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This second volume of the commentary on the Baal Cycle, the most important Canaanite religious text from Ugarit, in Syria, analyzes KTU/CAT 1.3 and 1.4, the tablets that contain the long episode about how Baal secured permission from El to build his royal palace and how the palace was built. It includes a new edition of the tablets, supplemented by a DVD-ROM with 92 images and superimposible drawings, a comprehensive introduction, new translation and vocalized text, and detailed commentary. The authors develop an interpretation of the episode which places it into the larger context of the Baal Cycle as a whole.
Baal (Divinité cananéenne) --- Ougaritique (Langue) --- Baal --- Baal Shamen --- Baal Shemin --- Bel --- Cycle de Baal. --- Ougarit (Ville ancienne) --- Ugarit (Extinct city) --- Religion. --- 299.23 --- Baal (Deity) --- 299.23 Oud-syrische godsdiensten. Ugaritische godsdienst --- Oud-syrische godsdiensten. Ugaritische godsdienst --- -Religion --- Ugarit (Extinct city) - - Religion --- -Baal (Deity) --- Baal (Canaanite deity) --- -Baal (Canaanite deity)
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"This book investigates the issue of the singularity versus the multiplicity of ancient Near Eastern deities who are known by a common first name but differentiated by their last names, or geographic epithets. It focuses primarily on the Ishtar divine names in Mesopotamia, Baal names in the Levant, and Yahweh names in Israel"--
God --- God (Judaism) --- Elohim --- Jehovah --- Yahveh --- Yahweh --- Yehovah --- Yhwh --- Metaphysics --- Misotheism --- Theism --- Name --- Name. --- Ishtar (Assyro-Babylonian deity) --- Baal --- Baal Shamen --- Baal Shemin --- Bel --- Baal (Canaanite deity) --- Ishtar --- Ištar --- Inanna --- Astarte --- Gods, Canaanite --- Ancient Near Eastern deities. --- Divine epithets.
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