Crossword clues for astarte
astarte
- Aphrodite's Semitic counterpart
- Semitic goddess of fertility
- Phoenician's Aphrodite
- Phoenician sex symbol
- Answer beginning with E for goddess
- One goddess or another imprisoning Pollux?
- Answer, beginning with European goddess
- Goddess of fertility
- Phoenician goddess
- Phoenician fertility goddess
- Moon goddess
- Semitic goddess
- Chestnut clam
- Bronze Age fertility deity
- Ancient goddess of fertility
- Ancient fertility goddess
- Fertility goddess
- Phoenician love goddess
- Goddess mentioned in Poe's "Ulalume"
- Phoenician fertility deity
- Semitic fertility goddess
- (Phoenician) a fertility goddess
- Counterpart of Ashtoreth and Ishtar
- A goddess of fertility
- Ancient Semitic goddess
- Phoenician goddess of fertility
- Kin of a quahog
- Ancient Semitic fertility goddess
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Astarte \As*tar"te\, n. [Gr. ? a Ph[oe]nician goddess.] (Zo["o]l.) A genus of bivalve mollusks, common on the coasts of America and Europe.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Phoenician goddess identified with Greek Aphrodite, from Greek Astarte, from Phoenician Astoreth.
Wikipedia
Astarte or Ashtoreth (, Astártē) is the Hellenized form of the Middle Eastern goddess Ishtar, worshipped from the Bronze Age through classical antiquity. The name is particularly associated with her worship in the ancient Levant among the Canaanites and Phoenicians. She was also celebrated in Egypt following the importation of Levantine cults there. The name Astarte is sometimes also applied to her cults in Mesopotamian cultures like Assyria and Babylonia.
Astarte was an all-female black metal band from Athens, Greece, named after the goddess Astarte.
Astarte is an ancient Semitic goddess.
Astarte may also refer to:
Astarte, choreographed by Robert Joffrey, was the first live, multi-media ballet with a specially commissioned rock music score composed and performed by Crome Syrcus. It received its world premier on September 20, 1967 and was performed by the Joffrey Ballet in New York at the City Center Theater. It was produced by Midge Mackenzie, with sets and lighting design by Thomas Skelton, costumes by Hugh Sherrer, and film created and photographed by Gardner Compton.
Astarte made the cover of Time Magazine in March 1968.
Usage examples of "astarte".
I may fabricate a name for pleasure-hunters, following still, with Corybantic fury, the orgic revels of Osiris or Astarte: in brief, to all the shades of human heresy, on this side or on that of the golden mean, the worship of one true God, as revealed to us in His three mysterious characters.
Astarte: in Phrygia, Atys and Cybele: in Persia, Mithras and Asis: in Samothrace and Greece, Dionusos or Sabazeus and Rhea: in Britain, Hu and Ceridwen: and in Scandinavia, Woden and Frea: and in every instance these Divinities represented the Sun and the Moon.
He had passed the temple in which the people of Kaft adored their goddess Astarte, and the sanctuary of Seth, where they sacrificed to Baal, without letting himself be disturbed by the dancing devotees or the noise of cymbals and music which issued from their enclosures.
The decrees of this Council covered a range as wide as the measures adopted for dredging the channels of the lake and preventing the encroachment of water weed, to the choice of messengers to be sent to the Gods Baal and Astarte.
Surely this must have been sacred to Astarte - more commonly worshipped by the Carthaginians as Tanith - goddess of earth and moon, and so ranks of white-clad priests wound in procession through the grove, past the towers and into the secret cavern.
Here Astarte seemed to have taken precedence over the more usual Carthaginian form Tanith.
That the glory of our nation may live for ever in the words of our beloved Huy, son of Amon, High Priest of Baal and favourite of Astarte, bearer of the cup of life and Axeman of all the Gods.
Opet, and to despoil their tomb, do so at your peril, and may the curse of Astarte and great Baal hound you to your own graves.
Huy led the praise chant to Astarte, and the work of refilling the mine began.
Here there were temples to both Baal and Astarte, the religious strongholds of the eastern kingdom, and Huy spent twenty days in synod with his priests and priestesses.
Huy invited the reverend priestesses of Astarte, and provided magnificent fare for he had hunted the day before and there was game to add to the beef and chicken and fish seasoned with spices traded from the Drav, while the gardens of Zeng provided the best of their fruits and wines.
She wore the gold crescent moon emblem of Astarte on her deep bulging forehead, dangling from a fine chain of gold, and her earrings were two small sun stones that shone like the stars of heaven.
You will travel with the wives of the king, and at Opet you will enter the sisterhood of Astarte - and await my return.
The priestesses of Astarte were dedicated to the goddess, they could never marry.
He had explained the theory of symbolic representation very carefully, showing Manatassi that the moon was not Astarte but her symbol, her coin, her sign and promise.