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List of Ugaritic deities

The Ugaritic pantheon included deities of local origin, many of whom are also known from Eblaite sources from the third millennium BCE or Amorite ones from the early second millennium BCE, as well as Hurrian and Mesopotamian ones.[2] The Ugaritic pantheon is considered better documented than other aspects of Ugaritic religion, such as the life of the clergy or the social context of various offerings.[3] Over two hundred names of deities are known from Ugaritic texts, though it has been argued the number of these who were an object of active worship was lower.[4] Many of the names are binomial, and as such may refer either to a single deity and their epithet, to two deities syncretized into one, or to a closely associated pair.[5]

The stela known as Baal with Thunderbolt, a well known depiction of one of the main gods of Ugarit.[1]

The presence of Hurrian deities in the pantheon is considered one of the main differences between the religion of the inhabitants of Ugarit and those known from other areas inhabited by speakers of Northwest Semitic languages, for example Canaan,[6] understood by researchers of Ancient Near Eastern religions as the area between Byblos and Gaza.[7] It has been suggested that it is not possible to divide the gods worshiped into this city into separate Ugaritic and Hurrian pantheons.[8]

The iconography of most Ugaritic deities is presently unknown due to lack of inscriptions identifying their depictions.[9]

Major deities edit

Name Alphabetic writing Details
Baal
Hadad[10]
b‘l[11]
hd(d)[12]
The name Baal ("lord") and its cognates (such as Akkadian bēlu) designated various deities in different time periods and locations in the Ancient Near East.[13] The Ugaritic Baal was a weather god.[13] He was portrayed as an active deity acting as the king of the gods, though it has been argued his position was subordinate to that of the inactive El.[14] At the same time, he was the most popular deity invoked in theophoric names, which might indicate that he was understood as the main deity of the city.[15] It has been noted that it is not impossible that both gods were viewed as heads of the pantheon, each with different functions.[14] Baal most likely developed as an epithet of a form of the weather god Hadad which became his primary name on the Mediterranean coast in the middle of the second millennium BCE.[16] The original name, Haddu/Hadad, remained in use but was secondary, and functioned as if it were an epithet.[10] In contrast, while "Baal" functioned as an epithet of the weather god as far east as Emar, it never became his main name in inland Syria.[10] In the Ugaritic texts, Baal is second only to El when it comes to the number of epithets applied to him, with as many as fourteen individual ones attested.[17] The most frequent is "the mighty one" (‘al‘iyn).[18] Only one epithet, "the rider of the clouds" (rkb ‘rpt) is related to his role as a weather deity.[19] Multiple hypostases of Baal were worshiped in Ugarit according to ritual texts, including "Baal of Aleppo" corresponding to the weather god of that city.[20] However, Baal of Saphon (the Ugaritic name of Jebel al-Aqra[10]) was most likely understood as the primary manifestation.[21] A series of Ugaritic myths known as the "Baal Cycle" describes Baal's struggle to attain kingship among the gods and his battles against various rivals, especially the sea god Yam.[22] Baal does not challenge El directly in any myths, though it has been argued that tensions between them are implicit due to Baal's opponents owing their positions to El.[23] Baal most likely had no permanent spouse, though it has been argued that he was associated with both Anat and Ashtart in some capacity.[24] The use of the name Baal to designate a weather god is also attested in Phoenician texts postdating the destruction of Ugarit.[25]
El ‘il[26] El was the head of the Ugaritic pantheon.[27] He was regarded as a creator deity[28] and was addressed as the father of the other gods and of mankind.[29] He was also the king (mlk) of the gods.[30] His dwelling is described as "the source of the rivers, in the midst of the confluence of the two deeps."[31] El also appears in the Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit.[32] He continued to be venerated in the first millennium BCE, and is mentioned in many other sources, for example in the Phoenician Azatiwada inscription (Karatepe bilingual) and in Aramaic texts from Palmyra.[33] However, he is absent from the pantheons of Ebla and Akkad from the third millennium BCE.[34] The Akkadian cognate of his name, ilu, has the same meaning, "god", but did not designate a specific deity.[35] In Ebla the word il was used in theophoric names as a stand-in for the names of individual deities.[36] Alfonso Archi proposes that El only developed in the second millennium BCE among speakers of West Semitic languages[34] under the influence of Mesopotamian and Hurrian beliefs about successive generations of ancestral deities.[37]
Anat ‘nt[38] Anat was a war goddess.[39] She shared this domain with other deities.[39] Her warlike character has been described as an inversion of gender norms which applied to mortal women.[40] Dennis Pardee informally characterizes her as a "tomboy goddess."[41] In myths she is the main ally of Baal.[41] She was believed to reside on the mountain Inbubu (inbb[42]), whose location is unknown, though references to "Anat of Saphon" are known too.[41] Anat's name is often assumed to be a cognate of the Arabic word ‘anwat, "force."[38] Wilfred G. Lambert instead proposed that it was derived from Ḫanât, a goddess worshiped by Ḫana, a nomadic Amorite group known from the texts from Mari.[43] She could be described as winged,[39] and this trait is often used to identify possible depictions of her.[44] Anat also appears in the Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit, possibly because she had no close counterpart among the Hurrian deities.[32]
Ashtart ‘ṯtrt[45] Ashtart's name was the western cognate of Mesopotamian Ishtar.[46] The earliest attestations of this goddess go back to the third millennium BCE, when she was worshiped in Ebla under the name Ašdar.[47] In some cities, for example Mari (which is designated as her cult center in Ugaritic texts[48]) the names Ashtart and Ishtar could be treated as interchangeable.[49] It has been argued that she was characterized by pugnacity.[50] She was closely associated with hunting.[50] Additionally, like Anat, she was regarded as a warrior goddess,[51] which is considered an inversion of gender norms which applied to mortal women.[52] While the evidence is not entirely conclusive, it is assumed that Ashtart was one of the higher ranked goddesses in the pantheon of Ugarit.[53] She does not play a larger role in Ugaritic myths on her.[45] An exception is the text "The Hunt of the Goddess," in which she is the central character.[54] Ashtart's association with Baal and Anat is well attested.[45] Two passages refer to her as "Ashtart of the name of Baal," while a text from outside Ugarit refers to her as "face of Baal."[55] In a single ritual text, Ashtart and Anat appear as a single entry with the binomial name Anat-wa-Ashtart.[41] It is agreed that the worship of Ashtart was of some importance to the royal family of Ugarit,[56] especially when it comes to her hypostasis Ashtart-Šadi, "Ashtart of the steppe."[48] It is also often assumed that she was an astral deity representing the evening star, but there is no direct evidence for this in any Bronze Age texts written in any Western Semitic language.[57]
Athirat
Elat?[58]
aṯrt[59]
‘ilt[58]
Athirat was the highest ranked goddess in the Ugaritic pantheon.[60] She was regarded as the spouse of El[61] and it has been proposed she could be referred to as Elat, though this name might also be a generic word, "goddess."[58] The Ugaritic texts are the only known source providing detailed information about her as a mythical figure.[62] She was addressed as "Lady Athirat of the Sea"[63] and "creatress of the gods."[61] No depictions of her are known, though based on textual sources it is assumed that she would be portrayed as a "senior seated lady dressed in a long robe blessing the gods and people," and at least one such a figure of an Ugaritic goddess is known.[64] Information about Athirat from outside Ugarit is scarce.[65] A goddess of Amorite origin with an etymologically related name, Ashratum, was worshiped in Mesopotamia, but her character and position in the pantheon were not similar.[66] Another possibly related goddess was worshiped in Qataban (part of modern Yemen).[65] The similar biblical term asherah refers primarily to an object, but most likely also functioned as the name of a deity.[67]
Kothar-wa-Khasis
Hayyānu[68]
kṯr w ḫss[69]
hyy[68]
Kothar-wa-Khasis was a craftsman god.[68] His name can be translated as "skilled and intelligent."[69] His alternate name, Hayyānu, which occurs in parallel with his regular name, might be derived from the Hurrian form of the name of the god Ea, and is not attested as a common noun in Ugaritic texts.[68] In myths his residences are Caphtor (Crete) and Memphis.[70] In the Baal Cycle, he creates the weapons Baal uses in his battle against Yam[71] and later builds his palace.[72] In the Epic of Aqhat, he is the creator of the bow of the eponymous hero.[73]
Kotharat kṯrt[74] Kotharat were a group of seven goddesses regarded as divine midwives.[69] Their collective name is derived from the root kṯr, "wise" or "cunning," same as the name of Kothar,[75] and can be translated as "the skilled."[76] It is possible that they also had individual names, with the six proposed ones including tlḫhw, mlghy, bq't (possibly "she who forces open [the womb]"[77]), tq't, prbḫt and dmqt (possibly "the good one"[78]), though there is no agreement regarding this and it has been suggested some of the words which can be interpreted this way are only common nouns.[79] They were originally worshiped in the middle Euphrates area and in Mari, as attested in texts from the early second millennium BCE.[75] They are also attested in texts from Emar under the name Ilû kašārati (DINGIRMEŜ ka-ša-ra-ti).[80]
Nikkal(-wa-Ib) nkl (w ib)[81] Nikkal, a derivative of Mesopotamian Ningal, appears in both Ugaritic and Hurrian sources from Ugarit.[82] She was considered one of the principal goddesses of Ugarit, comparable in rank to Shapash or Anat.[83] She was the wife of the moon god, Yarikh, similar to how her Mesopotamian forerunner was married to Nanna.[84] Nikkal could also be called Nikkal-wa-Ib, with the second element often translated as "fruit."[84] Dennis Pardee suggests that Ib (Ibbu) was originally a separate deity who came to be identified with Nikkal,[85] but Steve A. Wiggins instead argues that it is likely this title was derived from an analogous epithet of Nanna.[84] She is attested in five theophoric names from Ugarit, some of which are etymologically Hurrian.[86] Ugarit is the only Syrian city in which the worship of Nikkal is directly attested in the second millennium BCE, though Ugaritic documents indicate that she was also worshiped in two towns close to Carchemish.[82]
Resheph
Iršappa[87]
ršp[74]
eršp[87]
Resheph was a god associated with war, plague, the underworld and the planet Mars.[88] His name was derived from the root ršp, and as such is a cognate of an element of Amorite personal names meaning "to flame".[89] However, the relation between the meaning of the name and the nature of the god is not entirely clear.[89] He plays no major role in any Ugaritic myths, but nonetheless appears in many other types of texts.[90] He is one of the deities most commonly invoked in Ugaritic theophoric names.[91] Iršappa, the Hurrian form of his name, is also attested in them.[91] Hurrians regarded him as a god of the marketplace.[87] In the first millennium BCE he was worshiped by Phoenicians in Sidon, and was also introduced by them to Kition on Cyprus.[89]
