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NAMES OF IDOLS

TOPICAL STUDY SERIES

AAKBAR
[Chaldean] A mouse, also signifies "The mighty one", in Turkish and some other Eastern dialects became kbar, as in the Moslem saying "Allar Akbar", meaning "God is Great". Synonym of Abir. See: Gheber

ABER
Signifies a "wing".

ABIR
Synonym of Gheber.

ADAD
"The One God."

ADON
See: Adonis

ADONIS
The "Huntsman" that Venus cried over, the same as Tammuz. See: Tammuz

AGATHODAEMON
A god depicted as a winged asp.

AGNI
Hindu god of fire. Wore an open tiara with 2 horns.

AITHIO PAIS
Title of Bacchus; i.e., "the son of Ethiops."

AKMON
Name applied to the king of the gods. From Chaldean form of Hebrew word, khmn, "the burner". Khmn becomes Akmon, just as the Hebrew word for blood, dem, became adem in Chaldean.

ALA MAHOZIM
"The god of fortifications", the Egyptian Osiris, also celebrated as "the strong chief of the buildings".

ALMA MATER
"Virgin mother".

ALORUS
Possibly from Al-our, "god of fire", or Al-ltur, "the burning god".

AMARUSIA
Aphrodite’s name in Athens, meaning "the mother of gracious acceptance" from the word, ama, "mother"; and, retza, "to accept graciously". Name also applied to Diana.

AMMAS
Greek form of the Chaldean word, Ama, meaning mother. Greek name of the Babylonian Rhea.

AMON
Father of the Egyptian god, Khons or Khonso, known as "the hidden god".

APHRODITE
"The wrath-subduer". From the Chaldean word, aph, "wrath"; and radah, "to subdue". The feminine emphatic is the word radite. Legend has it that Aphrodite could soothe the anger of Jove and "the most mean spirits of gods and men" with her charm.

APIS
Another name for Saturn, "the hidden one". The calf Apis, known in Egypt as Hepi, or Hapi, mystically representative of the Egyptian, Osiris. In Chaldea Hap means "to cover", in Egyptian "to conceal". See: Athor

ASHER
[Chaldean] means "to prosper".

ASHTA
[Chaldee] Means both "the woman" and "fire".

ASSHUR
[Chaldean] "To make strong."

ASTARTE
Asht-tart,"the woman that made towers". Tart comes from the Hebrew verb tr, "to go around", or "to be round", "to surround", or "encompass". The masculine form of the word, tor, used for "a border, or row of jewels round the head". The feminine, turis, is Greek form of turit, with the "t" in Greek converted to an "s". In Hebrew, Ashtoreth, "the woman that made the encompassing wall." The name Astarte also signified, "maker of investigations."

ASTRAEA
From Ash-trai-a, "the maker of investigations".

ATARGATIS
See: Atergatis

ATERGATIS
Fish goddess of Syria, called the mother of Semiramis & at times said to be Semiramis.

ATHENA
Name of Minerva in Athens. Means "the lady"; from the Hebrew, Adon, meaning, "the lord," which became Athan, femine form of Athana, hence Athena in the Attic dialect.

ATHOR
A goddess in Egypt, her name means "habitation of God". The female counterpart of Apis, which is a "spotted cow". The Egyptian, Venus. (Note, that the Druids worship a spotted cow.)

ATYS
Also, Attis, or Attes. From Greek word Ate, which signifies "error of sin". Derived from Chaldean word Hata, "to sin", signifying "the sinner.

AURORA
Wife of Orion. Aur-ora physically means "pregnant with light"; and ohra, "to conceive" or be "pregnant" is origin of the Greek word for "a wife".

BAAL-ABERIN
"Lord of wings," the "winged one."

BAAL-ABIRIN
"The Winged One." (Pronounced nearly the same as Baal-aberin) Refers to Nimrod, as the "lord of the mighty-ones".

BAAL-APH
"Lord of wrath," "an angry man."

BAAL-BERITH
"Land of the covenant", used idolatrously of the false messiah as mediator and head of the covenant of grace.

BAAL-LASHON
"Lord of tongue," "an eloquent man."

BAAL
"The lord".

BACCHUS ICHTHYS
The fish. (If Bacchus was called a fish, and Bacchus was Nimrod, then Oannes, also must be Nimrod.)

BACCHUS
"The lamented one"; from Bakhah ,"to weep" or "lament". The revelries of Bacchus were suppose to purify the soul

BAITULOS
Greek name for the swaddled, anointed stone prevalent in many myths and legends. From B’hai and also, tli, tleh, or tloh; combined, B’hai-tuloh, "life-restoring child." See: B’hai

BAITZ
[Hebrew; Feminine] Means "egg," male form is Baitza. In Chaldee and Phoenician becomes Baith or Baitha. The words Baith and Baitha are pronounced same as the word for house in Chaldee and Phoenician.

