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[[Image:Destruction of Leviathan.png|thumb|250px||The destruction of Leviathan by [[God]], thought by some scholars to parallel the defeat of Yam or Lotan by [[Baal]].]]
  
'''Yamm''', from the [[Canaanite language|Canaanite]] word ''Yam'', meaning "Sea," is one name of the [[Ugarit]]ic god of Rivers and Sea. Also titled ''Judge [[Nahar]]'' ("Judge River"), he is also one of the 'ilhm ''([[Elohim (gods)|Elohim]])'' or sons of [[El (god)|El]], the name given to the [[Levant]]ine [[Pantheon (gods)|pantheon]]. Others dispute the existence of the alternative names, claiming it is a mistranslation of a damaged tablet. Despite linguistic overlap, theologically this god is not a part of the later subregional monotheistic theology, but rather is part of a broader and archaic Levantine [[polytheism]].  
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'''Yam''' or '''Yamm''', from the ancient [[semitic language|Semitic]] word meaning "sea," is the name of the [[Canaanite]] god of rivers and the sea. Yam was also the deity of the primordial [[Chaos (mythology)|chaos]]. He represented the power of the tempestuous sea ''untamed and raging.'' Also called '''Nahar''' ("river") he additionally ruled floods and related disasters.
  
Yam is the deity of the primordial [[Chaos (mythology)|chaos]] and represents the power of the sea ''untamed and raging;'' he is seen as ruling tempests and the disasters they wreak. The gods cast out Yam from the heavenly mountain Sappan (modern [[Jebel Aqra]]; "Sappan" is [[cognate]] to [[Zephon (angel)|Tsephon]] ([[Tsion]]). The seven-headed [[dragon]] [[Lotan]] is associated closely with him and ''the [[Serpent (symbolism)|serpent]]'' is frequently used to describe him.
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In West Semitic [[mythology]], Yam was given kingship over the other gods by the chief god [[El]]. When Yam's rulership turned tyrannical and he possessed El's wife [[Asherah]], the storm deity [[Baal]] ([[Hadad]]) challenged and defeated Yam in a [[titan]]ic battle, ending with Yam cast down from the heavenly mountain [[Saphon]].
  
Of all the gods, despite being the champion of [[El]], Yam holds special hostility against [[Baal]] [[Hadad]], son of [[Dagon]]. Yam is a deity of the sea and his palace is in the [[Tartarus|abyss]] associated with the depths, or Biblical [[tehwom]], of the oceans. (This is not to be confused with the abode of [[Mot]], the ruler of the netherworlds.)  In [[Ugarit#Ugarit religion|Ugaritic]] texts, Yam's special enemy Hadad is also known as the "king of heaven" and the "first born son" of [[El (god)|El]], whom ancient Greeks identified with their god [[Kronos]], just as Baal was identified with [[Zeus]], Yam with [[Poseidon]] and Mot with [[Hades]]. Yam wished to become the Lord god in his place. In turns the two beings kill each other, yet Hadad is resurrected and Yam also returns. Some authors have suggested that these tales reflect the experience of seasonal cycles in the Levant.  
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The mythic sea [[dragon]] [[Lotan]], whom Baal also defeated, was closely associated with Yam and possibly an aspect of him. A similar sea-demon appears in the [[mythology]] of many cultures. The biblical monster [[Leviathan]] is seen as related to Lotan, and his dwelling, the sea, is called ''yam'' in the [[Hebrew Bible]].
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Yam's defeat by Baal parallels the [[Mesopotamia]]n legend of the storm god [[Marduk]]'s victory over the primordial sea goddess [[Tiamat]]. Numerous other parallel myths have been noted by mythologists and religion scholars, often interpreted as representing the triumph of heavenly order over primeval [[chaos]].
  
==Speculative similarities in other mythological traditions==
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==In the Epic of Ba'al ==
"Yam, Judge Nahar" also has similarities with Mesopotamian [[Tiamat]] and [[Abzu]] and the battle between Yam and Baal (the Storm God) resembles the battle in [[Hurrian]] and [[Hittite]] mythology between the sky God [[Teshub]] (or [[Tarhunt]]) with the serpent [[Illuyanka]]. In this respect the battle with Baal resembles the battle between Tiamat and [[Enlil]] (Sumerian = Lord of the Command) and Babylonian [[Marduk]]. In the case of Yam, however, there is no indication that he was slain, as it appears from the texts that he was put to sleep through the intervention of Baal's "sister" and wife, [[Anath]]<ref>Pritchard, James Bennett (Editor) (1969), "Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament (with Supplement)" (Princeton University Press)</ref>.
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[[Image:Baal thunderbolt Louvre AO15775.jpg|thumb|150px|left|Baal wields his thunderbolt]]
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| style="border-bottom: 2px solid #ccf"| <big>'''Ancient Southwest Asian deities'''</big>
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| '''Levantine deities'''
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[[Adonis]] | [[Anat]] | [[Asherah]] | [[Astarte]] | [[Atargatis]] |
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[[Baal|Ba'al]] | [[Berith (god)| Berith]] | [[Chemosh]] | [[Dagon]] |
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[[El]] | [[Elohim]] | [[Eshmun]] |
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[[Hadad]] | [[Kothar-wa-Khasis|Kothar]] | [[Moloch]] | [[Mot (Semitic god)|Mot]] |
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[[ Yahweh ]] |
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[[Resheph]] | [[Yam (god)|Yam]]
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[[Adad]] | [[Amurru]] | [[An (mythology)|An]]/[[Anu]] | [[Anshar]] | [[Asshur]] | [[Apsu|Abzu/Apsu]] | [[Enki|Enki/Ea]] | [[Enlil]] | [[Ereshkigal]] | [[Inanna|Inanna]]/[[Ishtar]] | [[Kingu]] | [[Kishar]] | [[Lahmu]] & [[Lahamu]] | [[Marduk]] | [[Mummu]] | [[Nabu]] | [[Nammu]] | [[Nanna (Sumerian deity)|Nanna]]/[[Sin (mythology)|Sin]] | [[Nergal]] | [[Ningizzida]] | [[Ninhursag]] | [[Ninlil]] | [[Tiamat]] | [[Utu]]/[[Shamash]]
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A primary source for our knowledge concerning Yam is the ''Epic of Baal,'' also known as the [[Baal Cycle]], which describes the storm god [[Baal]] coming to ascendancy in the [[Canaanite]] [[pantheon]].
  