Shapash špš[92] Shapash was the Ugaritic sun goddess.[93] Her name is a cognate of that of the Mesopotamian sun god Shamash.[79] She was called the "lamp of the gods" (nrt 'ilm).[94] [95] She appears in sixty six known theophoric names, more than any other goddess.[96] Only El, Baal, Resheph and the Hurrian god Teshub appear in a greater number of names.[96] In myths and incantations, she acts as a messenger, and summons other gods from distant locations.[97] As an extension of this role, she could also be described as acting as a guide in the underworld.[98] Known texts characterize her as a compassionate deity.[99] She was regarded as a daughter of El[97] and acted as his messenger.[100] While a figure named pḥlt (who might be either a deity, a human or a horse) addresses her as "mother" in an incantation, it is most likely only a honorific in this case, and not a genealogical statement.[101] In the Baal cycle, she informs Attar that El has selected Yam for kingship,[102] and later announces to Mot that his struggle against Baal is futile, because the latter gained El's support.[103] In both cases, due to her authority instructions she gives are obeyed without question.[104] For uncertain reason, this cycle of myths ends with a hymn dedicated to her.[104]
Yarikh yrḫ[105] Yarikh was the Ugaritic moon god.[106] His name means "moon" and has cognates in many other Semitic languages, such as Akkadian warḫum ("month"), Amorite Yeraḫ (name of a lunar deity, common in theophoric names[107]) and Hebrew yariḫ ("moon") and yarḫ ("month").[108] One of the Ugaritic texts identifies the cult center of Yarikh as the settlement lrgt,[109] possibly to be identified with Larugadu, the cult center of Hadabal known from Eblaite texts.[110] One of the known Ugaritic myths describes the circumstances of his marriage to Nikkal.[111]

Minor deities edit

Name Alphabetic writing Details
Arsay ‘arṣy[112] Arsay was one of the goddesses regarded as daughters of Baal.[113] Her name is assumed to mean "earthy."[114] She is addressed as the "daughter of y'bdr," a word of unknown meaning.[115] In god lists, offering lists[116] and most passages from the Baal Cycle she and her siblings do not occur together.[117] One of the god lists identifies her with Allatum (Allani), an underworld goddess,[115] and it has been proposed her own character was similar.[117] However, due to scarcity of references the exact rationale behind this association remains unknown.[117]
Arṣu-wa-Šamuma ‘arṣ w šmm[118] The double deity Arsu-wa-Shamuma ("Earth and Heaven") appears only in ritual texts.[41] The ordering of earth before heaven reflects a Hurrian tradition.[2]
Attar ‘ṯtr[119] Attar's name is a cognate of Ashtart's, but they were not associated with each other.[49] He was regarded as a war god.[2] It has also been proposed that he was responsible for irrigation.[48] His epithet ‘rẓ is conventionally translated as "the terrible," often pejoratively, or even as "the tyrant," but according to Aicha Rahmouni it might mean "the mighty," with no pejorative undertones.[120] In the Baal cycle, Athirat proclaims Attar the new king of the gods in place of the deceased Baal,[121] but he turns out to be incapable of ruling and eventually the resurrected weather god returns to his old position.[122]
Ba‘alat Bahatīma b‘lt bhtm[123] Ba‘alat Bahatima, the "lady of the houses" or possibly "lady of the palace,"[124] might have been the goddess responsible for the area inhabited by the royal family.[20] It is not certain if she was an epithet of another goddess (Anat and Athirat have been proposed) or an independent deity.[20] It is possible that she corresponded to Mesopotamian Belet Ekallim (Ninegal).[123] The Hurrian form of Ninegal, Pendigalli, was also worshiped in Ugarit.[125]
Dadmiš
Tadmiš[126]
ddmš[127] The goddess Dadmiš is attested in both Ugaritic[128] and Hurrian ritual texts.[129] Dennis Pardee assumes that she was a healing deity.[130] In god lists she appears in the immediate proximity of Resheph,[127] and Manfred Krebernik tentatively proposes she was an underworld deity and his spouse.[126] Her origin remains uncertain.[130] One proposal derives her name from the Akkadian word dādmu, "dwellings."[131] A cognate of this term, Dadmum, was used by Amorites to refer to the area around Aleppo in the Old Babylonian period and possibly later in Ugarit as well, as evidenced by the term ddm, which might have referred to an inhabitant of this area.[131] It has also been proposed that Dadmiš is related to the Mesopotamian goddess Tadmuštum, who was associated with the underworld and deities such as Nergal, Šubula and Laṣ.[127] However, the Ugaritic edition of the Weidner god list equates her with Shuzianna.[126]
Dagan dgn[132] Dagan was the head of the pantheon of the middle Euphrates area,[133] but he does not appear frequently in the Ugaritic literary texts.[134] He is directly referred to as Baal's father in twelve passages.[135] While Baal was also references as a son of El, Aicha Rahmouni proposes that these statements are not necessarily contradictory, as it possible that El was understood as the creator of all deities, and thus their metaphorical father, while Dagan was regarded as Baal's biological father.[136] He is relatively well represented in offering lists, but there is no indication that he was regarded as a major deity.[137] In incantations he appears alongside Baal.[138] Texts from Ugarit, including the myth Marriage of Nikkal and Yarikh, associate him with Tuttul,[139] which was already recognized as his cult center in Ebla in the third millennium BCE.[130]
Dimgay dmgy[140] Dimgay was a minor goddess regarded as the handmaiden of Athirat.[140] The etymology of her name is uncertain.[140] In a single passage she occurs in parallel with Talish, the handmaiden of Yarikh, and it is sometimes proposed they were a single deity with a binomial name (dmg w tlš, Dimgay-wa-Talish).[141]
Didānu ddn[142] Didānu appears in the Epic of Kirta as the deified ancestor of the eponymous king.[130] He most likely was also regarded as the divine ancestor of the Ugaritic kings.[130]
Gaṯaru gṯr[143] Gaṯaru, "the powerful,"[144] was a god associated with the underworld.[145] Dennis Pardee proposes that additionally on comparative grounds it can be assumed he was associated with vegetation and warfare.[146] A cognate of his name functioned as an epithet of Anat.[147] He was also worshiped in Emar and Mari, and in Mesopotamia, where came to be associated with Lugalirra.[145]
Gupan-wa-Ugar gpn w ‘ugr[143] Gupan and Ugar, who typically occur together as Gupan-wa-Ugar, were messenger of Baal.[148] Their names mean "vine" and "field," respectively.[143] In the Baal Cycle, they carry messages between the eponymous protagonist and other deities, such as Anat or Mot.[149]
Gūrūma-wa-Tahāmātu grm w thmt[150] Gūrūma-wa-Tahāmātu, "mountains and waters-of-the-abyss,"[150] represented mountains and freshwater springs located in the proximity of Ugarit.[151] The name is grammatically plural in Ugaritic.[151]
Hargub hrgb[152] It is assumed Hargub was a minor god whose form was regarded as bird-like.[152] The meaning of his name is unknown, though it has been proposed it was derived from the name of a type of large bird.[153] In a single passage he is addressed as the "father of raptors," ‘ab nšrm, nšrm being a generic word for a bird of prey.[152] A similar epithet, "lord of the eagles" (Eblaite: BE Ámušen Ámušen) is known from the Ebla texts, where it refers to Adarwan, regarded as either a deity[152] or as a "numen" of the god Ammarik.[154]
Horon ḥrn[155] Horon was a god associated with magic and exorcisms.[85] He is primarily known from incantations.[156] It has been argued that he was associated with the underworld.[157] However, according to Manfred Krebernik there is no direct evidence supporting this view.[158] In the Epic of Kirta, he is invoked by the eponymous king in a curse.[159]
Hulelu?[160] hll[161] Hll was the father of the Kotharat.[161] The vocalization of his name is not certain, though Hulelu has been proposed based on the presence of a deity bearing this name in the pantheon of Emar.[160] The origin of the latter is not known.[162] A connection with the Arabic word hilālun, "crescent moon," has been proposed, and on this basis he is often considered an astral deity, perhaps a divine representation of the lunar crescent.[160] An alternative proposal connects Hll with Mesopotamian Enlil.[160] His epithet b‘l gml is usually translated as "lord of the crescent moon" or "lord of the sickle," but Aicha Rahmouni proposes "possessor of the gamlu staff."[161] She points out that while the gml/gamlu is well attested as a divine attribute, it was most likely a curved staff and not a sickle or sickle-like sword.[163]
Ḫiriḫibi ḫrḫb[164] Ḫiriḫibi is only attested in the myth Marriage of Nikkal and Yarikh.[165] He was most likely a deity of Hurrian origin.[165] The translation "he of the mountain Ḫiriḫ(i)," has been proposed for his name.[164] The widely accepted vocalization gives the name the Hurrian suffix -bi, attested in the names of Hurrian deities such as Kumarbi and Nabarbi.[164] He was regarded as a divine marriage broker.[166] He is also addressed as the "king of summer" or "divine patron of summer" (mlk qẓ).[167] It is possible that he was Nikkal's father, though the available evidence supporting this view is indirect.[165]
Ilib ‘il‘ib[168] Ilib appears before El, Dagan and Baal in Ugaritic offering lists.[34] It is uncertain if he should be interpreted as a divine ancestor, "god the father," or as a divine representation of the concept of a clan god.[34] Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit attest the existence of a Hurrian translation of the name of this deity, eni ettanni, "god father," who was a "generic ancestor of the gods."[34]
Ilish ‘ilš[169] Ilish was a minor god regarded as the "herald of the house of Baal."[169] He was believed to have multiple wives, referred to as the "herald goddesses" (ngrt ‘ilht).[169] The etymology of his name is unknown and its vocalization remains uncertain due to only relying on a similar Akkadian personal name which might be an etymologically unrelated hypocoristic.[170]
Kinnaru knr[171] Kinnaru was the deification of the lyre.[171] The name was identical with the ordinary word designating this instrument.[171]
Maḏḏara mḏr[172] Maḏḏara is attested in offering lists, but the nature and origin of this deity are unknown.[171] Based on the syllabic writing of the name, dma-za-ra,[172] a connection with the Hurrian word maziri, "help," has been tentatively suggested, though the similarity might be a coincidence.[173]
Messengers of Yam mlak ym[174] In the Baal Cycle, two unnamed deities serve as messengers of Yam.[174] They are also addressed as "the embassy of judge Nahar" (t'dt ṯpṭ nhr).[174] A single reference to an unidentified deity addressed as "servant of Yam" or "youth of Yam" (gml ym) is also known[175] from the Epic of Kirta.[176] Manfred Krebernik suggests it might be the name of a sea monster or a poetic way to refer to a wave.[176]
Mêšaru mšr[177] Mêšaru ("rectitude" or "uprightness") is attested in a single text alongside Ṣidqu.[70] It is presumed he was a divine judge.[177]
Milku mlk[178] Milku was a god associated with the underworld,[179] possibly regarded as its ruler.[70] His name is a cognate of the word malku, "king."[70] A Hurrian form, Milkunni, is also attested.[180] He could be addressed as "the eternal king" (mlk ‘lm).[181] Epithets containing the word "king" do not necessarily indicate the deity was regarded as high-ranked.[182]
