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>Then a serpent who could not be charmed Made its nest in the roots of the Huluppu-tree. The Anzu-bird set his young in the branches of the tree. And the dark maid Lilith built her home in the trunk.

Note the image (picrel) of the demon they try to pass off a Venus, it is her opposite.

>The identification of the relief as depicting "Lilith" has become a staple of popular writing on that subject.Raphael Patai(1990)[believes the relief to be the only existent depiction of a Sumerian female demon called alilituand thus to definelilitu'siconography. Citations regarding this assertion lead back toHenri Frankfort(1936). Frankfort himself based his interpretation of the deity as the demon Lilith on the presence of wings, the birds' feet and the representation of owls.

"The HebrewLilithand AkkadianLīlītuare female adjectives from the Proto-Semitic root LYL "night", literally translating to nocturnal "female night being/demon," althoughcuneiforminscriptions whereLīlītandLīlīturefers to disease-bearing wind spirits exist."