Since Yam wishes to raise himself to the lofty heights of Baal whom he hates, and since he is the lord of chaos and destruction, in some [[Christian]] interpretations of {{bibleverse||Genesis|3:15|HE}}, because of his connections with the Leviathan, equated sometimes with the [[Serpent (symbolism)#Torah and Biblical Old Testament|the serpent of Eden]], some feel he may have been in eternal conflict with the [[Messiah]], Jehovah's son. ''"They'' (the Messiah) ''shall bruise thy head, and thou'' (the serpent) ''shalt bruise their heel"'' is similar to Hadad and Yam killing each other.
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In the beginning, the kindly but distant [[El]], the father of the gods, bequeaths the divine kingship to Yam. The sea deity, however, soon turns tyrant and oppresses the other gods. [[Asherah]], the mother goddess, attempts to reason with Yam, but he adamantly refuses to relent. In desperation for the welfare of her children, Asherah finally consents to give Yam her own body.
  
A relevant passage in the [[Christian]] [[book of Revelation]] reads:  "''And the great [[dragon]] was cast out, that old serpent, called the [[Devil]] and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world''" ({{bibleref|Revelation|12:9|KJV}}).  
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Sitting in council with the other gods, [[Baal]] is outraged at this idea and determines to rebel against Yam. Hearing of Baal's plan, Yam brazenly demands that Baal be handed over to him for punishment, sending emissaries to the [[Assembly of the Gods]] who show no respect even to El. Baal secures weapons from the divine craftsman [[Kothar-wa-Khasis]] and proceeds to defeat Yam in a mighty battle, rescuing Asherah from her fate and liberating the other gods from Yam's oppression, thus becoming their lord.  
  
Also, the chaotic coiling sea serpent [[Leviathan]] appears as hated by [[Jehovah]] ({{bibleverse||Isaiah|27:1|HE}}).  
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However, Baal in turn proceeds to be defeated by [[Mot]], the desert god of [[death]] and infertility, who accuses him of having killed the great [[sea serpent]] [[Lotan]], closely associated with Yam. Baal himself is rescued by the efforts of his sister [[Anat]], so that he may rise again and reign supreme in an apparent re-enactment of the annual cycles of rain and drought.
  
In the [[Apocalypse of Abraham]], the enemy of [[Yahweh]] is called [[Azazel]] and is described as a dragon with "hands and feet like a man's, on his back six wings on the right and six on the left." (23:7) Some Christian interpretations identify Azazel with the serpent who tempted Eve.
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Little is known about the manner in which Yam may have been worshiped.
  
Moreover, a comparison with the evil [[Jörmungandr]] ([[Norsemen|Norse]] world-serpent and deity of the [[sea]]) is accurate, given his description. Like Yam and Hadad, he and [[Thor]] (son of [[Odin]]) slay each other at the end of the world ([[Ragnarok|Ragnarök]] or Twilight of the Gods).  
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===Excerpts===
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:Kindly [[El]]… gave the kingship to Prince Yam.
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:He gave the power to Judge Nahar.
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:Fearsome Yam came to rule the gods with an iron fist.
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:He caused them to labor and toil under his reign.
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:They cried unto their mother, [[Asherah]], Lady of the Sea.
  
There are also many similarities with the Egyptian chaos serpent, [[Apep]] and his animosity with the sun god [[Ra]]. They are described as eternally slaying each other.
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:Asherah went into the presence of Prince Yam….
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:She begged that he release his grip upon the gods her sons.
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:But Mighty Yam declined her request….
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:Finally, kindly Asherah, who loves her children, offered herself to the god of the Sea.
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:She offered her own body to the Lord of Rivers...
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:She came before the Divine Council and spoke of her plan to the gods her children.
  
In addition, the serpent-[[Titan]] [[Typhon]] battled the god [[Zeus]] over [[Mount Olympus (Mountain)|Olympus]] and was cast into the pits of the Earth.  
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:[[Baal]] was infuriated by her speech. He was angered at the gods who would allow such a plot.
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:He would not consent to surrendering Great Asherah to the Tyrant Yam-Nahar.
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:He swore to the gods that he would destroy Prince Yam…
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:Yam-Nahar was made aware of the words of Baal. He sent His two messengers to the court of El:
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::"Depart Lads!…. At the feet of El do not fall,
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::Do not prostrate yourselves before the convocation of the Assembly,
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::But declare your information and say to the Bull, my father, El:
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:::'Give up, O gods, him whom you harbor, him whom the multitude harbor!
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:::Give up Baal and his partisans… so that I may inherit his gold!'"
  
