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LILITH: ADVENTURE OF MOTHER GODDESS’ FALL AND TRANSFORMATION INTO A DEMON IN JEWISH MYTHOLOGY

Yıl 2018, Cilt: 2018 Sayı: 35, 363 - 395, 30.04.2018
https://doi.org/10.28949/bilimname.381879

Öz

It has been considered that Lilith derived from
Sumerian language origin ‘líl’ means “air, wind”, and was transferred to
Akkadian language as lilītu. Lilith name is firstly encountered in Epic of
Gılgamesh as a wrapped snake around Huluppu Tree of The Great Mother Goddess
Inanna. As is seen in this epic, in early ancient times, Lilith is a female
demon in snake form. Therefore, she has been identified with Lamashtu and Lamia
which are snake forms in most cultures of Mesopotamia and Levant. It has been
known that both are infanticides. Because of this identification Lilith has
been described as “infanticide” until today.

On the other hand, in the ancient times, Lilith has
not accepted only as a demon. Her position in the eye of community always
straddled the line between godlikeness and wickedness. Because in the period of
Sumerian-Babylonian, in which Inanna (Ishtar) is glorified by name “Queen of
Heavens and Earth”, the belief predominated that the Goddess is a resource of
all kinds of beauties and abundance as well as warfare and destruction. By
means of this high prestige of the Goddess, it has been known that the religion
of the Goddess had emancipated to women especially in her capital Uruk and in
most city-states. More particularly the women who are called Kadishtu, means “sinless, stainless and
lily”, had monopolized agricultural economics, services of the temple of the
Goddess and scholarly traditions. This position exhibits the superior social
status which could be bestowed on a woman in those times. In this period,
Lilith has continued her demonic character. On the other side, she has been
identified with Inanna (Ishtar) and she has symbolized the harlotry of the
temple. On that secondary sense Lilith has become to represent the negative
sides of the Goddess with her characteristics such as sexuality, aggression and
misandry. The fact that Lilith has begun to represent the negative sides of the
Goddess has enabled the belief that the Goddess is baleful. Thus, the Goddess
had become the focus of vulgarity, combativeness, immorality and all evils. For
this reason, Inanna/Ishtar had been narrated as an aggressive goddess in myths
more often.

When Jahwism-Judaism began to settle in Levant region
in terms of politics and religion, Lilith who had identified the religion of
Goddess and demonic characters, has become the villain in the battle of Judaism
against the religion of Goddess. She crossed into Jewish mythology with all her
characteristics and here she has reached the peak of evil as the most dangerous
feminine demon with her infertile and salacious character. First and only
reference to Lilith in Hebrew Bible is in Isaiah 34:14. Her adventure in Jewish
mythology has started with this reference. In this pasuk, Lilith has been
mentioned as a metaphor of God’s wrath to people of Edom which is the greatest
enemy of Israel. Accordingly, Lilith, the Virgin of ruins and wild lands, has
been described as an enormous pain which would take Edom to the age of chaos
before genesis. In this passage, she is a symbol of terror which the Holy One
YHWH spreads to the polytheist people. In a sense, non-believers suffered the
wrath of God through her.

In the Rabbinic period, the scholars accepted the myth
of Lilith as it was in the ancient period and adopted it to the Jewish culture.
They portrayed Lilith as a dangerous feminine devil who seduces men and causes
women to suffer a miscarriage. In the Midrashic literature she has been
referred as the reason of all evil factors in the history of humanity and
Judaism. In accordance with this belief, in the stories of people of Edom in
Hebrew Bible where they suffer fatalities, Lilith has been adapted to Esau and
his devil Samael. In this new picture, she is the harlot wife of Samael and the
feminine devil of Esau’s lineage and people of Edom which stands against
Children of Israel.

In the late Midrashic period, the origin of Lilith has
been traced all the way back to genesis. This once, Lilith is described as the
first wife of Adam, who dissuaded Eve and caused to be expelled from the garden
of Eden. By this interpretation, Jewish scholars not only have tried to clarify
the paradoxical and ambiguous pasuks in Genesis, but also they have reshaped
the fall of humanity. Also, they have strengthened the religious basis of
patriarchal Jewish mentality.











