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- From: cbsiren@hopper.unh.edu (Christopher B. Siren)
- Newsgroups: alt.mythology,alt.magick.tyagi,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: alt.mythology Assyro-Babylonian Mythology FAQ, ver. 1.7
- Followup-To: alt.mythology
- Date: 5 Nov 1997 19:10:00 GMT
- Organization: University of New Hampshire - Durham, NH
- Lines: 887
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Expires: Fri, 5 December 1997 00:00:00 GMT
- Message-ID: <63qga8$ttr@mozz.unh.edu>
- Reply-To: cbsiren@hopper.unh.edu
- NNTP-Posting-Host: hopper.unh.edu
- Summary: This posting contains a description of the pantheon,
- cosmology, and history of the ancient Assyrians and Babylonians.
- These people lived from about 4000 years ago to about
- 2500 years ago primarily in what is now northern and
- central Iraq.
- Originator: cbsiren@hopper.unh.edu
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu alt.mythology:42460 alt.magick.tyagi:15072 alt.answers:30105 news.answers:116208
-
- Archive-name: mythology/assyrbabyl-faq
- Posting-Frequency: monthly (3rd of the month)
- Last-modified: 1995/10/06
- Version: 1.7
- URL: http://pubpages.unh.edu/~cbsiren/assyrbabyl-faq.html
-
- The Assyro-Babylonian Mythology FAQ version 1.7
- by Christopher B. Siren (Nov. 1994)
- cbsiren@hopper.unh.edu
- http://pubpages.unh.edu/~cbsiren
- last revised (October 6th, 1995)
-
- changes since last revision: lengthened Bahamut answer; addresses.
-
- The latest copy of this FAQ is available via anonymous ftp at:
-
- rtfm.mit.edu at /pub/usenet/news.answers/mythology/assyrbabyl-faq
-
- It is currently availible on the web at:
- URL: http://pubpages.unh.edu/~cbsiren/assyrbabyl-faq.html
-
- I. Overview (including regional history)
- II. So these are just like the Sumerian deities right?
- III. Who were the gods and heroes of the Babylonians?
- A. The older gods
- B. The younger Annunaki and Igigi
- C. The chthonic gods
- D. The heroes and monsters
- IV. What about the Underworld and Heaven and all that?
- V. Hey! I read that Cthulhu is really some Babylonian or Sumerian god,
- how come he's not there under Kutu?
- VI. So, in AD&D, Tiamat is this five-headed evil dragon, but they got
- her from the Enumma Elish, right? What about her counterpart, Bahamut?
- VII. Where did you get this info and where can I find out more?
-
- I. Overview (including regional history)
- First, some definitions: Mesopotamia, in general, refers to the
- area of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. Assyria, was the northern
- portion of Mesopotamia, who's capital was Ashur, and whose reach
- included the major city of Nineveh. Sumer refers to the southern delta
- region, who's primary cities included Ur, Uruk, and Eridu. Akkad was a
- region north of Sumer which included the area around modern Baghdad as
- well as the ancient sites of Babylon, Kish, and Nippur.
- The political organization of the region was basically a
- collection of city-states. Sargon of Agade (2371-16 BC) united the
- regions of Sumer and Akkad. His descendants eventually lost control
- of the empire due to pressures from the Hurrians, the Hittites, and
- other invaders, not to mention internal pressures. In the south Sumer
- again gained ascendancy, dominated by the city-state Ur. Sumer then
- collapsed under the Amorites around 2000 BC. They established many sub-
- kingdoms including Assyria and Babylon. Assyria attained a brief period
- of dominance under Shamshi-Adad (1813-1781 BC) but was soon superseded
- by Babylon under Hammurabi (1792-50BC) who established what was once
- thought to be the first written law codes (more recent discoveries indicate
- law codes from a coupl centuries prior to Hammurabi). The first Babylonian
- dynasty collapsed in 1595BC when the Hittites sacked its eponymous capital.
- Assyria had been taken over by the Mitanni but established its independence
- in the mid 14th century BC. Under Tukulti-Ninurta I Assyria dominated the
- entire fertile crescent in the late 13th century. By the time of Tiglath-
- Pileser I, about a century later it had directed more of its attention
- westwards towards Palestine and lost control of Babylon and the south.
- Slowly Assyria began to expand again, reaching its apex between 750 and
- 650 BC under the rulers Tiglath-Pileser III, Sargon II, Senacherib, and
- Ashuribanipal(668-627 BC). The empire collapsed from invaders with
- Nineveh falling to Nabopalasar of Babylon in 612 BC and the empire dying
- in 605 BC. Meanwhile, Babylon had been reasserting itself. Under
- Nebuchadnezzar Babylon expanded westward, taking Jerusalem in 586 BC.
- Babylon fell in the mid-540's to Cyrus the Persian whose empire lasted
- until the late 300's BC when Alexander of Macedon established his empire
- and renamed the area "Mesopotamia".
-
- II. So these guys were just like the Sumerian Deities right?
- Well some of them were mostly like the Sumerian Deities, but as
- you might expect, they have their own kinks and differences. In general
- the following relationships apply:
-
- Sumerian name Babylonian Name
-
- An Anu
- Ki/Ninhursag Aruru, Mammi
- Enlil Ellil
- Enki Ea
- Nanna Sin
- Inanna Ishtar
- Utu Shamash
- Ninlil Mullitu, Mylitta
-
- This is not a cut and dry relation. Sumerian and Babylonian names
- appear in the same Babylonian document, sometimes referring to the same
- entity. In addition, there are numerous local variations of these
- deities names which, in the next section, such 'optional' names appear
- in parentheses after the more prevalent name.
-
-
- III. Who were the gods and the heroes of the Babylonians then?
-
- A. The Older (genealogical) Gods:
-
- Apsu - the underworld ocean, masculine. The begetter of the skies
- and the earth. The father of Lahmus, Lahamu, Anshar and Kishar. He
- could not quell the noise of them or their children. He colluded with
- his vizier Mummu to silence the gods and allow Tiamat to rest, after
- Tiamat rejected the idea. Ea found out about his plans, cast a sleeping
- spell on him and killed him.
