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- From: cbsiren@cisunix.unh.edu (Christopher B. Siren)
- Newsgroups: alt.mythology,alt.magick.tyagi,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: alt.mythology Sumerian Mythology FAQ, ver. 2.0
- Followup-To: alt.mythology
- Date: 10 Sep 2000 03:53:52 GMT
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- Summary: This posting contains a description of the pantheon
- and cosmology of the Sumerians, who lived in what is now
- southern Iraq over 4000 years ago. Aspects of Sumerian
- culture are touched upon as are parallels with Biblical
- stories.
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu alt.mythology:61348 alt.magick.tyagi:23501 alt.answers:51166 news.answers:191640
-
- Archive-name: mythology/sumer-faq
- Posting-Frequency: annually
- Last-modified: 2000/7/27
- Version: 2.0
- URL: http://pubpages.unh.edu/~cbsiren/sumer-faq.html
-
- Sumerian Mythology FAQ (Version 2.0)
- by Christopher Siren, 1992,1994-2000
- cbsiren@cisunix.unh.edu
- http://pubpages.unh.edu/~cbsiren
-
- This FAQ is posted after major updates to alt.mythology.
- The latest edition of this FAQ is maintained at the URL listed above.
- The latest text only version of this FAQ is availible via anonymous ftp at:
-
- rtfm.mit.edu at /pub/usenet/news.answers/mythology/sumer-faq
-
- last changes: July 27, 2000: complete revision including incorporating
- Kramer's _Sumerian Mythology_ and Black & Green's _God's Demons and
- Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia_. Added more complete citations of
- sources.
- July 19, 1999: modified first sentance to include hints of
- civilization prior to and outside of Sumer
- September 20, 1998: fleshed out the Gilgamesh entry
- July 3, 1998: added a couple of Lilith references to Renee Rosen's and Alan
- Humm's sites.
- August 13, 1997: added much more historical introductory
- material.
- March 20, 1996: cleaned up some misleading references to Kur.
- March 1, 1996: added the reference to Adapa's
- dictionary.
- Nov 2, 1995: added some short notes about the primary deities,
- Ninhursag, and the Dilmun/Eden parallel to clarify some issues.
- Oct 14, 1995: added brief reviews of the sources and related texts.
-
- Adapa (Dan Sullivan) has constructed a more complete Sumerian-English
- dictionary at:
-
- http://home.earthlink.net/~duranki/index1.html#dict
-
- John Halloran has a Sumerian Language Page at:
-
- http://www.sumerian.org/sumerian.htm
-
- I have constructed a rudimentary Sumerian-English, English-Sumerian
- glossary using Kramer's _The Sumerians_ and Jacobsen's _Treasures
- of Darkness_. Interested parties may locate it at:
- http://pubpages.unh.edu/~cbsiren/sumer-dict or send me email for a
- copy.
-
- note: This FAQ is partly based on an anthropology paper which I wrote in
- 1992, using some of the sources detailed below.
-
- Contents:
-
- I. History and Overview
- II. What do we know about Sumerian Cosmology?
- III. What Deities did they worship?
- A. The Four Primary Dieties
- B. The Seven who decreed fate
- C. The Annuna and others
- D. The Demigods, mortal Heroes and Monsters
- IV. What about the Underworld?
- V. What are "me" anyway?
- VI. I've heard that there are a lot of Biblical parallels in Sumerian
- literature. What are they?
- VII. Source material
- VIII. Other books of interest.
-
-
- I. History and Overview -
-
- Sumer may very well be the first civilization in the world (although
- long term settlements at Jericho and C,atal Hu:yu:k predate Sumer and
- examples of writing from Egypt and the Harappa, Indus valley sites _may_
- predate those from Sumer). From its beginnings as a collection of farming
- villages around 5000 BCE, through its conquest by Sargon of Agade around
- 2370 BCE and its final collapse under the Amorites around 2000 BCE, the
- Sumerians developed a religion and a society which influenced both their
- neighbors and their conquerors. Sumerian cuneiform, the earliest written
- language, was borrowed by the Babylonians, who also took many of their
- religious beliefs. In fact, traces and parallels of Sumerian myth can be
- found in Genesis.
