Gods and Goddesses
Middle Eastern
Hittite/Hurrian
Arma

TYPE: Minor Moon God

ORIGIN: Hittite/Hurrian

INFORMATION: Depicted winged or wearing a sickle moon surmounted on a horned helmet.
Arma was an Anatolian Moon god, worshipped by the Hittites and Luwians in the Bronze Age and early Iron Age.

NAME:
The name derives from the Proto-Anatolian *'Ormo- ("wanderer"). He is attested as the Moon god in Hittite and Luwian religion, with the name Arma-. In Lycian he was called Erm~ma-, Arm~ma-, in Carian Armo (dative case), and in Lydian Arm-. In cuneiform texts, the name is written with the Sumerograms dEN.ZU or dXXX, in Hieroglyphic Luwian with a crescent Moon symbol, which is transliterated as (DEUS) LUNA.

ROLE:
While the Hattian moon god, Kašku was not worshipped, Hittite and Luwian religion involved extensive worship of Arma. For the Luwians in particular, the moon was associated with the months of pregnancy and Arma was therefore believed to protect pregnant women and to help women giving birth (note Hittite armahh- ("to impregnate") and armai- ("to be pregnant"). Thus the Moon god had an important role in family religion. He also served as an important guarantor of oaths in state treaties. His wife was Nikkal (the Mesopotamian goddess Ningal).
The most well-known myth in which the Moon god is involved is of Hattian origin. In this story, the Moon god Kašku falls from heaven and lands in the marketplace or gatehouse of the city of Lahzan. The angry weather god dropped a heavy downpour of rain on the Moon god, who became very afraid. The goddesses ?apantali and Kamrušepa eventually saved him using magic spells.

EQUIVALENTS:
Arma was identified with the Hurrian Moon god Kušu?, as in Hittite sources which transmit the Hurrian "Song of Silver," in which the Moon god is defeated by the demon Ušhuni ("Silver") and is thrown out of heaven by him.
In Syria he is assimilated to the cult of the Moon god of Harran, especially in the 1st millennium BC, which was among the most important deities of the city.
It is theorized that the supreme deity of pre-Christian Georgian religion, Armazi, has heavy ties with Hittite Arma.