothesisconcerning Asherah.Accordingly,thetextofmy2008articleisre-presentedherewithoutany significantrevisionsexceptforthe2022additionthatIjustnoted.
I.GoddessesofSpinningandWeavingintheAncientMediterraneanWorld In Oikonomikos,hisfourth-centuryBCEtreatiseonestatemanagement,theGreek authorXenophondescribeshowthefourteen-year-oldbrideofawealthyfriendknew nothingoftheworldotherthanhowtoworkwoolherselfâandhowtoallotwoolworkto themaidservants.2 ScholarsoftheancientNearEastmightwellberemindedofthe SumerianmythologicalpoemthatThorkildJacobsencallsâTheBridalSheetsofInanna,â eventhoughthistextisalmosttwomillenniaolderthanXenophonâswork.Init,the youngbride-to-beandgoddessInannateasesbackandforthwithherbrotherUtu,thesun god,abouttheprocessof makinglinensforhermarriagebed.Utubeginsbysuggesting thathebringInannaflaxtorenderintocloth,butwithouttellingherexplicitlythatshe willbeproducingthebedsheetsthatwillbeusedonherweddingnight.She,however, seemstosensethepurposeforwhichtheclothistobemadeyetcoylyworkstoprolong theprocessofrevelationbyaskingUturepeatedlybywhomthevariousstagesof 2Xenophon, Oikonomikos 7.ThisreferencewasbroughttomyattentionbyBarber,âPeplosof Athena,â104â5.
Still,itshouldcomeasnosurprisethatthesetwootherwisedisparatetextssharethe perceptionthatyoungwomenwereresponsibleforproducing,oratleastoverseeingthe productionof,textilesinthehome,fordomesticfabric-makingwasaprimarytaskof womeninallpartsoftheancientworld.E.J.W.BarberhaswrittenofGreekwomen,for example,thatâspinningandweavingoccupiedmostofwomenâstimeinClassical Greece....ProperlymarriedAthenianwomen...spenttheirlivessequesteredathome spinningandweavingforthefamilyâsneeds.â5 TikvaFrymer-Kenskyhassimilarlynoted thatâproducingclothâwasthemostâbasiceconomictaskâofMesopotamianwivesand 3Inthetranslationofthispoemfoundin Inanna, Queen of Heaven and Earth,30â31,DianeWolkstein andSamuelNoahKramerofferaslightlydifferentlistofthestagesofclothproduction:combing,spinning, braidingthethread,settingthewarp,weaving,andbleaching.Here,Ihavegenerally followedJacobsen, Treasures of Darkness,30â31.YetIcannotagreewithJacobsenthatthepurposeofInannaâsrepeated questioningofherbrotherisherbeingâonguardâandâattemptingtopushâthewhole matterofthe bedsheetsaside,leerythatthegroomthathasbeenchosenforherwillnotbethesuitorsheprefers.Nordo IagreewithTikvaFrymer-KenskythatInannaâdeclinesto ret,spin,dye,weave,orbleachâtherawflax becausethisheadstrongandindependentlymindedgoddessrejectswomenâsroleinfabricproduction(In the Wake of the Goddesses,26â27).Rather,asmyremarksheresuggest,IfindInannaâsâspinningoutâof theexchangewithherbrotherUtutobebothamarkerof heraristocraticstatusâspinningandweavingis worksheexpectsmaidservantstodoâandcoquettishincharacter,acoydialogueleadinguptothe pronouncementthatsheeagerlyawaits:thatsheistobethebrideofherbelovedDumuzi.Iwouldalsotake thelinesfromadifferenttextthatFrymer-KenskyquotesasevidenceofInannaâsâgender-bendingâ rejectionofawomanâstypicaltasksofspinningandweavingâlinesinwhichherhusbandDumuzitellsher sheshallnotweaveorspinâasindicatinginsteadInannaâsaristocraticstatusasawomanwhosespinning andweavingwillbedoneby others.
4TranslationbyJacobsen, Treasures of Darkness,31.
5Barber,âPeplosofAthena,â104.
preparingthefabricâtheretting,thespinning,thedoublingupofthethreads,the weaving,andthebleachingâwillbeperformed.3 Forexample: Brother,whenyouhavebroughtmetheflax, whowillretforme,whowillretforme, whowillretitsfibersforme?4
Here,onethinksofthemaidservantstowhomwoolworkingwastobeassignedbythe youngbrideofXenophonâstext,andthisdespitethemillenniaandmilesthatseparated ancientSumerandclassicalGreece.
theirâmostimportantandcharacteristicnonprocreativefunction.â6 Indeed,intheGreek world,atuftofwoolwascustomarilyplacedonthedoorofahouseuponthebirthofa babygirlinordertosymbolizethecriticalrolethatspinningandweavingwouldplayin thischildâslaterlife.Likewise,intheancientNearEast,thespindleordistaffservedas thecharacteristicemblemoffemininity.7 Becauseoftheimportanceofspinningandweavingintheseancientcultures,it reasonablyfollowsthatthevariouspantheonsoftheNearEastandeasternMediterranean wouldincludeadeitywhowaspatronoftheartsofspinningandweaving,anditalso followsreasonably enoughthatbecauseofthealmoststereotypicalassociationofwomen withthedomesticartsofspinningandweaving,8 thispatrondeityofspinningand weavingwouldbefemale.Tobesure,genderrolesinNearEasternandeastern Mediterraneanpantheonsdonotinvariablyfollowthegenderrolesassumedwithinthe humancommunitiesoftheNearEastand easternMediterranean.9 Inthesecommunities, 6Frymer-Kensky, In the Wake of the Goddesses,23.
8Whiledomesticweavingwasalmostentirely,ifnotexclusively,theprovinceofwomen,weavingthat wasdoneoutsidethehomewasoftentheworkofmen.See,e.g.,fortheGreekworld,thedatacollectedby Thompson,âWeaving:AManâsWork,â217â22,andalsoScheidandSvenbro,âFromtheSixteenWomen totheWeaverKing,â23,181n75.InEgypt,thefamousMiddleKingdomtextâTheSatireoftheTradesâ presentstheprofessionalweaverasmaleâindeed,amalesomiserableinhisworkthatheisâworseoff thanawomanâ(translationbyLichtheim, Ancient Egyptian Literature,1:188).Isaiah19:9â10alsouses masculinegrammaticalformsinthreeofitsfourreferencestoEgyptiantextileworkers,indicating,ata minimum,thatsomeof thelaborerstowhomthistextrefersweremen(although,accordingtotherulesof Hebrewgrammar,womencouldbeincludedinthecollectivesdescribedbythispassageâsmasculineplural forms).Exodus35:35;36:14,35,37;38:22â23;39:27â29;2Chr2:12â13(inmostEnglishtranslations, 2:13â14);Isa38:12;andJob16:15similarlyrefertomaletextileworkerswithintheIsraelitesphere. Moreover,thenameofoneofthesonsofIssachar,Tola(tĂ´lÄâ,â[dyedwith]scarletstuffâ),canbetakento indicatethatthismanwastheheadofaclanof professionaldyers(aspointedoutbySheffer,âNeedlework andSewinginIsrael,â544n13).OnmaleprofessionalweaversinNewTestamenttimes,seeBird, âSpinningandWeaving,â988.
OnGreektradition,seeNeils,âChildrenandGreekReligion,â143;ontheancientNearEast,see Hoffner,âSymbolsforMasculinityandFemininity,â329;alsoBird,âWomen(OT),â954(thisreference wasbroughttomyattentionbyYoder, Wisdom as a Woman of Substance,81n43);Holloway,âDistaff, CrutchorChainGang,â370â71.
9See,e.g.,thediscussionofLambert,âGoddessesinthePantheon,â127.
7
10Onthetwoversionsofthismyth,andtheir differentversionsofUttuâsgenealogy,seeJacobsen, Treasures of Darkness,112â13.
12Frymer-Kensky, In the Wake of the Goddesses,23.
Frymer-Kensky, In the Wake of the Goddesses,23;seesimilarly Kramer, Sumerians,174,and KramerandMaier, Myths of Enki,53.
Inanna/Ishtar,CanaaniteAnat,andGreekAthenaâarewell attested.Still,inthecaseofspinningandweaving,acorrelationbetweenwomenspinners andweaversonearthandafemalepatronofspinningandweavingintheheavensdoes seemtohold,asissuggestedbyevidencefromthreeNearEasternandeastern Mediterraneansocieties.InMesopotamia,thepatrondeityofspinningandweaving,at leastintheSumerianperiod,wasthegoddessUttu.InEgypt,thedivinepatronof spinningandweavingwasthegoddessTait,orTayet.InGreece,thedeityofspinning andweaving,andindeedofallhandicrafts,wasthegoddessAthena.
forexample,theartsofwararemosttypicallyassociatedwithmen,yetwarrior
13BlackandGreen, Gods, Demons, and Symbols,182.
