Welcome to Assassin's Creed Wiki! Log in and join the community.

Board Thread:Series general discussion/@comment-68.119.166.116-20170728152907/@comment-18014300-20170926165428: Difference between revisions

From the Assassin's Creed Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Sol Pacificus
No edit summary
imported>Sol Pacificus
No edit summary
Line 8: Line 8:
</div>
</div>


I pointed this out in an older post, but if anything Aphrodite can be traced to Satan, as both symbolize the falling star, with the story of Lucifer himself being derived from an earlier story of the war god Attar, Attar being an Arabian variant of Aphrodite (or Ishtar/Asherah/Inanna) with the gender switched because that was an apparent habit of the Arabian pantheon. (The more chaotic and temperamental attributes of the original Sumerian god Inanna seemed to have mellowed as she moved westward, and we see part of this in Attar splitting off into a war god whereas Inanna/Ishtar/Aphrodite/Venus eventually lost her personal association with war when, in her original Sumerican incarnation, she was goddess of both love and war.)
I pointed this out in an older post, but if anything Aphrodite can be traced to Satan, as both symbolize the Morning Star, with the story of Lucifer himself being derived from an earlier story of the war god Attar, Attar being an Arabian variant of Aphrodite (or Ishtar/Asherah/Inanna) with the gender switched because that was an apparent habit of the Arabian pantheon. (The more chaotic and temperamental attributes of the original Sumerian god Inanna seemed to have mellowed as she moved westward, and we see part of this in Attar splitting off into a war god whereas Inanna/Ishtar/Aphrodite/Venus eventually lost her personal association with war when, in her original Sumerican incarnation, she was goddess of both love and war.)

Revision as of 18:57, 26 September 2017

Callum Konstantin wrote:

The Wikia Editor wrote:
Callum Konstantin wrote:
If the Instruments of the First Will wil come in Assassins Creed Origins, then would Juno be called Lilith?
Doubtful, Juno was already well-established and worshipped by the throughout the Roman Empire. There's also the fact that the earliest references to Lilith were in the Babylonian Talmud, which was compiled in the 3rd to 5th centuries.

Also, I can't seem to find any connection between Juno and Lilith that would imply that they were ever believed to be the same entity.

Maybe its one of her Aliases....therefore she is the Satan in the Assassins Creed Universe. 

I pointed this out in an older post, but if anything Aphrodite can be traced to Satan, as both symbolize the Morning Star, with the story of Lucifer himself being derived from an earlier story of the war god Attar, Attar being an Arabian variant of Aphrodite (or Ishtar/Asherah/Inanna) with the gender switched because that was an apparent habit of the Arabian pantheon. (The more chaotic and temperamental attributes of the original Sumerian god Inanna seemed to have mellowed as she moved westward, and we see part of this in Attar splitting off into a war god whereas Inanna/Ishtar/Aphrodite/Venus eventually lost her personal association with war when, in her original Sumerican incarnation, she was goddess of both love and war.)