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THE rise of Assyria brings
into prominence the national god Ashur, who had been
the city god of Asshur, the ancient capital. When
first met with, he is found to be a complex and
mystical deity, and the problem of his origin is
consequently rendered exceedingly difficult.
Philologists are not agreed as to the derivation of
his name, and present as varied views as they do
when dealing with the name of Osiris. Some give
Ashur a geographical significance, urging that its
original form was Aushar, "water field"; others
prefer the renderings "Holy", "the Beneficent One",
or "the Merciful One"; while not a few regard Ashur
as simply a dialectic form of the name of Anshar,
the god who, in the Assyrian version, or copy, of
the Babylonian Creation myth, is chief of the "host
of heaven", and the father of Anu, Ea, and Enlil.
If Ashur is to be regarded as
an abstract solar deity, who was developed from a
descriptive place name, it follows that he had a
history, like Anu or Ea, rooted in Naturalism or
Animism. We cannot assume that his strictly local
character was produced by modes of thought which did
not obtain elsewhere. The colonists who settled at
Asshur no doubt imported beliefs from some cultural
area; they must have either given recognition to a
god, or group of gods, or regarded the trees, hills,
rivers, sun, moon, and stars, and the animals as
manifestations of the "self power" of the Universe,
before they undertook the work of draining and
cultivating the "water field" and erecting permanent
homes. Those who settled at Nineveh, for instance,
believed that they were protected by the goddess
Nina, the patron deity of the Sumerian city of Nina.
As this goddess was also worshipped at Lagash, and
was one of the many forms of the Great Mother, it
would appear that in ancient times deities had a
tribal rather than a geographical significance.
If the view is accepted that
Ashur is Anshar, it can be urged that he was
imported from Sumeria. "Out of that land (Shinar)",
according to the Biblical reference, "went forth
Asshur, and builded Nineveh." 327:1
Asshur, or Ashur (identical, Delitzsch and Jastrow
believe, with Ashir), 327:2
may have been an eponymous hero--a deified king like
Etana, or Gilgamesh, who was regarded as an
incarnation of an ancient god. As Anshar was an
astral or early form of Anu, the Sumerian city of
origin may have been Erech, where the worship of the
mother goddess was also given prominence.
Damascius rendered Anshar's
name as "Assōros", a fact usually cited to establish
Ashur's connection with that deity. This writer
stated that the Babylonians passed over "Sige, 328:1
the mother, that has begotten heaven and earth", and
made two--Apason (Apsu), the husband, and Tauthe (Tiawath
or Tiamat), whose son was Moymis (Mummu). From these
another progeny came forth--Lache and Lachos (Lachmu
and Lachamu). These were followed by the progeny
Kissare and Assōros (Kishar and Anshar), "from which
were produced Anos (Anu), Illillos (Enlil) and Aos
(Ea). And of Aos and Dauke (Dawkina or Damkina) was
born Belos (Bel Merodach), whom they say is the
Demiurge" 328:2
(the world artisan who carried out the decrees of a
higher being).
Lachmu and Lachamu, like the
second pair of the ancient group of Egyptian
deities, probably symbolized darkness as a
reproducing and sustaining power. Anshar was
apparently an impersonation of the night sky, as his
son Anu was of the day sky. It may have been
believed that the soul of Anshar was in the moon as
Nannar (Sin), or in a star, or that the moon and the
stars were manifestations of him, and that the soul
of Anu was in the sun or the firmament, or that the
sun, firmament, and the wind were forms of this
"self power".
If Ashur combined the
attributes of Anshar and Anu, his early mystical
character may be accounted for. Like the Indian
Brahma, he may have been in his highest form an
impersonation, or symbol, of the "self power" or
"world soul" of developed Naturalism--the "creator",
"preserver", and "destroyer" in one, a god of water,
earth, air, and sky, of sun, moon, and stars, fire
and lightning, a god of the grove, whose essence was
in the fig, or the fir cone, as it was in all
animals. The Egyptian god Amon of Thebes, who was
associated with water, earth, air, sky, sun and
moon, had a ram form, and was "the hidden one", was
developed from one of the elder eight gods; in the
Pyramid Texts he and his consort are the fourth
pair. When Amon was fused with the specialized sun
god Ra, he was placed at the head of the Ennead as
the Creator. "We have traces", says Jastrow, "of an
Assyrian myth of Creation in which the sphere of
creator is given to Ashur." 329:1
Before a single act of
creation was conceived of, however, the early
peoples recognized the eternity of matter, which was
permeated by the "self power" of which the elder
deities were vague phases. These were too vague,
indeed, to be worshipped individually. The forms of
the "self power" which were propitiated were trees,
rivers, hills, or animals. As indicated in the
previous chapter, a tribe worshipped an animal or
natural object which dominated its environment. The
animal might be the source of the food supply, or
might have to be propitiated to ensure the food
supply. Consequently they identified the self power
of the Universe with the particular animal with
which they were most concerned. One section
identified the spirit of the heavens with the bull
and another with the goat. In India Dyaus was a
bull, and his spouse, the earth mother, Prithivi,
was a cow. The Egyptian sky goddess Hathor was a
cow, and other goddesses were identified with the
hippopotamus, the serpent, the cat, or the vulture.
Ra, the sun god, was identified in turn with the
cat, the ass, the bull, the ram, and the crocodile,
the various animal forms of the local deities he had
absorbed. The eagle in Babylonia and India, and the
vulture, falcon, and mysterious Phoenix in Egypt,
were identified with the sun, fire, wind, and
lightning. The animals associated with the god Ashur
were the bull, the eagle, and the lion. He either
absorbed the attributes of other gods, or symbolized
the "Self Power" of which the animals were
manifestations.
The earliest germ of the
Creation myth was the idea that night was the parent
of day, and water of the earth. Out of darkness and
death came light and life. Life was also motion.
When the primordial waters became troubled, life
began to be. Out of the confusion came order and
organization. This process involved the idea of a
stable and controlling power, and the succession of
i a group of deities--passive deities and active
deities. When the Babylonian astrologers assisted in
developing the Creation myth, they appear to have
identified with the stable and controlling spirit of
the night heaven that steadfast orb the Polar Star.