BALDER
"Seed of Baal", from the Chaldean form of Baal-zar. The Hebrew "z" often became a "d" in later Chaldee.

BAR
In the mysteries Bar signified corn to the common man; but to the initiated it was recognized to mean "the son".

BASSAREUS
Same as Kissos; also worshipped in Greece under the name of Bassareus. Meaning signifies both "the house of grapes", or "the vintage gatherer" and "the encompasser with a wall" , the latter identifies him with the Egyptian, Osiris, "the strong chief of the buildings", and the Assyrian, Belus, "who encompassed Babylon with a wall." From the Chaldean word Batzar.

BEE
In Chaldea the word for bee, dabar, also signified a "word." In the Mysteries a symbol for the "seed of a woman." See: Dabar

BEEL-ZEBUB
"Lord of the fly", an Oriental fly-destroying god. In very hot countries, swarms of flies are often a terrible nuisance. The name also refers to Satan because, Baal-zebub, means "the restless Lord". In Job, it is said of Satan that he, "goeth to and fro in the earth, and walketh up and down it..." The word zebub when referring to a fly comes from a Arabic root, which signifies "to move from place to place, like flies, without settling". Hence the secret meaning of Baal-zebub "Lord of restless and unsettled motion."

BEL
[Chaldean] "The confounder", "to mix", also "the heart". Name of the great Babylonian god, originally given as a title to Cush. Name later passed down to his deified descendants. As "The Confounder," his symbol was the club. In Chaldea the name of a club comes from the word Hephaitz, "to break in pieces or scatter abroad." (Vulcan’s Hammer) See: Hephaistos; Sacred Heart

BELLONA
In Chaldean, "the lamentar of Bel". From Bel and onah, "to lament".

BELTIS
(equivalent of, Baalti) translated "My Lady". In Latin, i>mea Dominia. In Italian, Maddonna.

BEN-ALMET-ISHAA
[Chaldean] "Son of the virgin of salvation." See: Druids / Heimdal

BENOTH
"Child-bearing". Benah, the verb from which benoth comes, means both to "bring forth children" and "to build houses". The "bringing forth of children" metaphorically regarded as "building up the house," or the family.

BERKHA
"A fugitive", also means "a he-goat".

B’HAI
"Life-restoring", from the Chaldee hia or haya, "to live, to restore life"; hia became haya in Greek and haya with the diggamma prefixed becomes B’haya; so in Egypt Bai signifies soul or spirit.

BOAR’S TUSKS
The tusks of a boar are symbolic of Spiritual power.

BONA DEA
"The good goddess" of Rome whose mysteries were celebrated by women in extreme secrecy.

BRAHM
From the Hebrew, Rahm.

BRANCH
In the mysteries refers to the branch of Chus. See: Sacred Branch

BULLA
A hollow, heart-shaped golden pendant worn in Ancient Rome by the very young. See: Cupid; Sacred Heart

BULL
The word for which in Hebrew, and Chaldean also signifies ruler or prince. In "Sanchuniathon" we read that "Astarte put on her own head a bull’s head as the ensign of royalty." (Eusebius)

CANNIBAL
From the Chaldean Cahna-bal, "Priest of Baal". Cahna is emphatic form of Cahn, "a priest".

CARDINAL
From the word cardo, "a hinge". Hence, cardinal, "priests of the hinge".

CECROPS
Founder of Athens, 1500 BC.

CENTAUR
In Chaldee is Kentaur (the c is hard, and so k), from kehn, "a "priest", and tor, "to go around"; meaning "priest of the revolver". See: Sun

CENTAURUS
Same as Kronos , or Saturn. Represented the same as the astrological sign Saggitarius, "the archer". See: Khons; Consus

CERES
Greek and Roman goddess. The same as Isis. Worshipped as "the Mother of Corn. She was the mother of He-Siri, "the seed,", more frequently known in Assyria as "Bar", "the Seed," or "the corn." Worshipped by most for giving them corn for nourishment of their bodies, but those initiated into the mysteries adored her for the gift of heavenly food that nourished their souls.

CHAOS
"God of confusion", by laws of Chaldaic pronunciation, Chaos is simply a form of Chus, or Cush. Also, khus pronounced khawos/khaos.

CHON
Or Khon, means "lamentar."

CHRISTMAS TREE
Symbol of "the Branch", as in a family branch. In the mysteries symbolized the branch of the family of Cush / Nimrod / Ninus and the false resurrection of the deified Nimrod.