goddessesâMesopotamian
11
Uttu.AccordingtothemythâEnkiandNinhursag,âMesopotamianUttucomesfrom adistinguishedlineage,assheisthegreat-granddaughter(orperhapsthegreat-greatgranddaughter)oftheSumerianmothergoddess Ninhursag.10 Moreimportantforour purposes,though,isamythcommonlycalledâEnkiandtheWorldOrder,âwhich describeshowthegodEnki,inassigningtothevariousgodsofthepantheonoversightof themainfeaturesofbothcosmosandcivilization(e.g.,theregulatingofthewaterflowof theTigrisandEuphrates,theeconomiesofagricultureandherding,andthetechnologies ofthepick-axeandbrick-mold),decreesthatUttu willbeinchargeofâeverything pertainingtowomen,âandspecificallytheweavingoftextiles.11 Frymer-Kenskyin additiondescribeshowUttuisrecognizedasthepatrongoddessofweavinginthe philosophicaldisputationâLaharandAĹĄnanâ(âEweandGrainâ),assheisalsoina bilingualSumerianandAkkadianbookofincantations.12 Inlogographicwriting, moreover,thesamesignthatisusedforUttuâsnameissometimesusedtowritetheword âspider,âprobablybecauseoftheexpertiseinweavingthatUttuandthespidershared.13
Tait/Tayet.EgyptianTait,orTayet,isbestknownasthegoddesswhoprovidesthe linensusedinritualsofembalmingandmummification.IntheOldKingdomPyramid
Texts,forexample,sheissaidtobethemotherwhoclothesthedeadkingandliftshimto thesky.14
Similarly,intheMiddleKingdomâStoryofSinuhe,âthecourtierSinuhe,years afterhehadleftEgyptforanextendedexileintheLevant,isurgedbythePharaohSenUserttoreturntohishomeland,inparticularsothatproperburialritescanbeobservedat thetimeofSinuheâsdeath.Theseinclude,amongotherobservances,afuneral procession,coffininginamummycasemadeofgold,andâanight...madeforyouwith ointmentsandwrappingsfromthehandofTait.â
15 TheEgyptiangoddessNeith,too,can beassociatedwiththeointmentsandwrappingsofmummificationandso,consequently, withweaving:16 aninscriptionfromthePtolemaictempleatEsna,forexample,speaksof NeithasâMistressoftheoilofunctionaswellasthepiecesofcloth.â17 Thereisalsoa minorEgyptiangod,Hedjhotep,associatedwithfabricsandweaving:thusheisdescribed inaNewKingdompapyrusascreatingthecordthatisattachedtoanamuletofhealing.18
BythetimeoftheNewKingdomâsNineteenthDynasty,moreover,Hedjhotepis identifiedastheconsortofTait,althoughinsomematerialsfromtheLate Periodof Egyptianhistory,Hedjhotepappearsasa goddess inthecompanyofTait.19 Still, throughoutmostofEgyptianhistory,Taitâsplaceasthepatrongoddessofweavingseems primary.ItisthusTaitwhoissaidtoweavethecurtainthathangsinthetentof purificationwheretheembalmingritualstakeplace;20 anEgyptianmagicalspellfurther describeslinenbandagesthatareusedtopreventhemorrhageastheâlandofTaitâ;21 and numerousfirst-millenniumBCEimagesofthegoddessshowherholdingtwopiecesof cloth.22 14Wilkinson, Complete Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt,168,citingPyramidText741. 15TranslationbyLichtheim, Ancient Egyptian Literature,1:229. 16Bleeker,âTheGoddessNeith,â42,54;el-Saady,âReflectionsontheGoddessTayet,â216. 17QuotedinHollis,âQueensandGoddessesinAncientEgypt,â212. 18Zecchi,âTheGodHedjhotep,â5,7. 19Zecchi,âTheGodHedjhotep,â8â9. 20Hart, Routledge Dictionary of Egyptian Gods and Goddesses,156;Wilkinson, Complete Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt,168. 21Hart, Routledge Dictionary of Egyptian Gods and Goddesses,156. 22El-Saady,âReflectionsontheGoddessTayet,â214.
25TranslationbySargent, Homeric Hymns,46;thisreferencewasbroughttomyattentionbyMilanezi, âHeadachesandGnawed Peplos,â323n63.
26Hesiod, Works and Days 60â65;Hesiod, Theogony 573â75;bothasquotedinBarber,âPeplosof Athena,â105.
24TranslationsbyLattimore, Odyssey,114,300.Thesereferenceswerebroughttomyattentionby Milanezi,âHeadachesandGnawed Peplos,â323n63.
InHomerâs Odyssey 7.110â11,itissaidthatthePhaiakianwomenâareskilledin weaving,âhavingbeenâdoweredwithwisdombestowedbyAthene,tobeexpertin beautifulworkâ;laterintheepic,Athenaisdescribedastheonewhoinstructedthe daughtersofPandareosâinglorioushandiworkâ(20.72).24 Thissamesentimentis expressedelsewhereinHomerictraditionintheHomericHymntoAphrodite,lines10â11,14â15,inwhichwereadthatâpleasureâforAthenaliesâinfosteringglorious handicrafts,âsothatsheâtaughtsmooth-skinnedpalacemaidensatworkintheirquarters toweavewithbrightstrands.â25 Athenaisalsoidentifiedin Iliad 14.178â79ashaving madeanelaboratelydecoratedrobeforthegoddessHera,andin Iliad 5.735,sheis similarlydescribedashavingmadeherownelaboratedress.According,moreover,to HesiodâsstoryofthecreationofPandorafoundinhis WorksandDays,Athenais chargedwithteachingPandoraâtoweaveacomplexwarpâ;Athenainaddition, accordingtoasecondversionofthePandorastoryfoundinHesiodâs Theogony,made Pandoraâsgirdle,robe,andveil.26 WecannoteaswellthestorytoldinOvidâs MetamorphosesâbutknowntobecenturiesolderthanOvidâofthemaidenArachneâs challengingAthenatoaweavingcontest,anactofsuchutterhubrisonArachneâspart, 23OnAthenaasadivinepatronofpotters,seeNeils,âPanathenaia,â21;onAthenaasapatronof goldsmiths,see Odyssey 6.233,aspointedoutbyRoseandRobertson,âAthena,â138.
Athena.AlthoughwemaymorereadilythinkofAthenaastheGreekgoddessof wisdomaswellasofwar,theevidencedemonstratingherroleinGreekcultureasthe goddessofspinningandweavingissubstantial.Atseveralpoints,sheisidentifiedin GreektraditionasAthenaErgane,orAthenatheâWorkerGoddess,âthegoddessof handicrafts(technai),andthusthedivinepatron,forexample,ofpotters(seefig.2.1),of goldsmiths,andpreeminentlyofweaversandothersinvolvedintheproductionof textiles.23 Athenaâsroleaspatronofweaversisfurtherillustratedinseveralliterarytexts.
{{INSERTfig.2.1AthenaErganeVaseFront.Caption:Red-figurecalyx-krater showingAthenaErganeinapotteryshop,ca.450BCE.Inv.no.1120,fromthe collectionoftheRegionalMuseumofCeramicsofCaltagirone,Sicily.Reproducedwith theauthorizationoftheRegionalMuseumofCeramicsofCaltagirone;further reproductionand/orduplicationbyanymeansisprohibited.}}
givenAthenaâsexpertiseintextileproduction,thatitresultsinArachneâstransformation intoaspider,doomedtoweaveforever.27
{{INSERTfig.2.2Athena&ArachneCorinthArbyllos.Caption:Detailofan aryballospaintingfromca.600BCEshowingtheweavingcontestbetweenAthenaand Arachne.FromGladysDavidsonWeinbergandSaulS.Weinberg,âArachneofLydiaat Corinth,âin TheAegeanandtheNearEast:StudiesPresentedtoHettyGoldmanonthe OccasionofHerSeventy-FifthBirthday,ed.SaulS.Weinberg(LocustValley,NY:J.J. Augustin,1956),263.UsedbypermissionoftheAmericanSchoolofClassicalStudies Athens-CorinthExcavations.}}
{{INSERTfig.2.3BrynMawrLoomWeightFrom2008.Caption:Loomweightwith Athenaâscharacteristicbird,theowl,spinning.BrynMawrCollegeLibrarySpecial Collections,BrynMawrCollege.GiftofCorneliusC.Vermule.Accessionno.T.182.}}
ScholarsknowthatOvidâsstoryoftheweavingcontestofArachneand Athenais hundredsofyearsolderthanOvidâsfirst-centuryBCE/first-centuryCEtextbecauseitis foundrepresentedonasmallCorinthianjugdatingfromca.600BCE(fig.2.2).Other iconographicmaterialsthatdemonstrateAthenaâsassociationwithweaving includethe severalloomweightsthatshowAthenaâscharacteristicbird,theowl,spinningwoolfrom abasketthatsitsinfrontofher(fig.2.3)andthenumerousfragmentsofterra-cotta plaquesfoundontheAthenianAcropolisthatdepictweavingscenes.28 Scholarshavein additionsuggestedthatatleastthreesixth-andfifth-centuryBCEimagesdepictAthena herselfasaspinner:afragmentaryfifth-centuryBCEterra-cottarelieffromSicily(fig. 2.4),asixth-centuryBCEstatuefromtheAcropolis(fig.2.5),andalatefifth-orearlyfourthcenturyBCEterra-cottareliefplaquethatalsocomesfromtheAcropolisandthat, 27Ovid, Metamorphoses 6.5ff.ThisreferencewasbroughttomyattentionbyBarber,âPeplosof Athena,â105â6. 28Barber,âPeplosofAthena,â106.
Finally,wemustciteinthiscatalogofAthenaâsassociationswithtextileproduction thefactthatthecentraleventinthecentralfestivalofAthena,thePanathenaia,isthe offeringofanewlywovenpeplos,arobeelaboratelydecoratedwithimagesofthe cosmogonicbattlebetweenthegodsandthegiganticTitansthatisdrapedoverAthenaâs cultstatue(figs.2.8and2.9).Indeed,socloselyistheweavingofAthenaâsPanathenaic peplosassociatedwithherroleasthegoddessoftextileproductionthattheactualmaking ofthepeplosisinauguratedinOctoberâNovember,ninemonthspriortothecelebration ofthePanathenaia,atafestivalknownastheChalkeia,whichwasheldinhonorof AthenainherguiseasAthenaErgane,AthenatheâWorkerGoddess,âpatronof handicrafts.30 29Ridgway,âImagesofAthena,â138â39. 30Neils,âPanathenaia,â17;forthedatesoftheChalkeiaandPanathenaia,seeScheidandSvenbro, âFromtheSixteenWomentotheWeaverKing,â18â19.
{{INSERTfig.2.5StatueofAthena.Caption:Asixth-centuryBCEstatueofAthena (spinning?),attributedtothesculptorEndoios.Acr.625ŠAcropolisMuseum,2018. PhotobyYiannisKoulelis.}}
{{INSERTfig.2.4DrawingofAthenaSpinning#2.Caption:DrawingoffifthcenturyBCErelieffromScornavacche,Sicily,showingAthenaErgane(?)withdistaffin herlefthand.FromAntonioDiVita,âAtenaErganeinunaterracottadallaSiciliaedil cultodelladeainAtene,â AnnuariodellaScuolaArcheologicadiAteneedelleMissioni ItalianeinOriente 30â32(1952â54):143.}}
whilefragmentary,seemstoshowAthenainthesameposeasassumedina contemporaneousreliefbyamortalwomanwhoisspinning(figs.2.6and2.7).29
{{INSERTfig.2.6ReliefPlaqueWomanSpinning.Caption:Alatefifth-orearlyfourthcenturyBCEterra-cottareliefplaqueofamortalwomanspinning.Acr.13055Š AcropolisMuseum,2011.PhotobyVangelisTsiamis.}}
{{INSERTfig.2.7ReliefPlaqueAthena(spinning?).Caption:Alatefifth-orearlyfourthcenturyBCEterra-cottareliefplaqueofAthena,perhapsinthesameâspinningâ poseasassumedbythemortalwomanoffig.2.6.Acr.13057ŠAcropolisMuseum, 2011.PhotobyVangelisTsiamis.}}
UgariticandHittiteMythologicalTexts
{{INSERTfig.2.9AthenaStatueDrapedinPeplos.Caption:Asmallfifth-century BCEterra-cottastatueofAthena(?),showingwhathercultstatuewiththepeplosdraped overitmayhavelookedlike.Height:18.7cm.TheMuseumofFineArts,Houston.Gift ofMissAnnetteFinnigan,37.16.}}
Thepresenceofthesegoddessesofspinningandweavinginthepantheonsof Mesopotamia,Egypt,andGreecesuggeststhatwemightwellexpecttofindagoddess patronofspinningandweavingalsointhepantheonsoftheWestSemiticworld.Below, IproposethatthisisaresponsibilityassumedbytheCanaanitemothergoddessAsherah. Threebodiesofevidencelendsupporttothisconclusion.Theyare(1)LateBronzeAge UgariticandHittitemythologicaltexts;(2)first-millenniumBCEbiblicaltextsfromthe bookofProverbsandalso,perhaps,2Kgs23:7;and(3)IronAgearchaeologicaldata fromthesitesofTaâanach,TelMiqne-Ekron,andKuntilletâAjrĂťd.