Today, the character of Lilith is influential on
feminist Jewish women. Jewish women, who are alienated from the religious and
social arena because of patriarchal religious Jewish idea, leap in action by
means of feminist ideas. While some of them deny the religion and Holy Bible,
others try to reconcile between feminist ideas and Holy Bible and pave the way
for reinterpreting the religion. Particularly, for the latter, Lilith is an
important symbol. She is the voice of challenging the male-dominated life style
and the pioneer of the philosophical questioning.  

Kaynakça

  • ABUSCH, T., “Ishtar”, DDD (edt: Karel van der Toorn), IInd edition, Cambridge: Brill, 1999.
  • ALTUNAY, Erhan, Paganizm-I (Kadim Bilgeliğe Giriş), İstanbul: Hermes Yayınları, 2014.
  • ANAGNASTOU-LAOUSTIDES, E., In The Garden Of The Gods, London-New York: Routledge, 2017.
  • APULEIUS, L., Altın Eşek (çev. F. Akderin), İstanbul: Alfa Yayınları, 2006.
  • AVISHUR, I., “Edom”, EJ, edt. F. Skolnik & M. Berenbaum. Jarusalem, 2007, VI.
  • AYDIN, Fuat, “Bir Sessizliğin ya da Yhvh’nin Tarihi”, Usûl İslam Araştırmaları, Sayı: 2, Temmuz-Aralık 2004, ss. 103-128.
  • BARTON, George A. “Tiamat”, Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 15 (1893), ss. 1-27.
  • Biblical Cycloopædia, edt.by. J. Eadie. London: The Religious Tract Society, 1870.
  • BOTTÉRO, Jean ve Samuel Noah Kramer, Mezopotamya Mitolojisi (çev. Alp Tümertekin), İstanbul: TİB Kültür Yayınları, 2017.
  • BUSTANAY, O. & SHIMON, G., “Canaan”, EJ, edt. F. Skolnik & M. Berenbaum. Jarusalem, 2007, IV.
  • CAMPBELL, J., Batı Mitolojisi (çev. K. Emiroğlu), İstanbul: İmge Kitabevi, 1999.
  • CIRLOT, J. E. A Dictionary of Symbols, London: Routledge, 2001.
  • DUFOUR, L. R. “Sifting Through Tradition: The Creation of Jewish Feminist Idendities”, Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Vol. 39, No. 1, March 2000, pp. 90-106.
  • DUKSTRA, M., “Esau”, DDD (edt. Karel van der Toorn), B. Becking & PW. Horst, (IInd edt.), Cambridge: Brill, 1999.
  • ELIADE, Mircea, Babil Simyası ve Kozmolojisi (çev. Mehmet Emin Özcan), İstanbul: Kabalcı Yayınları, 2002.
  • ELIADE, Mircea, Kutsal ve Kutsal Dışı (çev. Ali Berktay), İstanbul: Alfa Mitoloji, 2017.
  • FELIKS, J., “Snake”, EJ, edt. F. Skolnik-M. Berenbaum, IInd edt, Jerusalem, 2007, XVIII.
  • FRIEDMAN, R. E., Kitabı Mukaddes’i Kim Yazdı? (çev. M. Tarakçı), İstanbul: Kabalcı Yayınları, 2005.
  • FRIEDMAN, R. E. and DOLANSKY, S., The Bible Now. New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 2007.
  • FRIESEN, I. D., Isaiah (edt.by. D. B. Miller & L. Johns), Canada: Herald Press, 2009.
  • GEZGİN, İsmail, Kültürlenme Sürecinin Mitik Kahramanı Gılgamış, İstanbul: Alfa Yayınları, 2009.
  • Gılgamış Destanı (çev. Sait Maden), İstanbul: TİB Kültür Yayınları, 2017.
  • GRAVES, R. ve Raphael PATAI, İbrani Mitleri (çev. U. Akpur), İstanbul: Say Yayınları, 2009.
  • HALEVA, Yitshak, Tora ve Aftara-Bereşit (çev. Moşe Farsi), İstanbul: Gözlem Gazetecilik, 2010, I.
  • HALLORAN, James A., Sumerian Lexicon: A Dictionary Guide to the Ancient Sumerian Language, Oxford: Logogram Pub./Oxbox Books, 2006.
  • HOFFELD, J. M., “Adam’s Two Wifes”, The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, New Series, vol: 26, no: 10, June 1968, pp. 430-440.
  • HOOKE, Samuel Henry, Ortadoğu Mitolojisi (çev. Alâeddin Şenel), Ankara: İmge Kitabevi, 2016.
  • HENDEL, R.S., “Serpent”, DDD (eds. Karel van der Toorn), B. Becking & PW. Horst, (II.nd Edt.), Cambridge: Brill, 1999.
  • HUTTER, M., “Lilith”, DDD (eds. Karel van der Toorn), B. Becking & PW. Horst, (II.nd Edt.), Cambridge: Brill, 1999.
