Naamah sister of Tubal Cain and Lilith

Naamah is the daughter of Lamech and Zillah, and sister of Tubal‑Cain—part of Cain’s lineage. The biblical text mentions her briefly, and though her mention is enigmatic, it highlights that she was the only daughter explicitly named in that genealogical line. Her name means “pleasantness” or “loveliness” in Hebrew.

In later Kabbalistic and Talmudic texts, Naamah emerges as a ⁠—sometimes terrifying⁠—demonic figure. She is frequently associated with Lilith and Agrat bat Mahlat as one of the “four queens of demons”. Considered a seductress, she allegedly tempted angels (like Samael and Azazel), bore demonic offspring (including Asmodeus), and is even blamed in folklore for causing childhood afflictions.

According to the Zohar, Naamah and Lilith seduced Adam during his separation from Eve and gave birth to demons; she also corrupted Watcher angels like Ouza and Azazel.

“The Song of Naamah” — A Wicked Tale from Days Before the Flood

Long ago, before the floodwaters swallowed the wickedness of man, before Noah built the Ark, the earth groaned with corruption. But it was not only men who fell. Even angels lost their way.

Among the humans walked a woman of unnatural beauty. Her eyes were dark like the void between stars, and her voice—her voice was music itself. She was Naamah, daughter of Lamech, sister of Tubal-Cain, mistress of the forge and flame. But her craft was not metal.

It was desire. By night, she played her dulcimer and sang songs that no man could forget. Her music didn’t just stir the heart—it summoned the watchers above, the Grigori, the angels set to guard humanity.

Two angels descended: Azazel and Ouza, drawn by lust disguised as compassion.

Naamah welcomed them with honeyed words and whispered mysteries no human should know. She taught them the pleasures of the flesh and bound them to her with charms carved in bone.

Under her influence, Azazel taught men to make swords and women to paint their faces. Ouza revealed secrets of divination and dreams. Humanity, once innocent, turned toward war, vanity, and sorcery.

In the shadow of sacred groves, Naamah bore children—the Nephilim, giants with the blood of heaven and hell. Their laughter shook the mountains; their rage flooded rivers with blood. They devoured men and called Naamah "Queen of Earth and Sky.”

But the heavens did not remain silent. The archangel Michael descended in fire, scattering the Grigori in chains. Azazel was cast into a pit. Ouza vanished into the sea. And Naamah?

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