Atargatis

Mother goddess. Northern Syrian. She enjoyed major cults at Khirbet Tannur, where she is depicted as the vegetation goddess in nine separate variations, and at Khirbet Brak, where she is associated with dolphins. She often carries a cornucopia linking her with the goddess TYCHE (fortune) and may commonly be flanked by lions. She sometimes carries a rudder or wears the mural crown of a city guardian. There are hints of sky affinities in some depictions, with a sign of the zodiac or a nimbus-like veil.

Her earliest consort is DUSˇARA, but in later times she is linked with the Syrian storm god HADAD. At Dura and Hierapolis (Hera-Atargatis), she tended to overshadow Hadad. Atargatis is also a fish goddess depicted like a mermaid and in most of her cult centers she enjoyed a sacred lake stocked with fish. Statues of Hadad and Hera-Atargatis were carried in twice-yearly processions to the sea from Hierapolis, and by the third century BC her cult had reached Egypt. Greek writers of the Hellenic period describe her as a “radiate” goddess, which suggests some links with sun symbolism.

Also Allat.

 

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