This image of Lilith is based largely on a Sumerian clay tablet relief from 2000 BC. She wears the horned crown that marks her as a Goddess not a demon in Sumerian mythology. Lilith appears in Sumerian, Babylonian, Assyrian, Canaanite, Persian, Hebrew, Arabic, and Teutonic mythology. She is also known as Adam's "first wife" who refused to "lie beneath." In the oldest mythologies, she is a Goddess and in later stories, she is demonized. Lilith is a motherless form of the divine feminine even known to some as the wife of Yahweh. As the embodiment of the neglected, outcast, and rejected aspects of the Great Goddess she calls women to rise up in strength to reclaim their own divinity.
Measures 11 inches tall, 7 inches wide with a depth of 2 3/4 inches
- Tradition:
- Mesopotamian
- Material:
- Polyresin
- Artist:
- Paul Borda