-
- History
-
- Sumer was a collection of city states around the Lower Tigris and
- Euphrates rivers in what is now southern Iraq. Each of these cities had
- individual rulers, although as early as the mid-fourth millennium BCE the
- leader of the dominant city could have been considered the king of the
- region. The history of Sumer tends to be divided into five periods. They
- are the Uruk period, which saw the dominance of the city of that same
- name, the Jemdat Nasr period, the Early Dynastic periods, the Agade
- period, and the Ur III period - the entire span lasting from 3800 BCE to
- around 2000 BCE. In addition, there is evidence of the Sumerians in the
- area both prior to the Uruk period and after the Ur III Dynastic period,
- but relatively little is known about the former age and the latter time
- period is most heavily dominated by the Babylonians.
- The Uruk period, stretched from 3800 BCE to 3200 BCE. It is to this
- era that the Sumerian King Lists ascribe the reigns of Dumuzi the
- shepherd, and the other antediluvian kings. After his reign Dumuzi was
- worshipped as the god of the spring grains. This time saw an enormous
- growth in urbanization such that Uruk probably had a population around
- 45,000 at the period's end. It was easily the largest city in the area,
- although the older cities of Eridu to the south and Kish to the north may
- have rivaled it. Irrigation improvements as well as a supply of raw
- materials for craftsmen provided an impetus for this growth. In fact, the
- city of An and Inanna also seems to have been at the heart of a trade network
- which stretched from what is now southern Turkey to what is now eastern
- Iran. In addition people were drawn to the city by the great temples
- there.
- The Eanna of Uruk, a collection of temples dedicated to Inanna, was
- constructed at this time and bore many mosaics and frescoes. These
- buildings served civic as well as religious purposes, which was fitting as
- the en, or high priest, served as both the spiritual and temporal
- leader. The temples were places where craftsmen would practice their
- trades and where surplus food would be stored and distributed.
- The Jemdat Nasr period lasted from 3200 BCE to 2900 BCE. It was not
- particularly remarkable and most adequately described as an extension and
- slowing down of the Uruk period. This is the period during which the
- great flood is supposed to have taken place. The Sumerians' account of
- the flood may have been based on a flooding of the Tigris, Euphrates, or
- both rivers onto their already marshy country.
- The Early Dynastic period ran from 2900 BCE to 2370 BCE and it is this
- period for which we begin to have more reliable written accounts although
- some of the great kings of this era later evolved mythic tales about them
- and were deified. Kingship moved about 100 miles upriver and about 50
- miles south of modern Bahgdad to the city of Kish. One of the earlier
- kings in Kish was Etana who "stabilized all the lands" securing the First
- Dynasty of Kish and establishing rule over Sumer and some of its
- neighbors. Etana was later believed by the Babylonians to have rode to
- heaven on the back of a giant Eagle so that he could receive the "plant of
- birth" from Ishtar (their version of Inanna) and thereby produce an heir.
- Meanwhile, in the south, the Dynasty of Erech was founded by
- Meskiaggasher, who, along with his successors, was termed the "son of
- Utu", the sun-god. Following three other kings, including another Dumuzi,
- the famous Gilgamesh took the throne of Erech around 2600 BCE and became in
- volved in a power struggle for the region with the Kish Dynasts and with
- Mesannepadda, the founder of the Dynasty of Ur. While Gilgamesh became a
- demi-god, remembered in epic tales, it was Mesannepadda who was eventually
- victorious in this three-way power struggle, taking the by then
- traditional title of "King of Kish".
- Although the dynasties of Kish and Erech fell by the wayside, Ur
- could not retain a strong hold over all of Sumer. The entire region was
- weakened by the struggle and individual city-states continued more or less
- independent rule. The rulers of Lagash declared themselves "Kings of
- Kish" around 2450 BCE, but failed to seriously control the region, facing
- several military challenges by the nearby Umma. Lugalzagesi, _ensi_ or
- priest-king of Umma from around 2360-2335 BCE, razed Lagash, and conquered
- Sumer, declaring himself "king of Erech and the Land". Unfortunately for
- him, all of this strife made Sumer ripe for conquest by an outsider and
- Sargon of Agade seized that opportunity.