-
- Tiamat - primeval Chaos, bearer of the skies and the earth, mother
- of Lahmu, Lahamu, Anshar, and Kishar. The clamor of the younger gods
- disturbed her, but she continued to indulge them. When Apsu and Mummu
- suggested that they kill the younger gods, she grew furious, calmed down
- and rejected the plan. Her restless subservient gods goaded her into
- action after Apsu is slain. They prepared to wage war against the other
- gods. As Mother Hubur, the underworld river, who fashions all things,
- she bore giant snakes with venom for blood, and cloaked dragons with a
- godlike radiance yet with a terrible visage, for the war. She rallied a
- horned serpent, a mushussu-dragon, a lahmu-hero, a ugallu-demon, a rabid
- dog, a scorpion-man, umu-demons, a fish-man, a bull-man, and eleven
- others underneath her champion, Qingu. She gave Qingu the Tablet of
- Destinies to facilitate his command and attack.
- Marduk came with his host to attack her. Quingu's strategy initially
- confuses him, and Tiamat tried to enspell him, hurling jibes at him.
- She was rebuffed and incited into single combat with Marduk. She
- continued to cast her spell and Marduk netted her, and threw a wind at
- her. She tried to swallow it and was undone - distended, shot, sliced
- in two and cut in the heart. Her crushed skull heralded her death, and
- half of her skin was used to roof up the sky. Her eyes became the
- sources of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers.
-
- Lahmu and Lahamu - 'the hairy one' or 'muddy' they have three pairs
- of curls, and are naked except for a triple sash. They were the first
- children of Tiamat and Apsu. Kappa was sent to fetch them by Anshar, to
- help send off Marduk on his fight with Tiamat and be rallied to his
- side. They complied and helped find a princely shrine for Marduk
-
- Anshar - 'whole sky' He is the father of Anu and the child of
- Tiamat and Apsu. He is often paired with Kishar, and his qualities were
- assimilated with Ashur. When Ea learned of Tiamat's planned war, Anshar
- tried to stir him into attacking her first, but was rebuffed. He turned
- to Anu and sent him on a peace mission to Tiamat, but Anu returned
- unsuccessful. An assembly was convened and Marduk came forth at Ea's
- urging, promising to deliver Tiamat's defeated body to Anshar's feet.
- He required of the assembly a promise that he would be given the
- leadership of the pantheon after he is victorious. He had Kappa gather
- Lahmu, Lahamu, and the other gods together to send off Marduk on his
- fight and rally them to his side. When they arrive they help find a
- princely shrine for Marduk.
-
- Kishar - 'whole earth' , She is the mother of Anu and the child of
- Tiamat and Apsu.
-
- Anu - Sumerian for "heaven", a sky god, father and king of the gods.
- He is the son of Anshar and Kishar. He lives in the third heaven. The
- Eanna in Uruk was dedicated both to him and consort. His first consort
- was Antu. They produced the Anunnaki - the underworld gods, and the
- utukki - the seven evil demons. His second consort was Innina (Ishtar).
- He is a god of monarchs and is not friendly to the common people. He is
- a "King of the Igigi". He is assigned the sky as his domain in
- 'Atrahasis'. His 'kishru's (shooting stars) have awesome strength. He
- has the ability that anything he puts into words, becomes reality.
- He is Niudimmud's (Ea's) father.
- He calls Adapa to account for breaking the wing of the South Wind, and
- offers him the food and drink of eternal life after Dumuzi and Gizzida
- speak on Adapa's behalf.
- He agrees to send the Bull of Heaven after Gilgamesh on Ishtar's
- behalf, if she has made sure that the people of Uruk are properly
- provisioned for seven years. He decrees that either Gilgamesh or Enkidu
- must die for the slaying of Humbaba and the Bull of Heaven. He sends
- Kakka to Kurnugi to tell Ereshkigal to send a messenger to receive
- a gift from him.
- When Anzu stole the Tablet of Destinies from Ellil, he called for one
- of the gods to slay Anzu and thereby greatly increase his reputation.
- He gave Marduk the four winds to play with. He made a whirlwind and a
- flood wave and stirred up Tiamat on purpose. When Tiamat's retaliation
- for Apsu's death was discovered, Anshar sent him on a peace mission to
- her, but he returned unsuccessfully. He helps form a princely shrine
- for Marduk prior to his battle with Tiamat, and gives him the Anu-power
- of decreeing fates, such that his word is law.
- He and Earth father the Sebitti. He gives them fearsome fates and
- powers and puts them at Erra's command, to aid in killing noisy,
- over populous people and animals.
- Symbol: sacred shine surmounted by the divine horned cap.
- Sacred number: 60
- Astrological region: heavenly equator
- Sacred animal: the heavenly Bull
-
- Antu(m) - Sumerian for "the earth", she is a colorless being who was
- the first consort of Anu. They produced the Anunnaki - the underworld
- gods, and the utukki - the seven evil demons. She was replaced by
- Isthar (Inanna) who is sometimes her daughter.
-
- Aruru (Ninmah, Nintu, Ninhursasga, Belet-ili, Mami) -She is the
- mother goddess and was responsible for the creation of man with the help
- of Enlil or Enki. She is also called the womb goddess, and midwife of
- the gods. On Ea's advice, she acted on his direction and mixed clay
- with the blood of the god Geshtu-e, in order to shape and birth seven
- men and seven women. These people would bear the workload of the Igigi.
- She also added to the creation of Gilgamesh, and, at Anu's command, made
- Enkidu in Anu's image by pinching off a piece of clay, throwing it into
- the wilderness, and birthing him there. Ea called her to offer her
- beloved Ninurta as the one who should hunt Anzu. She does so.
-
- Mammetum - the maker or mother of fate
-
- Nammu - one of "the pure goddesses", Ea's mother, associated with
- fresh water.
-
- B. The Anunnaki, Igigi, and the Younger Gods
-
- Ellil (Enlil) - Sumerian for "wind/storm-god". Initially the leader
- of the pantheon, he has since relinquished his spot to Anu. He is possiblly
- the slayer of Enmesharra and avenger of his father Anu. His role in this
- was upplanted by Marduk by the Babylonians. He is a short-tempered god
- who was responsible for the great flood. He is the creator of mankind.
- He is thought to favor and help those in need. He guards the "tablets
- of destiny", which allow him to determines the fate of all things
- animate or inanimate. They was once stolen from him by a Zu, a storm-
- bird (a bird with some human qualities). They were recovered and Zu
- faced judgment by Ellil. His consort is Ninlil, his chief-minister is
- Nusku. He was also god of the lands and of the earth. He is a "King of
- the Anunnaki". He was their counselor warrior. He and his people
- receive the earth in 'Atrahasis'. His temple is Duranki.
