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ATARGATIS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 823 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ATARGATIS  , a Syrian deity, known to the Greeks by a shortened

form of the name, Derketo (Strabo xvi. c . '785; Pliny, Nat . Hist. v . 23 . 81), and as Dea
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Syria, or in one word Deasura (Lucian, de Dea Syria) . She is generally described as the " fish-goddess." The name is a compound of two divine names; the first
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part is a form of the Himyaritic 'Athtar, the
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equivalent of the Old Testament Ashtoreth, the Phoenician
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Astarte (q.v.), with the feminine ending omitted (Assyr .
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Ishtar); the second is a Palmyrene name `Attie (i.e. tempus opportunum), which occurs as part of many compounds . As a consequence of the first
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half of the name, Atargatis has frequently, though wrongly, been identified with Astarte . The two deities were, no doubt, of
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common origin, but their cults are historically distinct . In 2 Macc. xii . 26 we find reference to an Atargateion or Atergateion (temple of Atargatis) at Carnion in Gilead (cf . 1 Macc. v .

43), but the

home of the goddess was unquestionably not
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Palestine, but Syria proper, expecially at
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Hierapolis (q.v.), where she had a
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great temple . From Syria her worship extended to
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Greece, Italy and the furthest west . Lucian and Apuleius give descriptions of the
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beggar-priests who went round the great cities with an image of the goddess on an ass and collected
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money . The wide extension of the cult is attributable largely to Syrian merchants; thus we find traces of it in the great seaport towns; at
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Delos especially numerous inscriptions have been found bearing witness to its importance . Again we find the cult in Sicily, introduced, no doubt, by slaves and mercenary troops, who carried it even to the farthest
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northern limits of the
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Roman
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empire . In many cases, however, Atargatis and Astarte are fused to such an extent as to be indistinguishable . This
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fusion is exemplified by the Carnion temple, which is probably identical with the famous temple of Astarte at Ashtaroth-Karnaim . Atargatis appears generally as. the wife of
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Hadad (
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Baal) . They are the protecting deities of the community . Atargatis, in the capacity of aohwuxos, wears a mural
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crown, is the ancestor of the royal house, the founder of social and religious
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life, the goddess of generation and fertility (hence the prevalence of phallic emblems), and the inventor of useful appliances . Not unnaturally she is identified with the Greek
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Aphrodite . By the conjunction of these many functions, she becomes ultimately a great Nature-Goddess, analogous to Cybele and
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Rhea (see GREAT
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MOTHER OF THE GODS); in one aspect she typifies the
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function of
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water in producing life; in another, the universal mother-earth (Macrobius, Saturn, i .

23); in a third (influenced, no doubt, by Chaldaean

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astrology), the power of destiny . The legends are numerous and of an astrological character, intended to account for the Syrian dove-worship and abstinence from fish (see the story in
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Athenaeus viii . 37, where Atargatis is derived from amp Fanbos," without Gatis,"—a queen who is said to have forbidden the eating of fish) . Thus Diodorus Siculus, using
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Ctesias, tells how she fell in love with a, youth who wasworshipping at the shrine of Aphrodite, and by him became the mother of Semiramis, the
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Assyrian queen, and how in shame she flung herself into a
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pool at
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Ascalon or Hierapolis and was changed into a fish (W . Robertson Smith in Eng . Hist . Rev. ii., 1887) . In another story she was hatched from an egg found by some fish in the Euphrates and by them thrust on the
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bank where it was hatched by a dove; out of gratitude she persuaded
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Jupiter to transfer the fish to the Zodiac (cf . Ovid, Fast. ii, 459-474, Metam. v . 331) . See articles s.v. in Herzog-Hauck, Realencyk . (1897), by W .

Bain dissin; and Pauly-Wissowa, Realencyc.; Fr . Baethgen, Beitrdge zur Semit . Religiongesch . (1888) ; R . Pietschmann, Gesch. der Phonizier (1889) .

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