- Sargon united both Sumer and the northern region of Akkad - from
- which Babylon would arise about four hundred years later - not very far
- from Kish. Evidence is sketchy, but he may have extended his realm from
- the Medeterranian Sea to the Indus River. This unity would survive its
- founder by less than 40 years. He built the city of Agade and established
- an enormous court there and he had a new temple erected in Nippur. Trade
- from across his new empire and beyond swelled the city, making it the
- center of world culture for a brief time.
- After Sargon's death, however, the empire was fraught with rebellion.
- Naram-Sin, Sargon's grandson and third successor, quelled the rebellions
- through a series of military successes, extending his realm. He declared
- himself 'King of the Four corners of the World' and had himself deified.
- His divine powers must have failed him as the Guti, a mountain people,
- razed Agade and deposed Naram-Sin, ending that dynasty.
- After a few decades, the Guti presence became intolerable for the
- Sumerian leaders. Utuhegal of Uruk/Erech rallied a coalition army and
- ousted them. One of his lieutenants, Ur-Nammu, usurped his rule and
- established the third Ur dynasty around 2112 BCE. He consolidated his
- control by defeating a rival dynast in Lagash and soon gained control of
- all of the Sumerian city-states. He established the earliest known
- recorded law-codes and had constructed the great ziggurat of Ur, a kind of
- step-pyramid which stood over 60' tall and more than 200' wide. For the
- next century the Sumerians were extremely prosperous, but their society
- collapsed around 2000 BCE under the invading Amorites. A couple of
- city-states maintained their independence for a short while, but soon they
- and the rest of the Sumerians were absorbed into the rising empire of the
- Babylonians. (Crawford pp. 1-28; Kramer 1963 pp. 40-72)
-
- Culture
-
- Seated along the Euphrates River, Sumer had a thriving agriculture
- and trade industry. Herds of sheep and goats and farms of grains and
- vegetables were held both by the temples and private citizens. Ships
- plied up and down the river and throughout the Persian gulf, carrying
- pottery and various processed goods and bringing back fruits and various
- raw materials from across the region, including cedars from the Levant.
- Sumer was one of the first literate civilizations leaving many
- records of business transactions, and lessons from schools. They had
- strong armies, which with their chariots and phalanxes held sway over
- their less civilized neighbors (Kramer 1963, p. 74). Perhaps the most
- lasting cultural remnants of the Sumerians though, can be found in their
- religion.
-
- Religion
-
- The religion of the ancient Sumerians has left its mark on the
- entire middle east. Not only are its temples and ziggurats scattered
- about the region, but the literature, cosmogony and rituals influenced
- their neighbors to such an extent that we can see echoes of Sumer in
- the Judeo-Christian-Islamic tradition today. From these ancient
- temples, and to a greater extent, through cuneiform writings of
- hymns, myths, lamentations, and incantations, archaeologists and
- mythographers afford the modern reader a glimpse into the religious
- world of the Sumerians.
- Each city housed a temple that was the seat of a major god in the
- Sumerian pantheon, as the gods controlled the powerful forces which often
- dictated a human's fate. The city leaders had a duty to please the
- town's patron deity, not only for the good will of that god or goddess,
- but also for the good will of the other deities in the council of
- gods. The priesthood initially held this role, and even after secular
- kings ascended to power, the clergy still held great authority through
- the interpretation of omens and dreams. Many of the secular kings claimed
- divine right; Sargon of Agade, for example claimed to have been chosen by
- Ishtar/Inanna. (Crawford 1991: 21-24)
- The rectangular central shrine of the temple, known as a 'cella,' had
- a brick altar or offering table in front of a statue of the temple's
- deity. The cella was lined on its long ends by many rooms for priests
- and priestesses. These mud-brick buildings were decorated with cone
- geometrical mosaics, and the occasional fresco with human and animal
- figures. These temple complexes eventually evolved into towering
- ziggurats. (Wolkstein & Kramer 1983: 119)
- The temple was staffed by priests, priestesses, musicians, singers,
- castrates and hierodules. Various public rituals, food sacrifices, and
- libations took place there on a daily basis. There were monthly feasts
- and annual, New Year celebrations. During the later, the king would be
- married to Inanna as the resurrected fertility god Dumuzi, whose exploits
- are dealt with below.