Yam shares many characteristics with Greco-Roman [[Ophion]], the serpentine [[Titan (mythology)|Titan]] of the sea whom [[Kronos]] cast out of the heavenly [[Mount Olympus (Mountain)|Mt. Olympus]].  
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:The club swoops from the hands of Baal, like an eagle from his fingers….
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:Yam is strong; he is not vanquished,
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:His joints do not fail, nor does his frame collapse….
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:The weapon springs from the hand of the Lord Baal,
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:Like a raptor from between his fingers.
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:It strikes the skull of Prince Yam, between the eyes of Judge Nahar.  
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:Yam collapses, he falls to the earth; his joints quiver, and his spine shakes….
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:Then up speaks Yam: "Lo, I am as good as dead! Surely, the Lord now reigns as king!"
  
The story is also analogus to the war between the serpent [[Vritra]] and the god [[Indra]], son of the 'Sky Father' [[Dyaus Pita]].
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==Similarities in other mythological traditions==
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[[Image:Johann Heinrich Füssli 011.jpg|thumb|220px|[[Thor]] battles Jörmungandr]]
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Yam (sea) and his secondary title Nahar (river) bear definite similarities with the older Mesopotamian deities [[Tiamat]] and [[Apsu]], the primordial gods of salt water and fresh water, respectively. In the [[Babylonia]]n epic [[Enuma Elish]], Tiamat and her tyrannical henchman [[Kingu]] are defeated and slain by the storm god [[Marduk]], who then becomes the supreme ruler and king of the gods, much as Yam is defeated by [[Baal]], who ascends to the kingship of the [[Canaanite]] gods.
  
==In the Epic of Ba'al ==
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The battle between Yam and Baal also resembles the conflict in [[Hurrian]] and [[Hittite]] mythology between the sky God [[Teshub]] (or [[Tarhunt]]) and the serpent [[Illuyanka]]. In another Hittite myth, when the sea-dragon [[Hedammu]] threatens the earth and its creatures with his assaults, the goddess [[Ishtar]] pretends to offer herself to him.  
In the ''Epic of Ba'al'' [[El (god)|El]] king of the Gods appoints Yam to fight [[Hadad]] the king of heaven. [[KTU]] 1.2 iv reads:
 
:"I, myself, Kindly `El the Beneficent, have taken you upon my hands.
 
:I proclaim your name.
 
:Yam is your name,
 
:Your name is Beloved of `El, Yam."
 
:"[Go against] the hand of the Mighty Lord Most High <small>([[Elyon|´Aliyan]] [[Baal|Ba´al]] )</small> &mdash;
 
:Because he spoke ill to me &mdash;
 
:[And] drive him from the throne of his kingship,  
 
:From the resting place,
 
:the cushion on the seat of his dominion.
 
:But if then you do not drive him from his throne of kingship,
 
:from the seat of his dominion,
 
:He will beat you like...
 
:He slaughters oxen and sheep.
 
:He fells bulls and fatted rams, yearling calves,
 
:sheep by the flock, he sacrifices kids."
 
  
:Now Mighty Baal, son of Dagon, desired the kingship of the Gods. He contended with Prince Yam-Nahar, the Son of El. But Kindly El, Father Shunem, decided the case in favour of His son; He gave the kingship to Prince Yam. He gave the power to Judge Nahar.
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The [[Egypt]]ians also knew of Yam, perhaps borrowing the story from their [[Canaanite]] neighbors. The fragmentary ''Astarte Papyrus'' hints at Yam's unreasonable demands for tribute from the other deities. As with the case of [[Asherah]] in the [[Baal Cycle]] and [[Ishtar]] in the Hittite myth, the goddess [[Astarte]] then offers to become Yam's consort in order to placate him. She is helped to defeat Yam by the desert storm god [[Set]]. Another Egyptian tradition involved the casting of statues of the goddess of the [[Nile]] into the river to become its bride. Some scholars also see a parallel between Yam-Lotar and the Egyptian chaos serpent [[Apep]] the eternal adversary of the sun god [[Ra]].  
  
:Fearsome Yam came to rule the Gods with an iron fist. He caused Them to labor and toil under His reign. They cried unto Their mother, Asherah, Lady of the Sea. They convinced Her to confront Yam, to interceed in Their behalf.
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[[Norsemen|Norse]] mythology also speaks of a world-serpent and deity of the [[sea]] named [[Jörmungandr]]. Like Yam, he is the archenemy of the storm god, in this case [[Thor]], son of [[Odin]].
  
:Asherah went into the presence of Prince Yam. She came before Judge Nahar. She begged that He release His grip upon the Gods Her sons. But Mighty Yam declined Her request. She offered favours to the Tyrant. But Powerful Nahar softened not His heart.
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In [[Greek mythology]], the serpent-[[titan]] [[Typhon]] battled the storm god [[Zeus]] over [[Mount Olympus (Mountain)|Olympus]] and was cast into the pits of the Earth. Yam also shares certain characteristics with Greco-Roman [[Ophion]], the serpentine [[Titan (mythology)|Titan]] of the sea, whom [[Kronos]] cast out of the heavenly Mt. Olympus. Parallels between [[Oceanus]] or [[Poseidon]] to Yam have also been noted.
  
:Finally, Kindly Asherah, who loves Her children, offered Herself to the God of the Sea. She offered Her own body to the Lord of Rivers.
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Finally, the story of Yam and Baal is also seen as analogous to the Vedic myth of the war between the serpent [[Vritra]] and the god [[Indra]], son of the 'Sky Father' [[Dyaus Pita]].
  
