The Statue of Liberty standing in New York City
The Roman goddess Hecar Chiaramonti is the direct origin of the design of the Statue of Liberty
In order to design the Statue of Liberty erected in New York City in 1885 AD, the French artist (Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi) was inspired by the crown of sunlight on her head and the details of her dress from the statue of the Roman goddess (Hiccar Chiaramonti), the goddess of magic, ghosts, summoning spirits, and poisonous plants. He is not from the Punic goddess (Taanith / Tanit / Taanit), of Phoenician origin, whose head was depicted in her statues and on her coins without the halo of sunlight. Statue of the Roman goddess Hekar Chiaramonti preserved in the Chiaramonti Museum, Vatican City, Italy.
As for the origin of the origin, it goes back to the Mesopotamian goddess (Inanna), the Lady of the Holy Flame/the origin of the Olympic flame, as we see in her statue in the first image, which became the Babylonian (Ishtar) and the Phoenician Canaanite (Astarte)/the Punic (Taanith or Tanit/Taanit), one of the faces of the goddess (Astarte). ), which was inherited from her by her son, the Amorite god (Baal-Adad), the master of the flame and ears, as we see in an accompanying depiction of his statue in the second picture.
Source: Dr. Haitham Tayyoun/Dr. Sam Michaels, The History of the Hidden and Unseen Civilizations of the East -