- When it came to more private matters, a Sumerian remained
- devout. Although the gods preferred justice and mercy, they had also
- created evil and misfortune. A Sumerian had little that he could do
- about it. Judging from Lamentation records, the best one could do in
- times of duress would be to "plead, lament and wail, tearfully confessing
- his sins and failings." Their family god or city god might intervene on
- their behalf, but that would not necessarily happen. After all, man was
- created as a broken, labor saving, tool for the use of the gods and at
- the end of everyone's life, lay the underworld, a generally dreary
- place. (Wolkstein & Kramer 1983: pp.123-124)
-
- II. What do we know about Sumerian Cosmology?
-
- From verses scattered throughout hymns and myths, one can compile a
- picture of the universe's (anki) creation according to the Sumerians. The
- primeval sea (abzu) existed before anything else and within that, the
- heaven (an) and the earth (ki) were formed. The boundary between heaven
- and earth was a solid (perhaps tin) vault, and the earth was a flat
- disk. Within the vault lay the gas-like 'lil', or atmosphere, the
- brighter portions therein formed the stars, planets, sun, and
- moon. (Kramer, The Sumerians 1963: pp. 112-113) Each of the four major
- Sumerian deities is associated with one of these regions. An, god of
- heaven, may have been the main god of the pantheon prior to 2500 BC.,
- although his importance gradually waned. (Kramer 1963 p. 118) Ki is
- likely to be the original name of the earth goddess, whose name more
- often appears as Ninhursag (queen of the mountains), Ninmah (the exalted
- lady), or Nintu (the lady who gave birth). It seems likely that these two
- were the progenitors of most of the gods.
- According to "Gilgamesh, Enkidu, and the Netherworld", in the first days
- all needed things were created. Heaven and earth were separated. An took
- Heaven, Enlil took the earth, Ereshkigal was carried off to the
- netherworld as a prize, and Enki sailed off after her.
-
- III. What Deities did they worship?
-
- Nammu
- Nammu is the Goddess of the watery abyss, the primeval sea. She may
- be the earliest of deities within Sumerian cosmology as she gave birth to
- heaven and earth. (Kramer 1961 p. 39) She is elsewhere described both
- as the mother of all the gods and as the wife of An">An. (Kramer 1961
- p. 114) She is Enki">Enki's mother. She prompts him to create servants
- for the gods and is then directed by him on how, with the help of
- Nimmah/Ninhursag to create man. (Kramer 1963 p. 150; Kramer 1961 p. 70)
-
- A. The Primary Deities - It is notable that the Sumerians themselves
- may not have grouped these four as a set and that the grouping has been
- made because of the observations of Sumerologists.
-
- An
- An, god of heaven, may have been the main god of the pantheon prior to
- 2500 BC., although his importance gradually waned. (Kramer 1963 p. 118)
- In the early days he carried off heaven, while Enlil">Enlil carried away
- the earth. (Kramer 1961 p. 37-39) It seems likely that he and Ki/Ninhursag
- were the progenitors of most of the gods. although in one place Nammu is
- listed as his wife. (Kramer 1961 p. 114) Among his children and followers
- were the Anunnaki. (Kramer 1961 p. 53) His primary temple was in Erech.
- He and Enlil give various gods, goddesses, and kings their earthly regions
- of influence and their laws. (Kramer 1963 p. 124) Enki seats him at the
- first seat of the table in Nippur at the feast celebrating his new house
- in Eridu. (Kramer 1961 p. 63) He hears Inanna's complaint about Mount
- Ebih (Kur?), but discourages her from attacking it because of its fearsome
- power. (Kramer 1961 pp. 82-83) After the flood, he and Enlil make Ziusudra
- immortal and make him live in Dilmun. (Kramer 1961 p. 98)
- (See also Anu, his Babylonian analog, in the Assyro-Babylonian Mythology FAQ.)