:Yam-Nahar agreed to this, and Asherah returned to the Source of the Two Rivers. She went home to the court of El. She came before the Divine Council, and spoke of Her plan to the Gods Her children.
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===Biblical echoes===
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In the Biblical tradition, the [[polytheism|polytheistic]] mythologies of the sky and storm gods conquering the primordial sea demon is replaced by the idea that [[God]] reigned supreme from the beginning. Thus, [[Genesis]] 1:1 states: "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth." Yet, in the following verse, even before the creation of light, an echo of the older myth of the sky god creating order out of the watery chaos may be seen: "darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters.
  
Baal was infuriated by Her speech. He was angered at the Gods who would allow such a plot. He would not consent to surrendering Great Asherah to the Tyrant Yam-Nahar. He swore to the Gods that He would destroy Prince Yam.
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[[Image:Leviatan.jpg|thumb|200px|Leviathan in the fresco "The Last Judgment"  by Giacomo Rossignolo (1524-1604)]] 
  
:He would lay to rest the tyranny of Judge Nahar.
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Psalm 89:9 reiterates the theme of God's sovereignty over the chaotic deep: "You rule over the surging sea; when its waves mount up, you still them." However, Psalm 74:14 preserves a tradition which reflects the Hebrew deity [[Yahweh]]'s acting in [[Baal]]'s role, by defeating the sea monster [[Leviathan]] (Lotan): "It was you who crushed the heads of Leviathan and gave him as food to the creatures of the desert." The [[Book of Job]] 3:8 seems to refer to a day when the tyrant of the sea will wake from his sleep, speaking of "those who are ready to rouse Leviathan." [[Isaiah]] 27:1, meanwhile refers to God's victory over Leviathan in the future: "In that day the Lord with His severe sword, great and strong, will punish Leviathan the fleeing serpent, Leviathan that twisted serpent; He will slay the reptile that is in the sea."
  
Ba'al Hadad warns Yam that the gods will not allow him to usurp the throne of heaven. In KTU 1.2 iii, the Lord warns:
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[[Image:Brazen-sea.jpg|thumb|left|The bronze "sea" ''(yam)'' which stood before the [[Temple of Jerusalem]] was about 15 feet in diameter.]]
  
: "From your throne of kingship you shall be driven,
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The Hebrew word for "sea" in these verses is ''yam.'' In ancient Israel, God's sovereignty over the waters of chaos was symbolized in the [[Temple of Jerusalem]], as an many other ancient temples of the Middle East, by the presence of a large bronze "sea" which stood placidly near the temple's entrance.
:from the seat of your dominion cast out!
 
:On your head be Ayamari (Driver) O Yam,
 
:Between your shoulders Yagarish (Chaser), O Judge Nahar
 
:May [[Horon]] split open, O Yam,  
 
:may Horon smash your head,
 
:´Athtart-Name-of-the-Lord thy skull!
 
  
After a great war in heaven involving many of the gods, Yam is roundly defeated:
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The story of the prophet [[Jonah]] involves an episode at sea in which Jonah is blamed for a life-threatening storm by his [[pagan]] shipmates after they cast lots to discover who is responsible. He is thrown overboard by the sailors in an effort to assuage his angry deity, [[Yahweh]], and is swallowed by a great fish who seems to be a type of [[Leviathan]]. The story may hint at a practice followed by [[Levant]]ine fisherman involving human sacrifice to Yam in times of extreme danger.
:And the weapon springs from the hand of the Lord,
 
:Like a raptor from between his fingers.  
 
:It strikes the skull of Prince Yam,  
 
:between the eyes of Judge Nahar.  
 
:Yahm collapses, he falls to the earth;
 
:His joints quiver, and his spine shakes.
 
:Thereupon the Lord drags out Yam and would rend him to pieces;
 
:he would make an end of Judge Nahar.
 
  
However, Athtart pleads for Yam, who acknowledges the Lord as king of heaven:
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In some Christian interpretations of (Genesis 3:15), the serpent of [[Eden]] is seen as equivalent to Leviathan, whom the [[Messiah]] (or the [[Archangel Michael]]), like Baal, will one day vanquish: "He will crush your (the serpent's) head, and you will strike his heel." A relevant passage in the [[Book of Revelation]] reads: "And the great [[dragon]] was cast out, that old serpent, called the [[Devil]] and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world." (Rev. 12:9) Later, Revelation describes the final destruction of Satan, after which the declaration is made: "Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and there was no longer any sea." (Rev. 21:1)
:Then up speaks Yam: "Lo, I am as good as dead! Surely, the Lord now reigns as king!"
 
  
Hadad holds a great feast, but not long afterwards he battles [[Mot]] (death) and through his mouth he descends to [[Hades|his realm]] below the earth. Yet like Yam, Death too is defeated and in h. I AB iii the Lord arises from the dead:
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==Connections between Yam and YHWH==
:For alive is the Mighty Lord,
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While the above-mentioned biblical analogies, tend to see [[Yahweh]] as parallel to [[Baal]] in his conquering of Yam-Lotan, some scholars have seen connections between Yam and Yahweh. Biblical scholar Mark S. Smith provides evidence that Yam original's name was ''Yaw'' <ref>Mark S. Smith. ''The Origins of Biblical Monotheism: Israel's Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts.'' (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001) </ref>. The resemblance of the latter to the Tetragrammaton [[YHWH]] or Yahweh led to speculation over a possible connection between Yam and God of the [[Hebrew Bible]]. However, many scholars argue the names have different linguistic roots and reject the idea that they are related.
:Revived is the Prince, Master of Earth."
 