- When the Igigi rebelled against him, and surrounded his house and
- called for Anu. After man was created in response to the Igigi's
- grievances, he grew weary of their noise and released several disasters
- upon them, after each one, man recovered and then he released a new one.
- The disasters included disease, flood, drought, and the great flood. He
- appointed Humbaba to guard the cedar forest and terrify mankind. He
- decreed that Enkidu must die for the slaying of the Bull of Heaven and
- Humbaba. He does not answer Gilgamesh's plea to restore Enkidu to life.
- He found a throne for Etana to rule from in Kish. He appointed Anzu as
- the guardian of his bath chamber, but while bathing, Anzu stole from him
- the Tablet of Destinies, and his Ellil-power. Ninurta, with Ea's advise
- and Belet-ili's urgings slew Anzu and recovered the Tablet of Destinies.
- Symbol: Seven small circles representing the Pleiades.
- Sacred number: 50
- Astrological region: north of "the way of Anu" ie. 12 degrees
- north of the equator.
-
- Ea (Enki, Nudimmud) - god of the waters. He is in charge of the
- bolt which bars the sea. He knows everything. He is the "Lord of
- Wisdom" and "Lord of Incantations". When he speaks, of a thing, it will
- be made. He is the son of Anu, but sometimes he is the son of Anshar.
- Dumkina is his consort. He created Zaltu as a complement to Ishtar.
- He discovered the plot of Apsu and Mummu, put Apsu under a sleeping
- spell, and slew him and put Mummu into a daze, tied him up, and slew
- him. He then named his quarters Apsu, the underworld ocean that
- supports the world. He and Damkina produced Bel and Marduk. (Bel is
- likely to be another name for Marduk.)
- He learned that Tiamat was planning a war of revenge against the gods.
- His father Anshar tries to spur him into making the first attack against
- Tiamat, but Ea rebuffs him. He is the sire of Marduk. When Anu's peace
- mission fails, he urges Marduk into action.
- He suggests the method of creating man, in response to the heavy
- workload of the Igigi. As mankind's patron, he is the instructor of all
- crafts, writing, building, farming, and magic. He advises mankind when
- other gods would do them harm. He granted Adapa understanding, to teach
- mankind. When Adapa used this knowledge to break the wing of the South
- Wind, he cursed him and told him to complain of Dumuzi and Gizzida's
- absence to Anu. While in Anu's court, he advises Adapa not to eat the
- bread of eternal life (lest he forfeit his life on earth). He refuses
- to flood mankind for Ellil. Eventually he accedes, but only after
- advising Atrahasis to build a boat in which to weather the flood.
- He tells Nergal to allow Enkidu's spirit to visit with Gilgamesh.
- When Ea is informed of Ishtar's imprisonment in the Underworld, he
- creates 'His appearance is bright' to stand at Ereshkigal's gate and
- mellow her mood and have her swear an oath by the great gods. He
- instructs Nergal on how to build the gift throne for Ereshkigal, and
- hides him with spring water to hide him from Namtar after he returned
- from the underworld.
- When Anu and the gods could not locate a volunteer to kill Anzu, he
- told the Igiggi that he would pick one. He instructs Belet-ili/Mami to
- send Ninurta to slay Anzu and, through Sharur advises Ninurta on how to
- defeat the creature.
- Symbol: Ram's head; goat-fish (a goat's head on a fish's body)
- Sacred number: 40
- Astrological region: 12 degrees south in the sky (includes Pisces
- and Aquarius)
-
- Mummu - the craftsman god. He is attendant to Ea and Apsu's vizier.
- He is very fond of Apsu and colludes with him to disperse the younger
- gods when they disturb Tiamat, even after Tiamat rejects the plan. Ea
- found out about his plan, enspelled him and tied him up.
-
- Qingu - Tiamat's battle leader. He is promoted and enhanced to a
- leading position from among the ranks. Tiamat places the Tablet of
- Destinies into his possession, giving him the Anu-power, such that his
- word is law and effects reality. He gives his army fire-quenching
- breath and paralyzing venom. His battle strategy initially confuses
- Marduk. He is defeated by Marduk and counted among the dead gods.
-
- Sin (Nannar) - moon god, son of Enlil. He has a beard of Lapis
- Lazuli and rides a winged bull. His consort is Ningal. He is the
- father of Shamash. He does not answer Gilgamesh's plea to restore
- Enkidu to life.
- Symbol: Crescent
- Sacred number: 30
- Sphere of influence: the moon, calendars, vegetation, cattle
- fertility
-
- Ningal - the consort of Sin, the mother of Shamash
-
- Ishtar (Ishhara, Irnini, Inanna) - She is Anu's second consort,
- daughter of Anu and Antum, (sometimes daughter of Sin), and sometimes
- the sister of Ereshkigal. She is the goddess of love, procreation, and
- war. She is armed with a quiver and bow. Her temples have special
- prostitutes of both genders. She is often accompanied by a lion, and
- sometimes rides it. The Eanna in Uruk is dedicated both to her and Anu.
- As Irnini, she has a parakku (throne-base) at the cedar mountain. She
- loved Tammuz in her youth, although he spends half the year in the
- nether world wailing. She loved a lion, a stallion, a shepherd, all of
- whom she required great sacrifice from and abandoned. She loved
- Ishullanu a gardener who offered her fruit, but was taken aback when she
- revealed herself to him, so she turned him into a frog.
- After Gilgamesh cleans himself up, following his defeat of Humbaba,
- she asks him to be her lover and husband, and offers him many gifts and
- the homage of earthly rulers and kingdoms. She is rejected, both
- because of her godly nature, and as a fair-weather lover. Ishtar asks
- Anu to send the Bull of Heaven to kill Gilgamesh, and he agrees.
- She determines to go to the Underworld. She threatened to smash
- the gate and raise the dead so that they would eat and outnumber the
- living unless the gatekeeper would open it for her. She holds the great
- keppu-toy (a whipping top). She is allowed in by the gate keeper, who
- takes her through seven gates to Ereshkigal's realm. By Erishkigal's
- rites, she is stripped of items of clothing as she passes through each
- of the gates: first her crown, then her earrings, then her necklace,
- then her tudditu (breast pins), then her belt of birthstones, then her
- wrist and ankle bangles, and finally her garment. While in the
- underworld, no creatures engaged in acts of procreation. She was kept
- in Egalgina and brought forth by Namtar after being sprinkled with the
- water of life, and after 'His appearance is bright' has been cursed.