II.Asherah,theWestSemiticGoddessofSpinningandWeaving?
.Inascenefoundintablet4oftheUgaritic Baalcycle,thegodsBaalandAnatcometothemotherofthegods,Asherah,inorderto secureherhelpastheyseekpermissionfromthehighgodofthepantheon,El,tohavea palacebuiltforBaal.BaalandAnatfindAsherahundertakingdomesticchores:settinga potuponafire;carryingherrobesintotheriver(presumablytowashthem);andholding aspindle(plk)inherhand(KTU 1.4.2.3â9).AccordingtosometranslationsoftheHittite mythofElkunirsa,Asherah(Ashertu)alsocarriesaspindle,withwhichsheattemptsto stabBaalafterherefusestosleepwithher.31 Tobesure,asnotedabove,thespindleisa typicalsymboloffemininityintheancientNearEast,andsothefactthatAsherahis depictedasholdingoneintheseUgariticandHittitemythsmaybeamarkeronlyofher gender.Inaddition,asIhavejustmentioned,only some translationsoftheHittitemythof 31ThistextwasbroughttomyattentionbyWillett,âWomenandHouseholdShrines,â104,whocites Goetzeâstranslationin ANET,519,andHoffnerâstranslationinâTheElkunirsaMythReconsidered,â6â8.
{{INSERTfig.2.8PresentationofPeplos.Caption:Thepresentationofthepeplosto AthenaasrepresentedontheParthenonfrieze.ImageŠTrusteesoftheBritish Museum.}}
.Muchmoresuggestive,however,thantheHittiteand Ugariticmaterialsistheportraitofthe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil,theâwomanofvalorâorâcapable wife,âthatisfoundinthebiblicaltraditioninProv31:10â31,especiallywhenthistextis consideredinconjunctionwiththetextsdescribingWomanWisdomthatarefound interspersedinProv1â9(Prov1:20â33;3:13â18;4:1â9;7:4â5;8:1â36;9:1â6).Tobegin withthelatter:severalscholarshavesuggestedthattheWisdomfigureofProv1â9takes overââinratherunabashedfashion,âtouseClaudiaCampâswordsâimageryassociated witholderancientNearEasterngoddesses.33 Andalthoughmanygoddesseshavebeen nominatedasWisdomâsprimaryantecedent(EgyptianMaâat,MesopotamianIshtar, CanaaniteAstarte,CanaaniteAnat),34 themostcompellingarguments,inmyopinion,see WomanWisdomasareflexofCanaaniteAsherah.35 Especiallynotableinthisregardis theProv8descriptionofWomanWisdomaspresentwithandthepartneroftheIsraelite godYahwehincreation,atraditionthatparallelscloselybothUgariticmaterialsthat describeAsherahasâcreatressâ(qnyt),theconsortofthecreatorgod(qny)El,36 andthe biblicalandextrabiblicalmaterialsthatsuggestanancientIsraelitebeliefthatAsherah
32Inhis1965articleâTheElkunirsaMythReconsidered,âHoffnerwritesthatalthoughthereading âspindleâisrestored,âthereisnoreasontodoubtâit(7n10).Inhis1998translationofthemyth,however, Hoffnermarkseachofthethreepossibleoccurrencesofthetermâspindleâwithemptybrackets:see Hoffner,âCanaaniteMyth,â90â91.
34SeeCamp,âWomanWisdomasRootMetaphor,â61;Coogan,âGoddessWisdom,â203â4;FrymerKensky, In the Wake of the Goddesses,179;Hadley,âWisdomandtheGoddess,â235;and(withextensive references)Yoder, Wisdom as a Woman of Substance,4.
35Coogan,âCanaaniteOriginsandLineage,â119â20;Smith,âMythandMythmakinginCanaanand Israel,â2039;cf.also Hadley,âWisdomandtheGoddess,â234â43.
TextsfromtheHebrewBible
36ForAsherahas qnyt,see,e.g., KTU 1.4.1.23;1.4.3.26,30,35;and1.4.4.32.For Elas qny,see KTU 1.10.3.6,areadingbasedonthereconstructionproposedbyGinsberg,âBaâlandâAnat,â9.
ElkunirsadescribeAsherahgraspingaspindleâthisbecauseoflacunaein thecrucial passage.
33Camp,âWomanWisdomasRootMetaphor,â61.
32 Still,theUgariticreferencetoAsherahwithaspindleinherhandsissecure; moreover,Asherahisthe only goddessinourratherrichUgariticmythologicalcorpus whoappearswithaspindle.ThisperhapsindicatesthatAsherahhasaspecialassociation inLateBronzeAgemythologicaltraditionwithspinningandweaving.
wastheconsortofYahweh.37 InProv3:18,moreover,WomanWisdomisdescribedasa âtreeoflifeâ(âÄᚣ-ḼayyĂŽm),languagethatrecallsnotonlythetreeoflife(âÄᚣ-haḼayyĂŽm)in Gen3:22andtheassociatedâtreeoftheknowledgeofgoodandevilâ(Gen2:9,17)that soobviouslydrawsonwisdommotifs,butalsothestylizedpoleortreethatisfrequently associatedwiththegoddessAsherahinbiblicalliteratureandarguablyinWestSemitic iconographictradition.38 ThatâhappinessâaccruestothosewhoholdfasttoWoman Wisdomin3:18furtheralludestoheridentityasAsherah,astheHebrewwordfor âhappyâ(âĹĄr)isapunonthegoddessâsname.39 Scholarshaveinadditionarguedthatthe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil ofProv31:10â31isareflexor personificationofWomanWisdomasdepictedin Prov1â9.ThomasMcCreeshhas pointedout,forexample,thatthe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil isdescribedinProv31:10asmoreprecious that pÄnĂŽnĂŽm,âvariouslytranslatedasâpearls,ââcorals,âorsimplyâjewels,ââadescription thatisalsoofferedofWomanWisdominProv3:15,whichstates,âShe[Wisdom]is morepreciousthanjewelsâ(yÄqÄrâhĂŽâmippÄnĂŽnĂŽm,readingwiththe qere forthe ketiv mippÄniyyĂŽm).Moreover,intherelatedProv8:11,itissaidthatâWisdomisbetterthan jewelsâ(ášĂ´bâḼokmâmippÄnĂŽnĂŽm).McCreeshfurthernotesthatthehusbandofthe âÄĹĄetḼayil issaidtotrustinher(Prov31:11),asthestudentofWisdomisexhortedtoâlove,â âprizeâandâembraceâherinProv4:6,8â9,ratherthanâtrustinhisownmindâinProv 37
Thebibliographyisvast.Ihavedescribedmyownposition,andlistedreferencesinsupport,in Ackerman,âWomenandtheWorshipofYahwehinAncientIsrael,â189â90,reprintedinthisvolumeat [[XXXâXXX]];alsoinAckerman,âAtHomewiththeGoddess,â455â59,reprintedinthisvolumeat [[XXXâXXX.]] 38Smith,âMythandMythmakinginCanaanandIsrael,â2039.OntheevidenceforassociatingAsherah withastylizedpoleortreeinbiblicalliterature,seeespeciallyDeut16:21,whichspeaksof âplantingâ (nÄášaâ)atreetoserveasan âÄĹĄÄrâ,whichI,alongwithmostcommentators,presumereferstothecult objectthatrepresentedthegoddessAsherahandthatiscalledbyhername.ElsewhereintheBible(e.g.,1 Kgs14:15,23;16:33;2Kgs17:10,16;21:3;2Chr33:3),the âÄĹĄÄrâ cultobjectisdescribedasbeing âmadeâ(âÄĹâ),âbuiltâ(bÄnâ),âstoodupâ(âÄmad),orâerectedâ(hiᚣᚣÎb),alltermsthatwelldescribea stylizedpoleortree,asdothetermsthatdescribewhathappensto the âÄĹĄÄrâ ifitisdestroyed:itis âburnedâ(bÄŤâÄr or ĹÄrap),âcutdownâ(kÄrat),âhewndownâ(gÄdaâ),âuprootedâ(nÄtaĹĄ),orâbrokenâ (ĹĄibbÄr).FortheevidencethatlikewiseassociatesAsherahwithsacredtreesinWestSemiticiconographic representations,seeHestrin,âCultStandfromTaâanach,â61â77;Hestrin,âLachish Ewer,â212â23.
39Smith,âMythandMythmakinginCanaanandIsrael,â2039.
28:26.
40 ChristineRoyYoderaddsthatthenoun saḼar,whichshetranslatesasâmerchant profitâ(moretypicallyitisrenderedâincomeâorârevenueâ),occursinProverbsonlyin Prov31:18,wherethe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil perceivesthathermerchandiseisprofitable,andin Prov3:14,whereWomanWisdomâsincomeissaidtobebetterthansilver.Boththe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil andWomanWisdom,Yoderalsopointsout,aredifficulttoâfindâ(mÄᚣÄâ, Prov1:28;8:17;31:10).Yoderobserves,too,thateachhasahouse(bayit,9:1;31:15,21, and27)andastaffofyoungwomen(naâÄrĹt,9:3;31:15),andeachprovidesfood (leḼem)forhercompanions(9:5;31:14)andoffersalifeofsecurity(bÄášaḼ,1:33;31:11). Whatâsmore,accordingtoYoder,bothareknownatthecitygates(ĹĄÄâÄrĂŽm,1:21;8:3; 31:31),andbothstretchouttheirhand(yÄd)totheneedy(1:24;31:20).41 MaryPetrina BoydinadditionnotesthatâasWisdomrejoiced(mÄĹaḼeqet)beforeGodatalltimesâ accordingtoProv8:30,the âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil in31:25delights(wattiĹḼaq)ineachcoming day.42 AlWoltershassomewhatsimilarlyarguedthattherareparticipialformoftheverb ᚣÄpâ,âtowatchover,âusedtodescribethe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil atthebeginningofProv31:27 (ᚣôpiyyâ,insteadofthemoretypicalfeminineparticipialform ᚣôpâ,andalsoinlieuof theperfectorimperfectverbformsusedeverywhereelseinthepoemtodescribethe deedsofthe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil),wasdeliberatelychosenbythepoemâsauthorsasaHebrewpun ontheGreekword sophia,âwisdom.â43 Thisevidence,Walterswrites,lendssupportto theconclusionthatthe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil istheâpersonificationofwisdom....TheValiant Woman[the âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil]representswisdominactionand...herdeedsarethepractical andconcreteincarnationofwhatitmeanstobewise....Shepersonifieswisdominboth wordanddeed.â44 McCreeshlikewiseconcludes,âTheremarkablesimilaritiesbetween theportraitofthewifeandvariousdescriptionsofWisdom...indicatethatthepoemin 40McCreesh,âWisdomasWife,â41â42.