Anshar, like Shakespeare's Cæsar, seemed to say:
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Associated with the Polar Star
was the constellation Ursa Minor, "the Little Bear",
called by the Babylonian astronomers, "the Lesser
Chariot". There were chariots before horses were
introduced. A patesi of Lagash had a chariot which
was drawn by asses.
The seemingly steadfast Polar
Star was called "Ilu Sar", "the god Shar", or Anshar,
"star of the height ", or "Shar the most high". It
seemed to be situated at the summit of the vault of
heaven. The god Shar, therefore, stood upon the
Celestial mountain, the Babylonian Olympus. He was
the ghost of the elder god, who in Babylonia was
displaced by the younger god, Merodach, as Mercury,
the morning star, or as the sun, the planet of day;
and in Assyria by Ashur, as the sun, or Regulus, or
Arcturus, or Orion. Yet father and son were
identical. They were phases of the One, the "self
power".
A deified reigning king was an
incarnation of the god; after death he merged in the
god, as did the Egyptian Unas. The eponymous hero
Asshur may have similarly merged in the universal
Ashur, who, like Horus, an incarnation of Osiris,
had many phases or forms.
Isaiah appears to have been
familiar with the Tigro-Euphratean myths about the
divinity of kings and the displacement of the elder
god by the younger god, of whom the ruling monarch
was an incarnation, and with the idea that the
summit of the Celestial mountain was crowned by the
"north star", the symbol of Anshar. "Thou shalt take
up this parable", he exclaimed, making use of
Babylonian symbolism, "against the king of Babylon
and say, How hath the oppressor ceased! the golden
city ceased! . . . How art thou fallen from heaven,
O Lucifer, son of the morning! how art thou cut down
to the ground, which didst weaken the nations! For
thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascend unto
heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of
God; I will sit also upon the mount of the
congregation, in the sides of the north; I
will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will
be like the most High." 331:1
The king is identified with Lucifer as the deity of
fire and the morning star; he is the younger god who
aspired to occupy the mountain throne of his father,
the god Shar--the Polar or North Star.
It is possible that the
Babylonian idea of a Celestial mountain gave origin
to the belief that the earth was a mountain
surrounded by the outer ocean, beheld by Etana when
he flew towards heaven on the eagle's back. In India
this hill is Mount Meru, the "world spine", which
"sustains the earth"; it is surmounted by Indra's
Valhal, or "the great city of Brahma". In Teutonic
mythology the heavens revolve round the Polar Star,
which is called "Veraldar nagli", 332:1
the "world spike"; while the earth is sustained by
the "world tree". The "ded" amulet of Egypt
symbolized the backbone of Osiris as a world god: "ded"
means "firm", "established"; 332:2
while at burial ceremonies the coffin was set up on
end, inside the tomb, "on a small sandhill intended
to represent the Mountain of the West--the realm of
the dead". 332:3
The Babylonian temple towers were apparently symbols
of the "world hill". At Babylon, the Du-azaga, "holy
mound", was Merodach's temple E-sagila, "the Temple
of the High Head". E-kur, rendered "the house or
temple of the Mountain", was the temple of Bel Enlil
at Nippur. At Erech, the temple of the goddess
Ishtar was E-anna, which connects her, as Nina or
Ninni, with Anu, derived from "ana", "heaven".
Ishtar was "Queen of heaven".
Now Polaris, situated at the
summit of the celestial mountain, was identified
with the sacred goat, "the highest of the flock of
night". 332:4
Ursa Minor (the "Little Bear" constellation) may
have been "the goat with six heads", referred to by
Professor Sayce. 333:1
The six astral goats or goat-men were supposed to be
dancing round the chief goat-man or Satyr (Anshar).
Even in the dialogues of Plato the immemorial belief
was perpetuated that the constellations were "moving
as in a dance". Dancing began as a magical or
religious practice, and the earliest astronomers saw
their dancing customs reflected in the heavens by
the constellations, whose movements were rhythmical.
No doubt, Isaiah had in mind the belief of the
Babylonians regarding the dance of their goat-gods
when he foretold: "Their houses shall be full of
doleful creatures; and owls (ghosts) shall dwell
there, and satyrs shall dance there". 333:2
In other words, there would be no people left to
perform religious dances beside the "desolate
houses"; the stars only would be seen dancing round
Polaris.
Tammuz, like Anshar, as
sentinel of the night heaven, was a goat, as was
also Nin-Girsu of Lagash. A Sumerian reference to "a
white kid of En Mersi (Nin-Girsu)" was translated
into Semitic, "a white kid of Tammuz". The goat was
also associated with Merodach. Babylonians, having
prayed to that god to take away their diseases or
their sins, released a goat, which was driven into
the desert. The present Polar Star, which was not,
of course, the Polar star of the earliest
astronomers, the world having rocked westward, is
called in Arabic Al-Jedy, "the kid". In India, the
goat was connected with Agni and Varuna; it was
slain at funeral ceremonies to inform the gods that
a soul was about to enter heaven. Ea, the Sumerian
lord of water, earth, and heaven, was symbolized as
a "goat fish". Thor, the Teutonic fertility and
thunder god, had a chariot drawn by goats. It is of
interest to note that the sacred Sumerian goat bore
on its forehead the same triangular symbol as the
Apis bull of Egypt.
Ashur was not a "goat of
heaven", but a "bull of heaven", like the Sumerian
Nannar (Sin), the moon god of Ur, Ninip of Saturn,
and Bel Enlil. As the bull, however, he was, like
Anshar, the ruling animal of the heavens; and like
Anshar he had associated with him "six divinities of
council".
Other deities who were
similarly exalted as "high heads" at various centres
and at various periods, included Anu, Bel Enlil, and
Ea, Merodach, Nergal, and Shamash. A symbol of the
first three was a turban on a seat, or altar, which
may have represented the "world mountain". Ea, as
"the world spine", was symbolized as a column, with
ram's head, standing on a throne, beside which
crouched a "goat fish". Merodach's column terminated
in a lance head, and the head of a lion crowned that
of Nergal. These columns were probably connected
with pillar worship, and therefore with tree
worship, the pillar being the trunk of the "world
tree". The symbol of the sun god Shamash was a disc,
from which flowed streams of water; his rays
apparently were "fertilizing tears", like the rays
of the Egyptian sun god Ra. Horus, the Egyptian
falcon god, was symbolized as the winged solar disc.