  • KEEL, Othmar, The Symbolism of the Biblical World, Indiana: The Seabury Press, 1997.
  • KEMÂLÜDDÎN, H. A., Müfredâtü’l-Müştereki’s-Sâmî fî’l-Lüğati’l-Arabiyye, Kahire: Mektebetü’l-Adab, 2008.
  • KRAMER, Samuel N., Sümerler (çev. Özcan Buze), İstanbul: Kabalcı Yayınları, 2016.
  • KRAMER, Samuel N., Sümerlerin Kurnaz Tanrısı Enki (çev. H. Koyukan), İstanbul: Kabalcı Yayınları, 2000.
  • MCDONALD, Beth E., “In Possession of the Night: Lilith as Goddess, Demon, Vampire”, Sacred Tropes: Tanakh, New Testament and Qur’an as Literature and Culture (edt.by. R. S. Shabbat), Boston: Brill, 2009.
  • LESSES, R. M., “Lilith”, ER (edt. by. L. Jones), USA 2005, VIII.
  • LOCHTEFELD, James G., The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism, New York: The Rosen Publishing Group, 2002.
  • MANDER, Pietro, “Soul: Ancient Near Eastern Concepts”, ER (edt.by. Lindsay Jones), IInd edition, (1987) 2005, XII.
  • MARSMAN, H. J., Women in Ugarit & Israel (Their Social-Religious Position in the Context of the Ancient Near East, Boston: Brill 2003.
  • MISCALL, P. D., Isaiah (Readings, a New Biblical Commentary), Sheffield: Sheffield Phoenix Press 2006.
  • MORGAN, Sue, “Feminist Yaklaşımlar”, Dinler Tarihi İncelemelerinde Çağdaş Yaklaşımlar-1945’ten Günümüze (çev. Ravza Aydın), Ankara: Eski Yeni Yayınları, 2013, ss. 509-542.
  • NEUMAN, Eric, The Origins and History of Consciousness, London: Karnac, 1954.
  • NYDLE, Rabbi E. L., The Legend Of Lilith, Iowa: B’nei Avraham, trs.
  • POLATLAR, K., Kadim Bilgelik, Uygarlıklardaki Eril ve Dişil Yapısallığın Kökeni, İstanbul: Doğu Kitabevi, 2014.
  • ROSENBERG. D., The Book of J (trans. Harold Bloom), New York: General Publishing, 1990.
  • SCHOLEM, Gershom, “Lilith”, EJ (edt. F. Skolnik & M. Berenbaum), Jarusalem, 2007, XVI.
  • SCHUYLER, Jane, “Michelangelo’s Serpent With Two Tails”, Notes in History of Art, vol: 9, no: 2, Winter 1990, pp. 23-29.
  • Sepher Rezial Hamelach (The Book of the Angel Rezial), edt. trans.by. S. Savedow. Boston: Weiser Books, 2001.
  • Soncino Hebrew/English Babylonian Talmud (edt. I. Epstein), Soncino, 2000, I-XXX.
  • STONE, Marlin, Tanrılar Kadınken (çev. Nilgün Peyman), İstanbul: Payel Yayınevi, 2000.
  • TEKİN, Gönül Alpay, “Yakındoğu Mitolojisinde İki Ağaç”, Prof. Dr. M. Cemal Sofuoğlu’na Armağan (edt. Aynur Çınar), İzmir: Tibyan Yayınları, 2016, ss. 363-383.
  • “The Alphabet of Ben Sira”, Rabbinic Fantasies: Imaginative Narratives from Classical Hebrew Literature (edt.by. D. Stern & M. J. Mirsky), Boston: Varda Books, trs.
  • The Oxford Bible Commentary (edt.by. J. Barton & J. Muddiman), New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 2007.
  • The Zohar (edt. by. S. Bar Yochai & Y. Ashlag), USA: The Kabbalah Centre Int. Inc., 2003.
  • THOMPSON, R. Campbell The Devils and Evil Spirits of Babylonia (in Luzac’s Semitic Text and Translation Series), London: Luzac and Co., 1903, I.
  • WENIG, M.M., “Bereshit, The Book of Genesis”, Torah Queeries (Weekly Commentaries on the Hebrew Bible (edt.by. G. Drinkwater, J. Lesser, D. Shneer), New York: New York University Press, 2009, ss. 11-19.
  • WACKER, M. T., “Feminist Criticism and Related Aspects”, Biblical Studies (edt. by. J.W. Rogerson, J. M. Lieu), New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 2006, pp. 634-654.
  • YILDIZ, Aynur, Yahudi ve İslâm Kutsal Literatüründe Hz. Ya’kūb ve Seçilmişlik Kavramı: Karşılaştırmalı Bir Çalışma, DEÜSBF, İzmir: basılmamış yüksek lisans tezi, İzmir 2014.
  • ZINGSEM, Vera, Lilith (çev. D. D. Yüzer), İzmir: İlya Yayınları, 2007.