43Wolters,âᚢôpiyyâ (Prov31:27),â577â87;seealsoRendsburg,âBilingualWordplayintheBible,â 354â55.
41Yoder, Wisdom as a Woman of Substance,91â92.
42Boyd,âHouseThatWisdomWove,â9n46.
44Wolters,âᚢôpiyyâ (Prov31:27),â580â82.
IfMcCreesh,Yoder,Wolters,andtheseveralotherscholarswhohaveurgedthis correlationbetweenthe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil andWomanWisdomarecorrect,47 andif,moreover,it iscorrecttoseeWomanWisdominProv1â9asareflexofthegoddessAsherah,thenit becomessignificantforourpurposestonotethedegreetowhichtheactivitiesassociated withtextileproductiondominateintheProv31descriptionofthe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil.Ofthe versesinthepoemthatspeakspecificallytotasksundertakenbythe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil,the largestnumberâfullyfiveandperhapsuptosevenâspeaktothiswomanâsworkinthe makingofbothwoolenandlinencloth.Sheprocuresthenecessaryrawmaterials(wool andflax)accordingtov.13;usesaspindleandarelatedimplement(the kĂŽĹĄĂ´r, traditionallytranslatedasâdistaffâ)tospinthesefibersintothreadaccordingtov.19;48
48
Theword kĂŽĹĄĂ´r isa hapax legomenon inHebrew.Ithastraditionallybeenrenderedasâdistaff,âas translatorshaveassumedthatâdistaffâisthelogicalparallelofthe pelek,âspindle,âmentionedinthe secondcolonofProv31:19.Woltershasargued,however,thatthenoneoftheseveralspinning technologiesoftheancientNearEastusedadistaff,atleastuntiltheHellenisticperiod;Woltersfurther suggeststhatthegrammarofProv31:19a,whichhasthe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil puttingherâhandsâ(aHebrewdual form)tothe kĂŽĹĄĂ´r militatesagainstthemeaningâdistaff,âasadistaffisnotnormallygraspedinthisway butisheldinonehandor stuckintoabeltorintoaspecialbackstrap(seeBarber, Prehistoric Textiles,69).
Likewise,Wolterssuggests,thetranslationofâspindlewhorlâfor kĂŽĹĄĂ´r thatissometimesproposedis disallowed,asthetechnologyofspinningdoesnotinvolvegraspingthespindlewhorlatall,witheitherone handortwo.Woltersthusproposesatranslationofâgraspedspindle,âalargetypeofspindleknownto havebeenusedintheancientNearEast,especiallyforrespinningordoublinginordertomaketwo-plyor three-plyyarnoutofpreviouslyspunthread.(AlthoughnotcitedbyWolters,theillustrationsfound in Barber, Prehistoric Textiles,57â58,ofaspindleheldintwohandsareparticularlyinstructive;seefigs.2.18 and2.21.)Forfurtherdiscussion,seeWolters,âMeaningof KĂŽĹĄĂ´r (Prov31:19),â91â104;alsoRendsburg, âDouble PolysemyinProverbs31:19,â267â74,who,althoughfordifferentreasonsthanWolters,similarly advocatesfortranslating kĂŽĹĄĂ´r asâspindle.âOneshouldbeaware,however,regardingWoltersâsarguments,
47Forolderexegetes(includingthosedatingbacktothepatristicperiod)whoholdthisview,seethe catalogassembledbyWolters,âᚢôpiyyâ (Prov31:27),â581;formorerecentinterpretations,seeYoder, Wisdom as a Woman of Substance,91â93,and thereferenceslistedinnn.78â83.
45McCreesh,âWisdomasWife,â46. 46Yoder, Wisdom as a Woman of Substance,93.
chapter31isthebookâsfinal,masterfulportraitofWisdom.â45 Yoderconcurs:âThe specificnatureandextentof[the]parallelssuggestthat...theWomanofSubstance (31:10â31)andWomanWisdom(1â9)...essentiallycoalesceasonefigure.â46
WhilethereisindeednoevidenceoftheuseofdistaffsinEgypt(Barber, Prehistoric Textiles,50),distaffs mayhavebeenusedinMesopotamiaforspinningasearlyasthefourthmillenniumBCE(Barber, Prehistoric Textiles,56â57;Barber,âTextilesoftheNeolithicthroughIronAges,â192).Also,aLate BronzeAgedistaffwaspossiblyfoundatEnkomi,onCyprus(Barber, Prehistoric Textiles,63).
49Seeabove,[[n.43]].
Thesescholarsnote,forexample,thatveryterm Ḽayil usedtodescribethepoemâssubject (v.10)impliesstrengthandvirility;indeed,Woltersproposesthatthe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil should âprobablybeunderstoodasthefemalecounterpartofthe gibbĂ´rḼayil,thetitleofthe thattheevidenceregardingtheancientNearEasternuseoftheâdistaffâisnotasconclusiveasheclaims.
andmakesclothingforherselfand,itseems,forherhouseholdaswell,accordingtovv. 21â22.Also,accordingtov.24,shemakesadditionaltextilesâlinengarmentsand wovensashesâtosell.Verse18,whichdescribeshermerchandiseasprofitable,may likewiserefertothesetextilessheproducesforcommercialpurposes,andthereisanother allusiontoherowngarments,thisonemetaphorical,inv.25:âStrengthanddignityare herclothing.âMoreover,asbefitsawomanwhosedescriptionisderivedfromtheProv 1â9portrayalofWomanWisdom,thefabricsthe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil producesseemtobeofthe highestquality:theclothesshemakesforherhouseholdarearichlydyedcrimson(v. 21),andsomeofherownclothingisalsocoloredwitharichpurpledye(v.22).Otherof hergarmentsarefinelinenratherthanbeingtheeasier-to-produceandlessluxurious garmentsmadeofwool(v.22). Theassociationofthe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil withsomuchimageryconcerningluxurytextile production,whencoupledwiththe âÄĹĄet-ḼayilâsassociationswiththefigureofWoman Wisdom-cum-Asherah,speaksclearlytothehypothesisIhavebeenexploringhere:the possibilitythatAsherahwastheWestSemiticgoddessofspinningandweaving.Itisalso ofinterestformythesisthat,likeAsherahasrepresentedintheHittitemythofElkunirsa, whocanbetaken(dependingonhowonetranslates)touseherspindletoattackBaal,49 the âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil isdescribedinProv31:10â31notjustinconjunctionwithtextile productionbutalsousingmilitaristicimagery.Woltershascataloguedmultipleinstances ofmilitaristiclanguageinthepoem,andBoydandBruceK.Waltkehaveaddedmore.50
50Boyd,âHouseThatWisdomWove,â180â234;Waltke,âRoleoftheâValiantWife,ââ23â34;and Wolters,âProverbsXXXI10â31asHeroicHymn,â446â57.
51Wolters,âProverbsXXXI10â31asHeroicHymn,â453.For gibbĂ´r Ḽayil,seeJudg6:12;11:1;1Sam 9:1;16:18;1Kgs11:28;2Kgs5:1;Ruth2:1;1Chr12:29(28);28:1;2Chr13:3;17:16,17;25:6;32:21; andmultipleothercitationsintheplural.
53RepointinginJudg5:26toreadMT tiĹĄlaḼnâ as tiĹĄlaḼannâ,athird-personfemininesingularform withenergic nĂťn,asfirstproposedbyBurney, Book of Judges,153,andfollowedinturnbyCrossand Freedman, Studies in Ancient Yahwistic Poetry,19n(r),andbyCoogan,âStructuralandLiteraryAnalysis oftheSongofDeborah,â150â51n52.
Anumberofothertermsinthepoemcanalsobeseenashavingmilitary connotations.Woltersnotesinthisregard(1) âÄlââal inv.29,typicallytranslatedinthe Prov31contextasâtosurpassâbutusedâelsewhereinthesenseofgoingouttodobattle againstanenemyâ;(2) ĹĄÄlaḼyÄdbÄ,âtoreachout thehand,âinv.19,whichâalwayshas anaggressiveconnotationelsewhereâ(mostnotablyforourpurposesinJudg5:26,where itisused[albeitwiththepreposition lÄ insteadof bÄ]todescribeJaelâsgraspingofthe weapon[tent-peg,paralleltolaborersâhammer]withwhichshekillstheCanaanitewar leaderSisera);53 (3) tÄnâ,âtocelebrateinsong,âusedinv.31tocommandthepoemâs audiencetoextolthe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil,butusedelsewhereinthecontextofheroicpoetryto describesongssungincelebrationofmilitarytriumphs(again,notably,intheJudg5 âSongofDeborahâ;seeJudg5:11);and(4) ĹĄÄlÄl and ášerep invv.11and15,typically translatedâprofitâandâfoodâinthecontextofProv31,butelsewhereusedasâwarlike wordsâmeaningâplunderâandâprey.â54 Waltkenotesinadditionthat(1)ââlaughs[in victory]âisawar-liketermâ(v.25),and(2)ââwatchingoverâ(v.27)glossesthenormal Hebrewtermforâtoreconnoiterâandâtospy.ââ55 BothWoltersandWaltke,among others,furtherpointoutthattheâstrengthâ(Hebrew âĂ´z)withwhichthewoman
âmightymenofvalourâwhichareoftennamedinDavidâsage.â
51 InherPhDdissertation onProv31:10â31,Boydsomewhatsimilarlyobservesthatwhen Ḽayil occurswiththe masculine âĂŽĹĄ intheHebrewBible,ittypicallydescribesa âwarriorâorâmightyman,â whichsuggeststheconjunctionof Ḽayil withthefeminine âiťťâ shouldbeanalogously understood.52
52Boyd,âHouseThatWisdomWove,â4n8,182â85.For âĂŽĹĄ Ḽayil asaâwarriorâorâmightyman,âsee Judg3:29;1Sam31:12;2Sam24:9;1Chr10:12;11:22;cf.,however,1Kgs1:42and1Chr26:8.
55Waltke,âRoleoftheâValiantWife,ââ25.