It is necessary to accumulate
these details regarding other deities and their
symbols before dealing with Ashur. The symbols of
Ashur must be studied, because they are one of the
sources of our knowledge regarding the god's origin
and character. These include (1) a winged disc with
horns, enclosing four circles revolving round a
middle circle; rippling rays fall down from either

Click to enlarge
ASHUR SYMBOLS
The two symbols with
feather-robed archers, shown on the left, are
described on page
335. The winged disk on the right appears on a
Babylonian "boundary stone" which dates from the
reign of Marduk-balatsu-ikbi. (See pages
415,
416.)
Photos. Mansell side of the disc; (2) a circle or
wheel, suspended from wings, and enclosing a warrior
drawing his bow to discharge an arrow; and (3) the
same circle; the warrior's bow, however, is carried
in his left hand, while the right hand is uplifted
as if to bless his worshippers. These symbols are
taken from seal cylinders.
An Assyrian standard, which
probably represented the "world column", has the
disc mounted on a bull's head with horns. The upper
part of the disc is occupied by a warrior, whose
head, part of his bow, and the point of his arrow
protrude from the circle. The rippling water rays
are V-shaped, and two bulls, treading
river-like rays, occupy the divisions thus formed.
There are also two heads--a lion's and a man's--with
gaping mouths, which may symbolize tempests, the
destroying power of the sun, or the sources of the
Tigris and Euphrates.
Jastrow regards the winged
disc as "the purer and more genuine symbol of Ashur
as a solar deity". He calls it "a sun disc with
protruding rays", and says: "To this symbol the
warrior with the bow and arrow was added--a
despiritualization that reflects the martial spirit
of the Assyrian empire". 335:1
The sun symbol on the sun boat
of Ra encloses similarly a human figure, which was
apparently regarded as the soul of the sun: the life
of the god was in the "sun egg". In an Indian prose
treatise it is set forth: "Now that man in yonder
orb (the sun) and that man in the right eye truly
are no other than Death (the soul). His feet have
stuck fast in the heart, and having pulled them out
he comes forth; and when he comes forth then that
man dies; whence they say of him who has passed
away, 'he has been cut off (his life or life string
has been severed)'." 336:1
The human figure did not indicate a process of "despiritualization"
either in Egypt or in India. The Horus "winged disc"
was besides a symbol of destruction and battle, as
well as of light and fertility. Horus assumed that
form in one legend to destroy Set and his
followers. 336:2
But, of course, the same symbols may not have
conveyed the same ideas to all peoples. As Blake put
it:
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Indeed, it is possible that
the winged disc meant one thing to an Assyrian
priest, and another thing to a man not gifted with
what Blake called "double vision".
What seems certain, however,
is that the archer was as truly solar as the "wings"
or "rays". In Babylonia and Assyria the sun was,
among other things, a destroyer from the earliest
times. It is not surprising, therefore, to find that
Ashur, like Merodach, resembled, in one of his
phases, Hercules, or rather his prototype Gilgamesh.
One of Gilgamesh's mythical feats was the slaying of
three demon birds. These may be identical with the
birds of prey which Hercules, in performing his
sixth labour, hunted out of Stymphalus. 336:3
In the Greek Hipparcho-Ptolemy star list Hercules
was the constellation of the "Kneeler", and in
Babylonian-Assyrian astronomy he was (as Gilgamesh
or Merodach) "Sarru", "the king". The astral "Arrow"
(constellation of Sagitta) was pointed against the
constellations of the "Eagle", "Vulture", and
"Swan". In Phœnician astronomy the Vulture was
"Zither" (Lyra), a weapon with which Hercules
(identified with Melkarth) slew Linos, the musician.
Hercules used a solar arrow, which he received from
Apollo. In various mythologies the arrow is
associated with the sun, the moon, and the
atmospheric deities, and is a symbol of lightning,
rain, and fertility, as well as of famine, disease,
war, and death. The green-faced goddess Neith of
Libya, compared by the Greeks to Minerva, carries in
one hand two arrows and a bow. 337:1
If we knew as little of Athena (Minerva), who was
armed with a lance, a breastplate made of the skin
of a goat, a shield, and helmet, as we do of Ashur,
it might be held that she was simply a goddess of
war. The archer in the sun disc of the Assyrian
standard probably represented Ashur as the god of
the people--a deity closely akin to Merodach, with
pronounced Tammuz traits, and therefore linking with
other local deities like Ninip, Nergal, and Shamash,
and partaking also like these of the attributes of
the elder gods Anu, Bel Enlil, and Ea.
All the other deities
worshipped by the Assyrians were of Babylonian
origin. Ashur appears to have differed from them
just as one local Babylonian deity differed from
another. He reflected Assyrian experiences and
aspirations, but it is difficult to decide whether
the sublime spiritual aspect of his character was
due to the beliefs of alien peoples, by whom the
early Assyrians were influenced, or to the teachings
of advanced Babylonian thinkers, whose doctrines
found readier acceptance in a "new country" than
among the conservative ritualists of ancient
Sumerian and Akkadian cities. New cults were formed
from time to time in Babylonia, and when they
achieved political power they gave a distinctive
character to the religion of their city states.
Others which did not find political support and
remained in obscurity at home, may have yet extended
their influence far and wide. Buddhism, for
instance, originated in India, but now flourishes in
other countries, to which it was introduced by
missionaries. In the homeland it was submerged by
the revival of Brahmanism, from which it sprung, and
which it was intended permanently to displace. An
instance of an advanced cult suddenly achieving
prominence as a result of political influence is
afforded by Egypt, where the fully developed Aton
religion was embraced and established as a national
religion by Akhenaton, the so-called "dreamer". That
migrations were sometimes propelled by cults, which
sought new areas in which to exercise religious
freedom and propagate their beliefs, is suggested by
the invasion of India at the close of the Vedic
period by the "later comers", who laid the
foundations of Brahmanism. They established
themselves in Madhyadesa, "the Middle Country", "the
land where the Brahmanas and the later Samhitas were
produced". From this centre went forth missionaries,
who accomplished the Brahmanization of the rest of
India. 338:1
It may be, therefore, that the
cult of Ashur was influenced in its development by
the doctrines of advanced teachers from Babylonia,
and that Persian Mithraism was also the product of
missionary efforts extended from that great and
ancient cultural area. Mitra, as has been stated,
was one of the names of the Babylonian sun god, who
was also a god of fertility. But Ashur could not
have been to begin with merely a battle and solar
deity. As the god of a city state he must have been
worshipped by agriculturists, artisans, and traders;
he must have been recognized as a deity of
fertility, culture, commerce, and law. Even as a
national god he must have made wider appeal than to
the cultured and ruling classes. Bel Enlil of Nippur
was a "world god" and war god, but still remained a
local corn god.
