Actually I had known about the wife part I didn't know that the tetragramaton had been found on a wall in egypt next to heirglyphs hat talked about a town named Jehavah (really they called it Yahu but it was the tetragramaton anyways) I thought it intering Yahu was the god of War. His wife Asherah, (Which Yahu's cult tried to destroyed all mention of her) was the Goddess of Love and Procreation. Explains a lot, a whole lot when you think about it! It makes sence why his cult fears sex so much.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yahu
Yahweh, prior to becoming Yahweh the national god of Israel and taking on monotheistic attributes in the 6th century BCE, was a part of the Canaanite pantheon in the period before the Babylonian captivity. Archeological evidence reveals that during this time period the Israelites were a group of Canaanite people. Yahweh was seen as a war god, and equated with El. Asherah, who was often seen as El's consort, has been described as a consort of Yahweh in numerous inscriptions. [ 1 ] The name Yahwi may possibly be found in some male Amorite names. [ 2 ] Yahu may be found in a place name.
According to Botterweck and Ringgren, the earliest known occurrence of the name "Yahu" is its inclusion of the name "the land of Shasu-y/iw" in a list of Egyptian place names found in the temple of Amon at Soleb (see also Shasu of Yhw), from the time of Amenhotep III (1402-1363 BCE). [ 3 ] The place name appears to be associated with Asiatic nomads in the 14th to 13th centuries BCE. A later mention from the era of Ramesses II (c. 1303 BCE – 1213 BCE) associates Yahu with Mount Seir. From this, it is generally supposed that this Yahu refers to a place in the area of Moab and Edom. [ 4 ] Whether the god was named after the place, or the place named after the god, is undecided. [ 5 ]