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Showing Original Post only (View all)Have you seen the "Ishtar = Easter" meme floating around? Yeah, about that... [View all]
Easter Is Not Named After Ishtar, And Other Truths I Have To Tell You
Lets start from the top:
This is Ishtar
Okay, great. So far things are fairly accurate. The relief pictured here, known as the Burney Relief (also called the Queen of the Night relief) is widely considered to be an Ancient Babylonian representation of Ishtar (although some scholars believe that the woman depicted might be Lilitu or Ereshkigal). This relief is currently housed in the British Museum in London, but originates from southern Iraq and is nearly 4,000 years old.
pronounced Easter.
Actually, in modern English we pronounce it the way it looks. A case could be made for pronouncing it Eesh-tar, but I have yet to come across a credible source that gives the original pronunciation as Easter.
Easter is originally the celebration of Ishtar, the Assyrian and Babylonian goddess of fertility and sex.
Ishtar was the goddess of love, war and sex. These days, thanks to Herodotus, she is especially associated with sacred prostitution* (also known as temple prostitution), which, in the religions of the Ancient Near East, allegedly took on the form of every woman having to, at some point in her life, go to the temple of Ishtar and have sex with the first stranger who offered her money. Once a woman entered the temple of Ishtar for the purpose of sacred prostitution, she was not allowed to leave until shed done the deed. I cant imagine that sacred prostitution sex was ever very good sex, but hey, what do I know? Probably some people were pretty into it I mean, if you can imagine it, someones made porn about it, right?
Anyway, the point I am trying to make here is that, yes, Ishtar was associated with fertility and sex. However, her symbols were the lion, the gate and the eight-pointed star; I cant find any evidence of eggs or rabbits symbolically belonging to her. And Easter has nothing to do with her.
The rest, a pretty interesting read: http://bellejarblog.wordpress.com/2013/03/28/easter-is-not-named-after-ishtar-and-other-truths-i-have-to-tell-you/
Don't feel bad, I fell for it, too.
P.S. on edit: this isn't any kind of attempt to deny Easter's pagan roots. Just an argument for getting our pagans straight.
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Have you seen the "Ishtar = Easter" meme floating around? Yeah, about that... [View all]
WilliamPitt
Mar 2013
OP
LOL, that's exactly what I was thinking. I guess some bad experiences stay with you forever. n/t
winter is coming
Mar 2013
#6
My bad! Isn't there a web site devoted to whether or not celebrities are still with us?
6000eliot
Mar 2013
#22
I think the point is that Easter has a lot to do with the Goddess, Will. More so, originally
villager
Mar 2013
#2
true, It is clearer when people learn the sabbath is celebrated during the equinox
Dragonfli
Mar 2013
#8
What happens to this whole line of argument when you go to another country like Russia?
JVS
Mar 2013
#4
Pagan calendaring: Christians celebrate Easter based on the first moon after equinox.
Bernardo de La Paz
Mar 2013
#14
Alright! I always feel like a "scored" when I get William Pitt's attention.
xtraxritical
Apr 2013
#28
In all of the Christian burials that I know of, all bodies are buried so that they will arise facing
DhhD
Mar 2013
#18
Not only is Ishtar not Eostre, there's no known connection with bunnies, hares or eggs
muriel_volestrangler
Mar 2013
#20
Thanks for trying to keep pagan goddesses straight. Happiness from Equinox to Equinox!
Hekate
Apr 2013
#25
I'm pretty certain the pagan roots of Easter come from the old European Goddess Ostera
Matariki
Apr 2013
#31