- Kothar-wa-Khasis
Kothar-wa-Khasis ( _he. כושר וחסיס) is a Canaanite god whose name means "Skillful-and-Wise" or "Adroit-and-Perceptive" or "Deft-and-Clever". Another of his names means "Deft-with-both-hands". Kothar is smith, craftsman,
engineer ,architect , andinventor . He is alsosoothsayer and magician, creating sacred words and spells, in part because there is an association in many cultures of metalworking deities with magic. The god-name Ka-sha-lu in texts fromEbla suggests that he was known inSyria as early as the late third millennium.Kothar aids
Baal in his battles, as recounted in the Myth of Baal, by creating and naming two magic weapons with whichBaal defeats Yam. Kothar also creates beautiful furniture adorned with silver and gold as gifts forAthirat . And he builds Ba`al's palace of silver, gold, lapis lazuli, and fragrant cedar wood. One of his significant actions is as the Opener of the window through which Ba`al's rains can come and go to fertilize the earth and provide for the continuance of life.Kothar's abode is actually in two lands. One is the city of Memphis in Egypt, written in
Ugaritic as h.k.p.t (read perhaps as "hikaptah") and means "the house of the ka ofPtah ". Memphis is the site of the temple of Ptah, the Egyptian god responsible for crafts, whose name means "the Opener". Kothar's second land is Kaphtor (in Akkadian "kaptaru"), which is generally identified as Crete.In his book on the Myth of Baal, Mark Smith notes that there is a possible pun involved in Kothar's epithet "The Opener". According to the Phoenician mythology related by
Mochos of Sidon , as cited inDamascius 's "De principiis" (Attridge and Oden 1981:102-03), Chusor, Kothar's name in Phoenician Greek, was the first "opener." Assuming the West Semitic root *pt h, "to open," Albright argues that this title represents word-play on the name of the Egyptian god Ptah.Smith further explains Kothar's double abodes as reflexes of metal or craft trade both from Egypt and from the Mediterranean Sea to Ugarit, as Kothar is imputed to be the divine patron of these skills.
References
*Gibson, J.C.L., originally edited by G.R. Driver. "Canaanite Myths and Legends." Edinburgh: T. and T. Clark, Ltd., 1956, 1977.
*Smith, Mark S. "The Ugaritic Baal Cycle." Volume 1: Introduction with Text, Translation & Commentary of KTU 1.1-1.2. Supplements to Vetus Testamentum, Volume LV. Leiden, The Netherlands: E. J. Brill, 1994.
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