Lilith in Ancient Texts
Over
the years, Lilith has graced us with appearances of varying degrees in
several classic ancient texts. Here we will look through some of them
and detail Lilith’s characterizations in each of the texts.
On this page:
Gilgamesh and the Huluppu Tree
The Book of Genesis
The Hebrew Bible
The Dead Sea Scrolls
The Babylonian Talmud
The Alphabet of Ben Sira
The Book of Zohar
Gilgamesh and the Huluppu Tree
“Gilgamesh and the Huluppu Tree clay tablet” by Osama Shukir Muhammad Amin.
Lilith’s
first textual appearance happens in an ancient Sumerian epic named
“Gilgamesh and the Huluppu Tree”, which was written as a series of poems
in clay tablets. Originally known as “Innana and the Huluppu Tree”,
this epic dates back to 2000 BCE Babylonia, where the Sumerians reigned
supreme. The poems were written on several tablets and integrated into a
larger poem. Some tablets still exist to this day and can be found
written not only in Akkadian (the Semitic language that was spoken by
the Babylonians) but also in Hurrian and Hittite. In “Gilgamesh and the
Huluppu Tree”, a devilish Lilith builds a house in the middle of the
Huluppu Tree that had been planted near the Euphrates river in the days
of the Creation. This tree happens to be in the garden of Innana, the
Goddess of Erotic Love. Lilith is joined by a dragon who places his nest
at the base of the tree and by a Zu-bird who places its young on the
crown of the tree. The mighty hero Gilgamesh appears and slays the
dragon with his huge bronze ax. Stricken with fear, Lilith tears down
her house and flees to the desert.
The Book of Genesis
Perhaps
Lilith’s most controversial and discounted appearance in a religious
text is her appearance in the Book of Genesis, the first book of the
Bible. Thought to have been written by Moses in 1445 BCE (or 1290 BCE as
some dispute) the Book of Genesis has two parts that have often been
seen to counteract one another. While Genesis 2 contains the widely
popular Adam and Eve story where God first makes Adam and then fashions
Eve from Adam’s rib so that Adam would not be lonely and have a helper,
the shorter Genesis 1 clearly states that a male and a female were
created by God in His own image at the same time and from the same
earth. Genesis 1:27 states:
“So God created mankind in his own image,
in the image of god he created them;
male and female he created them.”
Genesis 1:27.
Although
many have debated over these notably different creation stories, in
Rabbinic and Jewish interpretations, these stories come chronologically.
First came Lilith, Adam’s first wife and equal made alongside him from
the same Earth. Then came Eve, Adam’s second wife, and the mother of
humanity. Despite her name never being mentioned in the text itself,
Lilith is widely considered to be Adam’s first wife, and thus the
world’s first woman.
The Hebrew Bible
The
Bible mentions Lilith only once, in Isaiah 34. The book of Isaiah
contains a collection of short but deeply detailed Hebrew prophecies,
with its first 39 chapters forming what has been called the “First
Isaiah”. Chapter 34 details Yahweh’s (God’s real name) day of vengeance
wherein Yahweh fights with Edomites- strange outisider creatures.
According to the prophecy, Edom will become a waste space full of wild
animals and infertile land. Lilith is said to be here too. Isaiah 34:14
states,
The wild-cat shall meet with the jackals
And the satyr shall cry to his fellow,
Yea, Lilith shall repose there
And find her a place of rest.
Isaiah 34:14
This
lone mention of Lilith is never followed up, supposably because Lilith
the she-demon was so well-known that her mere name was enough to conjure
up images of the horror when imagining this prophesized
post-apocolyptic world.
The Dead Sea Scrolls
Dead Sea Scrolls found in Qumran
“Complete Dead Sea Scroll 28a from Qumran Cave 1” by Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin, courtesy of the Jordan Museum in Amman.
