Betwixt The Sheets: The History of Sex, Scandal & Society - Who Was Lilith? The Semen-Stealing First Wife Of Adam
Episode Date: January 28, 2025Lilith's story goes back 4,000 years, and she's still making an impact today.She takes on different forms, depending on where you're looking, but a popular one was that she was the first wife of Adam,... long before Eve, and was expelled from the Garden of Eden to go and live as a promiscuous, baby-killing, semen-stealing demon. As you do.In short, she's embodies a lot of male anxieties about sex and women.What are her true origins? What's with all the semen-stealing? And what's her connection to mermaids?Joining Kate today is historian Sarah Clegg, author of Woman's Lore: 4,000 Years of Sirens, Serpents and Succubi, to help us get to know this fascinating woman better.This episode was edited by Tom Delargy and produced by Stuart Beckwith. The senior producer was Charlotte Long.All music from Epidemic Sounds/All3 Media.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here.Betwixt the Sheets: History of Sex, Scandal & Society is a History Hit podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hello, my lovely bit Twixters.
It's me, Kate Lister, and you are listening to About Twixter Sheets.
But before we can continue on our little merry adventure together,
I have to tell you.
This is an adult podcast, whether my adults,
other adults about adulty things and an adulty wake or a range of adult subjects
and you should be an adult too.
Oh, my God, do I have to keep saying that?
I suppose I do it because more people are turning up
and they might be easily offended.
So if that's you, this is your chance to sod off now
and leave the rest of us to crack on with it.
Right, on with the show.
Deep in the Garden of Eden, a spat is unfolding.
It's somewhat killing the idyllic vibe that they've got going on,
but let's listen in a little bit more closely.
Oh, okay, there's Adam, waltzing around like his God's gift,
which actually, I suppose technically, technically he was.
But there's also Lily, his first wife,
and also God's gift.
Who was around long before.
God plucked a rib from Adam and created Eve.
It seems like they're arranging a romantic evening,
and Lilith is rightly pointing out
that she is every bit as equal to Adam
and doesn't want to...
What was that?
Do it with him in the missionary position.
Hmm.
Okay.
Bit of a reverse cowgirl fan.
Well, yeah, exactly.
You do you, Lil.
But what she's doing,
here is much more than just trying to get hers. The fundamental point here is that she's refusing
to be subservient to Adam. And that will result in her being expelled from the Garden of Eden
and living the rest of eternity amongst the demons. I mean, I love her principles, but wow,
okay, that's a hell of a price to pay. But what other stories do we know about this original
badass? Do we find out? Let's do it. What do you look for a man?
You're supposed to rise when an adult speaks to you.
I make perfect copies of whatever my boss needs by just turning a knob and pushing the button.
Yes, social courtesy does make a difference.
Goodness, for a beautiful time. Goodness has nothing to do with it, Dary.
Hello and welcome back to Betwixt the Sheets, the History of Sex Scambling Society with me, Kate.
You might be listening to this and thinking, I've never heard of this Lilith, Kate.
Well, it's pretty remarkable that for someone who is for someone who is for someone who is for,
first spoken about thousands of years ago in Mesopotamia and Babylonia, Lilith actually feels
incredibly modern. She's been held up as a semen-stealing demon, responsible for wet dreams,
and she's also spoken about as Adam's first wife, who was every bit his equal. One of the different
ways that Lilith has been seen throughout history. And what does this tell us about views on equity
a thousand years ago? And did she really refuse to have sex with Adam in the missionary position?
Helping us get to know this remarkable, albeit mythical woman,
is Sarah Clegg, author of Woman's Law,
A Thousand Years of Sirens, Serpents and Succupi.
Well, I don't know about you, but I'm certainly ready for more.
Let's do it.
Hello, and welcome to Betwixt the Sheets.
It's only Sarah Clegg.
How are you doing?
I'm doing very well.
Thank you so much for having me on.
I'm so excited you're here
because you are here to talk to us about
how would you even describe her? She's not a real person. She's a mythological, but not like a unicorn.
But Lilith, you're here to talk to us about Lilith. I am just the best demoness going.
Demoness, that's the word. That is a fantastic word. I know bits and pieces about Lilith.
I know she's not quite in the Bible, but she's kind of biblical. And then she's in sort of older Jewish
sources here and there and she's generally, there's something naughty about her.