Mot mt[183] Mot was the god[184] or personification of death.[185] He does not appear in any ritual texts, only in myths.[186] He has also been compared to Namtar.[187] At the same time, Mot's mythical role as an opponent of Baal (and Anat) is unique to Ugaritic mythology, and has no parallel in traditions about the other weather gods of the Ancient Near East, such as Teshub.[23]
Pidar pdr[188] Pidar was a god associated with Baal.[188] It has been proposed that his name was derived from the Hurrian word pedari, "bull."[188] A proposal now considered less likely considers it identical with the Ugarit word pdr, "city."[188] It might also be etymologically related to Pidray's.[188] He is attested in theophoric names, offering lists and literary texts.[188]
Pidray pdry[189] Pidray was one of the goddesses considered to be daughters of Baal, as attested in the Baal Cycle and in Marriage of Nikkal and Yarikh.[113] She appears in known texts more frequently than the other goddesses belonging to this category.[190] The meaning of her name is unknown.[191] It has been suggested that it might mean "fatty"[186] due to its similarity to the rarely used Hebrew word peder, "renal fat," but this proposal is not universally accepted.[190] She was addressed as the "daughter of light."[72] While it is sometimes proposed that her epithet might hint at a connection with lightning, neither the Ugaritic word nor its Akkadian, Arabic and Hebrew cognates are used to specifically refer to this phenomenon, making this proposal implausible.[192] There is also no direct evidence that she was regarded as a weather goddess.[193] She was worshiped in the royal palace.[116] A festival focused on her is also attested.[186] Two of the texts which mention her appear to include Hurrian elements.[113] A god list equates her with Hebat, the wife of the Hurrian weather god Teshub, but according to Daniel Schwemer this is unlikely to be an indication that she was viewed as Baal's wife.[194] Only a single reference to Pidray from outside Ugarit is known: an Aramaic papyrus from Egypt from a later period mentions "Pidray of Raphia" next to "Baal of Saphon."[195]
Qudšu-wa-Amrur qdš w amrr[196] Qudšu-wa-Amrur was a minor deity considered to be Athirat's messenger, as attested in the Baal Cycle.[41] He is also addressed as her fisherman, possibly a referecent to her well attested connection with the sea.[197] Terms referring to fishermen are also attested as epithets of Mesopotamian deities.[198] Additionally, some temples in that area employed fishermen to provide them with fish which could be offered to the gods.[198]
Qudshu qdš[199] There is no agreement in scholarship over whether qdš ("holy"[200]) represents a goddess analogous to Egyptian Qetesh or if this word should merely be considered an epithet.[199] The notion that this term refers to a "sacred prostitute" is considered discredited.[201] No direct references to a goddess named qdš are actually present in Ugaritic texts, and the existence of this goddess is presumed only based on a distinct iconographic type.[202] The "Qudshu" figure is particularly common on metal pendants from Ugarit.[203] As an epithet, qdš is used to describe the god El in three known passages.[204]
Rahmay rḥmy[205] Rahmay was a goddess associated with Athirat.[206] It is assumed that her name is derived from the word raḥmu, "womb."[207] While it has been proposed in the past that she was not a separate goddess but a byname of Athirat or an epithet of Anat, neither assumption finds support in known Ugaritic texts.[208]
Samal ṣml[209] It is assumed Samal was a minor goddess whose form was considered to be bird-like.[209] The etymology of her name is unknown, and Aicha Rahmouni notes that most proposals are implausible and "have an unmistakable air of desperation."[210] In a single passage she is addressed as the "mother of raptors," ‘um nšrm,[209] nšrm being a generic word for a bird of prey.[152]
Shahar šḥr[211] Shahar's name means "dawn."[212] He does not appear in any Ugaritic texts on his own, only alongside Shalim.[212]
Shalim šlm[128] Shalim's name means "dusk."[212] He is attested on his own in offering lists, but Shahar only appears as a part of the binomial name Shahar-wa-Shalim.[212] Shalim was most likely regarded as the youngest son of El, and his mother was not Athirat.[212]
Shatiqatu š'tqt[213] Shatiqatu was a mythical female exorcist[213] and healer[214] most commonly identified in modern scholarship as a goddess.[215] However, she is absent from known offering lists and god lists.[215] On this basis, as an alternative to the most common interpretation it has been proposed that she might have been an apkallu-like figure or even a human.[216] She appears in the Epic of Kirta, where she heals the eponymous ruler by expelling the disease (or demon) from him with a staff.[217] She is described as a creation of El.[218] Her name is derived from the root ‘tq, "to pass" or "to move."[219]
Sumuqan?[220] ṯmq[220] The god ṯmq occurs in theophoric names and in a literary passage referring to him as the "warrior of Baal" (mhr b‘l)[220] and "warrior of Anat" (mhr ‘nt).[221] It has been suggested that he should be identified as the Mesopotamian god Sumuqan, who was associated with wild animals, but could also be referred to as a warrior (Akkadian: qarrādu).[220]
dSu-ra-su-gu-WA not available[222] The deity dSu-ra-su-gu-WA (reading of the final sign uncertain) is only known from a single offering list written in the syllabic cuneiform script.[222] The name might have Hurrian origin.[222]
Šaggar(-wa-‘Iṯum) šgr[110](w ‘iṯm)[223] Šaggar was the divine representation of the Sinjar Mountains, and likely additionally also a lunar deity.[224] He was already worshiped in Ebla in the third millennium BCE.[225] He also belonged to the pantheons of Mari, Kurda, Tell Leilan and Emar.[225] In Ugarit he was paired with the deity ‘Iṯum, and in an offering list they appear together as Šaggar-wa-'Iṯum.[212] Most likely they were usually treated as separate deities and only appear as a pair due to a shared function.[226] It has been suggested that they were responsible for "mixed herds of sheep and goats."[211] It has also been proposed that ‘Iṯum corresponded to Mesopotamian Ishum.[223]
Šamnu šmn[227] The name of the deity Šamnu is identical with a word referring to oil, most likely olive oil.[212]
Šaraššiya ṯrṯy[228] The god Šaraššiya is only attested in offering lists, where he follows Baal of Saphon and Baal of Aleppo.[228] Daniel Schwemer proposes that his name was derived from the Hurrian word šarašše-, "kingship," and that he was a divine personification of this concept.[228] The term šaraššiya, "for kingship," is well attested as a description of offerings in Hurro-Hittite texts.[228]
Ṣidqu ṣdq[229] Ṣidqu ("righteousness") is only attested in a single text, in which he appears alongside Mêšaru.[93]
Talish tlš[141] Talish was a goddess regarded as the handmaiden of Yarikh.[230] However, the moon god does not appear in the preserved sections of the text addressing her as such.[231] Multiple etymologies for the name have been proposed, including derivation from a verb meaning "to knead" and from a word possibly meaning "tardy" or "delay."[232] It is also possible that it did not originate in any Semitic language, as a similar personal name, Tu-li-ša, is known from Akkadian texts not only from Ugarit, but also Nuzi.[231] In a single passage she occurs in parallel with Dimgay, the handmaiden of Athirat, and it is sometimes proposed they were the same deity whose name was in reality binomial (dmg w tlš, Dimgay-wa-Talish).[141]
Tallay ṭly[189] Tallay's name can be translated as "dewy" and it is possible she was a weather deity,[113] most likely connected with dew and light rain.[190] She was addressed as "daughter of drizzle."[113] In a passage from the Baal Cycle, she is listed among Baal's daughters alongside Arsay and Pidray.[113] However, the three of them do not occur together otherwise, though Tallay and Pidray alone are attested as a pair in multiple passages from the same work.[233] Only one possible reference to Tallay from outside the Baal Cycle has been identified.[234]
Ṯukamuna-wa-Šunama ṯkmn w šnm[235] Ṯukamuna-wa-Šunama (Thukamuna and Shunama) were two gods who were sons of El[236] and Athirat, possibly regarded as the youngest among their children.[105] In a myth preserved on the tablet KTU 1.114, the two of them help El go back home after he gets drunk during a feast.[236] They are also mentioned in offering lists.[237] It has been proposed that they were related to the Kassite deities Shuqamuna and Shumaliya, with the latter pair possibly derived from gods with linguistically Semitic (rather than Kassite) names, but this proposal remains speculative.[238]
Tiraṯu trṯ[172] Tiraṯu, "young wine,"[239] was the god of wine.[240] The name of the Mesopotamian goddess Siraš is an Akkadian cognate of Ugaritic trṯ, but she was associated with beer, not wine.[241] A further deity with an etymologically related name, dzi-la-šu, is attested in an offering list from Ebla, but according to Manfred Krebernik should be considered analogous to the Mesopotamian goddess.[241] Another cognate of the name is the ordinary Hebrew noun tīrōš.[105]
Uṯḫatu ‘uṯḫt[242] Uṯḫatu was the deification of a ritual censer.[105]
Yam
Nahar[243]
ym[244]
nhr[243]
Yam was the god of the sea.[243] He could also be addressed as Nahar, "river."[243] It has been suggested that this name originally referred to a separate deity, possibly associated with river ordeal like Mesopotamian Idlurugu.[245] While he was actively worshiped, his rank in the pantheon was low.[244] He is nonetheless present in theophoric names from Ugarit.[244] Non-Ugaritic attestations of Yam come from Emar (where he appears as one of the deities celebrated in the local festival zukru) and Egypt (literary texts).[244] No direct reference to Yam is known from any later Phoenician texts, though it has been suggested that "Pontos" known from the writings of Philo of Byblos might correspond to him.[246]
Yaparudmay ybrdmy[247] In the myth Marriage of Nikkal and Yarikh, Yaparudmay is mentioned alongside Pidray as one of the goddesses Yarikh could marry instead of Nikkal.[247] She is not otherwise attested in any Ugaritic texts.[248] It has been suggested that she was a sister of Attar.[249] Steve A. Wiggins instead proposes that she was regarded as his daughter.[165] Wilfred G. E. Watson interprets her as a daughter of Baal.[97] Gabriele Theuer notes it is not impossible that she was not a separate goddess, but rather an epithet of Pidray.[248]
Ẓiẓẓu-wa-Kāmaṯu ẓẓ w kmṯ[250] Ẓiẓẓu-wa-Kāmaṯu only appear as a pair.[105] The meaning of Ẓiẓẓu's name and the character of this deity are not known.[105] Kāmaṯu is a cognate of the name of the god Chemosh worshiped in Moab in the first millennium BCE.[171] According to Wilfred G. Lambert it is uncertain if he corresponds to the god Kamiš known from Eblaite texts and Kammuš, a name of Nergal known from Mesopotamian god lists.[251]

Hurrian deities edit

Name Alphabetic writing Details
Adamma adm[252] Adamma was originally a spouse of Resheph in the Eblaite pantheon, but after the fall of Ebla she was incorporated into Hurrian religion.[253] She was associated with Kubaba.[41] They appear together in a Hurrian offering list from Ugarit.[254]
Allani aln[252] Allani was a Hurrian goddess regarded as the queen of the underworld.[255] She is attested in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit, where she appears alongside Ishara.[254]
Aštabi
Attapar?