54Wolters,âProverbsXXXI10â31asHeroicHymn,â453â54.
ThereisanothertextintheHebrewBiblethatexplicitlyassociatesAsherahwith traditionsofweaving:thisis2Kgs23:7,whichalludestoagroupofwomenweavers whowerehousedinthetemplecompoundinJerusaleminKingJosiahâsday(ca.640â609BCE).Themosttypicaltranslationofthisverse,andtheonethatIwouldinfact advocate,60 understandsthesewomenweaverstobe engagedintheprocessofweaving garmentsthatweredrapedovertheculticimageofAsherah(the âÄĹĄÄrâ)thatstood somewherewithinthetempleprecinctbeforeitwasremovedanddestroyedasapartof 56Wolters,âProverbsXXXI10â31asHeroicHymn,â453;Waltke,âRoleoftheâValiantWife,ââ24â25;Szlos,âPortraitof Power,â102;theSzlosreferencewasbroughttomyattentionbyBoyd,âHouseThat WisdomWove,â6n24.
57Boyd,âHouseThatWisdomWove,â6n25. 58Seeabove,[[n.33]]. 59Asherahmightalsobetakento havean associationwithmilitaristicimageryatUgarit,ifweareto translateherstandardepithetintheUgariticmythologicalcorpus, rbt âtrt ym,asâtheLadywhotreadson theSea(-dragon)â(asproposed,forexample,byCross, Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic,33)andsee reflectedinthattitleanowotherwiselosttraditionthatdescribedAsherahasplayingaroleinthe cosmogonicbattleagainsttheseagodYamm.
metaphoricallyclothesherselfinv.25carriesmilitaristicconnotations,asdoesthephrase âshegirdsherloinswithstrengthâ(again âĂ´z)inv.17a.56 YetBoydhasvery provocativelysuggestedthatthementionofthewomanâsstrongarmsinv.17balludes moretothewomanâsworkasweaver,as,âthetaskofweaving,asshebeatstheweftinto thewarp,requiresstrongarms.â57 IfBoydiscorrect,thenencapsulatedinthedescription ofthe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil inv.17aâbisthesamemotifofweaver/warriorthatmaybe encapsulated(dependingonhowonetranslates)intheHittiteAsherahâsuseofher spindleasaweapon.58 ThisfurthersupportstheseriesofcorrespondencesIhavebeen arguingforhere:thatthe âÄĹĄet-Ḽayil ofProv31istobeequatedwithWomanWisdomcum-AsherahinProv1â9andsomanifests,asIproposedoesAsherah,anassociation withtheartsoftextileproductionandalso,asperhapsdoesAsherahinHittitetradition, anassociationwithmilitaristicimagery.59
60Ackerman,âTheQueenMotherandtheCultintheAncientNearEast,â193,reprintedinthisvolume at[[XXX]];alsoAckerman,âWomenandtheWorshipofYahwehinAncientIsrael,â189,reprintedinthis volumeat[[XXX]];Ackerman,âDiggingUpDeborah.â180,182,182n11.
Gressman,âJosiaunddasDeuteronomium,â325â26and326n2(pointedoutbyCoganandTadmor, II Kings,286);toGressmanâsreferencesfromtheEpistleofJeremiah,addEpJer6:20,33. 64SuggestedtomebyPeterMachinist,personalcommunication. 65Gray, I & II Kings,664n(b). 66AccordingtoDever,âSilenceoftheText,â150,thisemendationformsthebasisofthetranslation foundintheRevisedStandardVersion(RSV),âvestments.âButDevergivesnoreferencesinsupportof
Josiahâsreligiousreforms.61 TheJerusalemBibleperhapsmakesthismostexplicitwhen ittranslates,âHe[Josiah]pulleddownthehouse...whichwasintheTempleofYahweh andwherethewomenwoveclothesforAsherah.âIwouldfurthersuggest,asdomultiple commentators,thattheclothingofAsherahâscultimageinthisverseistobeunderstood ascorrelatewiththetraditionofclothingcultstatuesthatiswellknownelsewhereinthe ancientNearEastandtheeasternMediterraneanworld62âattestedintheBible,for example,inJer10:9andEzek16:18andinextrabiblicaltextsinEpJer6:9,11â13,20, 33,72.63 Accordingtothisinterpretation,thereisnothingexceptionalaboutthefactthat thewomenresidentinJerusalemâstemplecompoundwereweavinggarmentsforthecult imageof Asherah,asopposedtothecultimageofanyotherdeity,andthusthereisno indicationofanyspecialassociationofAsherahwiththeartsoftextileproduction. Itispossible,however,totranslate2Kgs23:7toread:âHe[Josiah]destroyedthe houses(bÄttĂŽm)...wherethewomenwove,[namely]thehouses(bÄttĂŽm)for[i.e., âdedicatedtoâ]Asherah.â64 Thistranslationhastheadvantageofreadingthetwo occurrencesof bÄttĂŽm in2Kgs23:7ashavingthesamemeaning,asopposedtothe translationIhavepreviouslypresented,whichemendsthesecond bÄttĂŽm toahypothetical form kuttÇnĂŽm (forthemoreusual kuttĹnĂ´t),meaningârobesâorâtunicsâ;65 orto baddĂŽm, âwhitelinengarmentsâ;66 orto battĂŽm,ahypotheticalcognateofArabic batt,meaning 61So,e.g.,theJerusalemBible;theNewAmericanBible;theNewAmericanBible,RevisedEdition; theNewEnglish Bible;theNewJerusalemBible;theNewJewishPublicationSociety Tanakh;andthe RevisedEnglishBibletranslations.Amongcommentators,seeCoganandTadmor, II Kings,286;Gray, I & II Kings,664;Montgomery, Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Books of Kings,531;and Robinson, Second Book of Kings,220. 62
See,e.g.,forMesopotamia,Matsushima,âDivineStatuesinAncientMesopotamia,â209â19; Oppenheim,âGoldenGarmentsoftheGods,â172â93(pointedoutbyCoganandTadmor, II Kings,286); for Egypt,David, Religious Ritual at Abydos,89;andforGreece,Mansfield,âRobeofAthena,â438,442â43,445.
63
67 Itfurther,insupportofthethesis Iamexploring here,wouldsuggestaspecialassociationofAsherahwiththeartsofspinningand weaving,asitissheinparticularwhohashousesdedicatedtoherwithinthetempleâs wallsinwhichweavingisundertaken.Still,despitethesupportthistranslationoffersfor mythesis,Icannot,asIhavealreadyindicated,embraceit.Thisisbecause,first,the emendedreadingâgarmentsâorthelikethatIadvocatedoesfindasignificantpieceof corroborationintheversions,specificallyintheLucianicrecensionoftheLXX,which reads stolas,âgarment,robe.âItisimportanttonote,moreover,thattheLucianic recensionof2Kingsgenerallyseemstoofferanearlierandmorereliabletextthanthe maintradentoftheLXX,whichâapparentlyrepresentsarevisionbasedonaformofthe Hebrewtextcurrentatalatertime.â68 Alsoimportanttothenoteisthefactthatthe Masoreticaccentuationdoesnotsupportatranslationthatreadsthesecond bÄttĂŽm of2 Kgs23:7asthefirstwordofaconcludingappositionalclause,andsuchatranslationin additionleavesaveryawkward ĹĄÄm danglingattheendofthemainclause.69 Iconclude thisclaim,andheseemsmistaken,moreover,aboutthespecificsofit,astheRSVinfactreadsâhangings.â
âcloakâormoregenerallyâgarment.â
67ThisreadingwasoriginallyproposedbyĹ anda, Die BĂźcher der KĂśnige,2:344,andalsobyDriver, âSupposedArabismsintheOldTestament,â107(aspointedoutbyCoganandTadmor, II Kings,286;Day, âAsherahintheHebrewBible,â407;andGray, I & II Kings,664n[b]).
69Acompromisetranslationistheoneadvancedby,forexample,theRSV:âAndhe[Josiah]broke downthehouses...whichwereinthehouseoftheLord,wherethewomenwovehangingsforthe Asherah.âThistranslationapparentlydoestakethesecond bÄttĂŽm of2Kgs23:7tomeansâhousesârather thanrelyingonanemendedtext,althoughâhousesâisratherbroadlyinterpretedtomeanâhangings,âa referencepresumablytoatent-likestructuresomewhatanalogoustothetentshrinethathousedthe YahwisticarkofthecovenantortotheâcolorfulshrinesâthatJerusalem,envisionedasanapostateharlot, issaidtomakewithhergarmentsinEzek16:16.ThistranslationhastheadvantageofpreservingtheMT asitstands,andinaddition,itdoesnotgoagainsttheMasoreticaccentuationorleaveanawkward dangling ĹĄÄm,asopposedtotheemendation-freetranslationIhavejustpresentedinthemaintext. However,italso,asopposedtotheemendation-freetranslationpresentedinthemaintext,doesnotindicate thatthereisanythingdistinctiveaboutthewomendoingweavingforAsherahwithinthetemplecompound,
OntheRSVtranslation,seefurtherbelow,[[n.65]].
68Allen,âMoreCuckoosintheTextualNest,â70,whocitesinsupportTov,âLucianandProtoLucian,â101â13,esp.106.
IronAgeArchaeologicalData
72Gilmour,âArchaeologyofCultin theSouthernLevant,â260.SeealsoMazar, Excavations at Tell Qasile, Part 1,80,althoughMazarâsmathseemsalittleconfused.Inthechartonp.80,henotesthatthree loomweightswerefoundin Locus168ofBuilding225,thenanotherthreeinLocus171,thenfiveinLocus
71Mazar, Excavations at Tell Qasile, Part 1,42;seealsoMazar, Excavations at Tell Qasile, Part 2,80. TheQasilematerialswerefirstbroughttomyattentionbyShefferandTidhar,âTextilesandBasketryat KuntilletâAjrud,â22n27;subsequentlyShefferand Tidhar,âTextilesandBasketry,â309n26.
70Noteinthisregardthebiblicalevidencesuggestingthattextileswerepartofthecultictreasuryofthe templeofBaalinSamaria(2Kgs10:22).
that,unliketheProverbsmaterialswehaveexamined,2Kgs23:7âdespite itstantalizing juxtapositionofAsherahandweavingâdoesnotseemtoprovideevidencethatarguesin favorofmythesisthatAsherahisthepatrongoddessoftextileproductionintheWest Semiticworld.