But can you tell us, just for people who are listening, who are like, I have no idea who this is
at all, could you give us a sort of a potted history of who is Lilith?
Yeah.
So she is actually part of one of kind of the longest folkloric traditions that we have.
She stretches back kind of about 4,000 years.
And obviously over that time, she's gone through kind of loads of different iterations and has appeared in different cultures.
And depending on who was kind of trying to ward her off or telling a story about her, then she takes on different forms.
But the story that I think most people are vaguely familiar with is that she is the first wife of Adam, who is kicked out of the Garden of Eden or leaves it of her own free will because Adam won't acknowledge their equality.
and goes off and becomes a demoness and murders babies and women.
Completely natural reaction, by the way.
Yes, absolutely.
And has sex with everyone going.
So I think that's kind of the story that we know about her now, kind of the most familiar one.
Yeah, that's how I've heard of Lilith is that she was Adam's first wife, which in itself raises a lot of questions.
Like, I'm sorry, pardon, what?
What, I haven't heard, I haven't heard this.
If that's the case, why isn't she in the Bible?
Then she renounces him because she's like, on your bike mate.
I think you'll find that we are equals.
But the one that I've heard is that specifically she said, oh, well, screw you then,
because he wanted to have sex in the missionary position.
Yes.
Is that, that's right?
That's right.
No, no, no, this is absolutely right.
This is actually the first version of this story that we have.
Wow.
Up to this point, she's been a demoness who kills babies, kills kind of pregnant women.
Of course.
And will cause complications in labour.
And then on the other side of it, she will also appear in the night and steal your semen.
Right.
As you do.
As you do.
It is actually very natural.
It's probably the wrong way of saying.
There is actually a reason for this in that she is this combining of two different ancient Mesopotamian demonesses.
One is called Lamashtu.
and she is this demoness of kind of infant death and death in childbirth.
And the other hand, you've got Lolitu, who is the ghost of a girl who died before she could have sex.
And she seeks out mortal men and enacts her passions on them in the night.
She's not really a very important or terrifying demoness.
She's mainly the one who gets blamed for wet dreams.
And like there are a few illnesses that involve like continuous erections and make.
maybe that's her. But she's not that big of a deal. And gradually, the two kind of combine
until by the end of the end of ancient Mesopotamia isn't quite the right way of saying it.
But getting into kind of late antiquity, she has very much become this single demoness who will
have sex with you, whether you want to or not, who will seduce you, who if you're a man
will appear in the night and steal your semen. And if you're a woman, might appear in the form of a man
or might not, and sleep with you in the night, and will also kill babies and their mothers.
And she is there just in this form, maybe linked with Adam. There is this story that we have.
So after the incident with the apple, then supposedly Adam and Eve had a bit of a breakup.
This all but left out.
Yeah. Well, so there is quite a long period of time. There's about a hundred.
years in between the sort of canonical birth of Cain and Abel and then the canonical birth of their
next child. The explanation for this was that they stopped having sex with each other in this period.
And added to this was that Adam was actually having sex with demons and or having his semen stolen
by demons to create a whole new race of demons. And that is very Lilith code of behaviour.
No one ever says it's Lilith. But if you're not.
Seaman has been stolen by a demon, she's who you're looking at. So that's where you are. And then
you have this manuscript called the alphabet of Ben-Syra. The alphabet is Wen-Sura, I have to say,
it's one of my favorite ancient sources. It is the weirdest thing. Saterical is how it's
normally described. Ben-Zerah was a respected Jewish scholar. He lived a few centuries before this
manuscript was written. In the alphabet of Ben-Sirah,
then he is a mystically wise toddler who his father and his grandfather is the prophet Jeremiah.
Right.
Because Jeremiah publicly masturbated into a fountain and then Jeremiah's daughter bathed in it and conceived Ben Sira.
What in the Jerry Springer shit is?
It is incredible.
I mean, the whole manuscript is written like this.
So it follows Ben Sera as he solves problems for the king of Babylon, Nebuchadnezzar.
That in itself is likely part of the joke because Nebuchadnezzar is the king who raised Jerusalem
and instituted the Babylonian captivity. So he is not a man who a Jewish scholar should be helping out.
But Ben-Sirat is. The problems Nebuchadnezzar has are things like he wants to know why donkeys
urinate in the urine of other donkeys. I'm starting to see why people think this might be a satire
because like trying to take this seriously, this would have been a serious scholarly work.
that requires quite a leap of a faith, doesn't it?
