Ishtar (
DIŠTAR

) is the
Assyrian and
Babylonian
counterpart to the
Sumerian
Inanna and to the
cognate north-west
Semitic
goddess Astarte. Also
known as
Astaroth,
the Queen of the
Night.
Characteristics

One type of depiction of
Ishtar/Inanna
Ishtar is a goddess of fertility,
love,
war, and
sex In the
Babylonian pantheon, she "was the divine personification of the
planet Venus".
Ishtar was
above all associated with sexuality: her cult involved sacred prostitution; her holy city
Uruk
was called the "town of the sacred courtesans"; and
she herself was the "courtesan of the gods". Ishtar had many
lovers; however, as Guirand notes,
Ishtar was the daughter of
Sin or
Anu.
She was particularly worshiped at Nineveh
and Arbela
(Erbil).
Her symbol is an
eight
pointed star.
Descent into the underworld
One of the most famous myths about Ishtar describes her descent to
the underworld. In this myth, Ishtar approaches the gates of the
underworld and demands that the gatekeeper open them:
The gatekeeper hurried to tell
Ereshkigal, the Queen of the Underworld.
Ereshkigal told the gatekeeper to let Ishtar enter, but "according
to the ancient decree".
The gatekeeper lets Ishtar into the underworld, opening one gate at
a time. At each gate, Ishtar has to shed one article of clothing.
When she finally passes the seventh gate, she is naked. In rage,
Ishtar throws herself at Ereshkigal, but Ereshkigal orders her
servant Namtar to imprison Ishtar and unleash sixty diseases
against her.
After Ishtar descends to the underworld, all sexual activity ceases
on earth. The god Papsukal reports the situation to Ea, the king of
the gods. Ea creates an
intersex creature
called Asu-shu-namir and sends him-her to Ereshkigal, telling
him-her to invoke "the name of the great gods" against her and to
ask for the bag containing the waters of life. Ereshkigal is
enraged when she hears Asu-shu-namir's demand, but she has to give
him-her the water of life. Asu-shu-namir sprinkles Ishtar with this
water, reviving her. Then Ishtar passes back through the seven
gates, getting one article of clothing back at each gate, and is
fully clothed as she exits the last gate.
Here there is a break in the text of the myth. The text resumes
with the following lines:
Formerly, scholars believed that the myth of Ishtar's descent took
place after the death of Ishtar's lover, Tammuz: they thought
Ishtar had gone to the underworld to rescue Tammuz. However, the
discovery of a corresponding myth about Inanna, the Sumerian
counterpart of Ishtar, has thrown some light on the myth of
Ishtar's descent, including its somewhat enigmatic ending lines.
According to the Inanna myth, Inanna can only return from the
underworld if she sends someone back in her place. Demons go with
her to make sure she sends someone back. However, each time Inanna
runs into someone, she finds him to be a friend and lets him go
free. When she finally reaches her home, she finds her husband
Dumuzi (Babylonian Tammuz) seated on his throne, not mourning her
at all. In anger, Inanna has the demons take Dumuzi back to the
underworld as her replacement. Dumuzi's sister Geshtinanna is
grief-stricken and volunteers to spend half the year in the
underworld, during which time Dumuzi can go free. The Ishtar myth
presumably has a comparable ending, Belili being the Babylonian
equivalent of Geshtinanna.
Ishtar in the Epic of Gilgamesh
The
Epic of Gilgamesh
contains an episode involving Ishtar which portrays her as
bad-tempered, petulant and spoiled by her father.
She asks the hero
Gilgamesh to marry her,
but he refuses, citing the fate that has befallen all her many
lovers:
Angered by Gilgamesh's refusal, Ishtar goes up to heaven and
complains to the high god
Anu. She demands that
Anu give her the
Bull of Heaven. If
he refuses, she warns, she will do exactly what she told the
gatekeeper of the underworld she would do if he didn't let her
in:
Anu gives Ishtar the Bull of Heaven, and Ishtar sends it to attack
Gilgamesh and his friend Enkidu. Gilgamesh and
Enkidu kill the Bull and offer its heart to the
sun-god
Shamash.
While
Gilgamesh and Enkidu are resting, Ishtar stands upon the walls of
the city (which is Uruk
) and curses
Gilgamesh. Enkidu tears off the Bull's right thigh and
throws it in Ishtar's face, saying, "If I could lay my hands on
you, it is this I should do to you, and lash your entrails to your
side." Then Ishtar called together "her people, the dancing and
singing girls, the prostitutes of the temple, the courtesans," and
had them mourn for the Bull of Heaven.
Comparisons with other deities
Like Ishtar, the Greek
Aphrodite and
Northwestern Semitic
Astarte were love
goddesses who were "as cruel as they were wayward".
Donald A. Mackenzie, an early popularizer
of mythology, draws a parallel between the love goddess Aphrodite
and her "
dying god" lover
Adonis on one hand, and the love goddess
Ishtar and her "dying god" lover Tammuz on the other. Some scholars
have suggested that
Joseph Campbell, a more recent
popularizer of mythology, equates Ishtar, Inanna, and Aphrodite,
and he draws a parallel between the Egyptian goddess
Isis who nurses
Horus, and the
Babylonian goddess Ishtar who nurses the god Tammuz.
References
Further reading
- Powell, Barry. Classical Myth: Fourth Edition. Upper
Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2003.