Assyria's greatness was
reflected by Ashur, but he also reflected the origin
and growth of that greatness. The civilization of
which he was a product had an agricultural basis. It
began with the development of the natural resources
of Assyria, as was recognized by the Hebrew prophet,
who said: "Behold, the Assyrian was a cedar in
Lebanon with fair branches. . . . The waters made
him great, the deep set him up on high with her
rivers running round about his plants, and sent out
her little rivers unto all the trees of the field.
Therefore his height was exalted above all the trees
of the field, and his boughs were multiplied, and
his branches became long because of the multitude of
waters when he shot forth. All the fowls of heaven
made their nests in his boughs, and under his
branches did all the beasts of the field bring forth
their young, and under his shadow dwelt all great
nations. Thus was he fair in his greatness, in the
length of his branches; for his root was by great
waters. The cedars in the garden of God could not
hide him: the fir trees were not like his boughs,
and the chestnut trees were not like his branches;
nor any tree in the garden of God was like unto him
in his beauty." 339:1
Asshur, the ancient capital,
was famous for its merchants. It is referred to in
the Bible as one of the cities which traded with
Tyre "in all sorts of things, in blue clothes, and
broidered work, and in chests of rich apparel, bound
with cords, and made of cedar". 340:1
As a military power, Assyria's
name was dreaded. "Behold," Isaiah said, addressing
King Hezekiah, "thou hast heard what the kings of
Assyria have done to all lands by destroying them
utterly." 340:2
The same prophet, when foretelling how Israel would
suffer, exclaimed: "O Assyrian, the rod of mine
anger, and the staff in their hand is mine
indignation. I will send him against an hypocritical
nation, and against the people of my wrath will I
give him a charge, to take the spoil, and to take
the prey, and to tread them down like the mire of
the streets." 340:3
We expect to find Ashur
reflected in these three phases of Assyrian
civilization. If we recognize him in the first place
as a god of fertility, his other attributes are at
once included. A god of fertility is a corn god and
a water god. The river as a river was a "creator" (p.
29), and Ashur was therefore closely associated
with the "watery place", with the canals or "rivers
running round about his plants". The rippling
water-rays, or fertilizing tears, appear on the
solar discs. As a corn god, he was a god of war.
Tammuz's first act was to slay the demons of winter
and storm, as Indra's in India was to slay the
demons of drought, and Thor's in Scandinavia was to
exterminate the frost giants. The corn god had to be
fed with human sacrifices, and the people therefore
waged war against foreigners to obtain victims. As
the god made a contract with his people, he was a
deity of commerce; he provided them with food and
they in turn fed him with offerings.
In Ezekiel's comparison of
Assyria to a mighty tree, there is no doubt a
mythological reference. The Hebrew

Click to enlarge
WINGED DEITIES KNEELING BESIDE A SACRED TREE
Marble Slab from N.W. Palace of Nimrod: now in
British Museum.
Photo. Manell
prophets invariably utilized
for their poetic imagery the characteristic beliefs
of the peoples to whom they made direct reference.
The "owls", "satyrs", and "dragons" of Babylon,
mentioned by Isaiah, were taken from Babylonian
mythology, as has been indicated. When, therefore,
Assyria is compared to a cedar, which is greater
than fir or chestnut, and it is stated that there
are nesting birds in the branches, and under them
reproducing beasts of the field, and that the
greatness of the tree is due to "the multitude of
waters", the conclusion is suggested that Assyrian
religion, which Ashur's symbols reflect, included
the worship of trees, birds, beasts, and water. The
symbol of the Assyrian tree--probably the "world
tree" of its religion--appears to be "the rod of
mine anger . . . the staff in their hand"; that is,
the battle standard which was a symbol of Ashur.
Tammuz and Osiris were tree gods as well as corn
gods.
Now, as Ashur was evidently a
complex deity, it is futile to attempt to read his
symbols without giving consideration to the remnants
of Assyrian mythology which are found in the ruins
of the ancient cities. These either reflect the
attributes of Ashur, or constitute the material from
which he evolved.
As Layard pointed out many
years ago, the Assyrians had a sacred tree which
became conventionalized. It was "an elegant device,
in which curved branches, springing from a kind of
scroll work, terminated in flowers of graceful form.
As one of the figures last described 341:1
was turned, as if in act of adoration, towards this
device, it was evidently a sacred emblem; and I
recognized in it the holy tree, or tree of life, so
universally adored at the remotest period in the
East, and which was preserved in the religious
systems of the Persians to the final overthrow of
their Empire. . . . The flowers were formed by seven
petals." 342:1
This tree looks like a pillar,
and is thrice crossed by conventionalized bull's
horns tipped with ring symbols which may be stars,
the highest pair of horns having a larger ring
between them, but only partly shown as if it were a
crescent. The tree with its many "sevenfold" designs
may have been a symbol of the "Sevenfold-one-are-ye"
deity. This is evidently the Assyrian tree which was
called "the rod" or "staff".
What mythical animals did this
tree shelter? Layard found that "the four creatures
continually introduced on the sculptured walls",
were "a man, a lion, an ox, and an eagle". 342:2
In Sumeria the gods were given
human form, but before this stage was reached the
bull symbolized Nannar (Sin), the moon god, Ninip
(Saturn, the old sun), and Enlil, while Nergal was a
lion, as a tribal sun god. The eagle is represented
by the Zu bird, which symbolized the storm and a
phase of the sun, and was also a deity of fertility.
On the silver vase of Lagash the lion and eagle were
combined as the lion-headed eagle, a form of Nin-Girsu
(Tammuz), and it was associated with wild goats,
stags, lions, and bulls. On a mace head dedicated to
Nin-Girsu, a lion slays a bull as the Zu bird slays
serpents in the folk tale, suggesting the wars of
totemic deities, according to one "school", and the
battle of the sun with the storm clouds according to
another. Whatever the explanation may be of one
animal deity of fertility slaying another, it seems
certain that the conflict was associated with the
idea of sacrifice to procure the food supply.
