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Tamar, Qĕdēšā, Qadištu, and Sacred Prostitution in Mesopotamia*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 June 2011
Extract
The woman was dressed in purple and scarlet and glittered with gold and jewels and pearls, and she was holding a gold winecup filled with the disgusting filth of her prostitution; on her forehead was written a name, a cryptic name: “Babylon the Great, the mother of the prostitutes and all the filthy practices on the earth.” (Rev 17:4–5, NJB)
In discussions of the ancient Near Eastern setting for the Old Testament, various aspects of Mesopotamian society and culture are nominated as the precursors of certain features of Israelite practice.
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References
1 Some recent studies on various aspects of this issue include: Arnaud, Daniel, “La prostitution sacrée en Mésopotamie, un mythe historique?” RHR 183 (1973) 111–15Google Scholar; Astour, Michael, “Tamar the Hierodule: An Essay in the Method of Vestigal Motifs,” JBL 85 (1966) 185–96Google Scholar; Fisher, Eugene J., “Cultic Prostitution in the Ancient Near East? A Reassessment,” BTB 6 (1976) 225–36Google Scholar; Lerner, Gerda, “The Origin of Prostitution in Ancient Mesopotamia,” Journal of Women in Culture and Society 11 (1986) 236–54CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Oden, Robert A. Jr, The Bible Without Theology (New York: Harper & Row, 1987)Google Scholar chap. 5: “Religious Identity and the Sacred Prostitution Accusation,” 131–53; Yamauchi, Edwin M., “Cultic Prostitution, A Case Study in Cultural Diffusion,” in A., Harry, Hoffner, , Jr., ed., Orient and Occident: Essays Presented to Cyrus H. Gordon on the Occasion of His Sixty-fifth Birthday (AOAT 22; Kevelaer: Butzon & Bercker, 1973) 213–22.Google Scholar
2 NJB, 65 note h on Gen 38:21. Other translations include: “harlot” vs. “harlot” (KJV); “prostitute” vs. “prostitute” (Good News Bible [New York: American Bible Society, 1978])Google Scholar; “harlot” vs. “temple prostitute” (New American Standard Bible); “prostitute” vs. “temple prostitute” (NEB). The commentators mostly vary their translations: Haines, Lee, Genesis and Exodus (The Wesleyan Bible Commentary; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1967)Google Scholar: “harlot” vs. “prostitute”; Skinner, John, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on Genesis (2d ed.; ICC 1; Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1930)Google Scholar: “harlot” vs. “sacred prostitute”; Speiser, E. A., Genesis (AB 1; Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1964)Google Scholar: “harlot” vs. “votary”; Vawter, Bruce, On Genesis: A New Reading (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1977)Google Scholar: “harlot” vs. “temple prostitute.” A few commentators maintain the traditional translation “harlot” vs. “harlot”: Rad, Gerhard von, Genesis, A Commentary (3d ed.; London: SCM, 1972)Google Scholar, and Simpson, C. A. and Bowie, W. R., The Book of Genesis (The Interpreter's Bible; New York: Abingdon, 1952).Google Scholar
3 Astour, “Tamar the Hierodule.” Note the criticism of the biblical side of the argument by Emerton, J. A., “Some Problems in Genesis XXXVIII,” VT 25 (1975) 357–60.Google Scholar
4 Speiser, Genesis, 300; Haines, Genesis and Exodus, 124; Brenner, Athalya, The Israelite Woman: Social Role and Literary Type in Biblical Narrative (Sheffield: JSOT, 1985) 82.Google Scholar
5 Skinner, Genesis, 454; Simpson and Bowie, Genesis, 760.
6 Veiling upon marriage in the patriarchal period has been inferred from the fact that Rebecca covered herself with a veil on the approach of Isaac (Gen 24:65) and that Leah was unrecognizable during the marriage ceremony (Gen 29:23). Likewise, according to the legal system, the adulterous woman is punished by the loosening of her hair (Num 5:18). In the New Testament, Paul admonishes the Corinthians that women should choose between cutting off their hair, shaving their heads and wearing a veil to symbolize their subjection to men (1 Cor 11:4–7). For the Islamic world, see Kurān Surah XXXIII 53–59; for the Assyrian world, see Middle Assyrian Laws § § 40–41.
