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Martu, Lord of the Mountain Also Amurru, The Thunderer Culture Mesopotamian Amorite/Amurru The Parton god of the city of Ninab. bêlu šadī or bêl šadê, Bêl Šadê could also have become the fertility-god 'Ba'al', possibly adopted by the Canaanites, a rival and enemy of the Hebrew God YHWH, and famously combatted by the Hebrew prophet Elijah. Amurru also has storm-god features. Like Adad, Amurru bears the epithet 'thunderer', and he is even called 'hurler of the thunderbolt' . Yet his iconography is distinct from that of Adad, and he sometimes appears alongside Adad with a baton of power or throwstick, while Adad bears a conventional thunderbolt. Amurru's wife is usually the goddess Asratum (see Asherah) who in northwest Semitic tradition and Hittite tradition appears as wife of the god El which suggests that Amurru may indeed have been a variation of that god. Hewbrew His association to both El, and Baal can not be overstated in its importance. He was worshipped from 2,000 BCE to 200 common era. He had cult centers throughout the Ugaritic empire. Martu is referenced extensively in Ugaritic artwork and literary works. Including the Rasama. In his association as Baal he was worshipped in Lebanon, Syria and Israel. Storm god, creator god or shepherd is the legacy left by the deity Martu, Amurru, El, Baal.