:'El calls to the Virgin Anat:
 
:"Hearken, O maiden [[Anat]]!"{{ref|biti}}
 
  
==Yaw: speculation over connections between Yam and YHWH==
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Another suggested reading of the name is ''Ya'a.'' This has been suggested as an early form of the divine name [[Names of God in Judaism#Yah|Yah]] or [[Yahu]]. A theory proposed at the beginning of the twentieth century suggested that Ya'a was a form of the name [[Ea]], the Mesopotamian water deity.<ref>Walter Reinhold, ''Warttig Mattfeld y de la Torre,'' [http://www.bibleorigins.net/YahwehYawUgarit.html "Yahweh-Elohim's Historical Evolution" (Pre-Biblical)]. ''bibleorigins.net'' Link retrieved October 23, 2008.</ref> This view has been supported in more recent times by [[archaeology|archaeologists]] such as Jean Bottero <ref>Jean Bottero. ''Religion in Ancient Mesopotamia.'' (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004)</ref> among others. However, Ea's [[mythology]] makes him far more kindly than Yam, and the parallel to the older [[Mesopotamia]]n sea deity [[Tiamat]] seem more likely, despite the supposed [[etymology|etymological]] similarity to Ea.
According to some, Yam was also called '''Ya'a''' or '''Yaw'''. Damaged text in KTU 1.2 iv has been interpreted by Mark S. Smith as describing a renaming of Yam from an original name ''Yaw''.<ref>Smith, Mark S. (2001) "The Origins of Biblical Monotheism: Israel's Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts" (Oxford: Oxford University Press)</ref> The resemblance of the latter to the Tetragrammaton [[YHWH]] led to speculation over a possible connection between Yam and God of the Hebrew Bible. However, even if the reading is correct many scholars argue the names have different roots and reject the idea that they are related.{{Fact|date=July 2007}} Another suggested reading of the name is Ya'a and it has also been suggested as an early form of the divine name [[Names of God in Judaism#Yah|Yah]], [[Yahu]]. Earlier archaeologists like Theophilus G. Pinches<ref>Pinches, Theophilus G. (1908) ''The Old Testament in the Light of the Historical Records and Legends of Assyria and Babylonia.'' London. Society For Promoting Christian Knowledge.</ref> quoted the research of Hommel, Professor of Semitic languages at Munich, who suggested "that this god Ya is another form of the name Ea...." By this theory Ya'a thus appears to have been a God of the waters, both salt (Yam) and fresh (Nahar), in some ways similar to the [[Mesopotamian mythology|Mesopotamian]] God [[Enki|Ea]].<ref>Walter Reinhold Warttig Mattfeld y de la Torre, [http://www.bibleorigins.net/YahwehYawUgarit.html Yahweh-Elohim's Historical Evolution (Pre-Biblical)].</ref> This view has been supported in more recent times by archaeologists like Jean Bottero<ref>Bottero, Jean (2004) "Religion in Ancient Mesopotamia" (University Of Chicago Press) ISBN 0-226-06718-1</ref> and others,<ref>Cohn, Norman. ''Cosmos, Chaos and the World to Come, The Ancient Roots of Apocalyptic Faith.'' New Haven and London. Yale University Press, 1993.</ref> although this is disputed by other scholars.<ref>Gray, John, (1953), ''The god Yaw in the Religion of Canaan,'' in Journal of Near Eastern Studies. Chicago. Vol. 12, pp. 278-283. </ref><ref>Garbini, G. 1988. ''History and Ideology in Ancient Israel''.</ref>
 
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
 
* [[Ebla]]
 
* [[Ebla]]
 
* [[Ugarit#Ugarit religion|Ugaritic religion]]
 
* [[Ugarit#Ugarit religion|Ugaritic religion]]
* [[Devil]]
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* [[Tiamat]]
* [[Satan]]
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* [[Leviathan]]
* [[Demiurge]]
 
* [[YHWH]]
 
* [[Iaoue]]
 
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
{{Reflist}}
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<references/>
#{{Note|biti}}Lilinah biti-´Anat, ''[http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Lofts/2938/mythobaal.htm The Myth of Baal],'' "Baal Battles Yahm" (1997). (Accessed 2006.2.15). This site has an unusually complete online text based on several scholarly versions cited.
 
#{{Note|lxx}}The Septuagint, written in Greek, does not contain the [[Tetragrammaton]]. Since the ''original'' Hebrew texts from which it was translated have long since disappeared, it is not known in which passages YHWH may have been written.
 
#{{Note|demoor}}Johannes C. De Moor, ''The Rise of Yahwism: The Roots of Israelite Monotheism,'' (Peeters Publishers, 2001).
 
#{{Note|larue}}Gerald A. Larue, [http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/gerald_larue/otll/chap13.html ''Old Testament Life and Literature (1968)''.]  (Accessed 2005.12.4)
 
#{{Note|MikeMagee1}}Mike Magee, [http://essenes.net/m106.htm#crisis "The Truth about the Jewish Scriptures I".] (Accessed 2005.12.26)
 
#{{Note|heiser}}Michael S. Heiser, [http://www.thedivinecouncil.com/DT32BibSac.pdf ''Deuteronomy 32:8 and the Sons of God''.] (Accessed 2005.12.4)
 
#{{Note|smith}}Mark S. Smith, [http://www.bibleinterp.com/articles/MSmith_BiblicalMonotheism.htm ''The Origins of Biblical Monotheism: Israel's Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts''.] (Accessed 2005.12.4)
 
#{{Note|angels}}"Sons of El" is from the [[Qumran]] text, [[Septuagint|LXX]] has "angels of God."
 