.AsIhavejustintimated,wemightreasonablyexpect textileproductiontobepresentatanyancientNearEasternreligioussitewhereadivine imageordivineimagesstoodâthisbecauseofthewell-knownancientNearEastern traditionofclothingcultstatues.Inaddition,wemightjustasreasonablyexpecttextile productiontobepresentatreligioussiteswithoutacultstatue(forexample,Israelite religioussitesthatadheredtothebiblicaldictaforbiddingthemakingofgravenimages), asthecultrequiredfabric formanypurposesotherthanclothingdivineimages:for example,forpriestlyvestments;forcurtainsandothertypesofdraperiesthathunginand aroundcultsanctuaries;andforcoveringsofthingssuchasthetableofthebreadof presenceinYahwistictradition.70 Weshouldthusnotbesurprisedtolearnthatevidence fortextileproductionhasbeenfoundbyarchaeologistsintheexcavationsofseveral Levantinesitesidentifiedascultic.FifteenloomweightswerefoundinRoom204,which theexcavatorsidentifiedasaâkitchenâ(perhapsusedâforthepreparationofritual mealsâ)thatwaslocatedjustnorthofTemple131inStratumX(lateeleventh/earlytenth centuryBCE)atthePhilistinesiteofTellQasile,71 andelevenmoreloomweightswere foundscatteredinthevariousroomsofBuilding225,whichwasjustsouthofthe temple.72 Also,twenty-oneloomweightswerefoundinRoom1ofMegaronBuilding asthesortoftent-shrinetowhichitalludesmightalsobemadeforsomeother deity.Thusitdoesnot suggestanyspecialassociationofAsherahwiththeartsoftextileproduction.
76Tufnell, Lachish III,143.
74Gilmour,âArchaeologyofCultin theSouthernLevant,â260.
DiscussedinZevit, Religions of Ancient Israel,135.
75Gilmour,âArchaeologyofCultin theSouthernLevant,â260.
77LappmentionstheseloomweightsinâThe1968ExcavationsatTellTaâannek,â45,butwithno citation.
73
78Lapp,âThe1963ExcavationatTaâannek,â28,actually identifiedthe140astragaliaspig,butmore recentinvestigatorsidentifythemassheepandgoat:seeZevit, Religions of Ancient Israel,237.
350(aPhilistinetemple)fromStratumV(thefirsthalfoftheeleventhcenturyBCE)at TelMiqne-Ekron,73 andsevenloomweightswerefoundintheeleventh-centuryBCE âTwinâtemplecomplexatBeth-Shean(fourintheNorthernTemple,oneintheSouthern Temple,andtwointheroomsinbetween).74 AsingleloomweightwasfoundintheIron AgeITempleBuilding30(Phoenician)atTellAbuHawam,75 andoneloomweightwas alsofoundinaroomnorthoftheinnersanctuaryoftheso-calledSolarShrinefoundin postexilicLachish.76 PaulW.Lappinadditionreports(unfortunatelywithnoreference) thatacacheofloomweightswasfoundinaculticcontextatMegiddo.77 Noneofthese sites,however,hasanydemonstrableconnectionwithAsherahworship,sononeoffers anyevidenceinsupportofmythesisthatpositsaspecialassociationbetweenAsherah andtextile Strikingly,production.though,twoofthelargestcollectionsofloomweightsthathave been foundinWestSemiticculticcontextsâindeed,loomweightcollectionssubstantially largerthananyofthosejustdescribedâcomefromsitesarguablyassociatedwiththe worshipofAsherah.Webeginwithremainsfrom tenth-centuryBCETellTaâanach discoveredinthe1963excavationsofLapp.Theseincludeartifactsfromtworoomsofa largebuilding(muchofwhichhadbeendestroyedbythetrenchingofErnstSellinâs earlierexcavations),calledbyLapptheâCulticStructureâbecauseofthearguablycultic natureofmanyofthefinds:forexample,140sheepandgoatastragali,mostlikelyused indivinationrites;acompletemoldoftheâfigurine-with-a-diskâtype;andthreesmall standingstonesor maᚣᚣÄbĂ´t 78 AlloftheseremainswerefoundinRoom1ofLappâs âCulticStructure,âinwhichtheobjectswere,accordingtohim,sotightlypackedthatit 187,foratotalofeleven;inthetextonthesamepage,however,Mazarwritesoftheâ10 weights... scatteredinthevariousroomsâ(emphasismine).
81Friend, Tell Taannek 1963â1968 III/2:10.
shouldbeconsideredaroominwhichvariousculticparaphernaliawerestored.79 Alarge assemblageofloomweights(fifty-eightaccordingtoLappâsoriginalpublication;sixtytwoaccordingtoGlendaFriendâs1998studyofTellTaâanachâsloomweights)wasalso foundaspartofthisapparentcollectionofculticparaphernalia,gatheredinaneighthandledkrater(figs.2.10and2.11).80 FriendinadditionreportsthattheRoom1loom weightswereuniformindimensionandweightandthattheyrepresent68percentofall theIronAgeloomweightsfoundatTaâanach.Together,thesedata,inadditiontothe presenceinRoom1offivebonespatulasthatFriendproposesweretoolsusedtopickup threadsinordertoweavepatternedtextiles,suggesttoherâlarge-scaleâaswellas âspecializedtextileproduction.â81 {{INSERTfig.2.10RemainsfromTaanach.Caption:Remainsfromthestorageroom oftheso-calledCulticStructureatTellTaâanach,showingeight-handledkraterfilled withfifty-eightloomweights.FromPaulW.Lapp,âThe1963ExcavationatTaâannek,â BASOR 173(1964):28;thecompletearticleisavailableontheonlinejournalplatformof theUniversityofChicagoPress.}} 79Lapp,âThe1963ExcavationatTaâannek,â28. 80Lapp,âThe1963ExcavationatTaâannek,â28(aspointedoutbyShefferandTidhar,âTextilesand BasketryatKuntilletâAjrud,â12;subsequently,ShefferandTidhar,âTextilesandBasketry,â307);Friend, Tell Taannek 1963â1968 III/2:10,43.Itshouldbenotedthatinhisreportonthe1963season,Lapp indicatedhehadsomedoubtsaboutidentifyingtheseveraldozendoughnut-shapedclayobjectshefoundin theeight-handledkraterasloomweights;heusedquotationmarksaroundtheterm loom weights when describingthemandfootnotedanarticlebyRodneyYoungraisingdoubtsaboutidentifyingasimilarhoard offivehundredoftheseobjectsatGordionasloomweights(Young,âThe1961CampaignatGordion,â 165).Then,inhisreportonthe1968seasons,Lappraisedevenmoreconcerns,arguingthattheâloom weightsâhehadfoundin1963withintheâCulticStructureâwereunfiredandsoextremelyfragilethatthey couldhavehardlyservedinweaving:seeLapp,âThe1968ExcavationsatTellTaâannek,â47;alsoLapp, âTaanachby theWatersofMegiddo,â25.AvigailSheffer,however,hasdemonstratedthatsuchweights, bakedonlyinthesun,functionperfectlyâtokeepthewarpthreadsproperlytautduringtheweaving processâandthattheweightsarequitedurable,sustainingânodamage...evenwhentheloomhadtobe movedfromplacetoplace.âSeeSheffer,âUseofPerforatedClayBallsontheWarf-WeightedLoom,â82â83;alsoFriend, Tell Taannek 1963â1968 III/2:5,whodiscussesproblemswithLappâsanalysisofthe doughnut-shapedobjectsasheatabsorbersusedduringsacrificialrituals.
{{INSERTfig.2.11PlanTaanachCulticStructure.Caption:PlanoftheTaâanach culticstructure. FromŠZionyZevit,2001, TheReligionsofAncientIsrael:ASynthesis ofParallacticApproaches,Continuum,animprintofBloomsburyPublishingPlc.,p. 236.UsedbypermissionofContinuum.}}
Then,inhis1968excavations,âwithinafewmetersofthe1963culticfinds,â82 Lapp foundthemostfamousofTaâanachâsthreecultstands,animpressiverectangularshaped objectstandingoverhalfametertallwhoseiconographyhassuggestedtomanythat tenth-centuryBCETaâanachwasasiteassociatedwiththeworshipofAsherah(fig. 2.12).83 Inparticular,scholarshavesuggestedthatthefirstandthirdregistersofthe standâsfourregisters(countingfromthebottom)arerepletewithAsherah imagery.Inthe first,anakedwomanwithacrudelymodeledheaddressoftheHathortypestandsfacing frontally,withherarmsextendedtograsptwolions.Alloftheseaspects(thenaked womanfacingfrontally,theHathorheaddress,andlions)arewellknownfromother iconographicrepresentationsofAsherah:forexample,onseveralLateBronzeAgegold andelectrumpendantsthatcomefromUgaritandothersitesinthenorthernLevantand thatarguablydepictAsherah,thegoddessisdepictedstandingatopalion.84 Inthethird register,thelionsreappear,thistimeflankingtwocapridsthatrearuptograzeona stylizedtree.AsIhavementionedalreadyindiscussingProv3:18,thissortofâsacred treeâimage,likelionimagery,iswellknownasapartofAsherahiconography,and, indeed,goldandelectrumpendantssimilartothosethatshowAsherahstandingatopa liondepictherwithatreeorbranchetchedinherpubicregion.85 Textualtraditionsin additionassociateAsherahwithlionsandwithsacredtrees:in KTU 1.3.5.37;1.4.1.8; 1.4.2.25â26,forexample,thechildrenofAsherah arecalledherâprideoflions,â ᚣbrtary, andDeut16:21forbidstheIsraelitestoplantatreerepresentingAsherahbesideanyaltar ofYahweh.86 82Lapp,âThe1968ExcavationsatTellTaâannek,â42. 83Hestrin,âCultStandfromTaâanach,â61â77;Taylor,âTwoEarliestKnownRepresentationsof Yahweh,â557â66. 84Hestrin,âCultStandfromTaâanach,â68. 85Hestrin,âCultStandfromTaâanach,â71;Hestrin,âLachishEwer,â215â17. 86Seefurther[[n.36]] aboveand mydiscussioninAckerman, Under Every Green Tree,189â91.
