Ashur
Ashur
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,
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.
"Out of that land (Shinar)",
according to the Biblical reference, "went forth Asshur, and
builded Nineveh.
Ashur
(identical, Delitzsch and Jastrow believe, with
Ashir),[356] 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.
Apason (Apsu), the
husband, and Tauthe (Tiawath or Tiamat), whose son was Moymis
These were followed by the progeny Kissare
and Assōros (Kishar and Anshar) Dauke
(Dawkina or Damkina) was born Belos (Bel Merodach), whom they say
is the Demiurge"[358] (the world
artisan who carried out the decrees of a higher being)
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
Ursa Minor (the
"Little Bear" constellation) may have been "the goat with six
heads",
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"
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.[
he 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."
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"
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