#{{Note|date}}Joel Kalvemaski, [http://students.cua.edu/16kalvesmaki/lxx/ ''The Septuagint Online,''] (October 15, 2005). (Accessed 2006.2.15)
 
#{{Note|BryanT.Huie}}Bryan T. Huie, [http://users.aristotle.net/~bhuie/divine_council.htm ''The Heavenly Divine Council'',] (September 28, 2002). (Accessed 2005.12.4)
 
#{{Note|smith}}Smith.
 
#{{Note|RichardFreund}}Richard Freund, interviewed by Gary Hochman and Matthew Collins, [http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/transcripts/3118_scrolls.html NOVA. "Ancient Refuge in the Holy Land".] (Accessed 2005.12.26)
 
#{{Note|menorah}}Alan Fuller, [http://72.14.207.104/search?q=cache:cQ1vrLeYyP8J:post-boks.dk/rev-list/msg01074.html+titus+menorah+dragon&hl=en&client=safari "Re: A question about the introducing beasts",] Fri, 25 October 2002 16:02:20 -0000 (Accessed 2005.12.26), and Jean Philippe Fontanille, [http://www.menorahcoinproject.org/h426.htm Menorah Coin Project "H426",] (bottom of page). (Accessed 2005.12.26)
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
* [[Cassuto, U.]], trans. by Israel Abrahams. ''The Goddess Anath,'' (Jerusalem: Magnes Press, Hebrew University, 1951).
+
* Bottéro, Jean. ''Religion in Ancient Mesopotamia.'' Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004. ISBN 9780226067186
* Coogan, Michael D., trans. & ed., ''Stories from Ancient Canaan,'' (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1978), 86-89.
+
* Moor, Johannes C. de. ''The Rise of Yahwism: The Roots of Israelite Monotheism.'' (Bibliotheca Ephemeridum theologicarum Lovaniensium, 91.) Leuven: University Press, 1990. ISBN 9789068312034
* De Moor, Johannes, ''The Seasonal Pattern in the Myth of Ba' lu according to the version of Ilimilku,'' (1971).
+
* Smith, Mark S. ''The Ugaritic Baal Cycle. Vol.1: Introduction with Text, Translation and Commentary of Ktu 1.1-1.2.'' Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1994. ISBN 9789004099951
* Driver, G.R., trans., J. C. L. Gibson, ed., ''Canaanite Myths and Legends,'' (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark Ltd., 1977).
+
* Smith, Mark S. ''The Origins of Biblical Monotheism: Israel's Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts.'' New York: Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 9780195134803
*_____, ''The Rise of Yahwism: The Roots of Israelite Monotheism,'' (Peeters Publishers, 2001).
+
* Thompson, Thomas L. ''The Mythic Past: Biblical Archaeology and the Myth of Israel.'' New York: Basic Books, 1999. ISBN 9780465006229
* [[Theodor Gaster|Gaster, Theodor]], trans., ''Thespis: Ritual, Myth & Drama in the Ancient Near East'' (New York: Harper & Row, 1966), 114-244.
 
* [[Ginsberg]], H. L., trans., in ''The Ancient Near East, An Anthology of Tests and Pictures'', James B. Pritchard, Ed., (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1958), 92-118.
 
* Smith, Mark S., ''The Ugaritic Ba'al Cycle; Vol. I: Introduction with Text, Translation & Commentary of KTU 1.1-1.2,'' (New York: E. J. Brill, 1994).
 
* Thompson, Thomas L., ''The Mythic Past; Biblical Archaeology and the Myth of Israel,'' (New York: Basic Books, 1999).
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
* [http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Lofts/2938/mythobaal.htm ''The Epic of Ba'al''] <small>- online text</small>
+
All links retrieved May 22, 2023.
* [http://personalpages.tds.net/~theseeker/Yahweh.htm The Historical Evolution of the Hebrew God]
+
* ''Yam'' in the Bible: {{bibleverse||Habakkuk|3:8}}, {{bibleverse||Psalms|74:13}}, {{bibleverse||Job|7:12}}
* [http://www.bookofjob.org "Putting God on Trial: The Biblical Book of Job"] <small>- a Biblical reworking of the combat motif between Yaw and Baal</small>
 
* [http://www.bible.org/page.asp?page_id=2053 "Baalism in Canaanite Religion and Its Relation to Selected Old Testament Texts"] <small>- an overview of primary sources with a list of secondary sources</small>
 
* ''Yam'' in the Bible: {{bibleverse||Habakkuk|3:8}}, {{bibleverse||Psalms|74:13}}, {{bibleverse||Job|7:12}}<ref>from a translation note in the [[New Jewish Publication Society of America Version]]</ref>
 
  
 
[[Category:religion]]
 
[[Category:religion]]

Latest revision as of 10:06, 22 May 2023

The destruction of Leviathan by God, thought by some scholars to parallel the defeat of Yam or Lotan by Baal.

Yam or Yamm, from the ancient Semitic word meaning "sea," is the name of the Canaanite god of rivers and the sea. Yam was also the deity of the primordial chaos. He represented the power of the tempestuous sea untamed and raging. Also called Nahar ("river") he additionally ruled floods and related disasters.

In West Semitic mythology, Yam was given kingship over the other gods by the chief god El. When Yam's rulership turned tyrannical and he possessed El's wife Asherah, the storm deity Baal (Hadad) challenged and defeated Yam in a titanic battle, ending with Yam cast down from the heavenly mountain Saphon.