Lilith
then appears in the Dead Sea Scrolls, a collection of ancient
manuscripts that are approximately two thousand years old. Thought to be
the greatest archaeological find of the 20th century, the Dead Sea
Scrolls were first found by chance in 1947 in a cave near Khirbet Qumran
on the northwest shore of the Dead Sea. Now, fragments of almost 950
different scrolls have been found, consisting of copies of the Hebrew
Bible, sectarian commentary on the Bible, and even some new texts that
had not been known at all. The Qumran Sect was highly engrossed with
demonology, and so it is no shock that Lilith appears in the “Song for a
Sage”, a hymn possibly used in exorcisms. The hymn goes,
“And I, the
Sage, sound the majesty of His beauty to terrify and confound all the
spirits of destroying angels and the bastard spirits, the demons,
Lilith. . ., and those that strike suddenly, to lead astray the spirit
of understanding, and to make desolate their heart.”
Song for a Sage, Dead Sea Scrolls.
To learn more about the Dead Sea Scrolls, watch:
The Babylonian Talmud
With
her inclusion in the Babylonian Talmud, Lilith was officially brought
into the scholarly world. Learned rabbis compiled and edited the
Babylonian Talmud circa 500-600 CE, and it went on the become a central
text of Rabbinic Judaism. The Talmud is a compilation of legal
discussions, tales of great rabbis, and commentaries on Bible passages
which have become a central source for Jewish religious law and
theology.
In the Talmud, Lilith is mentioned sparsely in different
contexts. Lilith is mentioned as the mother of the demon Hormin
(b.Sanhedrin 39a) or Hormiz (b. Bava Batra 73b), establishing her in the
Jewish scholarly world as the “Mother of Demons”. Further mentions of
Lilith in the Talmud state that she has long hair (b. Eruvin 100), she
is winged (b. Niddah 24b), and attacks the lonely sleeper (b. Shabbat
151b). These characterizations of Lilith are thought to have been
heavily based upon Babylonian demonology, with Lilith sharing traits
with previous Babylonian demoneses the Ardat Lili (a lustful female who
attacks single men), and Labratu (a female demon with wild hair that
kills children and sucks their blood).
To learn more about the Babylonian Talmud, watch:
The Alphabet of Ben Sira
After
millenniums of sparse appearances in ancient Jewish texts, Lilith’s
story is finally fleshed out in a 900 CE text named the Alphabet of Ben
Sira. Often thought to be quite a sarcastic (and misogynistic) anonymous
midrash, the Alphabet of Ben Sira is a piece of Jewish Aggadah
(folklore) that portrays biblical stories in often satirical ways.
Lilith is the star of the fifth episode of this 22 episode-long ancient
text, and shockingly, is portrayed as Adam’s first wife before Eve.
The
Alphabet brings in Lilith”s narrative within the tale of King
Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon (the greatest king of the Chaldean dynasty of
Babylonia), and his young son who has fallen ill. The King commands Ben
Sira, a courtier, to cure his son. Promptly after taking the name of
God, Ben Sira settles in on the task at hand and inscribes an Amulet
with the names of the three Angels of Health-Senoy, Sansenoy, and
Semangelof . Ben Sira states that these angels travel around the world
to control and destroy evil spirits such as Lilith who bring death and
illness. Citing directly from Genesis, Ben Sira goes on to tell the
story of how God thought that Adam would be lonely, so God fashioned a
companion for him from the same soil. Soon the couple begins to fight,
with neither listening to the other. Thinking of her as his egalitarian
spouse, Lilith seeks not to be in a subordinate position during
intercourse. Adam disagrees, thinking that the bottom is her rightful
place. Furious, Lilith takes the Sacred Name (God’s real name), and
flies away, escaping to the Red Sea.
Lilith Amulet that reads "Bind Lilith in Chains"
“Amulet
for mother and newborn” by Ofrit Rosenberg, courtesy of Israel Museum,
Jerusalem. “Bind Lilith in Chains” reads this amulet. Lilith (center) is
bound by chains. God’s real name has been inscribed as well as some
abbreviated lines from the Torah/Bible.