ThelikelyconclusiontobedrawnfromtheevidenceofthiscultstandistheoneI havestatedabove:thattenth-centuryBCETaâanachwasasiteassociatedwiththe worshipofAsherah,probablyâwhatevertheproscriptionsarticulatedinDeut16:21and relatedtextsâinconjunctionwiththeIsraelitegodYahweh(whoisarguablyrepresented ontheTaâanachcultstandâssecondandfourthregisters;thisissuggested,forexample, bythetworepresentationsofcherubim,whicharesooftenassociatedwithYahwehin biblicaltradition,thatflankthesecondregister).Lesscertain,butIbelieveaprobable conclusionbasedontheotherdataIhavepresented,isthattheAsherahworshipat Taâanachistobeassociatedwiththeratherextraordinarycollectionofloomweightsand othertoolsoftextileproductionfoundthere.TheTaâanachdata,inshort,seemtosupport mythesisthatAsherahwasthepatrondeityofspinningandweavingintheWestSemitic world.Indeed,wemightgosofarastosuggestthatitwas because Asherahwasthe patrondeityofspinningandweavingintheWestSemiticworldthatshewasworshipped atTellTaâanach,herculticpresencethereanappropriateandperhapsevenanecessary partofthelarge-scaleandspecializedtextileindustrytowhichtheTaâanachartifacts point.ThesecondLevantinesitethathasproducedaratherextraordinaryassemblageof loomweightsisTelMiqne-Ekron,wherealargenumberofloomweightswerefoundin associationwiththeenormousolive-oilproductioncomplexoftheseventhcenturyBCE (StratumICandpossiblyIB).SeymourGitin,oneoftheprimaryexcavatorsatEkron,has theorizedthatthepresenceoftheseloomweightsintermingledwitholive-oilproduction equipmentatEkronisduetothefactthattheolive-oilindustryisseasonal,andsothe installationsforoilproductionwereidlesixtotenmonthsayear;duringthistime,he proposes,Ekronâsso-calledindustrialzonewasreconfiguredasatextile-production workshop.87 Gitinhasfurtherproposed,basedonthediscoveryofninehornedaltarsin 87Gitin,âTelMiqne-Ekron,â50;seealso DothanandGitin,âMiqne,Tel(Ekron),â1058.
{{INSERTfig.2.12TaanachCultStand.Caption:DrawingoftheTaâanachcult stand.FromŠZionyZevit,2001, TheReligionsofAncientIsrael:ASynthesisof ParallacticApproaches,Continuum,animprintofBloomsburyPublishingPlc.,p.319. UsedbypermissionofContinuum.}}
theâindustrialzone,âthatthisseeminglysecularmanufacturingareashouldactuallybe understoodasâsacredspace.â88 Butsacredtowhom?ReligionaspracticedinEkronwas acomplexandmulti-facetedphenomenon,buttheseventh-centuryBCEdataindicatethat Asherahwasamongthedeitiesbeingworshippedthere.
91GitinandCogan,âNewTypeofDedicatoryInscriptionfromEkron,â196.
89Gitin,âSeventhCenturyB.C.E.CulticElementsatEkron,â250,andfig.2aonp.251;Gitin, âIsraeliteandPhilistineCult,â280;Gitin,Dothan,andNaveh,âRoyalDedicatoryInscriptionfromEkron,â 13.
92HalpernâssuggestionthatAsherahisthedeityparticularlyassociatedwiththeindustrialzonehinges, infact,onhissuppositionthatAsherahisspeciallyassociatedwiththeoilproductionfacilitiesthereâthis becauseofAsherahâswell-knownassociationwithtrees(above,[[nn.36,82]]),including,Halpernseems toimply,thesortoftreeiconographyweknowbetterfromEgyptiantradition,whichdepictsanAsherahliketreegoddess/mothergoddessgivingsucktothepharaoh.ThisevidentlysuggeststoHalpern(although hedoesnotsaysoexplicitly)amoregeneralassociationofAsherahwith theproductionofliquidsfrom trees,suchastheoilfromolivetreesproducedinsuchvastquantitiesatTelMiqne-Ekron.SeeHalpern, âTheBaal(andtheAsherah)inSeventh-CenturyJudah,â137.
89 BaruchHalpern,moreover,has arguedthat,oftheEkrondeities,Asherahistobeparticularlyassociatedwiththe âindustrialzone,â90 asissuggestedbythefactthatthetwostorejarsfoundatEkronthat wereinscribedwithAsherahâsnamewerespecificallyusedforstoringoil.91 Tobesure, thisevidencemightseemmoretopointtoAsherahâsassociationwithoilproductionthan themakingoftextiles,92 butthepresenceoftextileproductionalongwithoilproduction intheEkronindustrialzoneâsâsacredspace,âinconjunctionwithsomeoftheother evidenceIhavecited,couldbetakentoindicatethat,inadditiontobeingassociatedwith oilproduction,Asherahwasalsoconsideredtobethepatrondeityofspinningand weavingatEkron.Indeed,asatTaâanach,wemightsuggestthatitwasduetoAsherahâs roleasthepatrondeityofspinningandweavingintheWestSemiticworldthathercult waspresentintheindustrialzoneatEkron,asthegoddesscouldhavebeenreveredthere becauseofthedivineblessingsshecouldprovidethesiteâstextileworkers.
90Halpern,âTheBaal(andtheAsherah)inSeventh-CenturyJudah,â137.
TheevidencefromTaâanachandEkron,moreover,mightleadustosuggestthattwo otherculticsitesatwhichmajortextile-productioncomplexeswerefoundaretobe 88Gitin,âTheFour-HornedAltarandSacredSpace,â113.
associatedwithAsherahworship:theseareTellel-Ḥammah,locatedatthesouthernend oftheBeth-Sheanvalley,andTelâAmal,whichliesthreekmwestofBeth-Shean.93 Tell el-Ḥammahwasexcavatedmostrecently(in1985,1987,and1988)byJaneM.Cahill, DavidTarler,andGaryLipton(Lipovich)onbehalfoftheInstituteofArchaeologyatthe HebrewUniversityofJerusalem.Artifactssuggestingaspinningandweavingcenterâ includingwoodspindlesandspindlewhorls,remainsofthreadwrappedaroundspindle fragments,stoneandclayloomweights,andtextilescrapsâwerefoundintwoadjoining roomsthatwerepartofoneofthetwobuildingcomplexesofthetenth-centuryBCE layer.94 Theotherbuildingcomplex,whichlayacrossacourtyardfromthefirst,also consistedofatleasttwoadjoiningrooms,oneroomofwhichcontainedartifactsthat seemedtotheexcavatorsculticincharacter(forexample,akernoswithfiveprojectiles;a zoomorphicvessel;andamulti-handledkraterwithhornedanimalappliquĂŠs).95 Also foundinthisroomweretheupperhalfofafemaleplaquefigurine,alargequantityof astragali,andperhapsafaienceamulet.96 Somesimilarobjectswerefoundinthetextileproductioncomplexaswell.97 InhisPhDdissertationonculticsitesfromthesouthern Levant,GarthHughGilmoursuggeststhattheculticactivitiesimpliedbythesefindsmay berelatedtotheTellel-Ḥammahâstextileindustry,98 andIwouldthenask,inthelightof thethesisIhaveadvancedhere,whetherwemightsuggesttheculticactivitieswerethus associatedwiththegoddessAsherahinherroleastheWestSemiticpatrongoddessof spinningandweaving?IwouldalsoaskthesamequestionofTelâAmal,where 93ThesesitesbroughttomyattentionbyNakhai, Archaeology and the Religions of Canaan and Israel, 180â81.
Cahill,Lipton(Lipovich),andTarler,âTellel-Ḥammah,1988,â193;Gilmour,âArchaeologyofCult intheSouthernLevant,â94;Nakhai, Archaeology and the Religions of Canaan and Israel,181. 97Nakhai, Archaeology and the Religions of Canaan and Israel,181. 98Gilmour,âArchaeologyofCultin theSouthernLevant,â95.
94
96
Cahill,Lipton(Lipovich),andTarler,âTellel-Ḥammah,1988,â193;CahillandTarler,âḤammah, Tellel-,â562.Seealso Nakhai, Archaeology and the Religions of Canaan and Israel,181.
Cahill,Lipton(Lipovich),andTarler,âTellel-Ḥammah,1985â1987,â280â83;Cahill,Tarler,and Lipton(Lipovich),âTellel-ḤammahintheTenthCenturyB.C.E.,â36;andCahillandTarler,âḤammah, Tellel-,â562.Seealso,ontheartifactssuggestingaspinningandweavingcenteratTellel-Ḥammah, Nakhai, Archaeology and the Religions of Canaan and Israel,180â81. 95
Because,however,noneoftheculticremainsfromeitherTellel-ḤammahorTel âAmalcanbeconnectedexplicitlywiththeworshipofAsherah,anyconclusions regardingthesesitesremaintenuous;alsotenuous,althoughsomewhatlessso,areany conclusionswemightdrawregardingthefinalsiteIwilldiscusshere,theearlyeighthcenturyBCEsiteofKuntilletâAjrĂťd,inthenorthernSinai.Asiswellknown,both epigraphicevidenceandalso(accordingtosome)iconographicdatafoundatKuntillet âAjrĂťdsuggestthatAsherahwasworshippedâprobably,asatTellTaâanach,in conjunctionwiththeIsraelitegodYahwehâasapartofwhateverculticactivitiestook placeatthesite:100 particularlycriticalaretheinscriptionthatreads,âIblessyouby YahwehofSamariaandbyhisAsherah/asherah,âandthethreeinscriptionsthatmention âYahwehofTemanandhisAsherah/asherah.â101 Whatissomewhatlesswellknownis thatalargeassemblageoftextilefragments(approximatelyonehundredandtwenty), mostlylinenwithonlyelevenpiecesofwoolenfabric,wasalsofoundatKuntilletâAjrĂťd, alongwithwoodenbeamsthatmayhavebelongedtoaloomandtwogroupsofloom weights.
100
102SeeShefferandTidhar,âTextilesandBasketry,â289,305â7;originallypublishedasShefferand Tidhar,âTextilesandBasketryatKuntilletâAjrud,â1,11â12.
99Gilmour,âArchaeologyofCultin theSouthernLevant,â95;LevyandEdelstein,âCinqannĂŠesde fouillesĂ TelâAmal,â331â44;andNakhai, Archaeology and the Religions of Canaan and Israel,181.
102
excavationsrevealedathree-roombuildingfromtheperiodofthetenthandninth centuriesBCEinwhichbothtextileproductionandcultactivitiestookplace(cultic remainsincludevotivevessels,adecoratedbowl,chalices,afigurineholdingadisk,a fenestratedceramicstand,acup-and-saucerlamp,andstoneculticstands).99
Thebibliographyisvast.Keyreferencesincludethe2012publicationvolume,Meshel, Kuntillet âAjrud;aswellasBecking,ed., Only One God?;Dever,âAsherah,ConsortofYahweh?,â21â37;Dever, Did God Have a Wife?,160â67,197â208;Dever,âRecentArchaeologicalConfirmationoftheCultof Asherah,â37â43;Hadley, Cult of Asherah;Lemaire,âDateetoriginedesinscriptioneshĂŠbraiqueset pheniciennesdeKuntilletâAjrud,â131â43;Lemaire,âWhoorWhatWasYahwehâsAsherah?,â42â51;and Olyan, Asherah and the Cult of Yahweh.
101SeeAḼituv,Eshel,andMeshel,âTheInscriptions,â86â91,94â100,105â7.Thetranslationshereare my own.