Yes. I mean, it would be really interesting if it was, but I think broadly, there's enough.
Yeah, Nebuchadnezzar has a very flatulent daughter and Ben Serra gets her to stop farting.
Yeah, I'm going to call that one with you as well. Yeah, I think that we're not supposed to take that seriously.
No, it's good fun. It's really enjoyable to read.
And one of the other problems that Nebuchadnezz has is that his child is sick.
and Ben Serra goes, and he reads an incantation over the boy and creates an amulet.
Now, this is kind of the sad side of Lilith.
Okay.
This kind of, like, the horrible side of her that, you know, women really were struggling with, you know,
prior to modern medicine, children died in droves, women died in droves.
Pregnancy and childbirth was frightening, and there wasn't much you could do if it started going wrong.
and we have a whole load of kind of incantations against Lilith and demons like her,
demons that tend to be related to her actually.
Like you can follow their folklore and they're all entangled together.
And one of them is this charm where it takes a lot of different forms,
but functionally the child stealing demoness manages to get hold of a child and runs towards the sea
because the sea is kind of her home, it's where she's safe.
and before she can get there, one to three brothers with names that have S, N, and S in them.
Sissinoyas is the most famous one.
Stop her.
And generally they extract from her a promise that whenever their names are spoken,
then she won't be able to cause harm to a baby.
Now, the story Ben Serra tells is a combination of that charm
and this weird Adam in the garden story.
So he specifically talks about once Adam and Lilith were created
and for a while everything was fine
and then let me just find the passage.
Oh yes please, we want to get this right.
He brought her to Adam and they immediately began to fight.
Adam said, you shall lie below and Lilith said you shall lie below
but we are equal and both of us were created from the earth.
They did not listen to each other.
When Lilith saw the state of things,
she uttered the ineffable name and flew away into the air and fled.
I really think when I saw the state of things is a very...
Yeah.
We've all been there.
We've all been there.
And she runs to the sea.
And she is pursued there by three angels called,
I mean, functionally unpronounceably,
snivy, snisphy and smunsgolf,
which are plays on these kind of like comical plays on these SNS names that are previously appeared in the charms.
And they extract from her the promise that she won't be able to kill any children,
which, fine, she's now going to start killing children where her names, these names are spoken.
So it is a really fascinating and really odd text in that it's taking this sort of relatively recent story
of like Adam sleeping with semen-stealing demonesses and putting Lilith into the garden
with him first before Eve. And also separately, these charm stories of a child stealing demoness
running to the sea and being chased there by people with SNS names who managed to get the promise
from her that she won't appear where their names are spoken. And that is really interesting,
to me at least, because it puts this story that he is reciting that Ben Serra is telling.
Obviously it's satirical. I think probably the most likely thing
that Bencera has added to it is this kind of debate about sexual positions.
Because other than that, it's bang on for one of these charm stories,
which we know were used kind of legitimately by women who are terrified for themselves or their
children. And it kind of puts this whole weird nonsense out of, I mean, it was already
sort of out of the scholarly world, but puts it into something that's a lot more folkloric.
Lilith appears in kind of very scholarly texts, but they're never, they're always written by men and they never care about the child stealing women-killing side of her.
In fact, eventually, especially in Judaism, she becomes the mother of all demons and actually the fact that she produces a lot of children is something that men hate about her.
And I just find it so interesting. Part of me is desperate in a very modern way to think that this kind of fun argument about equality,
was something that women were reciting themselves,
was a story that was being told by women.
It's probably too hopeful.
And probably like Ben Serra changes so much
that, you know, what can you say about what he was really riffing off?
That's my wish.
The thing about satire is it has to be satirising something, though, doesn't it?
So, like, it has to be, if it was some ancient joke
that everyone was going to be falling about laughing at,
there has to be a reason.
Like, why would he evoke that particular debate
unless it was something that was in currency at the time?
Yeah, and it has to be so as well.
What is really interesting?
So Ben Siras sticks.
There are other versions of this story
that eventually get told by kind of Jewish mystics,
especially in Kabbalah.
They're really boring.
They're much more kind of,
oh, God kicked her out the garden
because she actually wasn't great
and he imprisoned her in the sea.
She didn't want to go there.
and, you know, she has no power and she's just useless.
