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- Ba‘alat_Gebal abstract "Ba‘alat Gebal, 'Lady of Byblos', was the goddess of the city of Byblos, Phoenicia in ancient times. She was sometimes known to the Greeks as Baaltis or Atargatis.Ba‘alat Gebal was generally identified with the pan-Semitic goddess ‘Ashtart (Astarte) and, like ‘Ashtart, equated with the Greek goddess Aphrodite. However, Sanchuniathon presents Ba‘alat Gebal as a sister of ‘Ashtart and Asherah, and calls Ba‘alat Gebal by the name Dione, meaning that he identified her either with Asherah or with the mother of Greek Aphrodite, the Titan goddess Dione. According to Sanchuniathon, Baaltis/Dione, like Asherah and ‘Ashtart, was a sister and wife of 'El. He states that she bore daughters to El and that it was El who gave the city of Byblos to her.Ba‘alat Gebal was distinguished in iconography from ‘Ashtart or other aspects of ‘Ashtart or similar goddesses by two, tall, upright feathers in her headdress.The temple of Ba‘alat Gebal in Byblos was built around 2700 BC. Dedications from Egyptians begin appearing from the second to the 6th Egyptian dynasties. Two of these inscriptions equate Ba‘alat Gebal with the Egyptian goddess Hathor. Frank Moore Cross writes that at Sinai Ba‘alat seems to have referred to Hathor and possibly to Qudšu (see Qetesh), who is Asherah.".
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageExternalLink k68545.html.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageExternalLink byblos.htm.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageID "775009".
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageLength "2846".
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageOutDegree "18".
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageRevisionID "698235028".
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink 27th_century_BC.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Semitic_religion.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Aphrodite.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Asherah.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Astarte.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Atargatis.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Byblos.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Category:Phoenician_mythology.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Category:West_Semitic_goddesses.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Dione_(Titaness).
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink El_(deity).
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Frank_Moore_Cross.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Hathor.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Jean-Pierre_Thiollet.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Phoenicia.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Qetesh.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Sanchuniathon.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLink Sinai_Peninsula.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ba‘alat Gebal".
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Fertile_Crescent_myth_(Levantine).
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Morereferences.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Portal.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal subject Category:Phoenician_mythology.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal subject Category:West_Semitic_goddesses.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal hypernym Goddess.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal type MythologicalFigure.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal type Redirect.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal comment "Ba‘alat Gebal, 'Lady of Byblos', was the goddess of the city of Byblos, Phoenicia in ancient times. She was sometimes known to the Greeks as Baaltis or Atargatis.Ba‘alat Gebal was generally identified with the pan-Semitic goddess ‘Ashtart (Astarte) and, like ‘Ashtart, equated with the Greek goddess Aphrodite.".
- Ba‘alat_Gebal label "Ba‘alat Gebal".
- Ba‘alat_Gebal sameAs Q2223705.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal sameAs Baaltis.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal sameAs Baaltis.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal sameAs Baâlat.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal sameAs Baälat.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal sameAs Baaltis.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal sameAs m.03bhmg.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal sameAs Baalat.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal sameAs Q2223705.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal wasDerivedFrom Ba‘alat_Gebal?oldid=698235028.
- Ba‘alat_Gebal isPrimaryTopicOf Ba‘alat_Gebal.