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Gender variance in spirituality: Difference between revisions

→‎Levant spiritualities: Updated Enki, deleted Mylitta due to lack of evidence, expanded on Zurvan
imported>MorningSparrow
(→‎Levant spiritualities: changed to "Levant Spiritualities" to better reflect the deities featured and their region. Expanded on the inanna section. Added source.)
imported>MorningSparrow
(→‎Levant spiritualities: Updated Enki, deleted Mylitta due to lack of evidence, expanded on Zurvan)
Line 124: Line 124:
====Levant spiritualities====
====Levant spiritualities====
Gender-variant deities and patrons of gender variance in other Southwest Asian spiritualities:
Gender-variant deities and patrons of gender variance in other Southwest Asian spiritualities:
* '''Enki''', a Sumerian male god, creator and patron of several kinds of intersex, transgender, and gender nonconforming people, and of their gender roles.
* '''Enki''', a Sumerian male god and creator. He has been referenced to have both male and female aspects, but these seem to largely relate to fertility, or his place in a per-patriarchal society.
* '''Inanna''', a Sumerian goddess who was described in some hymns as both male and female, and whose worship included ritual cross-dressing. Some more recent translations indicate that "ritual cross dressing" might have been mistranslated, the passages instead referring to a sect of trans priestesses. She was also indicated to have domain over transitioning gender, "To turn a man into a woman and a woman into a man are yours, Inana." <ref> [http://etcsl.orinst.ox.ac.uk/section4/tr4073.htm] </ref>
* '''Inanna''', a Sumerian goddess who was described in some hymns as both male and female, and whose worship included ritual cross-dressing. Some more recent translations indicate that "ritual cross dressing" might have been mistranslated, the passages instead referring to a sect of trans priestesses. She was also indicated to have domain over transitioning gender, "To turn a man into a woman and a woman into a man are yours, Inana." <ref> [http://etcsl.orinst.ox.ac.uk/section4/tr4073.htm] </ref>
* '''Mylitta''', Babylonian, depicted as both male and female
* '''Zurvan''', a Zoroastrian primal deity of time who is grammatically represented as genderless.
* '''Zurvan''', a Zoroastrian primal androgyne


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