But none of those stories stick.
The story that sticks and the story that is told again and again,
like we have 50 manuscript versions of Ben-Syra.
It's still the story we know today is this kind of debate about sexual equality.
And Jewish scholars knew this as well because we have,
by kind of the logic of the story, Lilith's right,
like they are both made at the same clay.
There's no reason at all why she shouldn't like be equal with him and why she should listen to him.
And that is something that is picked up on by Jewish scholars looking at it later.
And they kind of try and downplay her argument.
They're like, oh, actually she was made out of the same clay, but it was just the scum that was left over after Adam was made.
So it's not actually a quality.
That's a strained argument.
So strained. And also, you wouldn't be arguing that if you hadn't noticed that, like, by the logic of the story, she's right.
Like, you're trying to change something because you've realised this is a good argument. It's fascinating.
That was Sarah after this short break. So Ben Serra, he'll have to forgive me. I don't know very much, but I am going to have a look at this mad text that he's written.
When was he writing that? What was the date?
It is around 700 to 1,000.
AD. Okay. And he is the earliest account we've got of this, I'm not going on top, you go on top,
he's the first one. That's fascinating, isn't it? Because it might just be a big joke, but look how
it's rippled into mythology and kind of our understanding of women in antiquity and what we're
projecting onto that. Yeah. It's incredible. It's one of the most interesting manuscripts there is.
make other sex jokes in this book?
I mean, as I say, there is public masturbation.
Yes, that counts.
Yeah.
Trying to think of any others apart from that.
Of the top of my head, I can't remember any, but that doesn't mean there aren't any in there.
But it's not like that that one incident stands out as like, oh, God, that's a fucking weird
edition.
No.
It's very much in keeping with the rest of it.
Okay, so that's about 1,000 AD.
But Lilith, you're saying she can trace her roots right back to.
Ancient Mesopotamia.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
How have they managed to join up those lines between this text of semen stealing and two demons in Mesopotamia?
Like how, that's incredible.
How do you manage to join those dots?
So actually, it follows really beautifully.
So from about 2000 BC, we have the initial texts against this demoness called Lamashtu and the incantations against her.
And then we can watch through sort of cuneiform texts.
She's popular as a demoness.
And she appears quite frequently.
And we can also see Alitu, kind of this virgin ghost figure as well.
I mean, ancient Mesopotamia is full of texts.
They wrote on clay.
And the joy of clay is that if you set a city on fire,
then it just bakes the clay and preserves everything even better.
It's like the opposite of paper.
If you burn a library, which they did, the library of Ashabana Pal is like the library or the collection of writing of the ancient world.
And it survives because someone torched the city and baked the clay tablets.
Mesopotamia is so cool.
It is, isn't it?
It's absolutely bonkers the stuff that goes on.
I say that.
That's not fair.
Comparing it to other world mythologies, they're equally as bonkers.
It's all bonkers.
It is.
I think what I like about stuff, the ancient.
ancient Mesopotamian, this is me being biased because I'm a sex historian, but they're very
open and upfront and not bothered about sex in a way that's quite, like even their gods and their
goddesses, they're just like, yeah, yeah, they were shagging. Well, I think what's really interesting
as well about kind of Litu is like I say, she is this demoness who is responsible for wet dreams.
That's a crap job, isn't it? Like, could you imagine if you were a goddess waiting for your assignments
to be handed out? And that's what you get given, like a... So she's a god. So she's a god.
She's the ghost of a girl who, no, no, sorry, ghost.
So she's the ghost of a girl who died having, never having sex.
So she is seeking out mortal men to enact her passions.
Wow.
And she comes to you in dreams and she's the explanation for wet dreams.
I mean, imagine dying when you haven't had sex and then you've got to go around.
Like hang around men having wet dreams.
What a treat.
Anyway, each their own.
And the thing is, in ancient Mesopotamia, wet dreams.
are just a thing.
They're just a thing that happens.
And you can kind of see this
in the incantations against her.
Like, they're just sad.
They're kind of,
you just feel sorry for her.
Like, they're things like,
oh, you know, this girl
who's never had a nice young man
undo her garment clasp.
Like, that's real sweet.
That is sweet.
Who among us hasn't wanted
a nice young man
to undo our garment clasp.
Oh.
They're full of this kind of pathos
and she's not very feared
at all is kind of the impression that you get from the sources.