In Assyria the various
primitive gods were combined as a winged bull, a
winged bull with human head (the king's), a winged
lion with human head, a winged man, a deity with
lion's head, human body, and eagle's legs with
claws, and also as a deity with eagle's head and
feather headdress, a human body, wings, and
feather-fringed robe, carrying in one hand a metal
basket on which two winged men adored the holy tree,
and in the other a fir cone. 343:1
Layard suggested that the
latter deity, with eagle's head, was Nisroch, "the
word Nisr signifying, in all Semitic languages, an
eagle". 343:2
This deity is referred to in the Bible:
"Sennacherib, king of Assyria, . . . was worshipping
in the house of Nisroch, his god". 343:3
Professor Pinches is certain that Nisroch is Ashur,
but considers that the "ni" was attached to "Ashur"
(Ashuraku or Ashurachu), as it was to "Marad" (Merodach)
to give the reading Ni-Marad = Nimrod. The names of
heathen deities were thus made "unrecognizable, and
in all probability ridiculous as well. . . . Pious
and orthodox lips could pronounce them without fear
of defilement." 343:4
At the same time the "Nisr" theory is probable: it
may represent another phase of this process. The
names of heathen gods were not all treated in like
manner by the Hebrew teachers. Abed-nebo, for
instance, became Abed-nego (Daniel, i,
7), as Professor Pinches shows.
Seeing that the eagle received
prominence in the mythologies of Sumeria and
Assyria, as a deity of fertility with solar and
atmospheric attributes, it is highly probable that
the Ashur symbol, like the Egyptian Horus solar
disk, is a winged symbol of life, fertility, and
destruction. The idea that it represents the sun in
eclipse, with protruding rays, seems rather
far-fetched, because eclipses were disasters and
indications of divine wrath; 344:1
it certainly does not explain why the "rays" should
only stretch out sideways, like wings, and downward
like a tail, why the "rays" should be double, like
the double wings of cherubs, bulls, &c., and divided
into sections suggesting feathers, or why the disk
is surmounted by conventionalized horns, tipped with
star-like ring symbols, identical with those
depicted in the holy tree. What particular
connection the five small rings within the disk were
supposed to have with the eclipse of the sun is
difficult to discover.
In one of the other symbols in
which appears a feather-robed archer, it is
significant to find that the arrow he is about to
discharge has a head shaped like a trident; it is
evidently a lightning symbol.
When Ezekiel prophesied to the
Israelitish captives at Tel-abib, "by the river of
Chebar" in Chaldea (Kheber, near Nippur), he appears
to have utilized Assyrian symbolism. Probably he
came into contact in Babylonia with fugitive priests
from Assyrian cities.
This great prophet makes
interesting references to "four living creatures",
with "four faces"--the face of a man, the face of a
lion, the face of an ox, and the face of an eagle;
"they had the hands of a man under their wings, . .
. their wings were joined one to another; . . .
their wings were stretched upward: two wings of
every one were joined one to another. . . . Their
appearance was like burning coals of fire and like
the appearance of lamps. . . . The living creatures
ran and returned as the appearance of a flash of
lightning." 344:2
Elsewhere, referring to the
sisters, Aholah and Aholibah, who had been in Egypt
and had adopted unmoral ways of life, Ezekiel tells
that when Aholibah "doted upon the Assyrians" she
"saw men pourtrayed upon the wall, the images of the
Chaldeans pourtrayed with vermilion, girded with
girdles upon their loins". 345:1
Traces of the red colour on the walls of Assyrian
temples and palaces have been observed by
excavators. The winged gods "like burning coals"
were probably painted in vermilion.
Ezekiel makes reference to
"ring" and "wheel" symbols. In his vision he saw
"one wheel upon the earth by the living creatures,
with his four faces. The appearance of the wheels
and their work was like unto the colour of beryl;
and they four had one likeness; and their appearance
and their work was as it were a wheel in the middle
of a wheel. . . . As for their rings, they were so
high that they were dreadful; and their rings were
full of eyes round about them four. And when the
living creatures went, the wheels went by them; and
when the living creatures were lifted up from the
earth, the wheels were lifted up. Whithersoever the
spirit was to go, they went, thither was their
spirit to go; and the wheels were lifted up over
against them; for the spirit of the living
creature was in the wheels. 345:2
. . . And the likeness of the firmament upon the
heads of the living creature was as the colour of
terrible crystal, stretched forth over their heads
above. . . . And when they went I heard the noise of
their wings, like the noise of great waters, as the
voice of the Almighty, the voice of speech, as the
noise of an host; when they stood they let down
their wings. . . ." 345:3
Another description of the
cherubs states: "Their whole body, and their backs,
and their hands, and their wings, and the wheels,
were full of eyes (? stars) round about, even the
wheels that they four had. As for the wheels, it was
cried unto them in my hearing, O wheel!"--or,
according to a marginal rendering, "they were called
in my hearing, wheel, or Gilgal," i.e. move round. .
. . "And the cherubims were lifted up." 346:1
It would appear that the wheel
(or hoop, a variant rendering) was a symbol of life,
and that the Assyrian feather-robed figure which it
enclosed was a god, not of war only, but also of
fertility. His trident-headed arrow resembles, as
has been suggested, a lightning symbol. Ezekiel's
references are suggestive in this connection. When
the cherubs "ran and returned" they had "the
appearance of a flash of lightning", and "the noise
of their wings" resembled "the noise of great
waters". Their bodies were "like burning coals of
fire". Fertility gods were associated with fire,
lightning, and water. Agni of India, Sandan of Asia
Minor, and Melkarth of Phoenicia were highly
developed fire gods of fertility. The fire cult was
also represented in Sumeria (pp.
49-51).
In the Indian epic, the
Mahàbhàrata, the revolving ring or wheel
protects the Soma 346:2
(ambrosia) of the gods, on which their existence
depends. The eagle giant Garuda sets forth to steal
it. The gods, fully armed, gather round to protect
the life-giving drink. Garuda approaches "darkening
the worlds by the dust raised by the hurricane of
his wings". The celestials, "overwhelmed by that
dust", swoon away. Garuda afterwards assumes a fiery
shape, then looks "like masses of black clouds", and
in the end its body becomes golden and bright "as
the rays of the sun". The Soma is protected by fire,
which the bird quenches after "drinking in many
rivers" with the numerous mouths it has assumed.