-
- Ninhursag (Ki, Ninmah, Nintu)
- Ki is likely to be the original name of the earth goddess, whose name
- more often appears as Ninhursag (queen of the mountains), Ninmah (the
- exalted lady), or Nintu (the lady who gave birth). (Kramer 1963
- p. 122) Most often she is considered Enlil's sister, but in some
- traditions she is his spouse instead. (Jacobsen p.105) She was born,
- possibly as a unified cosmic mountain with An, from Nammu and shortly
- thereafter, their union produced Enlil. (Kramer 1961 p. 74) In the
- early days, as Ki, she was separated from heaven (An) and carried off by
- Enlil. (Kramer 1961 pp. 37-41) It seems likely that she and An were
- the progenitors of most of the gods. She later unites with Enlil and
- with the assistance of Enki they produce the world's plant and animal life.
- (Kramer 1961 p. 75)
-
- "Enki and Ninhursag"
- In Dilmun, she (as Nintu) bears the goddess Ninsar from Enki, who in
- turn bears the goddess Ninkur, who in turn bears Uttu, goddess of
- plants. Uttu bore eight new trees from Enki. When he then ate Uttu's
- children, Ninhursag cursed him with eight wounds and dissapears. After
- being persuaded by Enlil to undo her curse, she bore Enki eight new
- children which undid the wounds of the first ones. (Kramer 1963
- pp. 147-149; Kramer 1961 pp. 54-59)
-
- Enki seats her (as Nintu) on the big side of the table in Nippur at the feast
- celebrating his new house in Eridu. (Kramer 1961 p. 63)
-
- "Enki and Ninmah"
- She is the mother goddess and, as Ninmah, assists in the creation of
- man. Enki, having been propted by Nammu to create servants for the
- gods, describes how Nammu and Ninmah will help fashion man from
- clay. Prior to getting to work, she and Enki drink overmuch at a
- feast. She then shapes six flawed versions of man from the heart of
- the clay over the Abzu, with Enki declaring their fates. Enki, in turn
- also creates a flawed man which is unable to eat. Ninmah appears to
- curse him for the failed effort. (Kramer 1963 pp. 149-151; Kramer 1961
- pp. 69-72)
- (See also Aruru, her Babylonian analog in the Assyro-Babylonian Mythology FAQ)
-
- Enlil
- An and Ki's union produced Enlil (Lord of 'lil'). Enlil was the
- air-god and leader of the pantheon from at least 2500 BC, when his
- temple Ekur in Nippur was the spiritual center of Sumer (Kramer 1961
- p. 47). In the early days he separated and carried off the earth
- (Ki) while An carried off heaven. (Kramer 1961 p. 37-41) He assumed
- most of An's powers. He is glorified as "'the father of the gods, 'the
- king of heaven and earth,' ' the king of all the lands'". Kramer
- portrays him as a patriarchal figure, who is both creator and
- disciplinarian. Enlil causes the dawn, the growth of plants, and bounty
- (Kramer 1961 p. 42). He also invents agricultural tools such as the
- plow or pickaxe (Kramer 1961 pp 47-49). Without his blessings, a city
- would not rise (Kramer 1961 pp. 63, 80) Most often he is considered Ninlil's
- husband, with Ninhursag as his sister, but some traditions have Ninhursag as
- his spouse. (Jacobsen p.105)
-
- "Enlil and Ninlil"
- He is also banished to the nether world (kur) for his rape of Ninlil,
- his intended bride, but returns with the first product of their union,
- the moon god Sin (also known as Nanna). (Kramer, Sumerians
- 1963: pp.145-147). Ninlil follows him into exile as his wife. He
- tells the various underworld guardians to not reveal his whereabouts and
- instead poses as those guardians himself three times, each time
- impregnating her again. It appears that at least on one occasion Enlil
- reveals his true self before they unite. The products of these unions
- are three underworld deities, including Meslamtaea (aka. Nergal) and
- Ninazu. Later, when Nanna visits him in Nippur, he bestows Ur to him
- with a palace and plentiful plantlife. (Kramer 1961 p. 43-49) Enlil is
- also seen as the father of Ninurta (Kramer 1961 p. 80).