And then you watch her move through.
Then you can find her in these things called Aramaic incantation bowls,
which are like clay bowls with incantations written on them.
And the idea is you kind of put it upside down.
Like you kind of trap a spider,
except you're trapping a demon in the bowl.
And she moves through those,
and she keeps up kind of the seduction and the child killing.
And there is a little bit more concern about the seduction side of things,
but it's not mostly people are afraid of her because she'll kill children and mothers.
And then you get into kind of Jewish texts being written by men,
and suddenly what everyone cares about is the sex side.
And Judaism in the Middle Ages especially really doesn't like masturbation or wet dreams.
No.
It's a surprisingly sex positive thing, at least for those of us kind of raised in Christian environments,
in that, you know, kind of go forth and multiply was taken seriously.
There's this one scholar who says,
if you say sex is terrible, you blaspheme God who created genitals,
which fair.
Yep, fair.
But it's only sex in the right context.
It's okay.
Sex with your wife, when you like her,
and neither of you were drunk, to make children.
And there is a real concern about sex outside of those contexts
and especially things like wet dreams.
There's a famous story where you also shouldn't have sex with your wife when she's menstruating.
And there's a very famous, very famous, mildly famous, known story about a man who during periods when his wife was menstruating would keep himself awake by sitting in an uncomfortable chair because he didn't want to risk the possibility of a wet dream.
Fucking hell.
It's just, come on, guys.
It's fine.
And like, masturbation isn't allowed.
You've got the story of Onan.
you know, who spilled his seed on the ground and God is unimpressed. And suddenly that side of
Lilith becomes terrifying. She stops being kind of the sad figure we all feel a bit sorry for
and almost like kind of an explanation for wet dreams rather than anything else and becomes this
horrible woman who's causing you to have wet dreams. So it's actually all women's fault at the end of
the day. Like if we really think about it. It's always women's fault. But there is, I don't want to
try and say that like the ancient Jewish text were really sex positive. You sometimes get scholars
who try and make the case, but they kind of, they keep coming, you sort of have to get limited by the
fact of like, there's a lot of sex in there and they're quite going to have sex, but it is heterosexual
sex, sex when you're married, yeah, absolutely. Yeah, it's like against medieval Christianity,
where it's like, oh my God, I thought of a woman, I shall be whipping myself and then I'll throw
myself into a bramble patch. They get very, very upset about that stuff. But,
The issue is semen stealing is really interesting because that has, it's separated from Lilith into like, is it the succubus, the succubite demon, this one that was supposed to like steal male essences and all kinds of mass stuff.
You see this cropping up all over the place that women are going to drain men's potency through having sex with them.
And you see that cropping up all over the place.
Absolutely, yeah.
I mean, the other thing that I really love in this stuff about Lily, where you can see, where she is sitting so precisely on the fault lines of male anxieties about sex and about women.
I think there's a wonderful scholar, Sarah Johnston, who wrote about kind of an iteration of Lamashtu and Lilith in Greece.
And she says, demons are the clay with which we sculpt mold images of our fears.
and she's so right in that Lilith is such a clear representation of people's fears about childbirth, infant death, sex,
and she is shaped so perfectly to kind of medieval Jewish scholars' fears about women.
And the other thing she does when she steals your semen, she'll create children,
and then she'll bring them to your funeral, and then God will see that you have a lot of illegitimate children.
And so are your relatives, and it will be really embarrassing.
I have to play in the long game, isn't it?
That really is.
And they might also dispute inheritances.
That's another thing that they're worried about.
And there is this really clear thing of like concern about having sex with a real woman
who might have illegitimate children and might embarrass you with them in front of your family and in front of God.
There's even a story where like the prophet Elijah meets Lilith.
And Lilith is like, you're a.
dad. Good news. Lilith. And it's got, it's quite fun to read. But at the same time, it's got this
kind of thing of like, if you have illegitimate children, that's bad. But isn't it really the fault of
women? Always. And it even happened to a prophet. So like, what are you meant to do? Like, it's not
great. That's a get out of jail free card, isn't it? Yeah. So by the time we've got to, is it the middle ages that
kind of the Judaic tradition. Lilith is now a demon who is like the antithesis of everything
women are supposed to be. She kills babies instead of birthing them. She steals semen for fun and
hijinks rather than to produce legitimate issue. Honestly, couldn't you just sit them down and
just go, lads, we don't want your semen. I know you think it's amazing, but like honestly,
we're fine. Nobody wants it. There is this real kind of whiplash when
and like kind of researching and reading about these demons,
where on the one hand, you've got women being like,
I'm very scared of dying in childbirth and my infant children dying.