7 Von Rad, Genesis, 359.
8 For a similar opinion see Vawter, Genesis, 397.
9 Cf. Gruber, Mayer I., “Hebrew qĕdēšāh and her Canaanite and Akkadian Cognates,” UF 18 (1986) 133–48. Gruber is not alone in visualizing the female role without taking into consideration the male counterpart; see references below, n. 11.Google Scholar
10 Speiser, Genesis, 300; Haines, Genesis and Exodus, 125; see also the NEB note on this line.
11 Cf. Bird, Phyllis, “The Place of Women in the Israelite Cultus,” in Hanson, Paul D., Miller, Patrick D., Jr., and McBride, S. Dean, eds., Ancient Israelite Religion: Essays in Honor of Frank M. Cross (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1987) 397–419 and references collected there.Google Scholar
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40 Harper, Robert Francis, Assyrian and Babylonian Letters Belonging to the Kouyunjik Collection of the British Museum (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1892–1914) no. 1126:13; see Parpola, Letters from Assyrian Scholars, no. 187.Google Scholar
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48 Cooper, Curse of Agade, 60.441; see also translations of Attinger, Pierre, “Remarques à propos de la ‘Malédiction d'Accad,’” RA 78 (1984) 106Google Scholar: “puissent ta hiérodule (devenue) mère, ta courtisane (devenue) mère faire avorter (son)/ son enfant!”; Jacobsen, The Harps That Once, 372: “May your hierodule who is a mother, and your courtesan who is a mother stab the child!”
49 Edzard, “Sumerische Komposita,” 91–102. Note his reluctance to state the etymology, linguistic structure, and semantics of this compound. See also Jestin, “Les noms de profession,” 211–13.
50 Astour, “Tamar the Hierodule,” 189 n. 28.
51 Published after Astour's article, CAD 9. 199 s.v. lipištu (written (UZU).NU in Akkadian texts) is translated as “an abnormal fleshy or membranous substance,” not a sexual organ.
52 It is not possible that gig stands here for mí + nunuz, which appears as part of the title of the en-priestess of Nanna of Ur (cf. Sollberger, Edmond, “Notes on the Early Inscriptions from Ur and El-'Obēd,” Iraq 22 (1960) 86 n. 22; Jestin, “Les noms de profession,” 212) because of syllabic renderings as well as the Emesal mugib. Likewise, it is not probable that the nu- prefix is a phonetic indicator.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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65 Berlin, Enmerkar and Ensuḫkešdanna, 74.
66 The three sources are: (1) Enmerkar and Ensuḫkešdanna, line 97, (2) Lugalbanda and Enmerkar, line 315 = 381, (3) Bird and Fish, line 117 var.
67 The geographical area covered by the term Mesopotamia includes the land between the two rivers, the Tigris and the Euphrates, and is divided into two geopolitical regions: Babylonia is the alluvial plain of the south and Assyria is situated on the highlands to the north. Evidence from the peripheral areas surrounding Mesopotamia will not be considered in the following since those areas belong to the Hittite, Neo-Hittite, or Hurrian culture areas.
68 Astour, “Tamar the Hierodule,” 185.
69 Marglin, Frédénque Apffel, “Hierodouleia,” in Eliade, Mircea, ed., Encyclopedia of Religion (16 vols.; New York: MacMillan, 1987) 6. 309.Google Scholar
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71 Yamauchi, “Cultic Prostitution,” 213.
72 Oden, Bible Without Theology, 140–47.
73 Lemer, “Origin of Prostitution,” 239.
74 Fisher, “Cultic Prostitution,” 230: “whole-scale debauchery connoted by the term cultic prostitution.”
75 OED 8. 1497.
76 Van Lerberghe, “New Data,” 280–83.
77 Amaud, “La prostitution sacrée,” 114.
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