PUNYCODEX

The Authentic Orthography

𐎀𐎘𐎗𐎚 ꜥAsherah

Mother Goddess, Lady of the Sea · Canaanite mother goddess, consort of Ēl and patroness of childbirth

Tier 2 ꜥAsherah.com
ꜥAsherah — Mother Goddess, Lady of the Sea
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The Authentic Name

Why ꜥAsherah.com is the correct form

Original Script

𐎀𐎘𐎗𐎚

The name in its original Canaanite form. ꜥAsherah (𐎀𐎘𐎗𐎚) is attested as mother goddess, lady of the sea — “Canaanite mother goddess, consort of Ēl and patroness of childbirth”. Its Egyptological ain and alef letters carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.

ASCII Constraint

asherah

Reduced to plain asherah, the name loses everything that made it specific: Egyptological ain and alef letters. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.

Unicode Restoration

ꜥAsherah

The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. ꜥAsherah restores Egyptological ain and alef letters, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.

Punycode Encoding
ꜥAsherah.com → xn--asherah-dv2z.com

The non-ASCII characters in ꜥAsherah are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is ꜥAsherah.

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Original Script Provenance

How ꜥAsherah travels from ancient script to scholarly transliteration

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Pronunciation

How ꜥAsherah was spoken

/ʔa.ʃeː.ra/ Ugaritic/Phoenician Reconstruction
ʔa- Glottal stop [ʔ] followed by open [a]; in some reconstructions the initial consonant is a pharyngeal ʿ rather than a glottal stop. The Egyptological Ain (ꜥ) marks this debated point.
-šē- Voiceless postalveolar fricative [ʃ] plus long [eː], marked by macron; the length is inferred from Hebrew and Aramaic reflexes.
-ra Tapped or trilled [r] plus final [a], a feminine ending.
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Lady of the Sea

Mother of the Gods, Consort of Ēl

ꜥAsherah is the great mother of the Canaanite pantheon, the consort of Ēl and the goddess whose very treading calms the sea. Unlike the fierce maiden ꜥAnat, she moves through the myths as queen mother, intercessor, and source of divine legitimacy. Where Ēl is the distant father, Asherah is the active power broker who knows how to approach him.

Mother of the Gods

Called qnyt ʾilm, 'Creatress of the Gods'; the seventy sons of Asherah populate the divine court.

Lady of the Sea

Her epithet rbt ʾaṯrt ym links her to the Mediterranean, to fishing, and to the cosmic waters tamed by her presence.

Royal Intercessor

It is Asherah who petitions Ēl on Baꜥal's behalf, securing permission for the storm-god's palace.

Domestic Sovereignty

Spindle, weaving, and nursing imagery mark her as the divine model of women's work raised to cosmic scale.

Sacred Symbols

Spindle Her attribute in Ugaritic iconography; symbol of feminine labor and cosmic order
Sea The waters she treads and tames, source of fertility and commerce for coastal Ugarit
Tree or pole The biblical ʾăšērâ, a wooden cult object that may represent her presence or be her symbol
Donkey The beast she rides when approaching Ēl's tent in the Baꜥal Cycle
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Mythology

Stories of ꜥAsherah

ꜥAsherah does not star in the great combat myths; she rules by relationship. Her appearances in the Baꜥal Cycle show a goddess who can approach the high god, sway his decisions, and guarantee the succession of kings. She is the still center around which the violent younger gods revolve.

The Baal Cycle

The Queen Mother's Journey

In KTU 1.4, Baꜥal longs for a palace but cannot win Ēl's approval directly. He turns to Asherah. She prepares herself with care, harnesses her donkey, and travels to the source of the divine rivers. There she prostrates before Ēl, flatters his wisdom, and asks that Baꜥal be granted a house 'like the gods'. Ēl laughs, welcomes her, and consents. Without her diplomacy, Baꜥal would remain homeless.

The Baal Cycle

Creatress of the Gods

Asherah is repeatedly called qnyt ʾilm, 'Creatress/Creatrix of the Gods' (KTU 1.3 v 25–26; 1.4 i 23; iii 26). The seventy sons of Asherah (KTU 1.4 vi 46) are the divine council itself; when Baꜥal disappears into Mot's realm, it is she who is asked to choose a successor from among her sons.

Myth of the Gracious Gods

Nurse of the Divine

In KTU 1.23, the 'Birth of the Gracious Gods,' Asherah appears in the background of a sacred-marriage and birth narrative, associated with suckling and nourishment. The newborn gods drink from her breasts, a motif that links her to royal legitimation: kings may be called her nurslings.

Iconography

The Lady and the Sea

Her epithet 'Lady Asherah of the Sea' (rbt ʾaṯrt ym) has been interpreted as 'she who treads on sea.' Whether the sea is the Mediterranean that fed Ugarit's economy, the cosmic watery chaos, or both, the title makes Asherah a boundary-goddess: she walks where land and water meet and brings the wild under domestic sovereignty.

Go Deeper

Extended Lore

ꜥAsherah teaches a theology of mediation. She is not the storm on the mountain; she is the one who persuades the high god to let the storm have a house. Her power is relational, domestic, and therefore easy to overlook — yet without it, the cosmos loses its cohesion.

Enter Extended Lore
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