aštb[256] Aštabi was originally worshiped in Ebla and other nearby settlements in the third millennium BCE.[257] His original character is unknown, but in later Hurrian sources he was regarded as a warrior god.[257] While in Ugarit he appears in Hurrian offering lists,[32] it is possible that he did not exclusively belong to the Hurrian milieu in this city.[257] Alfonso Archi additionally assumes that the god Attapar (or Attapal; 'tṭpr/'tṭpl), who formed a pair with Attar, was the same deity as Aštabi,[257] but Dennis Pardee considers him to be a distinct form of Attar himself instead.[48]
Daqitu dqt[258] Daqitu, also known as Takitu, was a minor Hurrian goddess regarded as an attendant of Hebat.[259] Based on the Ugaritic writing of her name, dqt, it has been proposed that it was derived from the root dqq, "small", present in Semitic languages.[259] She is attested in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit, where she follows Hebat.[254]
Ea iy[260] The god Ea, who originated in Mesopotamia, is well attested in Ugaritic theophoric names.[15] According to Dennis Pardee, Ea in Ugarit he should be understood as the Hurrian form of this deity.[146]
Ebrimuša ebrmž[261] Ebrimuša was a god who belonged to the retinue of Hebat.[261] His name can be translated as "lord of justice."[262]
Hebat ḫbt[252] Hebat was the wife of Teshub, the head of the Hurrian pantheon.[263] She appears in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit[32] and in 15 theophoric names known from Ugaritic documents, though one of them did not belong to an inhabitant of the city.[264]
Hutena and Hutellura ḫdn ḫdlr[265] Hutena and Hutellura were Hurrian goddesses of fate and divine midwives.[266] They can appear both together and individually.[85] They are attested in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit.[254]
Ishara ‘ušḫr(y)[267] Ishara was a Syrian goddess already worshiped in Ebla in the third millennium BCE.[87] She was later incorporated into the Hurrian pantheon.[87] She was associated with the underworld[105] and divination.[268] In Ugarit she appears in both Ugaritic[128] and Hurrian documents.[32] One of them mentions a king making a sacrifice to ‘ušḫr-ḫlmẓ, ḫlmẓ being often understood as an epithet meaning "the serpent" or "the lizard."[267] She also appears in association with Ashtart.[269]
Kiaše kyḏ[270] Kiaše was the Hurrian god representing the sea.[270] He appears in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit.[32] It has been pointed out that the perception of the sea in Ugaritic religion, while dissimilar to Mesopotamian traditions, is similar to that known from Hurrian sources.[271]
Kubaba kbb[252] Kubaba was a goddess of unknown origin, first attested in sources pertaining to Carchemish from the early second millennium BCE.[256] In Ugarit she appears in Hurrian offering lists[32] and in two theophoric names.[264]
Kumarbi kmrb[272] Kumarbi was the Hurrian "father of gods."[273] He appears in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit.[32] It has been pointed out that even though god lists treat him and El as analogous to each other, they received offerings separately.[8]
Kušuḫ kzg[260] Kušuḫ was the Hurrian moon god.[274] In Hurrian texts from Ugarit he is addressed as the "king of the (oracular) decisions."[129] In one of the offering lists he appears together with Nikkal and Yarikh.[32]
Ninatta and Kulitta nnt klt[252] Ninatta and Kulitta were the handmaidens of Šauška.[186] Both of them are attested in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit.[254]
Nupatik nbdg[275] Nupatik was a commonly worshiped Hurrian god,[274] but his functions remain unclear.[186] He most likely appears as a psychopomp in one of the Hurrian texts from Ugarit.[276] He is also attested in offering lists[277] and in a single theophoric name.[278]
Pendigalli pdgl[125] Pendigalli (Pentikalli) was most likely the Hurrian form of Mesopotamian Belet Ekallim (Ninegal).[125] She is attested in Ugarit in a Hurrian theophoric name, annpdgl, possibly Annani-Pendigalli.[125]
Pinikir prgl (disputed)[279] Pinikir was an astral goddess[280] of Elamite origin[279] who was incorporated into the Hurrian pantheon in the west.[274] Gary Beckman suggests that she appears in a single text from Ugarit where her name is written as prgl,[281] but this attestation is regarded as uncertain by Piotr Taracha.[279]
Pišaišapḫi pḏḏpḫ[252] Pišaišapḫi was a god representing the mountain Pišaiša, most likely located close to the Mediterranean coast.[87] He is attested in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit.[254]
Šarruma ṯrm[282] Šarruma was a god who most likely originated in the kingdom of Kizzuwatna.[283] He appears relatively commonly in Ugaritic theophoric names,[284] with as many as twenty eight known, though three of them belonged to people from outside the city.[285] In a single text from Ugarit he is referred to as the sukkallu (messenger or attendant deity) of Kumarbi.[286] However, elsewhere he was chiefly associated with Hebat and Teshub.[287]
Šauška ṯuṯk[260] Šauška was a Hurrian goddess of love and war regarded as similar to Mesopotamian Ishtar.[288] In Ugarit she was associated with Ashtart, and they appear together in the same ritual text.[289] The goddess "Ashtart ḫr", possibly to be interpreted as "Ashtart of Hurri," might correspond to Šauška too.[290]
Šimige ṯmg[260] Šimige was the Hurrian sun god.[291] He appears in nine theophoric names known from Ugaritic texts[96] and in Hurrian offering lists.[254]
Šuwala ṯwl[272] Šuwala was a Hurrian goddess associated with the underworld.[292] She is attested in a document from Ugarit alongside Nupatik and Kumarbi.[292] She was also worshiped in nearby Emar alongside Ugur.[292]
Teshub tṯb[293] Teshub was a weather god, as well as the head of the Hurrian pantheon.[294] He was worshiped in Ugarit both as "Teshub" (tṯb) and "Teshub of Halab" (tṯb ḫlbġ).[295] He appears in a total of seventy theophoric names known from Ugaritic documents, though seven of them belong to people from outside the city.[96]

Demons edit

Name Alphabetic writing Details
Arsh ‘arš[296] Arsh was a sea monster.[297] It has been suggested that he was among the allies of Yam.[297]
Atik ‘tk[298] Atik was a monster addressed as the "calf of El" or perhaps "divine calf."[299]
Ḏabību ḏbb[300] Ḏabību, "spark"[301] or "flame," was a female demonic being described as a daughter of El.[300] She is listed in an enumeration of vanquished enemies of Anat.[300] It has been pointed out that referring to a demon as a daughter of a major deity has a parallel in Mot's epithet "the son of El" and in the Mesopotamian tradition of referring to Lamashtu as a daughter of Anu (Akkadian: mārat Anim).[302]
Habayu ḥby[236] Habayu is a figure known from a myth about El (KTU 1.114), described in it as "lord of horns and a tail" (b‘l qrnm wḏnb).[236] He apparently smears El with excrements when the latter is intoxicated.[236] It is generally accepted that he was a demonic being.[303] However, Mark Smith suggested that he might be a form of Resheph,[236] while Scott B. Noegel tries to interpret the name as an epithet of El[304] because according to him a demon associated with inebriation would be unparalleled in the Ancient Near East.[305] He additionally proposes the name was derived from the root ḥbb, which is considered an onomatopoeic representation of murmuring.[306]
Illatāma Ḫāniqtāma ‘iltm ḫnqtm[258] Illatāma Ḫāniqtāma, "the two strangling goddesses," were figures of uncertain nature possibly regarded as responsible for death in infancy.[85] Despite their nature, they do appear in offering lists.[215]
Ishatu 'išt[307] The name Ishatu means "fire."[307] She was apparently regarded as a canine demonic being.[308] Since she is addressed as the "dog of El" or "bitch of El," it is assumed that she represented a similar concept as the dogs of Marduk mentioned in the Mesopotamian god list An = Anum.[309] Connections with the Eblaite deity dì-sa-tù, the deification of fire, and with Mesopotamian demon Lamashtu, whose appearance could be described as dog-like, have also been proposed.[308]
Lotan ltn[310] Lotan was a mythical serpent associated with Yam.[311] He was described as seven-headed.[311] Seven-headed mythical snakes are known from Mesopotamian texts as well.[312]

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  227. ^ Bordreuil & Pardee 2009, p. 324.
  228. ^ a b c d Schwemer 2008, p. 11.
  229. ^ Pardee 2002, p. 151.
  230. ^ Rahmouni 2008, p. 81.
  231. ^ a b Rahmouni 2008, p. 82.
  232. ^ Rahmouni 2008, pp. 81–82.
  233. ^ Wiggins 2003, p. 88.
  234. ^ Wiggins 2003, p. 93.
  235. ^ Bordreuil & Pardee 2009, p. 351.
  236. ^ a b c d e f Smith 2014, p. 50.
  237. ^ Pardee 2000, p. 323.
  238. ^ Seidl & Krebernik 2013, p. 324.
  239. ^ Pardee 2002, p. 19.
  240. ^ Krebernik 2013, p. 285.
  241. ^ a b Krebernik 1998, p. 442.
  242. ^ Bordreuil & Pardee 2009, p. 301.