And you're like, that's a very legitimate concern.
I get that.
On the other hand, you've got men being like,
I'm worried women are going to seduce me and steal my semen.
It's like, that will not be happening.
Also, I don't know, your picture came down to us because you're only medieval
and you're safe.
Do you think that like this semen stealing malarkey,
Do you think it could be like it's a coded fear of losing masculinity?
Because certainly by the time you...
Oh, God, yeah. Absolutely.
Yeah, by the time you get to like the 19th century in this idea,
it's reappeared then as like, if you masturbate, you're going to go insane and die if you're a man.
It's got to that point.
And it's all about that you'll lose your manly essence and you're kind of shrivel.
Do you think that's kind of what's going on here?
I think there's definitely kind of concerns about that too.
I think there are kind of in Judaism there is so much emphasis.
this on, you know, don't spill your seed on the ground. Keep it in your pants. Yeah.
Or in a woman. Or in a woman. In a lawful woman. In the right woman. At the right times,
in the right positions. Yes. It's very strict, isn't it? Yeah. It's so weird. I just, I know that
like, I don't know, I don't want people thousands of years hence to know what my sexual
hangups are. But I don't write books about them.
So, no, conjure demons out of, out of nothing.
The demon of not ever texting you back, that would be my one.
Yeah, just this horrible demon that ghosted you immediately and never spoke to you again.
That would be my demon.
Is Lilith in the Bible?
Let's talk about how she's got associated with Adam.
And is it just that one joke?
Like, is she in the Bible at all?
No.
But there is kind of this entry point for her.
So in Genesis, there's kind of two different accounts of the creation of women.
One of them is where God created man and woman, man and woman he created them.
And then a bit later, you get the story about kind of Eve coming out of Adam's rib or his side,
and you get that whole story.
Now, that is likely because sort of the first few books of the Bible are being created from at least four different sources.
that people are kind of awkwardly mushing together.
And these sources all tend to tell roughly the same stories,
just in slightly different ways.
And it means you get lots of little contradictions like that,
where sort of it looks like women's created twice,
but it's not.
It's the same story told twice slightly changed.
Obviously, though, in the medieval period and late antiquity,
you can't accuse the text itself of being incoherent.
So that explanation is off the table.
there's lots of ways this is resolved.
One of them, which I like,
is that Adam and Eve were created, like, as one,
kind of as one sort of, generally it's depicted, like, merged at the back,
and then Eve is removed from Adam's side afterwards,
but they've sort of already both been there as one weird double human.
Another method is just to ignore it, which is quite a common one.
But there is this suggestion of this first wife.
And that kind of allows Lilith entry into the garden.
And like I say, there is also this separate tradition where Adam was having his semen stolen by demons after he was in the garden.
Is that in the Bible?
That's not.
God, God, God knows.
I was going to say, it's been a while since I read it, but I don't recall that.
Would have made it much more fun.
Wouldn't it?
I definitely remembered that bit.
Take out some of the genealogies.
Put in more demon sex.
Put in more demon sex.
Is my editorial feedback.
Anyway.
Yeah, that's not in the Bible.
All that's in the Bible is this 100-year gap in between Adam and Eve having one set of children and then having their next child.
And then that was where this kind of idea that demons were stealing his semen came in.
I suppose in a world where you've already got semen stealing demons,
or at least one semen stealing demoness flying around, then that makes sense.
But it means you've kind of got her already as sexually associated with Adam after the garden.
So it sort of makes sense if she becomes the lover of Adam or the partner of Adam beforehand as well.
Interesting.
And like I say, Ben Serat is the first time that's fully expressed.
I'll be back with Sarah after this short break.
Bonkers, isn't it?
That like it was kind of a joke, but then it's not a joke and it's kind of attached onto something else.
But like the idea of sex in the Garden of Eden was actually something medieval scholars gave a lot of thought to.
because they had to try and square this circle of, as you were saying earlier,
the medieval scholars came up with this idea of pleasure is sinful,
which seems to have been new.
