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Around Lamashtu: animals and household appliances

Related Images

  • Fig. 1 - Another Lamashtu amulet. We see again a dog and a pig, with a comb, spindle and a toggle pin. A spell written in cuneiform encircles the scene - Metropolitan Museum of Art - [Wikimedia Commons](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Amulet_with_a_Lamashtu_demon_MET_me_1984_348a.jpg)
  • Fig. 2 - Lamashtu with a lion’s head, holding snakes in her hands and a dog and pig suckling her breasts. On the right-hand side the good demon Pazuzu intended to ward her off - Metropolitan Museum of Art - [Wikimedia Commons](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Amulet_with_a_Lamashtu_demon_MET_hb86_11_2a.jpg)

On either side of her we often find a dog (left) and a pig (right), sometimes suckling her breasts, replacing the children that she wants to kill with her milk. In her hands she can hold snakes, used for the poison with which she kills, and sometimes she moves on a donkey standing in a boat (as strange as that may sound).

Additional objects are commonly depicted on Lamashtu amulets: in this case a comb on the left, to stress that she is feminine, and the lower leg of a donkey on the right (this was considered repulsive). Faced with such horror, we have to ask how we can combat Lamashtu.