  243. ^ a b c d Rahmouni 2008, p. 239.
  244. ^ a b c d Niehr 2016, p. 143.
  245. ^ Rahmouni 2008, pp. 313–314.
  246. ^ Niehr 2016, pp. 143–144.
  247. ^ a b Wiggins 1998, p. 765.
  248. ^ a b Theuer 2000, p. 177.
  249. ^ Theuer 2000, pp. 177–178.
  250. ^ Bordreuil & Pardee 2009, p. 337.
  251. ^ Lambert 1980, p. 335.
  252. ^ a b c d e f del Olmo Lete 1999, p. 325.
  253. ^ Archi 1997, p. 417.
  254. ^ a b c d e f g Pardee 2002, p. 95.
  255. ^ Archi 2013a, p. 4.
  256. ^ a b Archi 2013, p. 15.
  257. ^ a b c d Archi 1997, p. 416.
  258. ^ a b Pardee 2002, p. 21.
  259. ^ a b Wilhelm 2013, p. 417.
  260. ^ a b c d del Olmo Lete 1999, p. 324.
  261. ^ a b Otten 1980, p. 23.
  262. ^ Archi 2013, p. 7.
  263. ^ Archi 2013, p. 6.
  264. ^ a b van Soldt 2016, p. 99.
  265. ^ Archi 2013, p. 19.
  266. ^ Archi 2013a, p. 13.
  267. ^ a b Rahmouni 2008, p. XXIII.
  268. ^ Feliu 2003, p. 55.
  269. ^ Smith 2014, p. 75.
  270. ^ a b Tugendhaft 2011, p. 712.
  271. ^ Tugendhaft 2011, pp. 711–712.
  272. ^ a b Schwemer 2001, p. 410.
  273. ^ Archi 2013, p. 1.
  274. ^ a b c Archi 2013, p. 8.
  275. ^ Archi 2013, p. 11.
  276. ^ Krebernik 2013, p. 201.
  277. ^ Pardee 2002, p. 98.
  278. ^ van Soldt 2016, p. 14.
  279. ^ a b c Taracha 2005, p. 570.
  280. ^ Beckman 1999, p. 27.
  281. ^ Beckman 1999, p. 28.
  282. ^ Pardee 1989, p. 422.
  283. ^ Trémouille 2011, p. 80.
  284. ^ van Soldt 2016, p. 106.
  285. ^ van Soldt 2016, p. 103.
  286. ^ Trémouille 2011, p. 82.
  287. ^ Trémouille 2011, p. 81.
  288. ^ Archi 2013, p. 12.
  289. ^ Smith 2014, pp. 76–77.
  290. ^ Smith 2014, p. 77.
  291. ^ Archi 2013, pp. 7–8.
  292. ^ a b c Trémouille 2013, p. 374.
  293. ^ Schwemer 2001, p. 84.
  294. ^ Schwemer 2008, p. 3.
  295. ^ Válek 2021, p. 52.
  296. ^ Rahmouni 2008, p. 215.
  297. ^ a b Rahmouni 2008, p. 216.
  298. ^ Rahmouni 2008, p. 257.
  299. ^ Rahmouni 2008, p. 256.
  300. ^ a b c Rahmouni 2008, p. 118.
  301. ^ Bordreuil & Pardee 2009, p. 334.
  302. ^ Rahmouni 2008, p. 119.
  303. ^ Noegel 2007, p. 537.
  304. ^ Noegel 2007, p. 541.
  305. ^ Noegel 2007, pp. 537–538.
  306. ^ Noegel 2007, p. 539.
  307. ^ a b Rahmouni 2008, p. 199.
  308. ^ a b Rahmouni 2008, p. 200.
  309. ^ Rahmouni 2008, pp. 199–200.
  310. ^ Rahmouni 2008, p. 142.
  311. ^ a b Rahmouni 2008, p. 301.
  312. ^ Rahmouni 2008, pp. 303–304.

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list, ugaritic, deities, ugaritic, pantheon, included, deities, local, origin, many, whom, also, known, from, eblaite, sources, from, third, millennium, amorite, ones, from, early, second, millennium, well, hurrian, mesopotamian, ones, ugaritic, pantheon, cons. The Ugaritic pantheon included deities of local origin many of whom are also known from Eblaite sources from the third millennium BCE or Amorite ones from the early second millennium BCE as well as Hurrian and Mesopotamian ones 2 The Ugaritic pantheon is considered better documented than other aspects of Ugaritic religion such as the life of the clergy or the social context of various offerings 3 Over two hundred names of deities are known from Ugaritic texts though it has been argued the number of these who were an object of active worship was lower 4 Many of the names are binomial and as such may refer either to a single deity and their epithet to two deities syncretized into one or to a closely associated pair 5 The stela known as Baal with Thunderbolt a well known depiction of one of the main gods of Ugarit 1 The presence of Hurrian deities in the pantheon is considered one of the main differences between the religion of the inhabitants of Ugarit and those known from other areas inhabited by speakers of Northwest Semitic languages for example Canaan 6 understood by researchers of Ancient Near Eastern religions as the area between Byblos and Gaza 7 It has been suggested that it is not possible to divide the gods worshiped into this city into separate Ugaritic and Hurrian pantheons 8 The iconography of most Ugaritic deities is presently unknown due to lack of inscriptions identifying their depictions 9 Contents 1 Major deities 2 Minor deities 3 Hurrian deities 4 Demons 5 References 5 1 BibliographyMajor deities editName Alphabetic writing DetailsBaal Hadad 10 b l 11 hd d 12 The name Baal lord and its cognates such as Akkadian belu designated various deities in different time periods and locations in the Ancient Near East 13 The Ugaritic Baal was a weather god 13 He was portrayed as an active deity acting as the king of the gods though it has been argued his position was subordinate to that of the inactive El 14 At the same time he was the most popular deity invoked in theophoric names which might indicate that he was understood as the main deity of the city 15 It has been noted that it is not impossible that both gods were viewed as heads of the pantheon each with different functions 14 Baal most likely developed as an epithet of a form of the weather god Hadad which became his primary name on the Mediterranean coast in the middle of the second millennium BCE 16 The original name Haddu Hadad remained in use but was secondary and functioned as if it were an epithet 10 In contrast while Baal functioned as an epithet of the weather god as far east as Emar it never became his main name in inland Syria 10 In the Ugaritic texts Baal is second only to El when it comes to the number of epithets applied to him with as many as fourteen individual ones attested 17 The most frequent is the mighty one al iyn 18 Only one epithet the rider of the clouds rkb rpt is related to his role as a weather deity 19 Multiple hypostases of Baal were worshiped in Ugarit according to ritual texts including Baal of Aleppo corresponding to the weather god of that city 20 However Baal of Saphon the Ugaritic name of Jebel al Aqra 10 was most likely understood as the primary manifestation 21 A series of Ugaritic myths known as the Baal Cycle describes Baal s struggle to attain kingship among the gods and his battles against various rivals especially the sea god Yam 22 Baal does not challenge El directly in any myths though it has been argued that tensions between them are implicit due to Baal s opponents owing their positions to El 23 Baal most likely had no permanent spouse though it has been argued that he was associated with both Anat and Ashtart in some capacity 24 The use of the name Baal to designate a weather god is also attested in Phoenician texts postdating the destruction of Ugarit 25 El il 26 El was the head of the Ugaritic pantheon 27 He was regarded as a creator deity 28 and was addressed as the father of the other gods and of mankind 29 He was also the king mlk of the gods 30 His dwelling is described as the source of the rivers in the midst of the confluence of the two deeps 31 El also appears in the Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit 32 He continued to be venerated in the first millennium BCE and is mentioned in many other sources for example in the Phoenician Azatiwada inscription Karatepe bilingual and in Aramaic texts from Palmyra 33 However he is absent from the pantheons of Ebla and Akkad from the third millennium BCE 34 The Akkadian cognate of his name ilu has the same meaning god but did not designate a specific deity 35 In Ebla the word il was used in theophoric names as a stand in for the names of individual deities 36 Alfonso Archi proposes that El only developed in the second millennium BCE among speakers of West Semitic languages 34 under the influence of Mesopotamian and Hurrian beliefs about successive generations of ancestral deities 37 Anat nt 38 Anat was a war goddess 39 She shared this domain with other deities 39 Her warlike character has been described as an inversion of gender norms which applied to mortal women 40 Dennis Pardee informally characterizes her as a tomboy goddess 41 In myths she is the main ally of Baal 41 She was believed to reside on the mountain Inbubu inbb 42 whose location is unknown though references to Anat of Saphon are known too 41 Anat s name is often assumed to be a cognate of the Arabic word anwat force 38 Wilfred G Lambert instead proposed that it was derived from Ḫanat a goddess worshiped by Ḫana a nomadic Amorite group known from the texts from Mari 43 She could be described as winged 39 and this trait is often used to identify possible depictions of her 44 Anat also appears in the Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit possibly because she had no close counterpart among the Hurrian deities 32 Ashtart ṯtrt 45 Ashtart s name was the western cognate of Mesopotamian Ishtar 46 The earliest attestations of this goddess go back to the third millennium BCE when she was worshiped in Ebla under the name Asdar 47 In some cities for example Mari which is designated as her cult center in Ugaritic texts 48 the names Ashtart and Ishtar could be treated as interchangeable 49 It has been argued that she was characterized by pugnacity 50 She was closely associated with hunting 50 Additionally like Anat she was regarded as a warrior goddess 51 which is considered an inversion of gender norms which applied to mortal women 52 While the evidence is not entirely conclusive it is assumed that Ashtart was one of the higher ranked goddesses in the pantheon of Ugarit 53 She does not play a larger role in Ugaritic myths on her 45 An exception is the text The Hunt of the Goddess in which she is the central character 54 Ashtart s association with Baal and Anat is well attested 45 Two passages refer to her as Ashtart of the name of Baal while a text from outside Ugarit refers to her as face of Baal 55 In a single ritual text Ashtart and Anat appear as a single entry with the binomial name Anat wa Ashtart 41 It is agreed that the worship of Ashtart was of some importance to the royal family of Ugarit 56 especially when it comes to her hypostasis Ashtart Sadi Ashtart of the steppe 48 It is also often assumed that she was an astral deity representing the evening star but there is no direct evidence for this in any Bronze Age texts written in any Western Semitic language 57 Athirat Elat 58 aṯrt 59 ilt 58 Athirat was the highest ranked goddess in the Ugaritic pantheon 60 She was regarded as the spouse of El 61 and it has been proposed she could be referred to as Elat though this name might also be a generic word goddess 58 The Ugaritic texts are the only known source providing detailed information about her as a mythical figure 62 She was addressed as Lady Athirat of the Sea 63 and creatress of the gods 61 No depictions of her are known though based on textual sources it is assumed that she would be portrayed as a senior seated lady dressed in a long robe blessing the gods and people and at least one such a figure of an Ugaritic goddess is known 64 Information about Athirat from outside Ugarit is scarce 65 A goddess of Amorite origin with an etymologically related name Ashratum was worshiped in Mesopotamia but her character and position in the pantheon were not similar 66 Another possibly related goddess was worshiped in Qataban part of modern Yemen 65 The similar biblical term asherah refers primarily to an object but most likely also functioned as the