
ꜥAnat through the eyes of sculptors, painters, and craftsmen across the ages

Solid-cast bronze votive figurine of Anat, Canaanite/Syrian, early 2nd millennium BCE (Middle Bronze Age). Walters Art Museum, Baltimore (acc. no. 54.2487).

Granite statue of Ramesses II with the goddess Anat, 19th Dynasty, 13th century BCE. Egyptian Museum, Cairo.

Neo-Assyrian stele of Ninurta-kudurrī-uṣur, governor of Suhu and Mari, dedicated to the goddess Anat, 8th century BCE. Iraq Museum, Baghdad (IM 132899).

Bronze “goddess with lions” figurine from Hauran, Syria, c. 1000–700 BCE; the Louvre notes the type may evoke Ishtar, Anat, or Astarte. Musée du Louvre, Paris (AO 3276).

The Anat-Athena bilingual inscription from Larnakas tis Lapithou, Cyprus, published 1867 by Melchior de Vogüé.