- She is led back out through the gates, given back her accouterments, and
- released in exchange for Dumuzi (Tammuz).
- Symbol: an eight or sixteen-pointed star
- Sacred number: 15
- Astrological region: Dibalt (Venus) and the Bowstar (Sirius)
- Sacred animal: lion, (dragon)
-
- Siduri - the barmaid, a manifestation of Ishtar who dwells at the
- lip of the sea, beyond which is the Land of Life, where Utnapishtim
- lives. She speaks with Gilgamesh. She wears a veil.
-
- Shamash (Babbar, Utu) - the sun god, the son of Sin and Ningal. He
- rises from the mountains with rays out of his shoulders. He enters and
- exits the underworld through a set of gates in the mountain, guarded by
- scorpion-people. He travels both on foot and in a chariot, pulled by
- fiery mules. He upholds truth, and justice. He is a lawgiver and
- informs oracles. Nergal is a corrupt aspect of his nature.
- He loves Gilgamesh, hates evil and instigates Gilgamesh's quest
- against Humbaba, guiding him and receiving prayers from him along the
- way. He tries to intercede to Ellil on Enkidu's behalf, but is
- unsuccessful. He rebukes Enkidu for cursing the Stalker and the temple
- prostitute for bringing him out of the wild.
- In Kish, the eagle and the serpent swore an oath to Shamash that they
- would not overstep the limits of Shamash. The eagle broke the oath and
- ate the eggs of the serpent. Shamash, 'whose net is as wide as earth',
- told the serpent how to serve the eagle justice. The serpent lured the
- eagle with a bull carcass and captured him. The eagle requested to be
- spared and the serpent refused, saying that Shamash's punishment would
- fall on him if he did not carry it out. He cut the eagle's wings and
- left him to die in a pit. The eagle prayed to Shamash for mercy, and
- Shamash refused to help personally, but sent Etana to help the eagle.
- He agreed to help Etana's infertility problem if Etana would help the
- eagle.
- Symbol: Solar disk with a four point star inside with rays
- coming from between the points. A winged disk.
- Sacred Number: 20
-
- Aia - Shamash's consort
-
- Kakka - Anshar and Anu's vizier, who is sent to Kurnugi to deliver
- Ereshkigal the message that Anu wishes to deliver a gift to her via one
- of her messengers. Anshar sends him to round up Lahmu and Lahamu to
- send off Marduk for his battle with Tiamat and rally them to his side.
-
- Ninlil - Ellil's consort
-
- Nusku - the god of fire and Ellil's vizier.
-
- Gerra (Gibil) - the god of fire, Anunitu (Antu)'s son. He despairs
- and will not attack Anzu after Anzu has stolen the Tablet of Destinies
- from Ellil.
-
- Ishum (Hendursanga - 'lofty mace') - He is the god of fire, and is
- adept at using weapons. He lights the way in front of Erra and the
- Sebitti. He advises Erra against attacking Marduk or his people in
- Babylon. When Erra takes Marduk's seat, Ishum persuades him against
- destroying Babylon, finally appeasing him by promising that the other
- gods would acknowledge themselves as his servants.
-
- Kalkal - Ellil's doorkeeper in Nippur
-
- Dumkina - Ea's lover, mother of Bel and Marduk (note Bel is likely to
- be another title for Marduk).
-
- Nash (Nanshe) - one of "the pure goddesses", Ea's daughter. Her cult
- center is Sirara near Lagash.
-
- Zaltu - "strife", goddess created by Ea to complement Ishtar
-
- Ninurta (shares some characteristics with Ningrisu) - Chamberlain of
- the Anunnaki, the war god, the champion of the land. He is the child of
- Ellil and Mami. He was born in Ekur, Ellil's temple in Ekur. He is
- responsible for some small scale irrigation. He has a bow and arrow,
- sometimes they are poisoned. He also carries the mace, Sharur which can
- act as a messenger between Ninurta and other beings (notably Ea). He
- can marshal the Seven of Battle, who can generate whirlwinds.
- He bound the Mountain of Stones in his fury, conquered the Anzu with
- his weapon and slew the bull-man inside the Sea. (Dalley p. 204).
- After the Tablet of Destinies was stolen, Belit-ili, at Ea's advice,
- instructed him to kill Anzu. Initially his assault was futile, but
- Sharur relayed advise from Ea to him, which, when it was carried out
- allowed him to slay Anzu in a great onslaught. He recovered the Tablet
- of Destinies for Ellil. Nissaba performs a purification ceremony on him
- and he receives the following new names and shrines: Duku - 'holy mound'
- in Sumerian, Hurabtil - an Elamite god, Shushinak - patron god of the
- Elamite city Susa, Lord of the Secret, Pabilsag - god of the
- antediluvian city Larak, Nin-Azu - god of Eshunna, Ishtaran - god of
- Der, Zababa -warrior god of Kish, Lugalbanda - Gilgamesh's father,
- Lugal-Marada - patron god of Marad, Warrior Tishpak - similar to Nin-
- Azu, Warrior of Uruk, Lord of the Boundary-Arrow, Panigara - a warrior
- god, and Papsukkal - vizier of the great gods.
-
- Ninsun - 'the great wild cow', the great queen, Gilgamesh's mother
- and Lugalbanda's mate. She is wise, 'knows everything' and interprets
- Gilgamesh's dreams. She offers incense and drink to Shamash and
- questions his decision to send Gilgamesh against Humbaba. When doing
- so, she wears a circlet on her head and an ornament on her breast. She
- adopts Enkidu prior to the quest against Humbaba.
-
- Marduk - son of Ea and Dumkina. He supplants the other Babylonian
- deities to become the central figure of their pantheon. He is a "King
- of the Igigi" He often works with and asks questions of his father. He
- has fifty names many of which are those of other deities whose
- attributes he usurped. He was of proud form and piercing stare, born
- mature, powerful, and perfect and superior. He has four eyes, four
- ears, and emits fire from his mouth when he speaks. He is also gifted
- in magic.