name of a deity 67 Kothar wa Khasis Hayyanu 68 kṯr w ḫss 69 hyy 68 Kothar wa Khasis was a craftsman god 68 His name can be translated as skilled and intelligent 69 His alternate name Hayyanu which occurs in parallel with his regular name might be derived from the Hurrian form of the name of the god Ea and is not attested as a common noun in Ugaritic texts 68 In myths his residences are Caphtor Crete and Memphis 70 In the Baal Cycle he creates the weapons Baal uses in his battle against Yam 71 and later builds his palace 72 In the Epic of Aqhat he is the creator of the bow of the eponymous hero 73 Kotharat kṯrt 74 Kotharat were a group of seven goddesses regarded as divine midwives 69 Their collective name is derived from the root kṯr wise or cunning same as the name of Kothar 75 and can be translated as the skilled 76 It is possible that they also had individual names with the six proposed ones including tlḫhw mlghy bq t possibly she who forces open the womb 77 tq t prbḫt and dmqt possibly the good one 78 though there is no agreement regarding this and it has been suggested some of the words which can be interpreted this way are only common nouns 79 They were originally worshiped in the middle Euphrates area and in Mari as attested in texts from the early second millennium BCE 75 They are also attested in texts from Emar under the name Ilu kasarati DINGIRMEŜ ka sa ra ti 80 Nikkal wa Ib nkl w ib 81 Nikkal a derivative of Mesopotamian Ningal appears in both Ugaritic and Hurrian sources from Ugarit 82 She was considered one of the principal goddesses of Ugarit comparable in rank to Shapash or Anat 83 She was the wife of the moon god Yarikh similar to how her Mesopotamian forerunner was married to Nanna 84 Nikkal could also be called Nikkal wa Ib with the second element often translated as fruit 84 Dennis Pardee suggests that Ib Ibbu was originally a separate deity who came to be identified with Nikkal 85 but Steve A Wiggins instead argues that it is likely this title was derived from an analogous epithet of Nanna 84 She is attested in five theophoric names from Ugarit some of which are etymologically Hurrian 86 Ugarit is the only Syrian city in which the worship of Nikkal is directly attested in the second millennium BCE though Ugaritic documents indicate that she was also worshiped in two towns close to Carchemish 82 Resheph Irsappa 87 rsp 74 ersp 87 Resheph was a god associated with war plague the underworld and the planet Mars 88 His name was derived from the root rsp and as such is a cognate of an element of Amorite personal names meaning to flame 89 However the relation between the meaning of the name and the nature of the god is not entirely clear 89 He plays no major role in any Ugaritic myths but nonetheless appears in many other types of texts 90 He is one of the deities most commonly invoked in Ugaritic theophoric names 91 Irsappa the Hurrian form of his name is also attested in them 91 Hurrians regarded him as a god of the marketplace 87 In the first millennium BCE he was worshiped by Phoenicians in Sidon and was also introduced by them to Kition on Cyprus 89 Shapash sps 92 Shapash was the Ugaritic sun goddess 93 Her name is a cognate of that of the Mesopotamian sun god Shamash 79 She was called the lamp of the gods nrt ilm 94 95 She appears in sixty six known theophoric names more than any other goddess 96 Only El Baal Resheph and the Hurrian god Teshub appear in a greater number of names 96 In myths and incantations she acts as a messenger and summons other gods from distant locations 97 As an extension of this role she could also be described as acting as a guide in the underworld 98 Known texts characterize her as a compassionate deity 99 She was regarded as a daughter of El 97 and acted as his messenger 100 While a figure named pḥlt who might be either a deity a human or a horse addresses her as mother in an incantation it is most likely only a honorific in this case and not a genealogical statement 101 In the Baal cycle she informs Attar that El has selected Yam for kingship 102 and later announces to Mot that his struggle against Baal is futile because the latter gained El s support 103 In both cases due to her authority instructions she gives are obeyed without question 104 For uncertain reason this cycle of myths ends with a hymn dedicated to her 104 Yarikh yrḫ 105 Yarikh was the Ugaritic moon god 106 His name means moon and has cognates in many other Semitic languages such as Akkadian warḫum month Amorite Yeraḫ name of a lunar deity common in theophoric names 107 and Hebrew yariḫ moon and yarḫ month 108 One of the Ugaritic texts identifies the cult center of Yarikh as the settlement lrgt 109 possibly to be identified with Larugadu the cult center of Hadabal known from Eblaite texts 110 One of the known Ugaritic myths describes the circumstances of his marriage to Nikkal 111 Minor deities editName Alphabetic writing DetailsArsay arṣy 112 Arsay was one of the goddesses regarded as daughters of Baal 113 Her name is assumed to mean earthy 114 She is addressed as the daughter of y bdr a word of unknown meaning 115 In god lists offering lists 116 and most passages from the Baal Cycle she and her siblings do not occur together 117 One of the god lists identifies her with Allatum Allani an underworld goddess 115 and it has been proposed her own character was similar 117 However due to scarcity of references the exact rationale behind this association remains unknown 117 Arṣu wa Samuma arṣ w smm 118 The double deity Arsu wa Shamuma Earth and Heaven appears only in ritual texts 41 The ordering of earth before heaven reflects a Hurrian tradition 2 Attar ṯtr 119 Attar s name is a cognate of Ashtart s but they were not associated with each other 49 He was regarded as a war god 2 It has also been proposed that he was responsible for irrigation 48 His epithet rẓ is conventionally translated as the terrible often pejoratively or even as the tyrant but according to Aicha Rahmouni it might mean the mighty with no pejorative undertones 120 In the Baal cycle Athirat proclaims Attar the new king of the gods in place of the deceased Baal 121 but he turns out to be incapable of ruling and eventually the resurrected weather god returns to his old position 122 Ba alat Bahatima b lt bhtm 123 Ba alat Bahatima the lady of the houses or possibly lady of the palace 124 might have been the goddess responsible for the area inhabited by the royal family 20 It is not certain if she was an epithet of another goddess Anat and Athirat have been proposed or an independent deity 20 It is possible that she corresponded to Mesopotamian Belet Ekallim Ninegal 123 The Hurrian form of Ninegal Pendigalli was also worshiped in Ugarit 125 Dadmis Tadmis 126 ddms 127 The goddess Dadmis is attested in both Ugaritic 128 and Hurrian ritual texts 129 Dennis Pardee assumes that she was a healing deity 130 In god lists she appears in the immediate proximity of Resheph 127 and Manfred Krebernik tentatively proposes she was an underworld deity and his spouse 126 Her origin remains uncertain 130 One proposal derives her name from the Akkadian word dadmu dwellings 131 A cognate of this term Dadmum was used by Amorites to refer to the area around Aleppo in the Old Babylonian period and possibly later in Ugarit as well as evidenced by the term ddm which might have referred to an inhabitant of this area 131 It has also been proposed that Dadmis is related to the Mesopotamian goddess Tadmustum who was associated with the underworld and deities such as Nergal Subula and Laṣ 127 However the Ugaritic edition of the Weidner god list equates her with Shuzianna 126 Dagan dgn 132 Dagan was the head of the pantheon of the middle Euphrates area 133 but he does not appear frequently in the Ugaritic literary texts 134 He is directly referred to as Baal s father in twelve passages 135 While Baal was also references as a son of El Aicha Rahmouni proposes that these statements are not necessarily contradictory as it possible that El was understood as the creator of all deities and thus their metaphorical father while Dagan was regarded as Baal s biological father 136 He is relatively well represented in offering lists but there is no indication that he was regarded as a major deity 137 In incantations he appears alongside Baal 138 Texts from Ugarit including the myth Marriage of Nikkal and Yarikh associate him with Tuttul 139 which was already recognized as his cult center in Ebla in the third millennium BCE 130 Dimgay dmgy 140 Dimgay was a minor goddess regarded as the handmaiden of Athirat 140 The etymology of her name is uncertain 140 In a single passage she occurs in parallel with Talish the handmaiden of Yarikh and it is sometimes proposed they were a single deity with a binomial name dmg w tls Dimgay wa Talish 141 Didanu ddn 142 Didanu appears in the Epic of Kirta as the deified ancestor of the eponymous king 130 He most likely was also regarded as the divine ancestor of the Ugaritic kings 130 Gaṯaru gṯr 143 Gaṯaru the powerful 144 was a god associated with the underworld 145 Dennis Pardee proposes that additionally on comparative grounds it can be assumed he was associated with vegetation and warfare 146 A cognate of his name functioned as an epithet of Anat 147 He was also worshiped in Emar and Mari and in Mesopotamia where came to be associated with Lugalirra 145 Gupan wa Ugar gpn w ugr 143 Gupan and Ugar who typically occur together as Gupan wa Ugar were messenger of Baal 148 Their names mean vine and field respectively 143 In the Baal Cycle they carry messages between the eponymous protagonist and other deities such as Anat or Mot 149 Guruma wa Tahamatu grm w thmt 150 Guruma wa Tahamatu mountains and waters of the abyss 150 represented mountains and freshwater springs located in the proximity of Ugarit 151 The name is grammatically plural in Ugaritic 151 Hargub hrgb 152 It is assumed Hargub was a minor god whose form was regarded as bird like 152 The meaning of his name is unknown though it has been proposed it was derived from the name of a type of large bird 153 In a single passage he is addressed as the father of raptors ab nsrm nsrm being a generic word for a bird of prey 152 A similar epithet lord of the eagles Eblaite BE Amusen Amusen is known from the Ebla texts where it refers to Adarwan regarded as either a deity 152 or as a numen of the god Ammarik 154 Horon ḥrn 155 Horon was a god associated with magic and exorcisms 85 He is primarily known from incantations 156 It has been argued that he was associated with the underworld 157 However according to Manfred Krebernik there is no direct evidence supporting this view 158 In the Epic of Kirta he is invoked by the eponymous king in a curse 159 Hulelu 160 hll 161 Hll was the father of the Kotharat 161 The vocalization of his name is not certain though Hulelu has been proposed based on the presence of a deity bearing this name in the pantheon of Emar 160 The origin of the latter is not known 162 A connection with the Arabic word hilalun crescent moon has been proposed and on this basis he is often considered an astral deity perhaps a divine representation of the lunar crescent 160 An alternative