Tanit (Mythologie)
Query URLs
https://term.museum-digital.de/md-de/persinst/191616
- Name (English)
- Tanit (Mythologie)
- Short name
- Tanit
- Short Description
- "Tanit (Punic: 𐤕𐤍𐤕 Tīnīt) was a Punic goddess, she was the chief deity of Carthage alongside her consort Baal-Hamon.
Tanit is also called Tinnit. The name appears to have originated in Carthage (modern day Tunisia), though it does not appear in local theophorous names. She was equivalent to the war goddess Astarte, and later worshipped in Roman Carthage in her Romanized form as Dea Caelestis, Juno Caelestis, or simply Caelestis.
In modern-day Tunisian Arabic, it is customary to invoke Omek Tannou or Oumouk Tangou ('Mother Tannou' or 'Mother Tangou', depending on the region), in years of drought to bring rain. Similarly, Algerian, Tunisian and many other spoken forms of Arabic refer to "Baali farming" to refer to non-irrigated agriculture. Such usage is attested in Hebrew, a Canaanite language sister to Phoenician, already in the 2nd century CE Mishnah." - (en.wikipedia.org 25.01.2022) - Entity Encoding
- pxl
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Stater, VS: Kopf der Tanit; RS: Pferd
Karthago (Zeugitanien), um...
Object information
Image: Winckelmann-Museum Stendal - CC BY-NC-SA -
Stater aus Karthago
Der Name Stater geht auf die...
Object information
Image: Museum August Kestner - CC BY-NC-SA
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