Reference: Nergal
American
One of the gods of the Cuthite heathen who were transplanted into Palestine, 2Ki 7:20. This idol probably represented the planet Mars, which was ever the emblem of bloodshed. Mars is names, by the Zabians and Arabians, ill luck, misfortune. He was represented as holding in one had a drawn sword, and in the other, by the hair, a human head just cut off; his garments were blood red, as the light of the planet is also reddish. His temple among the Arabs was painted red; and they offered to him garments sprinkled with blood, and also a warrior, (probably a prisoner,) who was cast into a pool. The name Nergal appears in the proper names Nergalsharezer. Neriglassar, Jer 39:3,13.
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Easton
the great dog; that is, lion, one of the chief gods of the Assyrians and Babylonians (2Ki 17:30), the god of war and hunting. He is connected with Cutha as its tutelary deity.
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Fausets
A Hamite name ("great hero".) Some of the Assyrian kings pretended descent from him. In the monuments he is called "the great brother," "the storm ruler," "king of battle," "the strong begetter"; "god of the chase," which is his special attribute. Nimrod deified, "the mighty hunter before the Lord," from whom naturally the kings of Babylon and Nineveh would claim descent. Cutha or Tiggaba (Nimrod's city in Arab tradition) is in the inscriptions especially dedicated to him. In accurate conformity with this the men of Cutha (2Ki 17:30) planted by the Assyrian king as colonists in Samaria "made Nergal their god."
Nergal appears in the compound Nergal-sharezer (Jer 39:3,13). A human headed lion with eagles' wings was his symbol. His Semitic name Aria (which when transposed is Nir) means "lion"; Greek Ares; Mars is his planet. Nerig is still its Mendaean name, and the Mendaeans call the third day of the week from him. The lion as lord of the forest was a fit symbol of the god of the chase. Tiglath Pileser (1150 B.C.) attributes to his gift the arrows wherewith he slew wild beasts; so Assur-dani-pal or Sardanapalus. Pul sacrificed to Nergal in Cutha, and Sennacherib built a temple to him in Tarbisa near Nineveh.
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Hastings
The god of the city of Cubta in Babylonia, hence worshipped by the captive Cuth
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Morish
Ner'gal
An Assyrian and Babylonian god. 2Ki 17:30. It has many titles on the monuments, such as 'the god of the chase,' 'the king of battle,' etc.
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Smith
Ner'gal
(hero), one of the chief Assyrian and Babylonian deities, seems to have corresponded closely to the classical Mars.
It is conjectured that he may represent the deified Nimrod.