Lilith: Yahudi Mitolojisinde Ana Tanrıça'nın Düşüş ve Şeytana Dönüşüm Serüveni

Yıl 2018, Cilt: 2018 Sayı: 35, 363 - 395, 30.04.2018
https://doi.org/10.28949/bilimname.381879

Öz

Lilith
kelimesinin, Sümer kökenli olan ve “hava, rüzgâr” anlamına gelen líl’den
türediği, bu dilden de Akkadçaya lilītu olarak geçtiği kabul edilir. Lilith
miti, lilitu, Lamaştu ve lilith olarak Mezopotamya’dan Suriye-Filistin
bölgesine kadar tüm Levant’a yayılmıştır. Babil’de rüzgârın yıkıcılığına ve
şehvete hükmeden dişil bir ruh hatta Fırtına Tanrıçası olan lilītu; ataerkil
zihniyetin gittikçe yerleşmesiyle, cazibesiyle geceleri erkekleri tuzağa
düşüren ve bebekleri öldüren şeytani bir karaktere dönüşmüştür. Bu
özellikleriyle Lilith Yahudi mitolojisine geçmiş ve kısır ve seksualiteye sahip
en büyük dişi şeytan olarak kötülüğün zirvesine oturmuştur. Ayrıca Lilith’e
Yeşaya 34:14’deki atıf sebebiyle o, Yahudi şeytan araştırmalarında kilit isim
olmuştur. Bu sebeple Yahudi tarih ve literatüründe başta Âdem’in Havva’dan
önceki ilk eşi olmak üzere İsmâil’in torunu Naama ve Saba Melikesi gibi pek çok
kötü kadınla özdeşleştirilmiş ve Eril Tek Tanrı karşısındaki en büyük dişi
düşman olarak kabul edilmiştir. Bu çalışmada Lilith’in etimolojisinden ve
mitolojideki özelliklerinden yola çıkarak, Yahudi mitolojisi ve mistisizminde şeytani
Lilith’in genel nitelikleri ortaya konulmuş ve Yahudiliğin “kötülük” profili
yakalanmaya çalışılmıştır.