That seems to have been,
I don't think many people before that would have come up with that,
like to actually,
even if it's with your wife and all the rest of it.
So you get these scholars like St. Augustine trying to work out
how Adam and Eve might have had sex in the Garden of Eden if pleasure is a sin
because how, and it just goes,
they get themselves into some real knots about it.
it. Isn't there one that's like, oh, like the penis thing was just mechanical at that point. So actually,
they weren't having fun. They would like lie next to one another and they would kind of like touch hands and then kind of like by a
process of osmosis, a pregnancy would happen. And they get really like caught up with it of just this, well,
how do pleasure exist? And then you can sort of understand that if they're that anxious about it,
Lilith offers this almost this like repository of like that's where all the naughty stuff was.
Yeah.
Does she crop up outside of after the Bible? So she has this biblical, almost like a step-on
cameo moment of a while she's not really in there. And then she's clearly being written about
in kind of parodies like a thousand years after that. But what life after that does she take on?
Is she taken seriously as like a demonic entity? Absolutely. So underneath all this,
pretty much down to the modern day,
the incantations against her as a demoness
who will harm pregnant women or their children,
that just continues.
Those you can find pretty much down to the modern day.
Basically, the advent of modern medicine is what stopped that.
For the other side of her,
kind of Renaissance Christianity got very interested in Kabbalah.
They were still persecuting Jews, obviously, but like...
But we like their stories. Lovely stories.
Yeah, yeah. Oh, God, it's...
Why is prejudice never a...
I mean, it probably worse if it was original, but it's so boring. Anyway, so Michelangelo
in the Sistine Chapel, Lilith's there. No way. Oh, I didn't know that. Yeah. So you've got Adam and Eve,
and Adam's like reaching up and taking, well, he's like pulling back the branches of the tree to reveal
Lilith. He's handing the fruit to Eve. Wow. It becomes this kind of story of her giving
the fruit to Eve because she is this kind of slighted ex-wife.
who wants to get even.
Wow.
One of the things that's really interesting, actually,
about kind of the story of the apple
is the snake is the primary driver of the story
but doesn't have a personality.
And why did the snake want Eve to eat the apple?
What was going on there?
What was the benefit of that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So constantly you get people trying to associate
anyone who might have had a motive with the snake.
So quite often, you know, like Lucifer might be the snake.
And quite often it's Lilith, who sort of makes sense.
She actually kind of Lamash to Lolitu and later forms of Lilith are really associated with snakes, and they always were.
So she'd already been depicted as kind of serpentine.
So she makes real sense to have as that.
Tishan painted her as kind of the snake in the Garden of Eden.
She's a Notre Dame.
See, this makes sense of why she's got that biblical association.
because people like Michael Angela are a painter into the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican itself.
It's no wonder that now she's kind of a part of it but not actually a part of it.
Yeah.
Would you say that she's undergone a little bit of a reclamation in modern terms?
I've certainly seen artists experimenting with this like that Lilith,
she isn't this demon stealing baby eating monster of olden times,
but she's like the first feminist.
When did that start to happen?
So fundamentally it happened with second wave feminism.
And it happened with Judith Plaskow, who wrote a midrash based on the Benzira story of Adam and Lilith.
Her story is about Lilith leaves, I think not because of sex stuff, but just because of equality.
Adam expects her to serve him constantly.
And she doesn't want that.
So she leaves.
and then God gives Eve to Adam, everything's fine,
but Eve starts to get really curious about Lilith.
Stalking her on Facebook.
Yeah, absolutely.
As you would.
As you would.
Your husband's ex.
Your husband's ex, when your husband isn't behaving very well,
is definitely the person you should be beaching out.
Definitely.
Definitely.
Yes.
So she climbs over an apple tree to get over the wall of Eden
and goes and speaks to Lilith.
And in quite an erratically charged scene,
Like they become friends.
They share everything with each other.
And then they return to the Garden of Eden together.
And I think the last line is, and Adam and God were afraid.
And then that's where it ends.
And it's brilliant.
And she was very, Judith Plaskar was very specifically writing this as like a Jewish text.
She wanted to write about kind of the idea that in Jewish history, the women's side of it was ignored.
That was sort of 50% of Jewish history was being.
dismissed and that actually what was important was to bring women's history back into Judaism.
And that was kind of how she was conceiving of this.
The thing is, though, it works just as a feminist text.
