The Ancient Gods have returned!

Articles by "Babylon"

Athtart  Atargatis (Semetic) – the first Mermaid

Geography/Culture: Babylonia: city of Der. Syria

Also Dagitu, the feminine form of the word for fish. Appropriated into Greek culture as Derceto

Period of Worship : 2,000 bce to 1,000 Common era

Associated: the moon feminine powers, and water

Description: Great fish Goddess of water and its fishes; She Who swallows and gives birth to the sun; City-Protectress.

Male Associate: Son, Oannes solar fish God.

To Whom Sacred: whale.

She is said to be the Mother of Semiramis, Queen-Goddess of great beauty, intelligence, mighty works, love and sensuality.

 

Derceto is the goddess of fertility, her anthropomorphic form is that of a mermaid, highlighting her relationship to the seas and fertility.

 

She was sacred to the whales of the Oceans and it is said that their songs are to serenade the Goddess.

 

According to the myth Atargatis fell in love to a mortal shepherd called Hadad and they had a daughter called Semiramis. Semiramis later on became queen of Assyria. She was most well -known for creating the famous hanging gardens of Babylonia.

 

Atargatis accidentally caused the death of Hadad. She could not live with her guilt and drowned herself into a lake near Ascalon. Waters however could not hide her beauty and she was transformed into a mermaid. A woman with a tail of a fish.

 

Atargatis was worshiped in a temple dedicated to her in the ancient city of Ascalon in Israel


Name: Marduk The God King

Pantheon: Mesopotamian

Gender: Male

Known Aliases: The Creator, King of Kings, The God King, Merodach (Hebrew), Amar-utuk (meaning calf of the sun god)

Associated: Sun

Classification: Patron God

Period of Worship: 3500 B.C.E-2000 B.C.E

Discipline: E Particle    

Hair: Brown/Black     

Eyes: Green

Occupation: King

Martial Status: Married

Known Affiliations: The Ruling Party

Known Relatives: Sarpanitu (wife) , Nabu (son)

Strength Class: 9

 

History: Marduk became the king of the gods when he defeated the mad god Tiamat and his vast army (see War Bringers). He ruled as a wise and just king and became the god of wisdom and healing.

 

Marduk was the patron god of Babylon, the Babylonian king of the gods, who presided over justice, compassion, healing, regeneration, magic, and fairness, although he is also sometimes referenced as a storm god and agricultural deity.

 

Marduk is still worshipped in small numbers throughout the world.

MKRdezign

Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *

Powered by Blogger.
Javascript DisablePlease Enable Javascript To See All Widget