Kaynakça

  • ABUSCH, T., “Ishtar”, DDD (edt: Karel van der Toorn), IInd edition, Cambridge: Brill, 1999.
  • ALTUNAY, Erhan, Paganizm-I (Kadim Bilgeliğe Giriş), İstanbul: Hermes Yayınları, 2014.
  • ANAGNASTOU-LAOUSTIDES, E., In The Garden Of The Gods, London-New York: Routledge, 2017.
  • APULEIUS, L., Altın Eşek (çev. F. Akderin), İstanbul: Alfa Yayınları, 2006.
  • AVISHUR, I., “Edom”, EJ, edt. F. Skolnik & M. Berenbaum. Jarusalem, 2007, VI.
  • AYDIN, Fuat, “Bir Sessizliğin ya da Yhvh’nin Tarihi”, Usûl İslam Araştırmaları, Sayı: 2, Temmuz-Aralık 2004, ss. 103-128.
  • BARTON, George A. “Tiamat”, Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 15 (1893), ss. 1-27.
  • Biblical Cycloopædia, edt.by. J. Eadie. London: The Religious Tract Society, 1870.
  • BOTTÉRO, Jean ve Samuel Noah Kramer, Mezopotamya Mitolojisi (çev. Alp Tümertekin), İstanbul: TİB Kültür Yayınları, 2017.
  • BUSTANAY, O. & SHIMON, G., “Canaan”, EJ, edt. F. Skolnik & M. Berenbaum. Jarusalem, 2007, IV.
  • CAMPBELL, J., Batı Mitolojisi (çev. K. Emiroğlu), İstanbul: İmge Kitabevi, 1999.
  • CIRLOT, J. E. A Dictionary of Symbols, London: Routledge, 2001.
  • DUFOUR, L. R. “Sifting Through Tradition: The Creation of Jewish Feminist Idendities”, Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Vol. 39, No. 1, March 2000, pp. 90-106.
  • DUKSTRA, M., “Esau”, DDD (edt. Karel van der Toorn), B. Becking & PW. Horst, (IInd edt.), Cambridge: Brill, 1999.
  • ELIADE, Mircea, Babil Simyası ve Kozmolojisi (çev. Mehmet Emin Özcan), İstanbul: Kabalcı Yayınları, 2002.
  • ELIADE, Mircea, Kutsal ve Kutsal Dışı (çev. Ali Berktay), İstanbul: Alfa Mitoloji, 2017.
  • FELIKS, J., “Snake”, EJ, edt. F. Skolnik-M. Berenbaum, IInd edt, Jerusalem, 2007, XVIII.
  • FRIEDMAN, R. E., Kitabı Mukaddes’i Kim Yazdı? (çev. M. Tarakçı), İstanbul: Kabalcı Yayınları, 2005.
  • FRIEDMAN, R. E. and DOLANSKY, S., The Bible Now. New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 2007.
  • FRIESEN, I. D., Isaiah (edt.by. D. B. Miller & L. Johns), Canada: Herald Press, 2009.
  • GEZGİN, İsmail, Kültürlenme Sürecinin Mitik Kahramanı Gılgamış, İstanbul: Alfa Yayınları, 2009.
  • Gılgamış Destanı (çev. Sait Maden), İstanbul: TİB Kültür Yayınları, 2017.
  • GRAVES, R. ve Raphael PATAI, İbrani Mitleri (çev. U. Akpur), İstanbul: Say Yayınları, 2009.
  • HALEVA, Yitshak, Tora ve Aftara-Bereşit (çev. Moşe Farsi), İstanbul: Gözlem Gazetecilik, 2010, I.
  • HALLORAN, James A., Sumerian Lexicon: A Dictionary Guide to the Ancient Sumerian Language, Oxford: Logogram Pub./Oxbox Books, 2006.
  • HOFFELD, J. M., “Adam’s Two Wifes”, The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, New Series, vol: 26, no: 10, June 1968, pp. 430-440.
  • HOOKE, Samuel Henry, Ortadoğu Mitolojisi (çev. Alâeddin Şenel), Ankara: İmge Kitabevi, 2016.
  • HENDEL, R.S., “Serpent”, DDD (eds. Karel van der Toorn), B. Becking & PW. Horst, (II.nd Edt.), Cambridge: Brill, 1999.
  • HUTTER, M., “Lilith”, DDD (eds. Karel van der Toorn), B. Becking & PW. Horst, (II.nd Edt.), Cambridge: Brill, 1999.
  • KEEL, Othmar, The Symbolism of the Biblical World, Indiana: The Seabury Press, 1997.
  • KEMÂLÜDDÎN, H. A., Müfredâtü’l-Müştereki’s-Sâmî fî’l-Lüğati’l-Arabiyye, Kahire: Mektebetü’l-Adab, 2008.
  • KRAMER, Samuel N., Sümerler (çev. Özcan Buze), İstanbul: Kabalcı Yayınları, 2016.
  • KRAMER, Samuel N., Sümerlerin Kurnaz Tanrısı Enki (çev. H. Koyukan), İstanbul: Kabalcı Yayınları, 2000.