The Almighty sends the Three
Angels of Health in search of Lilith and gives her an ultimatum- if
Lilith fails to return, 100 of her children would die every day. The
angels find Lilith near the Red Sea, and she refuses to go back,
claiming that she was made to devour children in retaliation for Adam’s
mistreatment and God’s commands to slay her children. To save herself
from being drowned in the Red Sea by the three angels, Lilith promises
no harm to any child who bears an amulet with either her name on it or
the names of the three Angels of Health on it.
The Alphabet of Ben
Sira goes into great detail about the kind of threat Lilith possesses,
claiming that Lilith would only harm baby boys during the first eight
days after their birth, until they are circumcised, and baby girls
during the first twelve days of their life. These declarations must have
impacted Jewish communities massively, for there are several customs
during childbirth related to avoiding Lilith and her like. To ward off
Lilith, amulets with her name were placed outside the entrances of the
birth rooms, the house, and even on the bed. With these amulets, kosher
mezuzot (parchment inscribed with specified Hebrew verses from the
Torah) were also positioned in all entrances of the birth room. The
birth rooms would be shut off and no one would be allowed to enter
during birth. Salt or knives were also placed under the baby’s mattress,
and a red thread would be tied to the baby’s wrist. The new mother
would stay in bed for eight days, adorned with amulets, and female
relatives of the woman would never leave the newborn baby unattended.
In
expanding on her back story then, The Alphabet of Ben Sira solidified
fear and hatred of Lilith in ancient Jewish communities and put the
blame of all infant deaths of her, further villainizing and demonizing
her.
The Book of Zohar
The
Book of Zohar brings in another spin on the biblical tale of creation
by incorporating Adam, Lilith, and Eve in the origin story. Thought to
have been written around 1300 CE in Spain by Moses de Leon (1250–1305),
the Book of Zohar serves as the foundational literature of Jewish
mystical thought known as the Kabbalah. The reinterpretations provided
by the Book of Zohar are taken to be sacred by Kabbalists (those who
subscribe to this particular Jewish mysticism).
The Book of Zohar’s
reinterpretations in describing the origin of humankind is based on a
reading of Genesis 1:27 where God created a male and a female in his own
image. In this take on the Biblical tale, God created an androgenous
figure who was half male and half female- a human. Centuries later,
Zohar elaborates that God put Adam on a deep slumber and sawed off the
female side of the human, dividing the “male” and the “female” into
distinct humans. This detached portion was “the original Lilith, who was
with him [Adam] and who conceived from him” (Zohar 34b). Later, Lilith
sees her rival Eve clinging on to Adam and in a jealous rage, flies
away.
In the Zohar too, Lilith’s past characterization as a vicious
succubus follows. Lilith grabs lone men and steals their seed to make
demon children, leaving them infected with diseases. All nocturnal
emissions reveal that Lilith has visited the man at night time. Zohar
19b reads:
She [Lilith] roams at night, and goes all about the world
and makes sport with men and causes them to emit seed. In every place
where a man sleeps alone in a house, she visits him and grabs him and
attaches herself to him and has her desire from him, and bears from him.
And she also afflicts him with sickness, and he knows it not, and all
this takes place when the moon is on the wane..
Zohar 19b.
The
Zohar often mentions Shekinah, the female side to God, and constructs
Lilith as her antithesis. While Shekinah is Israel’s mother, Lilith is
its destruction. The Book of Zohar then lands another strike to Lilith,
partnering her with the Samael or Asmodeus, the male personification of
evil. In Zohar 23b and 55a, Lilith and Samael are said to form an unholy
alliance, and breed demon children. God later castrates Samael, and she
turns to lone sleepers to steal their seed and impregnate herself. The
Zohar’s Lilith is Adam’s first wife who has turned into a succubus that
brings illness and death to all.
Lilith appears in many stories and
forms in ancient texts, all of which have informed and constructed
Lilith’s image in ancient societies. Lilith has forever been
immortalized in these texts.
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