The mythic sea dragon Lotan, whom Baal also defeated, was closely associated with Yam and possibly an aspect of him. A similar sea-demon appears in the mythology of many cultures. The biblical monster Leviathan is seen as related to Lotan, and his dwelling, the sea, is called yam in the Hebrew Bible.

Yam's defeat by Baal parallels the Mesopotamian legend of the storm god Marduk's victory over the primordial sea goddess Tiamat. Numerous other parallel myths have been noted by mythologists and religion scholars, often interpreted as representing the triumph of heavenly order over primeval chaos.

In the Epic of Ba'al

Baal wields his thunderbolt
Ancient Southwest Asian deities
Levantine deities

Adonis | Anat | Asherah | Astarte | Atargatis | Ba'al | Berith | Chemosh | Dagon | El | Elohim | Eshmun | Hadad | Kothar | Moloch | Mot | Yahweh | Resheph | Yam

Mesopotamian deities

Adad | Amurru | An/Anu | Anshar | Asshur | Abzu/Apsu | Enki/Ea | Enlil | Ereshkigal | Inanna/Ishtar | Kingu | Kishar | Lahmu & Lahamu | Marduk | Mummu | Nabu | Nammu | Nanna/Sin | Nergal | Ningizzida | Ninhursag | Ninlil | Tiamat | Utu/Shamash

A primary source for our knowledge concerning Yam is the Epic of Baal, also known as the Baal Cycle, which describes the storm god Baal coming to ascendancy in the Canaanite pantheon.

In the beginning, the kindly but distant El, the father of the gods, bequeaths the divine kingship to Yam. The sea deity, however, soon turns tyrant and oppresses the other gods. Asherah, the mother goddess, attempts to reason with Yam, but he adamantly refuses to relent. In desperation for the welfare of her children, Asherah finally consents to give Yam her own body.

Sitting in council with the other gods, Baal is outraged at this idea and determines to rebel against Yam. Hearing of Baal's plan, Yam brazenly demands that Baal be handed over to him for punishment, sending emissaries to the Assembly of the Gods who show no respect even to El. Baal secures weapons from the divine craftsman Kothar-wa-Khasis and proceeds to defeat Yam in a mighty battle, rescuing Asherah from her fate and liberating the other gods from Yam's oppression, thus becoming their lord.

However, Baal in turn proceeds to be defeated by Mot, the desert god of death and infertility, who accuses him of having killed the great sea serpent Lotan, closely associated with Yam. Baal himself is rescued by the efforts of his sister Anat, so that he may rise again and reign supreme in an apparent re-enactment of the annual cycles of rain and drought.

Little is known about the manner in which Yam may have been worshiped.

Excerpts

Kindly El… gave the kingship to Prince Yam.
He gave the power to Judge Nahar.
Fearsome Yam came to rule the gods with an iron fist.
He caused them to labor and toil under his reign.
They cried unto their mother, Asherah, Lady of the Sea.
Asherah went into the presence of Prince Yam….
She begged that he release his grip upon the gods her sons.
But Mighty Yam declined her request….
Finally, kindly Asherah, who loves her children, offered herself to the god of the Sea.
She offered her own body to the Lord of Rivers...
She came before the Divine Council and spoke of her plan to the gods her children.
Baal was infuriated by her speech. He was angered at the gods who would allow such a plot.
He would not consent to surrendering Great Asherah to the Tyrant Yam-Nahar.
He swore to the gods that he would destroy Prince Yam…
Yam-Nahar was made aware of the words of Baal. He sent His two messengers to the court of El:
"Depart Lads!…. At the feet of El do not fall,
Do not prostrate yourselves before the convocation of the Assembly,
But declare your information and say to the Bull, my father, El:
'Give up, O gods, him whom you harbor, him whom the multitude harbor!
Give up Baal and his partisans… so that I may inherit his gold!'"
The club swoops from the hands of Baal, like an eagle from his fingers….
Yam is strong; he is not vanquished,
His joints do not fail, nor does his frame collapse….
The weapon springs from the hand of the Lord Baal,
Like a raptor from between his fingers.
It strikes the skull of Prince Yam, between the eyes of Judge Nahar.
Yam collapses, he falls to the earth; his joints quiver, and his spine shakes….
Then up speaks Yam: "Lo, I am as good as dead! Surely, the Lord now reigns as king!"

Similarities in other mythological traditions

Thor battles Jörmungandr

Yam (sea) and his secondary title Nahar (river) bear definite similarities with the older Mesopotamian deities Tiamat and Apsu, the primordial gods of salt water and fresh water, respectively. In the Babylonian epic Enuma Elish, Tiamat and her tyrannical henchman Kingu are defeated and slain by the storm god Marduk, who then becomes the supreme ruler and king of the gods, much as Yam is defeated by Baal, who ascends to the kingship of the Canaanite gods.

The battle between Yam and Baal also resembles the conflict in Hurrian and Hittite mythology between the sky God Teshub (or Tarhunt) and the serpent Illuyanka. In another Hittite myth, when the sea-dragon Hedammu threatens the earth and its creatures with his assaults, the goddess Ishtar pretends to offer herself to him.

The Egyptians also knew of Yam, perhaps borrowing the story from their Canaanite neighbors. The fragmentary Astarte Papyrus hints at Yam's unreasonable demands for tribute from the other deities. As with the case of Asherah in the Baal Cycle and Ishtar in the Hittite myth, the goddess Astarte then offers to become Yam's consort in order to placate him. She is helped to defeat Yam by the desert storm god Set. Another Egyptian tradition involved the casting of statues of the goddess of the Nile into the river to become its bride. Some scholars also see a parallel between Yam-Lotar and the Egyptian chaos serpent Apep the eternal adversary of the sun god Ra.

