(Book Excerpt 1) Asherah: Roots of the Mother Tree ed. by Trista Hendren Et Al

[Editor’s Note: This excerpt series is from Asherah: Roots of the Mother Tree ed by Claire Dorey, Janet Rudolph, Pat Daly, and Trista Hendren (Girl God Books, 2025).]

The Great-Goddess Asherah by Miriam Robibins Dexter, Ph.D.

In my Preface to this rich anthology on the Great Mother Goddess Asherah, I would like to present an idea of how she was worshipped by related cultures in the Near East, including that of the Hebrews.  There are differing etymologies (root meanings) for Asherah’s Semitic name, but the one most accepted seems to be Hebrew ʾāšar, “to tread, to go straight on.” We may compare the related Ugaritic root word ʾṯr, “to tread;” (as in Ugaritic rbt ʾaṯrt ym: “Lady who treads the sea;” this can also be translated “Lady Asherah of the Sea”).  The name Asherah was pronounced without stress on any syllable, although in Europe and the United States there tends to be an accent on the second syllable.

Asherah was worshipped throughout the Near East; ancient Near Eastern texts which describe her may give us a clue to her functions and attributes.  In the ancient Syrian culture of Ugarit, texts dating to ca. 1300 BCE tell us that Asherah/Athirat was the wife of the father-god El, one of the names of the deity later worshipped in Hebrew texts.  In Hittite texts dating from the fifteenth to the twelfth centuries BCE, Ashertu, the Hittite equivalent of Asherah, was the consort of the father-god Elkunirsha, a form of El.

Asherah was popular in Israel, where she remained prominent long after the official Hebrew religion became monotheistic.  She was depicted as a tree, and sometimes she was bird-faced, linking her to Neolithic female figurines throughout Eurasia which were depicted as bird or snake.  Asherah was represented as a woman from head to waist and as a broad base below, a base easily planted as a tree. In the Hebrew Old Testament, Deuteronomy 16:21, it is forbidden to plant a tree as an Asherah beside the altar of Jehovah (Yahweh), another name of the Hebrew God. It would be unnecessary, of course, to forbid what was not practiced. Inscriptions discovered in the last several years bear out the biblical testimony. The Khirbet el-Qôm inscription and the inscription from Kuntillet Ajrud both invoke blessings by the Hebrew God and by his Asherah.

In the Ugaritic texts, Asherah, as the wife of El, was given as epithet the feminine form of El, Elat (the –t ending in Semitic nouns indicated the feminine gender):

“. . . to Asherah and her children; to Elat and her group [of offspring].(KTU 1.4.iv.49: aṯrt wbnh . ilt . wṣbrt.)

KTU stands for Keilschrifttexte aus Ugarit, ‘Cuneiform texts from Ugarit’.

The ancient Near-Eastern texts often refer to the same deity in repetition with differing epithets; the goddess was addressed as both Asherah and Elat.

Asherah was the “Great-Mother:”

Propitiation to the great lady Asherah of the Sea; honor to the Creatrix of the Gods . . .” (KTU 1.4.i.21-22: mgn . rbt . aṭrt ym mg . qnyt . ilm).

The gods were collectively her children:

            “The seventy children of Asherah shout: let the . . . gods drink…” (KTU 1.4.vi.45-47: ṣḥ…šbʾm. A[t]rt…špq…ilm).

Both the mother-goddess Asherah and the young goddess, Anat, were described as wet nurses in Ugaritic texts:

“ . . . [who] sucks the milk of Asherah    sucks the breast of the young girl, Anat, the wet nurses . . .”  (KTU 1.15.ii.26-28: ynq . ḥlb A[t]rt…mṣṣ ṭd . btlt nt] mšnq).   

In antiquity, trees were sacred in the religions of many cultures, and many sister-goddesses of Asherah were associated with sacred trees. The Egyptian Hathor was the goddess of the sycamore tree.  In the Indus Valley (Mature culture ca. 2600-2900 BCE), in Egypt, in Crete, in Greece, and in Syria, men and women were represented iconographically in attitudes of worship, facing trees. The tree is rich in fertile power when it blooms and becomes heavy with fruit, and thus it has been an icon of the divine.

In Hebrew religion, the sacrality and the feminine gender of the tree were greatly diminished.  In the Genesis myth of Eve and Adam (which is probably a re-telling of the Sumerian Paradise myth of Nin-Hursag and Enki, in the land of Dilmun, ca. 3000 BCE), one finds a female figure, a male figure, a snake, and a tree. According to the Old Testament Biblical story, the downfall of humanity was caused by the weakness or “sinfulness” of the woman, Eve. The first mortal, Adam, and his wife, Eve (she who was constructed from one of Adam’s ribs), were for some time very happy, while they lived in the Garden of Eden. But then, a serpent induced Eve to taste the forbidden fruit of the Tree of Knowledge, and the couple was subsequently banished from Eden. The main elements in this story, again, the tree, the serpent, the woman, and the man, are elements found in other Near Eastern cultures, both in their myths and literatures and in their iconographies.

One of the earliest Near Eastern cultures which gives us texts, the Sumerian, brings an earlier dimension to the Hebrew myth in language as well as in myth; the texts demonstrate the devaluation of the Goddess and her attributes.  In antiquity, the serpent was an avatar of the Great Goddess; thousands of Neolithic Eurasian figurines depicting woman/serpent have been excavated (as well as figurines of bird/woman).  In the Sumerian Paradise myth, the goddess Nin-Hursag (Lady Mountain) planted a lush, paradisiacal garden.  The wisdom – and water-god Enki – who was depicted on Sumerian cylinder seals with water and serpents–feeling hunger as he entered the garden, ate all of the plants which the goddess had so carefully tended.  The Goddess was angry, and she cursed Enki; he lay near death (even though he was a god!).  The other deities begged Nin-Hursag to cure Enki, because the one who delivered the curse was the only one who could be responsible for its revoking.  The deities did not want Enki to die; in particular, if he were gone, they would be left without water.  Nin-Hursag relented, and she placed several deities by Enki’s bodily parts; each deity would cure one damaged organ of the god.  The goddess who was chosen to heal Enki’s rib was Nin-Ti, the Lady of the Rib.  A homophone (words having the same pronunciation but different meanings) of ti in the Sumerian language was ti, ‘to make live’ – exactly the meaning of the name Chava, Eve.  Thus ti meant both ‘rib’ and ‘to make live’, two elements pertaining to the story of Eve. In sum, the Sumerian paradise story is one of a male deity (who in other sources was accompanied by serpents), a female deity, and sacred plants. The protagonists of the Hebrew Garden of Eden story – the male, the female, the tree, and the snake – had degenerated from their sacrality in earlier Near Eastern Sumerian myth to their culpability in the Hebrew Bible.

The Great Goddess Asherah, the sacred tree, Mother-Goddess of all of the gods, did not lose her sacrality in the Hebrew Bible; she was the wife of the Hebrew god as an undercurrent throughout early Hebrew religion, despite the fact that the Hebrew Fathers tried to remove her from their attempted monotheistic pantheon.  Blessings to the Goddess, and to this wonderful anthology in her honor.


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