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Ishtar
(redirected from Ischtar)

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Ishtar (ĭsh`tär), ancient fertility deity, the most widely worshiped goddess in Babylonian and Assyrian religion. She was worshiped under various names and forms. Most important as a mother goddess and as a goddess of love, Ishtar was the source of all the generative powers in nature and mankind. However, she was also a goddess of war and as such was capable of unremitting cruelty. Her cult spread throughout W Asia, and she became identified with various other earth goddesses (see Great Mother Goddess Great Mother Goddess, in ancient Middle Eastern religions, mother goddess, the great symbol of the earth's fertility. She was worshiped under many names and attributes. Similar figures have been known in every part of the world.
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). One of the most famous of the Babylonian legends related the trials of her descent into the underworld in search of her lover Tammuz Tammuz , ancient nature deity worshiped in Babylonia. A god of agriculture and flocks, he personified the creative powers of spring. He was loved by the fertility goddess Ishtar, who, according to one legend, was so grief-stricken at his death that she contrived to
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 and her triumphant return to earth. In Sumerian religion, where her cult probably originated, she was called Inanna or Innina.

Ishtar

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Ishtar, with her cult-animal the lion, and a worshipper, modern impression from a cylinder seal, …
(credit: Courtesy of the Oriental Institute, University of Chicago)
In Mesopotamian religion, the goddess of war and sexual love. Known as Ishtar in Akkadia, she was called Astarte by western Semitic peoples and was identified with Inanna in Sumeria. In early Sumeria she was the goddess of the storehouse as well as of rain and thunderstorms. Once a fertility goddess, she evolved into a deity of contradictory qualities, of joy and sorrow, fair play and enmity. In Akkadia she was associated with the planet Venus and was the patroness of prostitutes and alehouses. Her popularity became universal in the ancient Middle East, and she was called Queen of the Universe.


Ishtar 

(Sumerian, Inanna), in Akkadian (Assyro-Babylonian) mythology and religion, the central female deity. Ishtar was at first revered as a local deity in Mesopotamia (in Akkad, Arbela, Uruk, and Nineveh). In the second millennium B.C. the cult of Ishtar spread among the Hurrites, Hittites, Mitanni, and Phoenicians. Three main functions of Ishtar are discerned: she is the goddess of fertility and carnal love; the goddess of war and strife; and an astral deity, the personification of the planet Venus.

V. K. AFANAS’EVA



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