proposal connects Hll with Mesopotamian Enlil 160 His epithet b l gml is usually translated as lord of the crescent moon or lord of the sickle but Aicha Rahmouni proposes possessor of the gamlu staff 161 She points out that while the gml gamlu is well attested as a divine attribute it was most likely a curved staff and not a sickle or sickle like sword 163 Ḫiriḫibi ḫrḫb 164 Ḫiriḫibi is only attested in the myth Marriage of Nikkal and Yarikh 165 He was most likely a deity of Hurrian origin 165 The translation he of the mountain Ḫiriḫ i has been proposed for his name 164 The widely accepted vocalization gives the name the Hurrian suffix bi attested in the names of Hurrian deities such as Kumarbi and Nabarbi 164 He was regarded as a divine marriage broker 166 He is also addressed as the king of summer or divine patron of summer mlk qẓ 167 It is possible that he was Nikkal s father though the available evidence supporting this view is indirect 165 Ilib il ib 168 Ilib appears before El Dagan and Baal in Ugaritic offering lists 34 It is uncertain if he should be interpreted as a divine ancestor god the father or as a divine representation of the concept of a clan god 34 Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit attest the existence of a Hurrian translation of the name of this deity eni ettanni god father who was a generic ancestor of the gods 34 Ilish ils 169 Ilish was a minor god regarded as the herald of the house of Baal 169 He was believed to have multiple wives referred to as the herald goddesses ngrt ilht 169 The etymology of his name is unknown and its vocalization remains uncertain due to only relying on a similar Akkadian personal name which might be an etymologically unrelated hypocoristic 170 Kinnaru knr 171 Kinnaru was the deification of the lyre 171 The name was identical with the ordinary word designating this instrument 171 Maḏḏara mḏr 172 Maḏḏara is attested in offering lists but the nature and origin of this deity are unknown 171 Based on the syllabic writing of the name dma za ra 172 a connection with the Hurrian word maziri help has been tentatively suggested though the similarity might be a coincidence 173 Messengers of Yam mlak ym 174 In the Baal Cycle two unnamed deities serve as messengers of Yam 174 They are also addressed as the embassy of judge Nahar t dt ṯpṭ nhr 174 A single reference to an unidentified deity addressed as servant of Yam or youth of Yam gml ym is also known 175 from the Epic of Kirta 176 Manfred Krebernik suggests it might be the name of a sea monster or a poetic way to refer to a wave 176 Mesaru msr 177 Mesaru rectitude or uprightness is attested in a single text alongside Ṣidqu 70 It is presumed he was a divine judge 177 Milku mlk 178 Milku was a god associated with the underworld 179 possibly regarded as its ruler 70 His name is a cognate of the word malku king 70 A Hurrian form Milkunni is also attested 180 He could be addressed as the eternal king mlk lm 181 Epithets containing the word king do not necessarily indicate the deity was regarded as high ranked 182 Mot mt 183 Mot was the god 184 or personification of death 185 He does not appear in any ritual texts only in myths 186 He has also been compared to Namtar 187 At the same time Mot s mythical role as an opponent of Baal and Anat is unique to Ugaritic mythology and has no parallel in traditions about the other weather gods of the Ancient Near East such as Teshub 23 Pidar pdr 188 Pidar was a god associated with Baal 188 It has been proposed that his name was derived from the Hurrian word pedari bull 188 A proposal now considered less likely considers it identical with the Ugarit word pdr city 188 It might also be etymologically related to Pidray s 188 He is attested in theophoric names offering lists and literary texts 188 Pidray pdry 189 Pidray was one of the goddesses considered to be daughters of Baal as attested in the Baal Cycle and in Marriage of Nikkal and Yarikh 113 She appears in known texts more frequently than the other goddesses belonging to this category 190 The meaning of her name is unknown 191 It has been suggested that it might mean fatty 186 due to its similarity to the rarely used Hebrew word peder renal fat but this proposal is not universally accepted 190 She was addressed as the daughter of light 72 While it is sometimes proposed that her epithet might hint at a connection with lightning neither the Ugaritic word nor its Akkadian Arabic and Hebrew cognates are used to specifically refer to this phenomenon making this proposal implausible 192 There is also no direct evidence that she was regarded as a weather goddess 193 She was worshiped in the royal palace 116 A festival focused on her is also attested 186 Two of the texts which mention her appear to include Hurrian elements 113 A god list equates her with Hebat the wife of the Hurrian weather god Teshub but according to Daniel Schwemer this is unlikely to be an indication that she was viewed as Baal s wife 194 Only a single reference to Pidray from outside Ugarit is known an Aramaic papyrus from Egypt from a later period mentions Pidray of Raphia next to Baal of Saphon 195 Qudsu wa Amrur qds w amrr 196 Qudsu wa Amrur was a minor deity considered to be Athirat s messenger as attested in the Baal Cycle 41 He is also addressed as her fisherman possibly a referecent to her well attested connection with the sea 197 Terms referring to fishermen are also attested as epithets of Mesopotamian deities 198 Additionally some temples in that area employed fishermen to provide them with fish which could be offered to the gods 198 Qudshu qds 199 There is no agreement in scholarship over whether qds holy 200 represents a goddess analogous to Egyptian Qetesh or if this word should merely be considered an epithet 199 The notion that this term refers to a sacred prostitute is considered discredited 201 No direct references to a goddess named qds are actually present in Ugaritic texts and the existence of this goddess is presumed only based on a distinct iconographic type 202 The Qudshu figure is particularly common on metal pendants from Ugarit 203 As an epithet qds is used to describe the god El in three known passages 204 Rahmay rḥmy 205 Rahmay was a goddess associated with Athirat 206 It is assumed that her name is derived from the word raḥmu womb 207 While it has been proposed in the past that she was not a separate goddess but a byname of Athirat or an epithet of Anat neither assumption finds support in known Ugaritic texts 208 Samal ṣml 209 It is assumed Samal was a minor goddess whose form was considered to be bird like 209 The etymology of her name is unknown and Aicha Rahmouni notes that most proposals are implausible and have an unmistakable air of desperation 210 In a single passage she is addressed as the mother of raptors um nsrm 209 nsrm being a generic word for a bird of prey 152 Shahar sḥr 211 Shahar s name means dawn 212 He does not appear in any Ugaritic texts on his own only alongside Shalim 212 Shalim slm 128 Shalim s name means dusk 212 He is attested on his own in offering lists but Shahar only appears as a part of the binomial name Shahar wa Shalim 212 Shalim was most likely regarded as the youngest son of El and his mother was not Athirat 212 Shatiqatu s tqt 213 Shatiqatu was a mythical female exorcist 213 and healer 214 most commonly identified in modern scholarship as a goddess 215 However she is absent from known offering lists and god lists 215 On this basis as an alternative to the most common interpretation it has been proposed that she might have been an apkallu like figure or even a human 216 She appears in the Epic of Kirta where she heals the eponymous ruler by expelling the disease or demon from him with a staff 217 She is described as a creation of El 218 Her name is derived from the root tq to pass or to move 219 Sumuqan 220 ṯmq 220 The god ṯmq occurs in theophoric names and in a literary passage referring to him as the warrior of Baal mhr b l 220 and warrior of Anat mhr nt 221 It has been suggested that he should be identified as the Mesopotamian god Sumuqan who was associated with wild animals but could also be referred to as a warrior Akkadian qarradu 220 dSu ra su gu WA not available 222 The deity dSu ra su gu WA reading of the final sign uncertain is only known from a single offering list written in the syllabic cuneiform script 222 The name might have Hurrian origin 222 Saggar wa Iṯum sgr 110 w iṯm 223 Saggar was the divine representation of the Sinjar Mountains and likely additionally also a lunar deity 224 He was already worshiped in Ebla in the third millennium BCE 225 He also belonged to the pantheons of Mari Kurda Tell Leilan and Emar 225 In Ugarit he was paired with the deity Iṯum and in an offering list they appear together as Saggar wa Iṯum 212 Most likely they were usually treated as separate deities and only appear as a pair due to a shared function 226 It has been suggested that they were responsible for mixed herds of sheep and goats 211 It has also been proposed that Iṯum corresponded to Mesopotamian Ishum 223 Samnu smn 227 The name of the deity Samnu is identical with a word referring to oil most likely olive oil 212 Sarassiya ṯrṯy 228 The god Sarassiya is only attested in offering lists where he follows Baal of Saphon and Baal of Aleppo 228 Daniel Schwemer proposes that his name was derived from the Hurrian word sarasse kingship and that he was a divine personification of this concept 228 The term sarassiya for kingship is well attested as a description of offerings in Hurro Hittite texts 228 Ṣidqu ṣdq 229 Ṣidqu righteousness is only attested in a single text in which he appears alongside Mesaru 93 Talish tls 141 Talish was a goddess regarded as the handmaiden of Yarikh 230 However the moon god does not appear in the preserved sections of the text addressing her as such 231 Multiple etymologies for the name have been proposed including derivation from a verb meaning to knead and from a word possibly meaning tardy or delay 232 It is also possible that it did not originate in any Semitic language as a similar personal name Tu li sa is known from Akkadian texts not only from Ugarit but also Nuzi 231 In a single passage she occurs in parallel with Dimgay the handmaiden of Athirat and it is sometimes proposed they were the same deity whose name was in reality binomial dmg w tls Dimgay wa Talish 141 Tallay ṭly 189 Tallay s name can be translated as dewy and it is possible she was a weather deity 113 most likely connected with dew and light rain 190 She was addressed as daughter of drizzle 113 In a passage from the Baal Cycle she is listed among Baal s daughters alongside Arsay and Pidray 113 However the three of them do not occur together otherwise though Tallay and Pidray alone are attested as a pair in multiple passages from the same work 233 Only one possible reference to Tallay from outside the Baal Cycle has been identified 234 Ṯukamuna wa Sunama ṯkmn w snm 235 Ṯukamuna wa Sunama Thukamuna and Shunama were two gods who were sons of El 236 and Athirat possibly regarded as the youngest among their children 105 In a myth preserved on the tablet KTU 1 114 the two of them help El go back