Adad
ADAD, the name of the storm-god in the Babylonian-Assyrian
pantheon, who is also known as Ramman (“the thunderer”). The problem
involved in this double name has not yet been definitely solved.
Evidence seems to favour the view that Ramman was the name current in
Babylonia, whereas Adad was more common in Assyria. To judge from
analogous instances of a double nomenclature, the two names revert to
two different centres for the cult of a storm-god, though it must be
confessed that up to the present it has been impossible to determine
where these centres were. A god Hadad who was a prominent deity in
ancient Syria is identical with Adad, and in view of this it is
plausible to assume---for which there is also other evidence—that the
name Adad represents an importation into Assyria from Aramaic
districts. Whether the same is the case with Ramman, identical with
Rimmon, known to us from the Old Testament as the chief deity of
Damascus, is not certain though probable. On the other hand the cult of
a specific storm-god in ancient Babylonia is vouched for by the
occurrence of the sign Im—the “Sumerian” or ideographic writing for
Adad-Ramman—as an element in proper names of the old Babylonian period.
However this name may have originally been pronounced, so much is
certain,---that through Aramaic influences in Babylonia and Assyria he
was identified with the storm-god of the western Semites, and a trace of
this influence is to be seen in the designation Amurru, also given to
this god in the religious literature of Babylonia, which as an early
name for Palestine and Syria describes the god as belonging to the
Amorite district.
The Babylonian storm-god presents two aspects in the hymns,
incantations and votive inscriptions. On the one hand he is the god
who, through bringing on the rain in due season, causes the land to
become fertile, and, on the other hand, the storms that he sends out
bring havoc and destruction. He is pictured on monuments and seal
cylinders with the lightning and the thunderbolt, and in the hymns the
sombre aspects of the god on the whole predominate. His association
with the sun-god, Shamash, due to the natural combination of the two
deities who alternate in the control of nature, leads to imbuing him
with some of the traits belonging to a solar deity.
In Syria Hadad is hardly to be distinguished from a solar deity. The
process of assimilation did not proceed so far in Babylonia and Assyria,
but Shamash and Adad became in combination the gods of oracles and of
divination in general. Whether the will of the gods is determined
through the inspection of the liver of the sacrificial animal, through
observing the action of oil bubbles in a basin of water or through the
observation of the movements of the heavenly bodies, it is Shamash and
Adad who, in the ritual connected with divination, are invariably
invoked. Similarly in the annals and votive inscriptions of the kings,
when oracles are referred to, Shamash and Adad are always named as the
gods addressed, and their ordinary designation in such instances is bele
biri, “lords of divination.” The consort of Adad-Ramman is Shala, while
as Amurru his consort is called Aschratum.
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