Norse mythology also speaks of a world-serpent and deity of the sea named Jörmungandr. Like Yam, he is the archenemy of the storm god, in this case Thor, son of Odin.

In Greek mythology, the serpent-titan Typhon battled the storm god Zeus over Olympus and was cast into the pits of the Earth. Yam also shares certain characteristics with Greco-Roman Ophion, the serpentine Titan of the sea, whom Kronos cast out of the heavenly Mt. Olympus. Parallels between Oceanus or Poseidon to Yam have also been noted.

Finally, the story of Yam and Baal is also seen as analogous to the Vedic myth of the war between the serpent Vritra and the god Indra, son of the 'Sky Father' Dyaus Pita.

Biblical echoes

In the Biblical tradition, the polytheistic mythologies of the sky and storm gods conquering the primordial sea demon is replaced by the idea that God reigned supreme from the beginning. Thus, Genesis 1:1 states: "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth." Yet, in the following verse, even before the creation of light, an echo of the older myth of the sky god creating order out of the watery chaos may be seen: "darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters.

Leviathan in the fresco "The Last Judgment" by Giacomo Rossignolo (1524-1604)

Psalm 89:9 reiterates the theme of God's sovereignty over the chaotic deep: "You rule over the surging sea; when its waves mount up, you still them." However, Psalm 74:14 preserves a tradition which reflects the Hebrew deity Yahweh's acting in Baal's role, by defeating the sea monster Leviathan (Lotan): "It was you who crushed the heads of Leviathan and gave him as food to the creatures of the desert." The Book of Job 3:8 seems to refer to a day when the tyrant of the sea will wake from his sleep, speaking of "those who are ready to rouse Leviathan." Isaiah 27:1, meanwhile refers to God's victory over Leviathan in the future: "In that day the Lord with His severe sword, great and strong, will punish Leviathan the fleeing serpent, Leviathan that twisted serpent; He will slay the reptile that is in the sea."

The bronze "sea" (yam) which stood before the Temple of Jerusalem was about 15 feet in diameter.

The Hebrew word for "sea" in these verses is yam. In ancient Israel, God's sovereignty over the waters of chaos was symbolized in the Temple of Jerusalem, as an many other ancient temples of the Middle East, by the presence of a large bronze "sea" which stood placidly near the temple's entrance.

The story of the prophet Jonah involves an episode at sea in which Jonah is blamed for a life-threatening storm by his pagan shipmates after they cast lots to discover who is responsible. He is thrown overboard by the sailors in an effort to assuage his angry deity, Yahweh, and is swallowed by a great fish who seems to be a type of Leviathan. The story may hint at a practice followed by Levantine fisherman involving human sacrifice to Yam in times of extreme danger.

In some Christian interpretations of (Genesis 3:15), the serpent of Eden is seen as equivalent to Leviathan, whom the Messiah (or the Archangel Michael), like Baal, will one day vanquish: "He will crush your (the serpent's) head, and you will strike his heel." A relevant passage in the Book of Revelation reads: "And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the Devil and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world." (Rev. 12:9) Later, Revelation describes the final destruction of Satan, after which the declaration is made: "Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and there was no longer any sea." (Rev. 21:1)

Connections between Yam and YHWH

While the above-mentioned biblical analogies, tend to see Yahweh as parallel to Baal in his conquering of Yam-Lotan, some scholars have seen connections between Yam and Yahweh. Biblical scholar Mark S. Smith provides evidence that Yam original's name was Yaw [1]. The resemblance of the latter to the Tetragrammaton YHWH or Yahweh led to speculation over a possible connection between Yam and God of the Hebrew Bible. However, many scholars argue the names have different linguistic roots and reject the idea that they are related.

Another suggested reading of the name is Ya'a. This has been suggested as an early form of the divine name Yah or Yahu. A theory proposed at the beginning of the twentieth century suggested that Ya'a was a form of the name Ea, the Mesopotamian water deity.[2] This view has been supported in more recent times by archaeologists such as Jean Bottero [3] among others. However, Ea's mythology makes him far more kindly than Yam, and the parallel to the older Mesopotamian sea deity Tiamat seem more likely, despite the supposed etymological similarity to Ea.

See also

Notes

  1. Mark S. Smith. The Origins of Biblical Monotheism: Israel's Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001)
  2. Walter Reinhold, Warttig Mattfeld y de la Torre, "Yahweh-Elohim's Historical Evolution" (Pre-Biblical). bibleorigins.net Link retrieved October 23, 2008.
  3. Jean Bottero. Religion in Ancient Mesopotamia. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004)

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bottéro, Jean. Religion in Ancient Mesopotamia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004. ISBN 9780226067186
  • Moor, Johannes C. de. The Rise of Yahwism: The Roots of Israelite Monotheism. (Bibliotheca Ephemeridum theologicarum Lovaniensium, 91.) Leuven: University Press, 1990. ISBN 9789068312034
  • Smith, Mark S. The Ugaritic Baal Cycle. Vol.1: Introduction with Text, Translation and Commentary of Ktu 1.1-1.2. Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1994. ISBN 9789004099951
  • Smith, Mark S. The Origins of Biblical Monotheism: Israel's Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 9780195134803
  • Thompson, Thomas L. The Mythic Past: Biblical Archaeology and the Myth of Israel. New York: Basic Books, 1999. ISBN 9780465006229

External links

All links retrieved May 22, 2023.

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