>>20508640In Hebrew tradition as Lilith she was considered the first wife of Adam, as the negative aspect of Venus this would act as a catalyst to turn the other planetary archetypes towards evil, the seven lights of the Menorah under the sign of the Scorpion.
>Although the evidence for the third millennium history of Lamastu is limited, there are clear indications that in origin she was not the individual mythological figure of later tradition. In the Ur III period her Sumerian name, Dimme, is not spelled with the divine determinative, even though she is called the "offspring of gods". A text of the same period reveals the early existence of the "seven Dimme damsels", a feature which persists through time, and adheres to the individualized Lamastu in the form of her seven names>Asherah was the consort of El, who is also known as Yahweh. She was also known by other names: Elat was her most common epithet. The Greeks knew her as Dione, Rhea or Cybele. The Canaanites knew her as Tannit or Hawwa, which is Eve in Hebrew. Who worshiped Asherah? Everyone who lived between India and Spain, 2nd millennium BC. until the Christian era. With the exception of the Hebrews, who only venerated it until the monotheistic reforms of Hezekiah and, later, of Josiah. The etymology of “Tannit” proposed by Cross is: feminine of “tannin”, which would mean “the one with the serpent”. Furthermore, Asherah had a second epithet in the Bronze Age, “dat batni”, also “she of the serpent”. The Sumerians knew her as Nintu or Ninhursag. Its symbol is a serpent coiled around a tree or staff: the caduceus. Associated with snakes. Asherah is also an Ophidian mother goddess. And both are also associated with trees. The Jewish menorah is commonly thought to depict the Tree of Life and/or Asherah