Then Garuda finds that right above the Soma is "a
wheel of steel, keen edged, and sharp as a razor,
revolving incessantly. That fierce instrument, of
the lustre of the blazing sun and of terrible form,
was devised by the gods for cutting to pieces all
robbers of the Soma." Garuda passes "through the
spokes of the wheel", and has then to contend
against "two great snakes of the lustre of blazing
fire, of tongues bright as the lightning flash, of
great energy, of mouth emitting fire, of blazing
eyes". He slays the snakes. . . . The gods
afterwards recover the stolen Soma.
Garuda becomes the vehicle of
the god Vishnu, who carries the discus, another
fiery wheel which revolves and returns to the
thrower like lightning. "And he (Vishnu) made the
bird sit on the flagstaff of his car, saying: 'Even
thus thou shalt stay above me'." 347:1
The Persian god Ahura Mazda
hovers above the king in sculptured representations
of that high dignitary, enclosed in a winged wheel,
or disk, like Ashur, grasping a ring in one hand,
the other being lifted up as if blessing those who
adore him.
Shamash, the Babylonian sun
god; Ishtar, the goddess of heaven; and other
Babylonian deities carried rings as the Egyptian
gods carried the ankh, the symbol of life. Shamash
was also depicted sitting on his throne in a
pillar-supported pavilion, in front of which is a
sun wheel. The spokes of the wheel are formed by a
star symbol and threefold rippling "water rays".
In Hittite inscriptions there
are interesting winged emblems; "the central
portion" of one "seems to be composed of two
crescents underneath a disk (which is also divided
like a crescent). Above the emblem there appear the
symbol of sanctity (the divided oval) and the
hieroglyph which Professor Sayce interprets as the
name of the god Sandes." In another instance "the
centre of the winged emblem may be seen to be a
rosette, with a curious spreading object below.
Above, two dots follow the name of Sandes, and a
human arm bent 'in adoration' is by the side. . . ."
Professor Garstang is here dealing with sacred
places "on rocky points or hilltops, bearing out the
suggestion of the sculptures near Boghaz-Keui 348:1,
in which there may be reasonably suspected the
surviving traces of mountain cults, or cults of
mountain deities, underlying the newer religious
symbolism". Who the deity is it is impossible to
say, but "he was identified at some time or other
with Sandes". 348:2
It would appear, too, that the god may have been
"called by a name which was that used also by the
priest". Perhaps the priest king was believed to be
an incarnation of the deity.
Sandes or Sandan was identical
with Sandon of Tarsus, "the prototype of Attis", 348:3
who links with the Babylonian Tammuz. Sandon's
animal symbol was the lion, and he carried the
"double axe" symbol of the god of fertility and
thunder. As Professor Frazer has shown in The
Golden Bough, he links with Hercules and
Melkarth. 348:4
All the younger gods, who
displaced the elder gods as one year displaces
another, were deities of fertility, battle,
lightning, fire, and the sun; it is possible,
therefore, that Ashur was like Merodach, son of Ea,
god of the deep, a form of Tammuz in origin. His
spirit was in the solar wheel which revolved at
times of seasonal change. In Scotland it was
believed that on the morning of May Day (Beltaine)
the rising sun revolved three times. The younger god
was a spring sun god and fire god. Great bonfires
were lit to strengthen him, or as a ceremony of
riddance; the old year was burned out. Indeed the
god himself might be burned (that is, the old god),
so that he might renew his youth. Melkarth was
burned at Tyre. Hercules burned himself on a
mountain top, and his soul ascended to heaven as an
eagle.
These fiery rites were
evidently not unknown in Babylonia and Assyria.
When, according to Biblical narrative,
Nebuchadnezzar "made an image of gold" which he set
up "in the plain of Dura, in the province of
Babylon", he commanded: "O people, nations, and
languages . . . at the time ye hear the sound of the
cornet, flute, harp, sackbut, psaltery, dulcimer,
and all kinds of musick . . . fall down and worship
the golden image". Certain Jews who had been "set
over the affairs of the province of Babylonia",
namely, "Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego", refused
to adore the idol. They were punished by being
thrown into "a burning fiery furnace", which was
heated "seven times more than it was wont to be
heated". They came forth uninjured. 349:1
In the Koran it is related
that Abraham destroyed the images of Chaldean gods;
he "brake them all in pieces except the biggest of
them; that they might lay the blame on that". 349:2
According to the commentators the Chaldæans were at
the time "abroad in the fields, celebrating a great
festival". To punish the offender Nimrod had a great
pyre erected at Cuthah. "Then they bound Abraham,
and putting him into an engine, shot him into the
midst of the fire, from which he was preserved by
the angel Gabriel, who was sent to his assistance."
Eastern Christians were wont to set apart in the
Syrian calendar the 25th of January to commemorate
Abraham's escape from Nimrod's pyre. 350:1
It is evident that the
Babylonian fire ceremony was observed in the spring
season, and that human beings were sacrificed to the
sun god. A mock king may have been burned to
perpetuate the ancient sacrifice of real kings, who
were incarnations of the god.
Isaiah makes reference to the
sacrificial burning of kings in Assyria: "For
through the voice of the Lord shall the Assyrian be
beaten down, which smote with a rod. And in every
place where the grounded staff shall pass, which the
Lord shall lay upon him, it shall be with tabrets
and harps: and in battles of shaking will he fight
with it. For Tophet is ordained of old; yea, for the
king it is prepared: he hath made it deep and large:
the pile thereof is fire and much wood: the breath
of the Lord, like a stream of brimstone, doth kindle
it." 350:2
When Nineveh was about to fall, and with it the
Assyrian Empire, the legendary king, Sardanapalus,
who was reputed to have founded Tarsus, burned
himself, with his wives, concubines, and eunuchs, on
a pyre in his palace. Zimri, who reigned over Israel
for seven days, "burnt the king's house over him
with fire" 350:3.