- Anu gave him the four winds to play with. When Anu's peace mission to
- Tiamat fails, Ea urges him into action. He goes before Anshar and the
- divine assembly and declares that he will defeat Tiamat and lay her head
- at his feet, but that the assembly must promise that he should be the
- one to fix fates and more or less assume the role of the leader of the
- pantheon. Anshar, Lahmu, Lahamu, and Anu find him a shrine and Anu
- instills upon him the Anu-power in which, his word decrees fate. He is
- proclaimed king and invested with the scepter, throne, and staff-of-
- office. He is given an unfaceable weapon, the flood-weapon. He takes a
- bow and arrow and mace. He puts lightning in front of him, marshals his
- winds, makes a net to encircle Tiamat, fills his body with flame. He
- rides his storm-chariot driven by Slayer, Pitiless, Racer, and Flyer,
- poison-toothed, tireless steeds. He had a spell on his lips and an anti-
- toxin in his hand. He led the gods to battle. (P.251-252 Dalley)
- Qingu's strategy confused him. Tiamat tried to enspell him and wheedled
- at him. Marduk reproaches her and calls her out for single combat. She
- looses her temper and they fight. He unleashes his weapons at her,
- distended her body with winds, shot her in the belly with an arrow,
- split her in two and slit her heart. He defeats the rest of her forces
- and retrieves the Tablet of Destinies.
- He smashed Tiamat's skull to herald her death. He made half of her
- skin the roof of the sky. He leveled Apsu, measured it and established
- numerous shrines for many of the gods. He set up stands for the gods,
- constructed the heavens and regulated the year, giving Shamash some
- dominion over the months and the year. He made the Tigris and Euphrates
- rivers from Tiamat's eyes and made mountains from her udders. He
- smashed the weapons of Tiamat's army and put images of them at the gates
- to the underworld. He set up his temple at Esharra and his seat in
- Babylon. The gods honored him as king. He put blood and bones together
- as and made early man to bear the work of the gods, as in Atrahasis.
- For Qingu's part in the war he was made to provide the blood for the
- creation of man. He divided the Anunnaki and placed 300 to guard the
- sky, and six hundred to dwell in heaven and earth. He had them create
- Babylon building the Esagalia temple and a high ziggurat. Anshar gave
- him many new names: 1. Asarluhi, 2. Marduk, 3. The Son, The Majesty of
- the Gods, 4. Marukka, 5. Mershakushu, 6. Lugal-dimmer-ankia (King of
- heaven and earth), 7. Bel, 8. Nari-lugal-dimmer-ankia, 9. Asarluhi, 10.
- Namtila, 11. Namru, 12. 'Asare, 13. Asar-alim, 14. Asar-alim-nuna, 15.
- Tutu, 16. Zi-ukkina, 17. Ziku, 18. Agaku, 19. Shazu, 20. Zisi, 21.
- Suhrim, 22. Suhgurim, 23. Zahrim, 24. Zahgurim, 25. Enbilulu, 26.
- Epadun, 27. Gugal, 28. Hegal, 29. Sirsir, 30. Malah, 31. Gil, 32.
- Gilima, 33. Agilima, 34. Zulum, 35. Mummu, 36. Zulum-ummu, 37. Gizh-
- numun-ab, 38. Lugal-ab-dubur, 39. Pagal-guena, 40. Lugal-Durmah, 41.
- Aranuna, 42. Dumu-duku, 43. Lugal-duku, 44. Lugal-shuanna, 45. Iruga,
- 46. Irqingu, 47. Kinma, 48. Kinma, 49. E-sizkur, 50. Addu, 51. Asharu,
- 52. Neberu, 53. Enkukur. He becomes a firm lawgiver and judge who, when
- angered is not stoppable. Later he becomes somewhat negligent and Erra
- challenges him by preparing to attack his people in Babylon. He
- responds to the challenge by saying that he already killed most of the
- people in the flood and would not do so again. He also states that no-
- one would be in control of things if he got off of his throne to work up
- a flood, to which Erra volunteers to run things from Marduk's throne.
-
- Bel - Cleverest of the clever and sage of the gods, he is the child
- of Ea and Dumkina. This name (meaning 'lord') is most likely referring
- to Marduk.
-
- Ashur (A-sir, Arusar, A-shar, Assur) - god of Assyria and war. He
- is a "King of the Igigi"
- Symbol: winged disk enclosing upper body, while he shoots an
- arrow.
-
- Shullat - Shamash's servant
-
- Papsukkal - vizier of the Great Gods, son of Sin. While Ishtar was
- in the Underworld, he became gloomy and informed Sin and Ea of this
- plight.
-
- Hanish - the weather god's servant
-
- Adad (the Canaanite Hadad, the Hurrian Teshub, Canaanite/Egyptian
- Resheph, Rimmon) - a storm god, Anu's son. He holds a lightning bolt in
- his right hand and an axe in his left. He is partially responsible for
- the flood. He despairs and will not attack Anzu after Anzu has stolen
- the Tablet of Destinies from Ellil.
- Sacred number: 6
- Sacred animal: Bull
-
- Shara - Anu and Ishtar's son. He despairs and will not attack Anzu
- after Anzu has stolen the Tablet of Destinies from Ellil.
-
- Nin-ildu - the carpenter god. He carries the pure axe of the sun.
-
- Gushkin-banda - creator of god and man, goldsmith god.
-
- Nin-agal - 'lord strong-arm' patron god of smiths. He chews copper
- and makes tools.
-
- C. The Anunnaki and other chthonic deities and demons
-
- Ereshkigal (Allatu) - the supreme goddess of the underworld.
- Nergal is her consort. She is often considered Ishtar's sister. When
- angered, her face grows livid and her lips grow black.
- She doesn't know why Ishtar would visit her, but she allows her in,
- according to the ancient rites. She instructs Namtar to release his
- diseases upon Ishtar. When 'His appearance is bright' tries to get her
- to swear an oath, she curses him. She has Namtar release Ishtar in
- exchange for Dumuzi.
- Anu sends Kakka to her with a message and then sends Nergal to give
- her a throne upon which she is to sit and give judgment. She offers
- Nergal food, drink, a foot bath, and entices him with her body.
- Eventually he succumbs and they sleep with each other for seven days.
