. . . . . . . "909"^^ . . "Marqod, also known as Baal-Marqod (Lord of the Dance), was a Phoenician god of healing and dancing. His name is from a common Semitic root for dancing; hence Hebrew \u05E8\u05B8\u05E7\u05B7\u05D3 (raqad), Aramaic \u05E8\u05E7\u05D3, and Arabic \u0631\u064E\u0642\u064E\u0635\u064E (raqa\u1E63a), all meaning \"to dance.\" It is unknown if Marqod was considered the creator of dancing or if dancing was merely the proper way to worship the deity. This may be evidence that the Phoenicians were the first ancient Near Eastern culture to have a specific deity devoted to dance."@en . . . "Baal Marqod, noto anche come Marqod o Ba'al-Marqod (Signore delle danze), era il divinit\u00E0 fenicio della guarigione e della danza. Non \u00E8 chiaro se Marqod fosse l'inventore della stessa danza, o se questa fosse uno specifico rituale per adorare la divinit\u00E0. Era venerato principalmente a Berito e con il titolo di scuotitore della terra e corrisponde al latino Giove Ottimo Massimo e accostato a Poseidone ed \u00E8 Signore dei mari. \u00C8 rappresentato in sposa a Baalat-Afrodite. Probabilmente i fenici furono il primo popolo del Vicino Oriente ad avere una divinit\u00E0 specifica per la danza."@it . . . "Baal Marqod"@it . . . "1089672765"^^ . . . "Marqod"@en . . "31027605"^^ . . . "Baal Marqod, noto anche come Marqod o Ba'al-Marqod (Signore delle danze), era il divinit\u00E0 fenicio della guarigione e della danza. Non \u00E8 chiaro se Marqod fosse l'inventore della stessa danza, o se questa fosse uno specifico rituale per adorare la divinit\u00E0. Era venerato principalmente a Berito e con il titolo di scuotitore della terra e corrisponde al latino Giove Ottimo Massimo e accostato a Poseidone ed \u00E8 Signore dei mari. \u00C8 rappresentato in sposa a Baalat-Afrodite. Probabilmente i fenici furono il primo popolo del Vicino Oriente ad avere una divinit\u00E0 specifica per la danza."@it . . "Marqod, also known as Baal-Marqod (Lord of the Dance), was a Phoenician god of healing and dancing. His name is from a common Semitic root for dancing; hence Hebrew \u05E8\u05B8\u05E7\u05B7\u05D3 (raqad), Aramaic \u05E8\u05E7\u05D3, and Arabic \u0631\u064E\u0642\u064E\u0635\u064E (raqa\u1E63a), all meaning \"to dance.\" It is unknown if Marqod was considered the creator of dancing or if dancing was merely the proper way to worship the deity. This may be evidence that the Phoenicians were the first ancient Near Eastern culture to have a specific deity devoted to dance."@en . .