A female DEMON of the night and SUCCUBUS who 
fl ies about searching for newborn children to kidnap or 
strangle and sleeping men to seduce in order to produce 
demon children. Lilith is a major fi gure in Jewish demonology, 
appearing as early as 700 B.C.E. in the book of Isaiah; 
she or beings similar to her also are found in myths 
from other cultures around the world. She is the dark 
aspect of the Mother Goddess. She is the original scarlet 
woman and sometimes described as a screech owl, blind 
by day, who sucks the breasts or navels of young children 
or the dugs of goats. 
In addition to Jewish folklore, Lilith appears in various 
forms in Iranian, Babylonian, Sumerian, Canaanite, Persian, 
Arabic, Teutonic, Mexican, Greek, English, Asian, 
and Native American legends. She is sometimes associated 
with other characters in legend and myth, including 
the queen of Sheba and Helen of Troy. In medieval 
Europe, she was often portrayed as the wife, concubine, 
or grandmother of SATAN. 
Lilith appears in different guises in various texts. She 
is best known as the fi rst wife of Adam, created by God 
as twins joined in the back. Lilith demanded equality 
with Adam and, failing to get it, left him in anger. Adam 
complained to God that his wife had deserted him. God 
sent three angels, Sanvi, Sansanvi, and Semangelaf, to 
take Lilith back to Eden. The angels found her in the 
Red Sea and threatened her with the loss of 100 of her 
demon children every day unless she returned to Adam. 
She refused and was punished. Lilith took revenge by 
launching a reign of terror against women in childbirth, 
newborn infantsparticularly malesand men who 
slept alone. She was forced, however, to swear to the 
three angels that whenever she saw their names or images 
on an amulet, she would leave infants and mothers 
alone. 
After the Fall, Adam spent 130 years separated from 
Eve, during which Lilith went to him and satisfi ed him 
during sleep. They had a son, who became a frog. 
The earliest account of Lilith appears in a midrash, Alpha 
Bet Ben Sira, which attempts to resolve the discrepancies 
in the Torah about the creation of Lilith in Genesis, 
followed by the creation of Eve just a few passages later. 
In the midrash, God created Lilith in the same way as he 
did Adam, but he used fi lth and impure sediment instead 
of dust from the earth. Adam and Lilith were at odds with 
each other from the beginning, and she refused to lie beneath 
him during intercourse. When she saw that Adam 
would gain power over her, she uttered the ineffable name 
of God and fl ew off to a cave in the desert near the Red Sea. 
There, as queen of Zemargad or queen of the desert, she 
engaged in promiscuity, including with demons, and gave 
birth to 100 demonic offspring called lilim every day. The 
daughters all practice SORCERY, seduction, and strangling. 
She became the bride of SAMAEL, the DEVIL (in some 
accounts called Ashmodai, or ASMODEUS), in a union arranged 
by the Blind Dragon, an entity who has been castrated 
so that his offspring will not overcome the world. 
The lilim are hairy beings, having hair everywhere on 
their faces and bodies except their heads. 
In a text preceding the Zohar, Lilith and Samael are 
born joined as androgynous twins from an emanation beneath 
the throne of glory. They are the lower aspects of 
another androgynous twin, Adam and Eve. 
In the Zohar, Lilith arises from an evil shell or husk, 
a KELIPPAH, that is created in the waning of the Moon. In 
the beginning, the Sun and Moon were equal, and this 
created a rivalry. To end it, God diminished the Moon 
and made it rule the night. Liliths powers are at their 
peak when the Moon is dark. She is the seducer of men 
and the strangler of children; the latter role is sometimes 
attributed to NAAMAH. 
Lilith, who has the upper body of a beautiful woman 
and a lower body of fi re, carries the fi ery resentment of 
the Moon. Lilith lurks under doorways, in wells, and in 
latrines, waiting to seduce men. She is adorned with the 
ornaments for seduction: 
Her hair is long and red like the rose, her cheeks are 
white and red, from her ears hang six ornaments, Egyptian 
cords and all the ornaments of the Land of the 
East hang from her nape. Her mouth is set like a narrow 
door comely in its decor, her tongue is sharp like 
a sword, her words are smooth like oil, her lips are red 
like a rose and sweetened by all the sweetness in the 
world. She is dressed in scarlet and adorned with forty 
ornaments less one. 
Men who sleep alone are especially vulnerable to Lilith. 
The Zohar also describes Lilith as a female aspect of 
LEVIATHAN, who has a SERPENT body. She is Leviathan, 
the Tortuous Serpent, the counterpart to the male aspect, 
Leviathon, the Slant Serpent. Lilith is the serpent 
who tempts Eve with the apple of forbidden knowledge 
in paradise and thus instigates the Fall. She also persuades 
Eve to seduce Adam while she is menstruating 
and impure. 
The numerical value of Liliths name equals the Hebrew 
word for screech. Thus, Lilith is the demon of screeching 
and the princess of screeching and is personifi ed as 
a screech owl. In legend, on the Day of Atonement, Lilith 
spends the day in a screeching battle with MAHALATH, a 
concubine to Samael. They taunt each other so much that 
the very earth trembles. Also on the Day of Atonement, 
Lilith goes forth into the desert with 420 LEGIONs of her 
demons, and they march about while she screeches. 
Lilith is also known as Lady of the Beasts, who rules 
the wilderness and all beasts, the animal side of human 
nature. 
In her guise as the queen of Sheba, she attempted to 
seduce King SOLOMON. He discovered her true nature by 
having the DJINN build a throne room with a fl oor of glass. 
Lilith mistook it for water and raised her garments in order 
to cross it to his throne. Her hairy, bestial legs were 
revealed in the refl ection of the glass. 
AMULETs and INCANTATION BOWLs traditionally protected 
new mothers and infants against Lilith. Common 
amulets were knives and hands inscribed with CHARMs; 
some had bells attached. Frogs also protect against her. 
Male infants were vulnerable for the fi rst week of life, girls 
for the fi rst three weeks. Sometimes a magic circle was 
drawn around the lying-in bed, with a charm inscribed 
with the names of the three angels, Adam and Eve, and 
the words barring Lilith or protect this newborn child from 
all harm. Sometimes amulets with such inscriptions were 
placed in all corners of and throughout the bedchamber. 
If a child laughed in its sleep, it was a sign that Lilith was 
present. Tapping the child on the nose made the demon 
go away. 
According to lore, men who had nocturnal emissions 
believed they had been seduced by Lilith during the night 
and had to say incantations to prevent the offspring from 
becoming demons. Any seed spilled during sex, even 
marital sex, is at risk for becoming lilim. 
FURTHER READING: 
Koltuv, Barbara Black. The Book of Lilith. Berwick, Me.: Nicolas- 
Hays, 1986. 
Scholem, Gershom. Kabbalah. New York: New American 
Library, 1974. 
Lilith
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