- She is enraged when he wishes to leave. She sends Namtar to heaven to
- request that Anu, Ellil, and Ea send Nergal to her as one of the few
- favors she has ever had. If they do not, she will raise the dead and
- they will eat and outnumber the living. Nergal is brought back. In some
- versions of the myth, Nergal takes control of Namtar's attendant demons
- and grabs Ereshkigal by the hair. In this position she proposes
- marriage to him. In both versions they are married.
-
- Belit-tseri, tablet-scribe of the underworld. She kneels before
- Ereshkigal.
-
- Namtar(a) - the Fate-Cutter, Ereshkigal's messenger and vizier, the
- herald of death. He commands sixty diseases, which are grouped by the
- part of the body which they affect. Offerings to him may stave off
- diseases. He takes Ishtar back out of the Underworld at Ereshkigal's
- command. He acts as her messenger to Anu.
-
- Sumuqan - the cattle god, he resides in the underworld, in
- Ereshkigal's court.
-
- Nergal (Erragal, Erra, Engidudu - 'lord who prowls by night') -,
- the Unsparing, god of the underworld, husband of Ereshkigal, lover of
- Mami. As Erra he is a hunter god, a god of war and plague. He is
- submissive to Ea. He can open the doorposts to the underworld to allow
- the passage of a soul.
- He achieved his post by refusing to stand before an address of Namtar.
- When Ereshkigal called him to be punished, he dragged her off of her
- throne by the hair, and threatened to decapitate her. She offered him
- the position as her consort and he accepted.
- He is an evil aspect of Shamash. He allows Enkidu's spirit to visit
- Gilgamesh at the behest of Ea. He is sometimes the son of Ea. Prior to
- his first journey to the underworld, he builds a chair of fine wood
- under Ea's instruction to give to Ereshkigal as a gift from Anu. He is
- advised not to take part of the food, drink and entertainment offered
- there. He is tempted by Ereshkigal and eventually succumbs, sleeping
- with her for seven days. He then takes his leave, angering her. The
- gatekeeper lets him out and he climbs the stairway to heaven. He hides
- from Namtar in heaven, but is discovered and returns to the underworld
- to marry Ereshkigal. In some versions, on the way back to the
- Underworld, he seizes control of Namtar's attendant demons and grabs
- Ereshkigal by the hair. In this position she offers marriage.
- He commands the Sebitti, seven warriors who are also the Pleadies,
- they aid in his killing of noisy, over-populous people and animals. He
- rallies them when he feels the urge for war, and calls Ishum to light
- the way. They prefer to be used in war instead of waiting while Erra
- kills by disease.
- He regards Marduk as having become negligent and prepares to attack
- his people in Babylon. He challenges Marduk in Esagila in
- Shuanna/Babylon. Marduk responds that he already killed most of the
- people in the flood and would not do so again. He also states that he
- could not run the flood without getting off of his throne and letting
- control slip. Erra volunteers to take his seat and control things.
- Marduk takes his vacation and Erra sets about trying to destroy Babylon.
- Ishum intervenes on Babylon's behalf and persuades Erra to stop, but not
- before he promises that the other gods will acknowledge themselves as
- Erra's servants.
-
- Irra - plague god, underling of Nergal
-
- Enmesharra - Underworld god
-
- Lamashtu - a dread female demon also known as 'she who erases'.
-
- Nabu - god of writing and wisdom.
-
- Nedu - the guardian of the first gate of the underworld.
-
- Ningizzia - a guardian of the gate of heaven; a god of the
- underworld
-
- Tammuz (Dumuzi, Adonis) the brother and spouse to Ishtar, or the
- lover of her youth. He is a vegetation god. He went into the
- underworld and was recovered through the intervention of Ishtar. He is
- sometimes the guardian of heaven's gates and sometimes a god of the
- underworld. He is friends with Ningizzia. He is exchanged for Ishtar
- in the Underworld. He guards the Gate of Anu with Gizzida.
-
- Belili (Geshtinanna) - Tammuz/Dumuzi's sister, 'the one who always
- weeps', the wife of Ningishzida.
-
- Gizzida (Gishzida) - son of Ninazu, consort of Belili, doorkeeper
- of Anu.
-
- Nissaba (Nisaba) - cereal grain harvest goddess. Her breast
- nourishes the fields. Her womb gives birth to the vegetation and grain.
- She has abundant locks of hair. She is also a goddess of writing and
- learned knowledge. She performs the purification ceremony on Ninurta
- after he has slain Anzu and is given his additional names and shrines.
-
- Dagan (Ugaric for 'grain) - chthonic god of fertility and of the
- Underworld. He is paired with Anu as one who acknowledges directives
- and courses of action put forth in front of the assembly of the gods.
-
- Birdu - (means 'pimple') an underworld god. Ellil used him as a
- messenger to Ninurta
-
- Sharru - god of submission
-
- Urshambi - boatman to Utnapishtim
-
- Ennugi - canal- controller of the Anunnaki.
-
- Geshtu-e - 'ear', god whose blood and intelligence are used by Mami
- to create man.
-
- D. Demigods, heroes, and monsters:
-
- Adapa (Uan) - the first of the seven antediluvian sages who were
- sent by Ea to deliver the arts of civilization to mankind. He was from
- Eridu. He offered food an water to the gods in Eridu. He went out to
- catch fish for the temple of Ea and was caught in a storm. He broke the
- South Wind's wing and was called to be punished. Ea advised him to say
- that he behaved that way on account of Dumuzi's and Gizzida's absence
- from the country. Those gods, who tended Anu's gate, spoke in his favor
- to Anu. He was offered the bread and water of eternal life, but Ea
- advised against his taking it, lest he end his life on earth.
-
- Atrahasis and Ut-napishtim, like the Sumerian Ziusudra (the
- Xisuthros of Berossus) or Noah from the Pentateuch, were the long-lived
- survivors of the great flood which wiped out the rest of humanity. In
- Atrahasis' case, Ellil had grown tired of the noise that the mass of
- humanity was making, and after a series of disasters failed to eliminate
- the problem, he had Enki release the floodgates to drown them out.
- Since Enki had a hand in creating man, he wanted to preserve his
- creation, warned Atrahasis, and had him build a boat, with which he
- weathered the flood. He also had kept his ear open to Enki during the
- previous disasters and had been able to listen to Enki's advice on how
- to avoid their full effects by making the appropriate offerings to the
- appropriate deities. He lived hundreds of years prior to the flood,
- while Utnapishtim lives forever after the flood.