home after he gets drunk during a feast 236 They are also mentioned in offering lists 237 It has been proposed that they were related to the Kassite deities Shuqamuna and Shumaliya with the latter pair possibly derived from gods with linguistically Semitic rather than Kassite names but this proposal remains speculative 238 Tiraṯu trṯ 172 Tiraṯu young wine 239 was the god of wine 240 The name of the Mesopotamian goddess Siras is an Akkadian cognate of Ugaritic trṯ but she was associated with beer not wine 241 A further deity with an etymologically related name dzi la su is attested in an offering list from Ebla but according to Manfred Krebernik should be considered analogous to the Mesopotamian goddess 241 Another cognate of the name is the ordinary Hebrew noun tirōs 105 Uṯḫatu uṯḫt 242 Uṯḫatu was the deification of a ritual censer 105 Yam Nahar 243 ym 244 nhr 243 Yam was the god of the sea 243 He could also be addressed as Nahar river 243 It has been suggested that this name originally referred to a separate deity possibly associated with river ordeal like Mesopotamian Idlurugu 245 While he was actively worshiped his rank in the pantheon was low 244 He is nonetheless present in theophoric names from Ugarit 244 Non Ugaritic attestations of Yam come from Emar where he appears as one of the deities celebrated in the local festival zukru and Egypt literary texts 244 No direct reference to Yam is known from any later Phoenician texts though it has been suggested that Pontos known from the writings of Philo of Byblos might correspond to him 246 Yaparudmay ybrdmy 247 In the myth Marriage of Nikkal and Yarikh Yaparudmay is mentioned alongside Pidray as one of the goddesses Yarikh could marry instead of Nikkal 247 She is not otherwise attested in any Ugaritic texts 248 It has been suggested that she was a sister of Attar 249 Steve A Wiggins instead proposes that she was regarded as his daughter 165 Wilfred G E Watson interprets her as a daughter of Baal 97 Gabriele Theuer notes it is not impossible that she was not a separate goddess but rather an epithet of Pidray 248 Ẓiẓẓu wa Kamaṯu ẓẓ w kmṯ 250 Ẓiẓẓu wa Kamaṯu only appear as a pair 105 The meaning of Ẓiẓẓu s name and the character of this deity are not known 105 Kamaṯu is a cognate of the name of the god Chemosh worshiped in Moab in the first millennium BCE 171 According to Wilfred G Lambert it is uncertain if he corresponds to the god Kamis known from Eblaite texts and Kammus a name of Nergal known from Mesopotamian god lists 251 Hurrian deities editName Alphabetic writing DetailsAdamma adm 252 Adamma was originally a spouse of Resheph in the Eblaite pantheon but after the fall of Ebla she was incorporated into Hurrian religion 253 She was associated with Kubaba 41 They appear together in a Hurrian offering list from Ugarit 254 Allani aln 252 Allani was a Hurrian goddess regarded as the queen of the underworld 255 She is attested in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit where she appears alongside Ishara 254 Astabi Attapar astb 256 Astabi was originally worshiped in Ebla and other nearby settlements in the third millennium BCE 257 His original character is unknown but in later Hurrian sources he was regarded as a warrior god 257 While in Ugarit he appears in Hurrian offering lists 32 it is possible that he did not exclusively belong to the Hurrian milieu in this city 257 Alfonso Archi additionally assumes that the god Attapar or Attapal tṭpr tṭpl who formed a pair with Attar was the same deity as Astabi 257 but Dennis Pardee considers him to be a distinct form of Attar himself instead 48 Daqitu dqt 258 Daqitu also known as Takitu was a minor Hurrian goddess regarded as an attendant of Hebat 259 Based on the Ugaritic writing of her name dqt it has been proposed that it was derived from the root dqq small present in Semitic languages 259 She is attested in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit where she follows Hebat 254 Ea iy 260 The god Ea who originated in Mesopotamia is well attested in Ugaritic theophoric names 15 According to Dennis Pardee Ea in Ugarit he should be understood as the Hurrian form of this deity 146 Ebrimusa ebrmz 261 Ebrimusa was a god who belonged to the retinue of Hebat 261 His name can be translated as lord of justice 262 Hebat ḫbt 252 Hebat was the wife of Teshub the head of the Hurrian pantheon 263 She appears in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit 32 and in 15 theophoric names known from Ugaritic documents though one of them did not belong to an inhabitant of the city 264 Hutena and Hutellura ḫdn ḫdlr 265 Hutena and Hutellura were Hurrian goddesses of fate and divine midwives 266 They can appear both together and individually 85 They are attested in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit 254 Ishara usḫr y 267 Ishara was a Syrian goddess already worshiped in Ebla in the third millennium BCE 87 She was later incorporated into the Hurrian pantheon 87 She was associated with the underworld 105 and divination 268 In Ugarit she appears in both Ugaritic 128 and Hurrian documents 32 One of them mentions a king making a sacrifice to usḫr ḫlmẓ ḫlmẓ being often understood as an epithet meaning the serpent or the lizard 267 She also appears in association with Ashtart 269 Kiase kyḏ 270 Kiase was the Hurrian god representing the sea 270 He appears in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit 32 It has been pointed out that the perception of the sea in Ugaritic religion while dissimilar to Mesopotamian traditions is similar to that known from Hurrian sources 271 Kubaba kbb 252 Kubaba was a goddess of unknown origin first attested in sources pertaining to Carchemish from the early second millennium BCE 256 In Ugarit she appears in Hurrian offering lists 32 and in two theophoric names 264 Kumarbi kmrb 272 Kumarbi was the Hurrian father of gods 273 He appears in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit 32 It has been pointed out that even though god lists treat him and El as analogous to each other they received offerings separately 8 Kusuḫ kzg 260 Kusuḫ was the Hurrian moon god 274 In Hurrian texts from Ugarit he is addressed as the king of the oracular decisions 129 In one of the offering lists he appears together with Nikkal and Yarikh 32 Ninatta and Kulitta nnt klt 252 Ninatta and Kulitta were the handmaidens of Sauska 186 Both of them are attested in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit 254 Nupatik nbdg 275 Nupatik was a commonly worshiped Hurrian god 274 but his functions remain unclear 186 He most likely appears as a psychopomp in one of the Hurrian texts from Ugarit 276 He is also attested in offering lists 277 and in a single theophoric name 278 Pendigalli pdgl 125 Pendigalli Pentikalli was most likely the Hurrian form of Mesopotamian Belet Ekallim Ninegal 125 She is attested in Ugarit in a Hurrian theophoric name annpdgl possibly Annani Pendigalli 125 Pinikir prgl disputed 279 Pinikir was an astral goddess 280 of Elamite origin 279 who was incorporated into the Hurrian pantheon in the west 274 Gary Beckman suggests that she appears in a single text from Ugarit where her name is written as prgl 281 but this attestation is regarded as uncertain by Piotr Taracha 279 Pisaisapḫi pḏḏpḫ 252 Pisaisapḫi was a god representing the mountain Pisaisa most likely located close to the Mediterranean coast 87 He is attested in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit 254 Sarruma ṯrm 282 Sarruma was a god who most likely originated in the kingdom of Kizzuwatna 283 He appears relatively commonly in Ugaritic theophoric names 284 with as many as twenty eight known though three of them belonged to people from outside the city 285 In a single text from Ugarit he is referred to as the sukkallu messenger or attendant deity of Kumarbi 286 However elsewhere he was chiefly associated with Hebat and Teshub 287 Sauska ṯuṯk 260 Sauska was a Hurrian goddess of love and war regarded as similar to Mesopotamian Ishtar 288 In Ugarit she was associated with Ashtart and they appear together in the same ritual text 289 The goddess Ashtart ḫr possibly to be interpreted as Ashtart of Hurri might correspond to Sauska too 290 Simige ṯmg 260 Simige was the Hurrian sun god 291 He appears in nine theophoric names known from Ugaritic texts 96 and in Hurrian offering lists 254 Suwala ṯwl 272 Suwala was a Hurrian goddess associated with the underworld 292 She is attested in a document from Ugarit alongside Nupatik and Kumarbi 292 She was also worshiped in nearby Emar alongside Ugur 292 Teshub tṯb 293 Teshub was a weather god as well as the head of the Hurrian pantheon 294 He was worshiped in Ugarit both as Teshub tṯb and Teshub of Halab tṯb ḫlbġ 295 He appears in a total of seventy theophoric names known from Ugaritic documents though seven of them belong to people from outside the city 96 Demons editName Alphabetic writing DetailsArsh ars 296 Arsh was a sea monster 297 It has been suggested that he was among the allies of Yam 297 Atik tk 298 Atik was a monster addressed as the calf of El or perhaps divine calf 299 Ḏabibu ḏbb 300 Ḏabibu spark 301 or flame was a female demonic being described as a daughter of El 300 She is listed in an enumeration of vanquished enemies of Anat 300 It has been pointed out that referring to a demon as a daughter of a major deity has a parallel in Mot s epithet the son of El and in the Mesopotamian tradition of referring to Lamashtu as a daughter of Anu Akkadian marat Anim 302 Habayu ḥby 236 Habayu is a figure known from a myth about El KTU 1 114 described in it as lord of horns and a tail b l qrnm wḏnb 236 He apparently smears El with excrements when the latter is intoxicated 236 It is generally accepted that he was a demonic being 303 However Mark Smith suggested that he might be a form of Resheph 236 while Scott B Noegel tries to interpret the name as an epithet of El 304 because according to him a demon associated with inebriation would be unparalleled in the Ancient Near East 305 He additionally proposes the name was derived from the root ḥbb which is considered an onomatopoeic representation of murmuring 306 Illatama Ḫaniqtama iltm ḫnqtm 258 Illatama Ḫaniqtama the two strangling goddesses were figures of uncertain nature possibly regarded as responsible for death in infancy 85 Despite their nature they do appear in offering lists 215 Ishatu ist 307 The name Ishatu means fire 307 She was apparently regarded as a canine demonic being 308 Since she is addressed as the dog of El or bitch of El it is assumed that she represented a similar concept as the dogs of Marduk mentioned in the Mesopotamian god list An Anum 309 Connections with the Eblaite deity di sa tu the deification of fire and with Mesopotamian demon Lamashtu whose appearance could be described as dog like have also been proposed 308 Lotan ltn 310 Lotan was a mythical serpent associated with Yam 311 He was described as seven headed 311 Seven headed mythical snakes are known from Mesopotamian texts as well 312 References edit Cornelius 2008 p 10 a b c Haas 2015 p 557 Pardee 2000 p 322 Cornelius 2008 p 6 Cho 2013 pp 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