Saul, another fallen king, was burned after death,
and his bones were buried "under the oak in Jabesh". 350:4
In Europe the oak was associated with gods of
fertility and lightning, including Jupiter and Thor.
The ceremony of burning Saul is of special interest.
Asa, the orthodox king of Judah, was, after death,
"laid in the bed which was filled with sweet odours
and divers kinds of spices prepared by the
apothecaries' art: and they made a very great
burning for him" (2 Chronicles, xvi, 14).
Jehoram, the heretic king of Judah, who "walked in
the way of the kings of Israel", died of "an
incurable disease. And his people made no burning
for him, like the burning of his fathers" (2
Chronicles, xxi, 18, 19).
The conclusion suggested by
the comparative study of the beliefs of neighbouring
peoples, and the evidence afforded by Assyrian
sculptures, is that Ashur was a highly developed
form of the god of fertility, who was sustained, or
aided in his conflicts with demons, by the fires and
sacrifices of his worshippers.
It is possible to read too
much into his symbols. These are not more
complicated and vague than are the symbols on the
standing stones of Scotland--the crescent with the
"broken" arrow; the trident with the double rings,
or wheels, connected by two crescents; the circle
with the dot in its centre; the triangle with the
dot; the large disk with two small rings on either
side crossed by double straight lines; the so-called
"mirror", and so on. Highly developed symbolism may
not indicate a process of spiritualization so much,
perhaps, as the persistence of magical beliefs and
practices. There is really no direct evidence to
support the theory that the Assyrian winged disk, or
disk "with protruding rays", was of more spiritual
character than the wheel which encloses the
feather-robed archer with his trident-shaped arrow.
The various symbols may have
represented phases of the god. When the spring fires
were lit, and the god "renewed his life like the
eagle", his symbol was possibly the solar wheel or
disk with eagle's wings, which became regarded as a
symbol of life. The god brought life and light to
the world; he caused the crops to grow; he gave
increase; he sustained his worshippers. But he was
also the god who slew the demons of darkness and
storm. The Hittite winged disk was Sandes or Sandon,
the god of lightning, who stood on the back of a
bull. As the lightning god was a war god, it was in
keeping with his character to find him represented
in Assyria as "Ashur the archer" with the bow and
lightning arrow. On the disk of the Assyrian
standard the lion and the bull appear with "the
archer" as symbols of the war god Ashur, but they
were also symbols of Ashur the god of fertility.
The life or spirit of the god
was in the ring or wheel, as the life of the
Egyptian and Indian gods, and of the giants of folk
tales, was in "the egg". The "dot within the
circle", a widespread symbol, may have represented
the seed within "the egg" of more than one
mythology, or the thorn within the egg of more than
one legendary story. It may be that in Assyria, as
in India, the crude beliefs and symbols of the
masses were spiritualized by the speculative
thinkers in the priesthood, but no literary evidence
has survived to justify us in placing the Assyrian
teachers on the same level as the Brahmans who
composed the Upanishads.
Temples were erected to Ashur,
but he might be worshipped anywhere, like the Queen
of Heaven, who received offerings in the streets of
Jerusalem, for "he needed no temple", as Professor
Pinches says. Whether this was because he was a
highly developed deity or a product of folk religion
it is difficult to decide. One important fact is
that the ruling king of Assyria was more closely
connected with the worship of Ashur than the king of
Babylonia was with the worship of Merodach. This may
be because the Assyrian king was regarded as an
incarnation of his god, like the Egyptian Pharaoh.
Ashur accompanied the monarch on his campaigns: he
was their conquering war god. Where the king was,
there was Ashur also. No images were made of him,
but his symbols were carried aloft, as were the
symbols of Indian gods in the great war of the
Mahàbhàrata epic.
It would appear that Ashur was
sometimes worshipped in the temples of other gods.
In an interesting inscription he is associated with
the moon god Nannar (Sin) of Haran. Esarhaddon, the
Assyrian king, is believed to have been crowned in
that city. "The writer", says Professor Pinches, "is
apparently addressing Assur-bani-apli, 'the great
and noble Asnapper':
"When the father of my king my
lord went to Egypt, he was crowned (?) in the
ganni of Harrah, the temple (lit. 'Bethel') of
cedar. The god Sin remained over the (sacred)
standard, two crowns upon his head, (and) the god
Nusku stood beside him. The father of the king my
lord entered, (and) he (the priest of Sin) placed
(the crown?) upon his head, (saying) thus: 'Thou
shalt go and capture the lands in the midst'. (He
we)nt, he captured the land of Egypt. The rest of
the lands not submitting (?) to Assur (Ashur) and
Sin, the king, the lord of kings, shall capture
(them)." 353:1
Ashur and Sin are here linked
as equals. Associated with them is Nusku, the
messenger of the gods, who was given prominence in
Assyria. The kings frequently invoked him. As the
son of Ea he acted as the messenger between Merodach
and the god of the deep. He was also a son of Bel
Enlil, and like Anu was guardian or chief of the
Igigi, the "host of heaven". Professor Pinches
suggests that he may have been either identical with
the Sumerian fire god Gibil, or a brother of the
fire god, and an impersonation of the light of fire
and sun. In Haran he accompanied the moon god, and
may, therefore, have symbolized the light of the
moon also. Professor Pinches adds that in one
inscription "he is identified with Nirig or En-reshtu"
(Nin-Girsu = Tammuz). 354:1The
Babylonians and Assyrians associated fire and light
with moisture and fertility.
The astral phase of the
character of Ashur is highly probable. As has been
indicated, the Greek rendering of Anshar as "Assoros",
is suggestive in this connection. Jastrow, however,
points out that the use of the characters Anshar for
Ashur did not obtain until the eighth century B.C.
"Linguistically", he says, "the change of Ashir to
Ashur can be accounted for, but not the
transformation of An-shar to Ashur or Ashir; so that
we must assume the 'etymology' of Ashur, proposed by
some learned scribe, to be the nature of a play upon
the name." 354:2
On the other hand, it is possible that what appears
arbitrary to us may have been justified in ancient
Assyria on perfectly reasonable, or at any rate
traditional, grounds. Professor Pinches points out
that as a sun god, and "at the same time not
Shamash", Ashur resembled Merodach. "His
identification with Merodach, if that was ever
accepted, may have been due to the likeness of the
word to Asari, one of the deities' names." 354:3
As Asari, Merodach has been compared to the Egyptian
Osiris, who, as the Nile god, was Asar-Hapi. Osiris
resembles Tammuz and was similarly a corn deity and
a ruler of the living and the dead, associated with
sun, moon, stars, water, and vegetation. We may
consistently connect Ashur with Aushar, "water
field", Anshar, "god of the height", or "most high",
and with the eponymous King Asshur who went out on
the land of Nimrod and "builded Nineveh", if we
regard him as of common origin with Tammuz, Osiris,
and Attis--a developed and localized form of the
ancient deity of fertility and corn.