- Utnapishtim of Shuruppak was the son of Ubaratutu. His flood has no
- reason behind it save the stirrings of the hearts of the Gods. As with
- Atrahasis, Utnapishtim is warned to build an ark by Ea. He is also told
- to abandon riches and possessions and seek life and to tell the city
- elders that he is hated by Enlil and would go to the watery Abyss to
- live with Ea via the ark. He loads gold, silver, and the seed of all
- living creatures into the ark and all of his craftsmen's children as
- well. After Ea advises Enlil on better means to control the human
- population, (predators, famine, and plague), Enlil makes Utnapishtim and
- his wife immortal, like the gods.
-
- Lugalbanda - a warrior-king and, with Ninsun, the progenitor of
- Gilgamesh. He is worshipped, being Gilgamesh's ancestor, by Gilgamesh
- as a god.
-
- Gilgamesh (possibly Bilgamesh) and Enkidu
- The son of the warrior-king Lugalbanda and the wise goddess
- Ninsun, Gilgamesh built the walls of the city Uruk, and the Eanna (house
- of An) temple complex there, dedicated to Ishtar. He is two-thirds
- divine and one-third human. He is tall and a peerless warrior. He is
- the king and shepherd of the people of Uruk, but he was very wild, which
- upset his people, so they called out to Anu. Anu told Aruru to make a
- peer for Gilgamesh, so that they could fight and be kept occupied, so
- she created the wild-man Enkidu. Enkidu terrorizes the countryside, and
- a Stalker, advised by his father, informs Gilgamesh. They bring a love-
- priestess to bait Enkidu. She sleeps with him, and educates him about
- civilization, Gilgamesh and the city. Gilgamesh dreams about Enkidu and
- is anxious to meet him. Enkidu comes into the city Gilgamesh is on his
- way to deflower the brides in the city's "bride-house" and the two
- fight. They are evenly matched and become friends.
- Gilgamesh decides to strengthen his reputation by taking on
- Humbaba, Enlil's guardian of the forest. Enkidu accompanies Gilgamesh
- and they spend much time in preparation. Eventually they find the
- monster and defeat him.
- Ishtar offers to become Gilgamesh's lover, but Gilgamesh insults
- her, saying that she has had many lovers and has not been faithful to
- them. Ishtar asks Anu to send the Bull of Heaven to punish Gilgamesh,
- and he does. Gilgamesh and Enkidu defeat the creature, but Enkidu falls
- ill and dies, presumably because the gods are unhappy that he helped
- kill Humbaba and the Bull of Heaven.
- Gilgamesh morns Enkidu and decides to visit Utnapishtim, the only
- human who does not die. He goes to the mountains of Mashu and passes by
- the guardian scorpion-demons into the darkness. It becomes light as he
- enters the Garden of the Gods and he finds Siduri the Barmaid, to whom
- he relates his quest. She sends him to cross the waters of death and he
- confronts the boatman, Urshanabi. They cross and Gilgamesh speaks with
- Utnapishtim. Utnapishtim recounts the tale of the flood and challenges
- Gilgamesh to remain awake for six days and seven nights. He fails, but
- Utnapishtim's wife urges him to reveal to Gilgamesh a rejuvinative
- plant. Gilgamesh takes it, but looses it to a serpent before returning
- to Uruk.
- Another tablet of the Babylonian Gilgamesh story exists, which is
- similar to the Sumerian version of the tale. Enkidu volunteers to enter
- the underworld to recover Gilgamesh's pukku and mikku (drum and throwing
- stick). Gilgamesh warns him of the proper etiquette for the underworld,
- lest Enkidu be kept there. Enkidu prepares to enter the underworld, and
- is dressed, scented and bade good-bye. The Earth seizes him and
- Gilgamesh weeps. He pleads for Enkidu's sake to Enlil, Sin, and finally
- to Ea. Ea tells Nergal to let Enkidu's ghost escape the underworld and
- tell Gilgamesh about it. He tells Gilgamesh of the dead which he has
- seen there, of those who are cared for and those who aren't, indicating
- the sort of judgment and ritual associated with the afterlife and death.
-
- Etana - the human taken to the sky by an eagle. He was the king
- of Kish. Ishtar and the Igigi searched for a king for Kish. Ellil found
- a throne for Etana and they declared him the king. He was pious an
- continued to pray to Shamash, yet he had no son. Shamash told him to
- where to find the eagle with the cut wings, who would find for him the
- plant of birth. He found the eagle, fed it, and taught it to fly again.
- Not being able to find the plant, the eagle had Etana mount on his back
- and they journeyed to Ishtar, mistress of birth. On flying up to
- heaven, Etana grew scared at the height and went down. Then after some
- encouraging dreams tried to ascend to heaven on the eagle again. They
- succeeded. Etana had a son, Balih.
-
- Humbaba (Huwawa) - this monster was appointed by Ellil to guard
- the cedar forest, which is in fact one large tree, the home of the gods,
- and terrify mankind. 'His shout is the storm-flood, his mouth, fire,
- his breath is death.' (Gardner & Maier p. 105) He has seven cloaks with
- which to arm himself. There is a gate and a path in the cedar mountain
- for Humbaba to walk on. Gilgamesh and Enkidu attack. Humbaba pleads
- for mercy, Enkidu argues against mercy, and Enkidu and Gilgamesh
- decapitate him.
-
- The Bull of Heaven - this creature was created by Anu to kill
- Gilgamesh at Ishtar's behest. At its snorting, a hole opened up and 200
- men fell into it. When it fights Enkidu and Gilgamesh, it throws
- spittle and excrement at them. It is killed and set as an offering to
- Shamash.
-
- Anzu - a demonic being with lion paws and face and eagle talons
- and wings. It was born on the mountain Hehe. It's beak is like a saw,
- its hide as eleven coats of mail. It was very powerful. Ellil
- appointed him to guard his bath chamber. He envied the Ellil-power
- inherent in Ellil's Tablet of Destinies and stole it while Ellil was
- bathing. With the Tablet of Destinies, anything he puts into words
- becomes reality. He takes advandtage of this by causing Ninurta's
- arrows to never reach their target. However, once Ea's advice reached
- Ninurta, Anzu was slain by the hero's onslaught.