  • MCDONALD, Beth E., “In Possession of the Night: Lilith as Goddess, Demon, Vampire”, Sacred Tropes: Tanakh, New Testament and Qur’an as Literature and Culture (edt.by. R. S. Shabbat), Boston: Brill, 2009.
  • LESSES, R. M., “Lilith”, ER (edt. by. L. Jones), USA 2005, VIII.
  • LOCHTEFELD, James G., The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism, New York: The Rosen Publishing Group, 2002.
  • MANDER, Pietro, “Soul: Ancient Near Eastern Concepts”, ER (edt.by. Lindsay Jones), IInd edition, (1987) 2005, XII.
  • MARSMAN, H. J., Women in Ugarit & Israel (Their Social-Religious Position in the Context of the Ancient Near East, Boston: Brill 2003.
  • MISCALL, P. D., Isaiah (Readings, a New Biblical Commentary), Sheffield: Sheffield Phoenix Press 2006.
  • MORGAN, Sue, “Feminist Yaklaşımlar”, Dinler Tarihi İncelemelerinde Çağdaş Yaklaşımlar-1945’ten Günümüze (çev. Ravza Aydın), Ankara: Eski Yeni Yayınları, 2013, ss. 509-542.
  • NEUMAN, Eric, The Origins and History of Consciousness, London: Karnac, 1954.
  • NYDLE, Rabbi E. L., The Legend Of Lilith, Iowa: B’nei Avraham, trs.
  • POLATLAR, K., Kadim Bilgelik, Uygarlıklardaki Eril ve Dişil Yapısallığın Kökeni, İstanbul: Doğu Kitabevi, 2014.
  • ROSENBERG. D., The Book of J (trans. Harold Bloom), New York: General Publishing, 1990.
  • SCHOLEM, Gershom, “Lilith”, EJ (edt. F. Skolnik & M. Berenbaum), Jarusalem, 2007, XVI.
  • SCHUYLER, Jane, “Michelangelo’s Serpent With Two Tails”, Notes in History of Art, vol: 9, no: 2, Winter 1990, pp. 23-29.
  • Sepher Rezial Hamelach (The Book of the Angel Rezial), edt. trans.by. S. Savedow. Boston: Weiser Books, 2001.
  • Soncino Hebrew/English Babylonian Talmud (edt. I. Epstein), Soncino, 2000, I-XXX.
  • STONE, Marlin, Tanrılar Kadınken (çev. Nilgün Peyman), İstanbul: Payel Yayınevi, 2000.
  • TEKİN, Gönül Alpay, “Yakındoğu Mitolojisinde İki Ağaç”, Prof. Dr. M. Cemal Sofuoğlu’na Armağan (edt. Aynur Çınar), İzmir: Tibyan Yayınları, 2016, ss. 363-383.
  • “The Alphabet of Ben Sira”, Rabbinic Fantasies: Imaginative Narratives from Classical Hebrew Literature (edt.by. D. Stern & M. J. Mirsky), Boston: Varda Books, trs.
  • The Oxford Bible Commentary (edt.by. J. Barton & J. Muddiman), New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 2007.
  • The Zohar (edt. by. S. Bar Yochai & Y. Ashlag), USA: The Kabbalah Centre Int. Inc., 2003.
  • THOMPSON, R. Campbell The Devils and Evil Spirits of Babylonia (in Luzac’s Semitic Text and Translation Series), London: Luzac and Co., 1903, I.
  • WENIG, M.M., “Bereshit, The Book of Genesis”, Torah Queeries (Weekly Commentaries on the Hebrew Bible (edt.by. G. Drinkwater, J. Lesser, D. Shneer), New York: New York University Press, 2009, ss. 11-19.
  • WACKER, M. T., “Feminist Criticism and Related Aspects”, Biblical Studies (edt. by. J.W. Rogerson, J. M. Lieu), New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 2006, pp. 634-654.
  • YILDIZ, Aynur, Yahudi ve İslâm Kutsal Literatüründe Hz. Ya’kūb ve Seçilmişlik Kavramı: Karşılaştırmalı Bir Çalışma, DEÜSBF, İzmir: basılmamış yüksek lisans tezi, İzmir 2014.
  • ZINGSEM, Vera, Lilith (çev. D. D. Yüzer), İzmir: İlya Yayınları, 2007.
Toplam 58 adet kaynakça vardır.

Ayrıntılar

Birincil Dil Türkçe
Bölüm Makaleler
Yazarlar

Aynur Çınar 0000-0001-8576-7566

Yayımlanma Tarihi 30 Nisan 2018
Gönderilme Tarihi 20 Ocak 2018
Kabul Tarihi 10 Nisan 2018
Yayımlandığı Sayı Yıl 2018 Cilt: 2018 Sayı: 35

Kaynak Göster

APA Çınar, A. (2018). Lilith: Yahudi Mitolojisinde Ana Tanrıça’nın Düşüş ve Şeytana Dönüşüm Serüveni. Bilimname, 2018(35), 363-395. https://doi.org/10.28949/bilimname.381879