Ashur had a spouse who is
referred to as Ashuritu, or Beltu, "the lady". Her
name, however, is not given, but it is possible that
she was identified with the Ishtar of Nineveh. In
the historical texts Ashur, as the royal god, stands
alone. Like the Hittite Great Father, he was perhaps
regarded as the origin of life. Indeed, it may have
been due to the influence of the northern hillmen in
the early Assyrian period, that Ashur was developed
as a father god--a Baal. When the Hittite
inscriptions are read, more light may be thrown on
the Ashur problem. Another possible source of
cultural influence is Persia. The supreme god Ahura-Mazda
(Ormuzd) was, as has been indicated, represented,
like Ashur, hovering over the king's head, enclosed
in a winged disk or wheel, and the sacred tree
figured in Persian mythology. The early Assyrian
kings had non-Semitic and non-Sumerian names. It
seems reasonable to assume that the religious
culture of the ethnic elements they represented must
have contributed to the development of the city god
of Asshur.
Footnotes
327:1 Genesis, x, 11.
327:2 "A number of tablets have been found in
Cappadocia of the time of the Second Dynasty of Ur
which show marked affinities with Assyria. The
divine name Ashir, as in early Assyrian texts, the
institution of eponyms and many personal names which
occur in Assyria, are so characteristic that we must
assume kinship of peoples. But whether they witness
to a settlement in Cappadocia from Assyria, or vice
versa, is not yet clear." Ancient Assyria, C.
H. W. Johns (Cambridge, 1912), pp. 12-13.
328:1 Sumerian Ziku, apparently derived from Zi,
the spiritual essence of life, the "self power" of
the Universe.
328:2 Peri Archon, cxxv.
329:1 Religion of Babylonia and Assyria,
p. 197 et seq.
330:1 Julius Cæsar, act iii, scene 1.
331:1 Isaiah, xiv, 4-14.
332:1 Eddubrott, ii.
332:2 Religion of the Ancient Egyptians,
A. Wiedemann, pp. 289-90.
332:3 Ibid., p. 236. Atlas was also
believed to be in the west.
332:4 Primitive Constellations, vol. ii,
p. 184.
333:1 Cuneiform Inscriptions of Western Asia,
xxx, 11.
333:2 Isaiah, xiii, 21. For "Satyrs" the
Revised Version gives the alternative translation,
"or he-goats".
335:1 Aspects of Religious Belief and
Practice in Babylonia and Assyria, p. 120, plate
18 and note.
336:1 Satapatha Brahmana, translated by
Professor Eggeling, part iv, 1897, p. 371. (Sacred
Books of the East.)
336:2 Egyptian Myth and Legend, pp. 165
et seq.
336:3 Classic Myth and Legend, p. 105.
The birds were called "Stymphalides".
337:1 The so-called "shuttle" of Neith may be a
thunderbolt. Scotland's archaic thunder deity is a
goddess. The bow and arrows suggest a lightning
goddess who was a deity of war because she was a
deity of fertility.
338:1 Vedic Index, Macdonell & Keith,
vol. ii, pp. 125-6, and vol. i, 168-9.
339:1 Ezekiel, xxxi, 3-8.
340:1 Ezekiel, xxvii, 23, 24.
340:2 Isaiah, xxxvii, 11.
340:3 Ibid., x, 5, 6.
341:1 A winged human figure, carrying in one
hand a basket and in another a fir cone.
342:1 Layard's Nineveh (1856), p. 44.
342:2 Ibid., p. 309.
343:1 The fir cone was offered to Attis and
Mithra. Its association with Ashur suggests that the
great Assyrian deity resembled the gods of corn and
trees and fertility.
343:2 Nineveh, p. 47.
343:3 Isaiah, xxxvii, 37-8.
343:4 The Old Testament in the Light of the
Historical Records and Legends of Assyria and
Babylonia, pp. 129-30.
344:1 An eclipse of the sun in Assyria on June
15, 763 B.C., was followed by an outbreak of civil
war.
344:2 Ezekiel, i, 4-14
345:1 Ezekiel, xxiii, 1-15.
345:2 As the soul of the Egyptian god was in the
sun disk or sun egg.
345:3 Ezekiel, i, 15-28.
346:1 Ezekiel, x, 11-5.
346:2 Also called "Amrita".
347:1 The Mahàbhàrata (Adi Parva),
Sections xxxiii-iv.
348:1 Another way of spelling the Turkish name
which signifies "village of the pass". The deep "gh"
guttural is not usually attempted by English
speakers. A common rendering is "Bog-haz´ Kay-ee", a
slight "oo" sound being given to the "a" in "Kay";
the "z" sound is hard and hissing.
348:2 The Land of the Hittites, J.
Garstang, pp. 178 et seq.
348:3 Ibid., p. 173.
348:4 Adonis, Attis, Osiris, chaps. v and
vi.
349:1 Daniel, iii, 1-26.
349:2 The story that Abraham hung an axe round
the neck of Baal after destroying the other idols is
of Jewish origin.
350:1 The Koran, George Sale, pp. 245-6.
350:2 Isaiah, xxx, 31-3. See also for
Tophet customs 2 Kings, xxiii, 10;
Jeremiah, vii, 31, 32 and xix, 5-12.
350:3 2 Kings, xvi, 18.
350:4 1 Samuel, xxxi, 12, 13 and 1
Chronicles, x, 11, 12.
353:1 The Old Testament in the Light of the
Historical Records and Legends of Assyria and
Babylonia, pp. 201-2.
354:1 Babylonian and Assyrian Religion,
pp. 57-8,
354:2 Aspects of Religious Belief and
Practice in Babylonia and Assyria, p.121.
354:3 Babylonian and Assyrian Religion,
p. 86. |