Ashtarot destruction as mentioned in the historical manuscripts


This monument, which is now found in the National Museum of Damascus, which was found in the temple of Nebo in Palmyra of the Canaanite god Akhtarot, contains many of the symbols that express the richness of religious life in Palmyra and its spiritual association with Phenicia, Fatmur was within the borders of Lebanese Phenicia, whose capital was Damascus.
Ashtrout is the goddess of the main kingdom of Saida, mentioned in the epic of King Krat the Ugarite, and worshiped in Palmyra as illustrated by this monument erected by Paul Hazi and Tim Ben Zabad Paul and other names do not appear clearly as a result of the statue crash into more than one piece. But the name Paul Hazzi refers to the forerunner of the god Paul (Baal). This name is the original version of the word dicapon in the Arabic dictionaries which means the old man, but in reality it means the coming into the prophecy of the god Paul (Baal).
In this sculpture, Ashtrout is sitting like a queen on her throne, and on her right is the eagle, carrying an olive branch in her beak, a sign of peace. The symbol of her companion is Baal Shamain. Under her feet a man is perhaps the owner of the offering, expressing the most submissive. Compliance.
Atarghats stands with her distinctive hat in the shape of a citadel, carrying the olive branch, which is one of its many manifestations, as if the owner of the offering wanted to tell us that Ashtrout is herself Etrogatus. She herself is the great Syrian goddess.
The god Nebo, who found this sculpture in his temple of destruction, is a Babylonian god who specializes in wisdom and writing, and is especially sanctified by the Chaldeans, a god whose origins are to the Canaanites - the Amorites. His priesthood seems to be called prophets or prophets.

0 Comments