WELCOME TO FOR THE
Post #3 Mermaid in search of God. Enter her consort. Think beard, bull, and Ba'al.
Atargatis as we
know is a Syrian goddess who appears as part fish-bodied and may play an
important role in why fish are regarded as sacred in Syria. Atargatis, goddess
of creation and a protectress of the people, was depicted with flowing hair and
had several temples and followers around the first century. Frequently devotees
disfigured themselves. Ouch! Symbols associated with Atargatis are the lion
(see the coin), crescent moon, and two fish (Pisces discussed in Post #2). Also,
doves and scepters. Love and weaponry…go figure. In ancient Greece she was referred
to as Aphrodite Derceto and by the Romans as Dea Syria or Goddess of Syria.
Some shortened her name to Deasura.
Now, this is all
about the Love of Mythology and so we must have love in our story. Atargatis
indeed has several instances of being linked to love. Her consort is Hadad, the
bearded god associated with the bull as well as rain and storms. Can you image
what a fiery romance that could make? If I had to cast Hollywood glamour pusses
I’d pick Hugh Jackson as Hadad and Blake Lively as Atargatis. Side note: Hadad
also referred to a Ba’al, and his power was equivalent to the great Olympians. And
yes, he’d referenced to in the Bible.
Another trivia
snippet: Atargatis is attributed to Derceto, a high priestess who fell in love
with a shepherd and became pregnant. Out of shame, she plunged herself into the
sea but because of her great beauty, she was changed to part fish while
retaining the upper torso and head of her human body.
Atargatis had
several temples throughout Syria in which sacred ponds were built and
prohibited from contact except by her priests or Dervishes. Up to the 1930’s there were still sacred
ponds in Lebanon.
So far, I’ve put together some visuals and research on
Mermaid Mythology this immensely captivating subject of sea nymphs for the sequel to Ocean of
Love. New Players:
Hadad: aka Ba'al. God who dictated weather as
well as kept the land fertile or not with drought.
Derceto: Goddess with a temple and Priestess in
in Ephesus
Dervish: Priest or devout follower, pious and lead
an ascetics life.
Thanks to
Jewish Encyclopedia
Hey, now it's time to discuss prizes.
Thank you for joining in For the Love of Mythology.
I'm giving away on this hop site one $5.00 Amazon Gift Card to a randomly winner. All I need is your email address in a comment below. And that's not all. See the Grand Prize and other donated gifts that our lovely hostesses have put together for you below.
We will be having a grand prize so far consisting of...
$50 Amazon GC or $50 worth of books at TBD.
ebooks from Patricia Bates
a prize from Lisa Beth Darling
Rosanna Leo wants to donate Sunburn
Danica Avet : Ain't No Bull
Sheri Fredricks: Remedy Maker!!
An ecopy of Mything You by Greta Buckle
an ebook by Tmonique Stephens
An ecopy of Death Blow by Jianne Carlo
Remember to leave a comment with your correct email address.
Thanks for the giveaway.
ReplyDeletesstrode at scrtc dot com
Thanks for the giveaway. :)
ReplyDeleteThorton12 at hotmail dot com
Thanks for participating in the hop!
ReplyDeletejmcgaugh (at) semo (dot) edu
Nice giveaway, thanks! nidabland (at) msn (dot)com
ReplyDeleteI wish to thank you for making this an easy one. I enjoyed your site and books. Be happy
ReplyDeleteThanks for the giveaway <3
ReplyDeletefunkynaz@gmail.com
My favorite myth is about Thesseus and Ariadne.
ReplyDeletespamscape [at] gmail [dot] com
Thank you so much and Good luck to all! jmelter at gmail dot com
ReplyDeletethanks for the giveaway! - regnod(at)yahoo(d0t)com
ReplyDeleteI have to say...my fav is Greek mythology. I can't get enough :) fishinlovingal@yahoo.com Thank you!!
ReplyDeleteLove mythology! Thanks for the giveaway.
ReplyDeletebhometchko(at)hotmail(dot)com
Amazing post! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteverusbognar (at) gmail (dot) com
I do love the stories in mythology. So many to choose from...
ReplyDeleteMel
bournmelissa at hotmail dot com
Thanks for the chance to win :)
ReplyDeleteMorganlafey86(at)aol(dot)com
Thank you for sharing the "mermaid" mythology. I began studying mythology when I was just a child. I devoured every kind of myth I could find and could cite the differences between the Roman and Greek gods/goddesses by age 9. Alas, life began to interfere and I forgot what I once knew. I still love it, though and my daughter has inherited that love with a passion. I hope I win; thank you so much. (I don't think I ever learned about the mermaids.) Namaste. michelle_willms@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteGreat giveaway and great post on Mermaid myths. I love Greek mythology and my favorite book is Acheron by Sherrilyn Kenyon. I love his back story revolving around the greeks- Apollo, Artemis, Atlantis ect.
ReplyDeletekacidesigns AT yahoo DOT com
Great post! Mermaids are so unique and cool, arent they? I find them fascinating! I love the legends and stories. :D Thank you for all the info! I love reading about them! :) Thank you!!
ReplyDeleteshadowluvs2read(at)gmail(dot)com
Mermaids are cool! I love two series with a basis in mythology: Cole's Immortals after Dark and Kenyon's Dark-hunter series.
ReplyDeletemarlenebreakfield(at)yahoo(dot)com