-
- aqrabuamelu (girtablilu) - scorpion-man, the guardians of the
- gates of the underworld. Their "terror is awesome" and their "glance is
- death". They guard the passage of Shamash. They appraise Gilgamesh and
- speak with him.
-
- Definitions:
- Anunnaki - gods (mostly of the earth). The sky Anunnaki set the
- Igigi to digging out the rivers
- Igigi - gods (mostly of the heavens) They are given the task of
- digging riverbeds by the Anunnaki. They rebelled against Ellil.
- Sebitti - the seven warrior gods led by Erra; in the sky they are
- the Pleadies. They were children of Anu and the Earth-mother. Anu gave
- them fearsome and lethal destinies and put them under Erra's command.
- They prefer to exercise there skills instead of letting Erra stay in the
- cities with his diseases.
- Utukki - demons
- Muttabriqu - Flashes of Lightning
- Sarabda - Bailiff
- Rabishu - Croucher
- Tirid - Expulsion
- Idiptu - Wind
- Bennu - Fits
- Sidana - Staggers
- Miqit - Stroke
- Bel Uri - Lord of the Roof
- Umma - Feverhot
- Libu - Scab
- gallu-demons - can frequently alter their form.
- umu-demons - fiercely bare their teeth.
-
- IV. What about the Underworld and Heaven and all that?
- For a more general discussion of this, take a look at the
- Underworld and Cosmology sections in the Sumerian FAQ, for the
- particulars, see below.
- The Igigi and the Anunaki met in heaven in Ubshu-ukkinakku, the
- divine assembly hall. The Gilgamesh epic has the gods dwelling in the
- cedar mountain. They had their parakku, throne-bases, there. It was an
- enormous tree at the cedar forest and was guarded by Humbaba. There is
- a stairway up to heaven from the underworld.
- As for the underworld Kurnugi (Sumerian for 'land of no return').
- It is presided over by Ereshkigal and Nergal. Within the house of
- Irkalla (Nergal), the house of darkness, the house of Ashes, no one ever
- exits. "They live on dust, their food is mud; their clothes are like
- birds' clothes, a garment of wings, and they see no light, living in
- blackness." It is full of dust and mighty kings serve others food. In
- Ereshkigal's court, heroes and priests reside, as well as Sumuqan and
- Belit-tseri. The scorpion-people guard the gates in the mountain to the
- underworld which Shamash uses to enter and exit. There are seven gates,
- through which one must pass. At each gate, an adornment or article of
- clothing must be removed. The gates are named: Nedu, (En)kishar,
- Endashurimma, (E)nuralla, Endukuga/Nerubanda, Endushuba/Eundukuga, and
- Ennugigi. Beyond the gates are twelve double doors, wherein it is dark.
- Siduri waits there by the waters of death, beyond which, is the Land of
- the Living, where Utnapishtim and his wife dwell. Shamash and
- Utnapishtim's boatman, Urshanbi, can cross the waters. Egalginga, the
- everlasting palace, is a place where Ishtar was held.
-
- V. Hey! I read that Cthulhu is really some Babylonian or Sumerian god,
- how come he's not there under Kutu?
-
- I have yet to find any secondary (or for that matter primary) source
- which lists Kutu as a Mesopotamian deity, or for that matter lists any
- name resembling Cthulhu at all. However, having been given a pointer by
- DanNorder@aol.com, I have confirmed that Kutha or Cutch was the cult
- city of Nergal, the Akkadian god of plagues and the underworld (see
- above) and that 'lu' is the Sumerian word for man. So, Kuthalu
- would mean Kutha-man which could conceivably refer to Nergal. As far
- as I can tell it could mean Joe the Butcher or any of his neighbors
- who happen to live in Kutha just as easily. Nergal, of course bears
- little resemblance to Lovecraft's Cthulhu beyond the fact that both
- can be considered underworld powers. Those interested in further
- discussion about this contact might wish to contact Dan at the above
- address and they may wish to read alt.horror.cthulhu as well.
-
- VI. So, in AD&D, Tiamat is this five-headed evil dragon, but they got her
- from the Enumma Elish, right? What about her counterpart, Bahamut?
-
- Bahamut, according to Edgerton Sykes' _Who's Who of Non-Classical
- Mythology_, is "The enormous fish on which stands Kujara, the giant
- bull, whose back supports a rock of ruby, on the top of which stands an
- angel on whose shoulders rests the earth, according to Islamic myth.
- Our word Behemoth is of the same origin." (Sykes, p. 28)<p>
- Behemoth then, is usually the male counterpart to Leviathan, and is a
- great beast that roams on land. He is sometimes equated with a
- hippopotamus, and is alternately listed as a creature on the side of
- God and as one over whom God has or will triumph over.<p>
-
-
- VII. Where did you get this info and where can I find out more?
-
- Well this FAQ is primarily derived from the following works:
-
- Barraclough, Geoffrey (ed.) _The Times Consise Atlas of World History_,
- Hammond Inc., Maplewood, New Jersey, 1982.
- Dalley, Stephanie _Myths from Mesopotamia_, Oxford University Press, New
- York, 1991
- Gardner, John & Maier, John _Gilgamesh_:Translated from the Sin-Leqi-
- Unninni Version_, Vintage Books, Random House, New York, 1984.
- Hooke, S. H., _Babylonian_and_Assyrian_Religion_, University of Oklahoma
- Press, Norman Oklahoma, 1963.
- Kinnier Wilson, J. V., _The Rebel Lands : An Investigation into the
- Origins of Early Mesopotamian Mythology_, Cambridge, Cambridge
- University Press, 1979.
- McCall, Henrietta, _Mesopotamian Myths_, University of Texas Press,
- Austin, 1990.
- _The New American Bible_, Catholic Book Publishing Co., New York, 1970.
-
- In addition the following books have occasionally proven helpful:
-
- Carlyon, Richard, _A Guide to the Gods_, Quill, William Morrow, New
- York, 1981.
- Hooke, S. H., _Middle Eastern Mythology_, Viking Penguin Inc., New York,
- 1963.
- Jacobsen, Thorkild, _The Treasures of Darkness_, Yale University Press,
- New Haven, 1976.
- Pritchard, J. B. (ed), _The_Ancient_Near_Eastern_Texts_Relating_to_the_
- _Old_Testiment_, Princeton, 1969.
- Sykes, Edgerton, _Who's Who in Non-Classical Mythology_, Oxford
- University Press, New York, 1993.
-