So who is Baal?
Baal or BaĘťal, was a title and honorific meaning 'owner', 'lord' in the Northwest Semitic languages spoken in the Levant during antiquity.
Baal is a God of fertility, weather, rain, wind, lightning, seasons, war, sailors and so on.
Baal worship is also called Baalism.
Solid cast bronze of a votive figurine representing the god Baal discovered at Tel Megiddo, dating to the mid-2nd millennium BC.
His holy symbols are bull, ram and thunderbolt.
Baal was worshipped in ancient Syria, especially Halab, near, around and at Ugarit, Canaan, North Africa and Middle Kingdom of Egypt.
BaĘżal is well-attested in surviving inscriptions and was popular in theophoric names throughout the Levant but he is usually mentioned along with other gods, "his own field of action being seldom defined". Nonetheless, Ugaritic records show him as a weather god, with particular power over lightning, wind, rain, and fertility. The dry summers of the area were explained as BaĘżal's time in the underworld and his return in autumn was said to cause the storms which revived the land. Thus, the worship of BaĘżal in Canaanâwhere he eventually supplanted El as the leader of the gods and patron of kingshipâwas connected to the regions' dependence on rainfall for its agriculture, unlike Egypt and Mesopotamia, which focused on irrigation from their major rivers. Anxiety about the availability of water for crops and trees increased the importance of his cult, which focused attention on his role as a rain god. He was also called upon during battle, showing that he was thought to intervene actively in the world of man, unlike the more aloof El. The Lebanese city of Baalbeck was named after Baal.
The BaĘżal of Ugarit was the epithet of Hadad but as the time passed, the epithet became the god's name while Hadad became the epithet. BaĘżal was usually said to be the son of Dagan, but appears as one of the sons of El in Ugaritic sources. Both BaĘżal and El were associated with the bull in Ugaritic texts, as it symbolized both strength and fertility. He held special enmity against snakes, both on their own and as representatives of Yammu (lit. "Sea"), the Canaanite sea god and river god. He fought the Tannin (Tunnanu), the "Twisted Serpent" (Bášn Ężqltn), "Lotan the Fugitive Serpent" (Ltn Bášn BrḼ, the biblical Leviathan), and the "Mighty One with Seven Heads" (Ĺ lyáš D.ĹĄbĘżt RaĹĄm). BaĘżal's conflict with Yammu is now generally regarded as the prototype of the vision recorded in the 7th chapter of the biblicalBook of Daniel. As vanquisher of the sea, BaĘżal was regarded by the Canaanites and Phoenicians as the patron of sailors and sea-going merchants. As vanquisher of Mot, the Canaanite death god, he was known as BaĘżal RÄpiĘžuma (BĘżl Rpu) and regarded as the leader of the Rephaim (Rpum), the ancestral spirits, particularly those of ruling dynasties.
From Canaan, worship of BaĘżal spread to Egypt by the Middle Kingdom and throughout the Mediterranean following the waves of Phoenician colonization in the early 1st millennium BCE. He was described with diverse epithets and, before Ugarit was rediscovered, it was supposed that these referred to distinct local gods. However, as explained by Day, the texts at Ugarit revealed that they were considered "local manifestations of this particular deity, analogous to the local manifestations of the Virgin Mary in the Roman Catholic Church". In those inscriptions, he is frequently described as "Victorious BaĘżal" (Aliyn or Ảláťyn BaĘżal), "Mightiest one" (Aliy or ĘżAly) or "Mightiest of the Heroes" (Aliy Qrdm), "The Powerful One" (Dmrn), and in his role as patron of the city "BaĘżal of Ugarit" (BaĘżal Ugarit). As BaĘżal Zaphon (BaĘżal ᚢapunu), he was particularly associated with his palace atop Jebel Aqra (the ancient Mount ᚢapÄnu and classical Mons Casius). He is also mentioned as "Winged BaĘżal" (BĘżl Knp) and "BaĘżal of the Arrows" (BĘżl Ḥáş). Phoenician and Aramaic inscriptions describe "BaĘżal of the Mace" (BĘżl KrntryĹĄ), "BaĘżal of the Lebanon" (BĘżl Lbnn), "BaĘżal of Sidon" (BĘżl ᚢdn), BĘżl ᚢmd, "BaĘżal of the Heavens" (BaĘżal Shamem or Shamayin), BaĘżal ĘžAddir (BĘżl Ęždr), BaĘżal Hammon (BaĘżal Ḥamon), BĘżl Mgnm.
The epithet Hammon is obscure. Most often, it is connected with the NW Semitic ḼammÄn ("brazier") and associated with a role as a sun god. Renan and Gibson linked it to Hammon (modern Umm el-âAmed between Tyre in Lebanon and Acre in Israel) and Cross and LipiĹski to Haman or KhamĹn, the classical Mount Amanus and modern Nur Mountains, which separate northern Syria from southeastern Cilicia.
The major source of our direct knowledge of this Canaanite deity comes from the Ras Shamra tablets, discovered in northern Syria in 1958, which record fragments of a mythological story known to scholars as the Baal Cycle. Here, he earns his position as the champion and ruler of the gods. The fragmentary text seems to indicate a feud between him and his father El as background. El chooses the fearsome sea god Yam to reign as king of the gods. Yam rules harshly, and the other deities cry out to Ashera, called Lady of the Sea, to aid. Ashera offers herself as a sacrifice if Yam will ease his grip on her children. He agrees, but Baal opposes such a scheme and boldly declares he will defeat Yam even though El declares that he must subject himself to Yam.
With the aid of magical weapons given to him by the divine craftsman Kothar-wa-Khasis, Baal defeats Yam and is declared victorious. He then builds a house on Mount Saphon, today known as Jebel al-Aqra. (This mountain, 1780 meters high, stands only 15 km north of the site of Ugarit, clearly visible from the city itself.)
Lo, also it is the time of His rain. Baal sets the season, And gives forth His voice from the clouds. He flashes lightning to the earth. As a house of cedars let Him complete it, Or a house of bricks let Him erect it! Let it be told to Aliyan Baal: 'The mountains will bring Thee much silver. The hills, the choicest of gold; The mines will bring Thee precious stones, And build a house of silver and gold. A house of lapis gems!'
However, the god of the underworld, Mot, soon lures Baal to his death, spelling ruin for the land. His sister Anat retrieves his body and begs Mot to revive him. When her pleas are rebuffed, Anat assaults Mot, ripping him to pieces and scattering his remains like fertilizer over the fields.
El, in the meantime, has had a dream in which fertility returned to the land, suggesting that Baal was not indeed dead. Eventually he is restored. However, Mot too has revived and mounts a new attack against him.
They shake each other like Gemar-beasts, Mavet [Mot] is strong, Baal is strong. They gore each other like buffaloes, Mavet is strong, Baal is strong. They bite like serpents, Mavet is strong, Baal is strong. They kick like racing beasts, Mavet is down. Baal is down.
After this titanic battle, neither side has completely prevailed. Knowing that the other gods now support Baal and fearing El's wrath, Mot finally bows before him, leaving him in possession of the land and the undisputed regent of the gods.
Baal is thus the archetypal fertility deity. His death signals drought and his resurrection, and brings both rain and new life. He is also the vanquisher of death. His role as a maker of rain would be particularly important in the relatively arid area of Palestine, where no mighty river such as the Euphrates or the Nile existed.





