{{INSERTfig.2.14TextilesAjrudColoredDecorations.Caption:Linenwithcolored wooldecorationfromKuntilletâAjrĂťd.FromAvigailShefferandAmaliaTidhar, âTextilesandBasketry,âin KuntilletâAjrud(ḤorvatTeman):AnIronAgeIIReligious SiteontheJudah-SinaiBorder,byZeâevMeshel,editedbyLioraFreud(Jerusalem: IsraelExplorationSociety,2012),301(fig.9.16).}}
{{INSERTfig.2.13TextilesAjrudRolledHem.Caption:Rolledhemfromtextilesat KuntilletâAjrĂťd.FromAvigailShefferandAmaliaTidhar,âTextilesandBasketry,âin BorderKuntilletâAjrud(ḤorvatTeman):AnIronAgeIIReligiousSiteontheJudah-Sinai ,byZeâevMeshel,editedbyLioraFreud(Jerusalem:IsraelExplorationSociety, 2012),298(fig.9.11).}}
104See,e.g.,inbiblicaltradition,Exod26:1,36;27:9;28:4â5;andfortheEastSemiticworld,the commentsofPotts, Mesopotamia,119.
105Shefferand Tidhar,âTextilesandBasketryatKuntilletâAjrud,â3,11,12,14;subsequently,Sheffer andTidhar,âTextilesandBasketry,â290,305,307.Shefferelsewherehasexplainedthatthereasonflaxgrowingiscenteredinthenorth,especiallyintheBeth-SheanregionoftheJordanValley,isbecauseofthe
ThequalityofmanyofthetextilesfoundatKuntilletâAjrĂťd,moreover,isextremely high:fragmentsexhibit,forexample,complicatedandmeticulouslyexecutedsewing techniques(fig.2.13),inadditiontotheuseofsomecoloredthreadsfordecoration(blue and,inoneexample,red;seefig.2.14).Infact,thequalityofthefabricsfoundat KuntilletâAjrĂťdissohighthatthescholarwhohaswrittenmostextensivelyonthesiteâs textiles,AvigailSheffer,hassuggestedthattheirexcellenceshouldberelatedtocultic activitiesatthesite.103 Similarly,ShefferandAmalia Tidharhavearguedthatthe overwhelmingpredominanceof linen textilesatKuntilletâAjrĂťdmayalsobedueto culticactivitiesthatoccurredatthesite,giventhatlinenisthefabricknownfromthe Bible(andfromelsewhereintheancientNearEast)tobepreferredforpriestlyvestments andotherculticcloth;104 notealsothatthepresenceofsomanylinenfragmentsat KuntilletâAjrĂťdcanotherwisebedifficulttoexplain,asthesiteâsproximitytothesheepherdingregionoftheNegev,anditsdistancefromflax-growingregionssuchasthe JezreelandBeth-Sheanvalleys,shouldmeanthatwoolentextileswouldbefarmore prevalent.105 Sheffer andTidharhaveinadditionsuggestedareligiousexplanationforthe 103Sheffer,âNeedleworkandSewinginIsrael,â547â50.
threepiecesoffabricatâAjrĂťdthatmixwoolandlinenfibers,somethingthatisgenerally forbiddentotheancientIsraelitesaccordingtoLev19:19andDeut22:11butis prescribedforpriestlyvestmentsinExod28:4â8and39:2â5,24,27â29.106
IfShefferandTidhararecorrectregardinganyorallofthesevariousassessmentsof theKuntilletâAjrĂťdfabricsascultic,thentheiranalysiscouldbetakentosuggesta relationshipbetweentextileproductionandacult incorporatingtheworshipofAsherah aspracticedattheâAjrĂťdsite.However,asinourdiscussionofloomweightsabove,we mustrecallthattextileswouldpresumablyhavebeenpresentatanyancientNearEastern culticsite,andsothepresenceofarguably cultictextilefragmentsatKuntilletâAjrĂťd neednotbespecificallyrelatedtothecultofAsherahthatisseeminglyrepresentedthere. Moreover,whilethehighconcentrationofloomweightsfoundinconjunctionwith AsherahworshipatthesitesofTaâanachandTelMiqne-Ekron did suggestacorrelation betweentextileproductionandthegoddessâscult,thehighconcentrationoftextile fragmentsfoundatKuntilletâAjrĂťdinconjunctionwithAsherahworshipcannotas definitelyindicateaspecialassociationbetweenAsherahandtheartsofspinningand weavingâthisbecauseKuntilletâAjrĂťdisadesertsite,andthusthehighconcentrationof textilefragmentsfoundatthislocation,asopposedtootherculticlocales,maybedue onlytoclimatologicalfactors,thearidityoftheeasternSinaiallowingforthe preservationoftextileremainsoverthemillennia.Similarpreservationwouldnothave happenedatother,morehumidreligioussites.
107 Moreover,theoverallcorpusofremains fromKuntilletâAjrĂťd,inadditiontoindicatingculticactivity,demonstratesthatthesite wasacaravanserai,meaningwecannotdismissthepossibilitythatatleastsomeofthe textilefragmentsfoundatâAjrĂťdwereapartofthetradingstockbroughtbymerchants travelingfromthetextile-producingarenasoftheJezreelandBeth-Sheanvalleys(e.g., thesitesofTellel-ḤammahandTelâAmaldiscussedabove)intotheArabianpeninsula andwere not apartofthesiteâsculticparaphernalia. fairly significantamountofwaterrequiredfor growingthiscrop(Sheffer,âUseofPerforatedClayBallson theWarf-WeightedLoom,â82).
106Sheffer,âNeedleworkandSewinginIsrael,â547n16;ShefferandTidhar,âTextilesandBasketryat KuntilletâAjrud,â12;subsequently,ShefferandTidhar,âTextilesandBasketry,â307.
107Sheffer,âNeedleworkandSewinginIsrael,â527,547.
Still,theremainsfromKuntilletâAjrĂťddoinclude,asIhavealreadynoted,loom parts(workedwoodenbeamsandloomweights)andabundleofflaxfibers,spunyarn, andtwistedthread,indicatingthatsometextileproductiondidtakeplaceatthesite, presumablyinordertofabricatematerialsforuseatKuntilletâAjrĂťditselfandnotfor trade.Moreover,atleast someoftheclothbeingproducedatKuntilletâAjrĂťdwaslinen (asevidencedbythepresenceofbundledflaxfibers),eventhoughwoolwastheonlyraw materialforfabricproductionlocallyavailable.Thissuggeststhatatleastsomeofthe fabricsbeingproducedatâAjrĂťdwereforsomesortofspecialuse.Thatthespecialusein questionisreligiousisstronglyindicatedbothbytheculticremainsotherwiseattestedat thesiteandbyShefferâsandTidharâsreminderthatlinenisthefabricknownfrom throughouttheancientNearEasttobepreferredforculticpurposes.Thatthefabrics producedatâAjrĂťdarespecificallytobeassociatedwiththeworshipofAsherahthatis seeminglyattestedthereislesssure,but IbelievetheâAjrĂťddata,whenconsideredin conjunctionwiththeotherdatasuggestinganassociationbetweenAsherahandtheartsof spinningandweavingIhavepresented,arehighlysuggestive.
III.Conclusions
IhavetitledthischapterâAsherah,theWestSemiticGoddessofSpinningand Weaving?âwithaquestionmarkatitsendbecauseIreadilyadmitthatnoneofthe evidenceIhaveassembledhereissecure.Nevertheless,asInotedabove,thecomparative evidenceavailabletousfromMesopotamia,Egypt,andGreeceseemstoindicatethat,as inthesecultures,thereshouldbeapatrongoddessofspinningandweavinginWest Semiticpantheons.WhilethedatathatAsherahis thispatrongoddessisnotironclad,I believeabettercasecanbemadeforherthanforanyotherWestSemiticgoddess.I thereforetentativelyproposethatAsherah,amonghermanyotherrolesintheWest Semiticpantheon,servedasthegoddessofspinningandweavingintheLateBronzeAge andIronAgeWestSemiticworld. 2022Postscript
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108Lewis, Origin and Character of God,675â96,esp.690â91;Lewis,âUgariticAthtartuĹ adi,â138â59,esp.150â51.
AsInotedabove,inmyintroductorycommentstothischapter,TheodoreJ.Lewis hasrecentlypushedbackagainstmy2008suggestionregardingAsherahastheWest Semiticgoddessofspinningandweaving,bothinhisbook TheOriginandCharacterof God:AncientIsraeliteReligionthroughtheLensofDivinity andinanarticletitled âUgariticAthtartuĹ adi,FoodProduction,andTextiles:MoreDataforReassessingthe BiblicalPortrayalofAĹĄtartinContext.â108 Morespecifically,andasIalsonotedinmy commentsabove,Lewishassuggestedâasthetitleofhisarticleparticularlyindicatesâ thatUgariticevidencedemonstratesanassociationbetweentheUgariticgoddess Athtartu/Athtart(knownintheBibleasAĹĄtart/Astarte)andtextileproduction. Inmakingthisargument,Lewisreliesparticularlyontworitualandeconomictexts fromUgarit,bothofwhichspeakofAthtartu/AthtartasAthtart-Ĺ ad,âAthtartofthe FieldâorâAthtartoftheSteppeLand.âLewisnotes,forexample,thatin KTU 4.182,an economictext,Athtart-Ĺ adismentionedtwice,inlinesthatcanbetakentofollowalist ofvarioustextileproducts,suchasboltsoffabric,differenttypesofgarments,andseven hundredandfiftyunitsofwool,includingunitsofwoolthathaveapparentlybeendyed redorblue(literallyâlapisâ).Thistextalsomentionsaâweaverâ(mḍᚣ),inline56,in closeconjunctionwiththetworeferencestoAthtart-Ĺ adinlines55and58,althoughthe fragmentarynatureofthispartofthetabletmakesitdifficulttoknowwhethertheselines actuallyassertanassociationofAthtart-Ĺ adwithweaving.Itisalsodifficulttoknow how,precisely,thetworeferencestoAthtart-Ĺ adinlines55and58relatetothelistof textileproductsfoundelsewhereinthetext,inlines2â40,giventhatonlyafewlettersin theinterveninglines,lines41â54,arepreserved.Perhaps,ifwearetofollowDavidM. Clemens,whounderstandsthetextaslistingtextileproductsthataredistributedto multiplegods,wearetotakeAthtart-Ĺ adasamongthedivinerecipientsofthese offerings.
109Clemens, Sources for Ugaritic Ritual and Sacrifice,357â58.Foratranslationof KTU 4.182,see McGeough, Ugaritic Economic Tablets,130â33;forLewisâsdiscussion,seeLewis, Origin and Character of God,682â83,andLewis,âUgariticAthtartu Ĺ adi,â148â49.