Like, it always works just as a feminist text.
A woman who says, no thank you to God and her husband and the idea of paradise and leaves
to go have sex with other demons.
That's a flex.
It is a flex.
And especially because she's leaving because she doesn't want to have sex with Adam in the way he wants her to have sex.
But she still wants sex, just not the way he does.
It's brilliant.
It's so good.
It's something that centers women's pleasure that says you can want to have sex, but not with that person in that way.
And that's legitimate.
Go have sex with demons in the sea.
It is such an incredible feminist text.
Even with Ben Serra, in fact, especially with Ben Serra's sexual.
editions. It's perfect.
It's only really surprising
it didn't happen earlier, but it's so perfectly
matched second wave feminism
in this idea of kind of
I shouldn't have to be secondary
to my husband, I should be allowed to have
sexual pleasure, and perhaps
I might have to turn my back on husband
and God to get
that. In order to get that. It just
chimes so well, and
this story is told again
and again with kind of different iterations
with some minor historical inaccuracies about the belief about who Lilith was and where she came from.
But yes.
And it just became such a well-known story and such a feminist story in a way that can't really, I think, be undone?
As a final question then, and this is a really tricky one, but could Lilith be the oldest mythology,
that mythological creature that we've got
that still has a sort of a presence
and an incantation today
because I know that you can go back to Mesopotam
and you can track down gods
and you can say like Inana and Ishtar
but they don't have stories written about them today
like Lilith is still going
she still crops up in like people are reclaiming her
that are retaking about her
she's got to be one of the oldest right
of myths that we've got
she absolutely is
this tradition of kind of Lamashtu
all the way down to the present day
is basically the longest continuous tradition that we have.
I mean, the fact that not even being treated as a story,
but being treated as like an incantation against her,
we have versions of that kind of going on in the 20th century,
in the late 20th century.
People are still writing incantations against her.
And they are similar to ones that people were writing thousands of years ago.
It is incredible how well she has survived.
And as you say, yeah, she absolutely is,
one of the longest. And the other ones that are kind of up for the contest are related to Lilith.
Mermaids. Mermaids are a part of this family too. So Lamash to Lalitu doesn't just become
Lilith. She also goes over to Greece and becomes Lamia, who is this seductive, child-eating monster,
who pops through kind of ancient Greek legend. And she ends up being incredibly associated with the sea,
having a serpent tail
sitting by a passage
that once you sail into
you can't sail out of it again
and she hides her serpent tail
takes her top off
lures sailors to her
with her breasts
and then when they get close enough to her
she'll eat them
and that monster
which is Lamia sort of
combines a little bit with the sirens
sirens aren't sexy in like the Odyssey
they promise knowledge they're not promising
sex their song isn't
sexual at all
but she combines with them in that they're also kind of watery.
So she ends up getting kind of the song from the sirens.
But all the rest of the stuff in mermaids and kind of medieval law about them
seducing men and eating them and that kind of thing,
that is Lamia and that is coming from that kind of Lamashtu branch that's gone over to ancient Greece.
She's just the best.
I mean, I'm biased.
But she's absolutely incredible.
And then the mermaid sits perfectly.
on like the sexual repression fault lines of the medieval church,
in that they are, you know, terrified of women seducing them
and drawing them away from God.
And you can see as she sits there
and is kind of the absolute expression of those fears.
Wow.
Sarah, you have been marvellous to talk to.
Thank you so much.
And if people want to know more about you and your work,
where can they find you?
So I'm reading artefacts on Instagram and on blue sky.
So find me there.
And I would love to talk to anyone about Lilith.
Thank you so much for coming to talk to me.
You've been so much fun.
Thank you for having me.
This has been fantastic.
Thank you for listening.
And thank you so much to Sarah for joining me.
And if you like what you heard,
please don't forget to like with you and follow along
whatever it is that you get your podcasts.
If there's a subject you wanted us to explore
or maybe you just wanted to say hi,
you can email us at betwixt at history hit.com.
Coming up, we've got episodes on Genghis Khan
and The Sex Lives of the Spartans
all heading your way. This podcast was edited by Tom Delagie and produced by Stuart Beckwith.
The Senior Producer was Charlotte Long. Join me again betwixt the sheets, The History of Sex
Scandal and Society, a podcast by History Hit. This podcast contains music from Epidemic Sound.