CIRCLE
(Or disk) A well known symbol in the East of the Sun-divinity. Also, of Pagan Rome. Apollo, as child of sun was often represented thus; goddesses that claimed kinship to the sun; etc.... Called nimbus, or aureola. "The luminous fluid which encircles the heads of the gods", came to symbolize "the seed" born again.

CONSUS
A Latin god, "the god of hidden counsels", or "the concealer of secrets" looked upon as patron of horsemanship and said to have produced the horse. Also identified with Neptune. See: Khons

CROSS
In Scripture the cross is called "the accursed tree." The Apostle Paul does say, "God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ," referring to the Christ crucified, not to the cross.

CUPID
To identify him with his father "the mighty hunter," he was equipped with "bow and arrows;" See: Bulla; Sacred Heart

CUP
In the hand of Bacchus, young Chus, son of Chus, or Cush. In sacred language of the mysteries the name of a cup is Khus. See: Chaos

CUSH
See: Chaos; Cup

CUTH
It is well known that the name Cush is often found as Cuth. In certain dialects this becomes Cuath. See: Khuth

CYCLOPS
Also, kuclops, from khuk, "king", and lohb, "flame. This god, or creature was portrayed as having three eyes; one in the forehead

DABAR
[Chaldean] Signifies "bee"; also "word". Before Jesus came to earth, Rev. Hislop says, "the ancient Jews commonly spoke of the Messiah, or the son of God , under the name of Dabar, or the ‘word’." 1Sam 3:1 says "the word of the lord was precious in those days; there was no open vision," and 1Sam 3:21, "And the Lord spake to Samuel by the word of the Lord."

DAGON
A fish-god of the Philistines and the Babylonians. Jerome calls him, "the fish of sorrow". The same as Janus. In the Babylonian Mysteries he was the incarnation of Noah. See: Janus

DERO
The same as Zero in later Chaldee.

DESPOINA
Greek Domina, "the lady".

DEUCALION
A name connected with the Flood, a term used by water-worshippers. Dukh-kalien means "to purify by washing". From dukh, "to wash", and khaleh, "to complete" or "perfect".

DEVA
From the Chaldee Thov; a Sanskrit word. Generic name for "God" in India akin in meaning to Brahm. From the Sanskrit Div.

DIONYSUS
From the Chaldee, DVon-nusu-s, "the sin-bearer".

DISK
(Or circle) Well known symbol in the East of the Sun-divinity. Also, of Pagan Rome. Apollo, as child of sun was often represented thus; goddesses that claimed kinship to the sun; etc.... Called nimbus, or aureola. "The luminous fluid which encircles the heads of the gods", came to symbolize "the seed" born again.

DIV
(Also, Shiv) Sanskrit; means "to shine", from the Chaldee Ziv.

DOMINA
[Latin] "Lady."

DOVE
Symbolic of The Holy Spirit, and blasphemously a symbol of Semiraimis, "the Queen of Heaven", or "mother goddess".

EANUS
See: Janus

EBN HATUL
[Chaldean] "The stone bound in swaddling band", found in many myths and legends. A similar Chaldean word Ebn-Hat-tul signifies "a sin-bearing son". From Hat or Hata, "sin", and tul or ntl, "to support".

EGG
Druidic emblem of their religious order. Symbolizes the ark of Noah’s flood. In perverse symbology is called the "mundane egg," became one of the symbols of Astarte.

EL-BAR
[Hebrew] "God the Son", name under which Ninus was worshipped in Babylon. Under this very name Berosus, the Chaldean Historian, names El-bar second in the list of Babylonian sovereigns. Also in Ninevah he was known under this name. In Egypt he was known as simply Bar. Bar meaning "son"; El meaning "God". In Chaldean this becomes Ala-Bar; Greek becomes Ala-Par.

ENOS
Also, Innus. Ancient Raman name of Pan, a generic name for fallen man.

ER-RAHMAN
From the Hebrew Rahm. Turkish title for "The All-Merciful One".

ESSNN
"King-bee", name of the chief priest of the Ephesian Diana. See: Dabar

FISH
Symbolic of Noah.

FLOWERS
See: The Two Babylons / Clothing & Crowning of Images

GOAT
Symbolic of Pan, also Adam.

GOOSE
In hieroglyphics according to Wilkinson signified a child or son.

HORNED AND WINGED BULL

Nimrod. Symbolized not only his own authority but those "mighty ones" under his command. The wide expanded wings symbolized the great extent of his reach and power. Aristophanes, says that in the beginning "the birds" were fist created, then the "race of the blessed immortal gods." What may be meant by this is (if "the birds" are the same as the "winged ones") first men "began to be mighty on the earth," and then the leaders of "these mighty ones" were deified. Aristophanes also claims that the ancestor of "the birds" and of the gods was Cupid, the son of Venus, and that he made the "birds" and the "gods" by "mingling all things."