-
- "Enki and Eridu"
- When Enki journeys to Enlil's city Nippur in order for his own city,
- Eridu to be blessed. He is given bread at Enki's feast and is seated
- next to An, after which Enlil proclaims that the Anunnaki should praise
- Enki. (Kramer 1961 pp. 62-63)
-
- "The Dispute between Cattle and Grain"
- Enlil and Enki, at Enki's urging, create farms and fields for the
- grain goddess Ashnan and the cattle goddess Lahar. This area has places
- for Lahar to take care of the animals and Ashnan to grow the crops. The
- two agricultural deities get drunk and begin fighting, so it falls to
- Enlil and Enki to resolve their conflict - how they do so has not been
- recovered. (Kramer 1961 pp. 53-54; Kramer 1963 pp. 220-223)
-
- "The Dispute between Emesh and Enten"
- Enlil creates the herdsman deity Enten and the agricultural deity
- Emesh. He settles a dispute between Emesh and Enten over who should be
- recognized as 'farmer of the gods', declaring Enten's claim to be
- stronger. (Kramer 1961 p. 49-51).
-
- "Enki and Ninhursag"
- He helps Enki again when he was cursed by Ninhursag. Enlil and a fox
- entreat her to return and undo her curse. (Kramer 1961 p. 57)
-
- "Enki and the World Order"
- The "me" were assembled by Enlil in his temple Ekur, and given to Enki
- to guard and impart to the world, beginning with Eridu, Enki's center of
- worship. (Kramer 1963 pp. 171-183)
-
- "Inanna's Descent to the Nether World"
- Enlil refuses Ninshubur's appeal on behalf of his [grand-]daughter,
- Inanna to help rescue her from Ereshkigal in the underworld. (Kramer
- 1961 pp. 86, 87, 89, 93)
-
- "Ziusudra"
- After the flood, he and An gave Ziusudra eternal life and had him live
- in Dilmun. (Kramer 1961 p. 98)
-
- "Gilgamesh, Enkidu and the Netherworld"
- When Gilgamesh looses his "pukku" and "mikku" in the nether world, and
- Enkidu is held fast there by demons, he appeals to Enlil for
- help. Enlil refuses to assist him. (Kramer 1961 p. 35-36)
- (See also his Babylonian analog Ellil in the Assyro-Babylonian Mythology
- FAQ)
-
- Enki
- Enki is the son of Nammu, the primeval sea. Contrary to the
- translation of his name, Enki is not the lord of the earth, but of the
- abzu (the watery abyss and also semen) and of wisdom. This
- contradiction leads Kramer and Maier to postulate that he was once known
- as En-kur, lord of the underworld, which either contained or was
- contained in the Abzu. He did struggle with Kur as mentioned in the
- prelude to "Gilgamesh, Enkidu, and the Underworld", and presumably was
- victorious and thereby able to claim the title "Lord of Kur" (the
- realm). He is a god of water, creation, and fertility. He also holds
- dominion over the land. He is the keeper of the "me", the divine
- laws. (Kramer & Maier Myths of Enki 1989: pp. 2-3)
-
- "Gilgamesh, Enkidu, and the Underworld"
- Enki sails for the Kur, presumably to rescue Ereshkigal after she was
- given over to Kur. He is assailed by creatures with stones. These
- creatures may have been an extension of Kur itself. (Wolkstein and
- Kramer p. 4; Kramer 1961 p. 37-38, 78-79)
-
- "Enki and Eridu"
- Enki raises his city Eridu from the sea, making it very lush. He
- takes his boat to Nippur to have the city blessed by Enlil. He throws a
- feast for the gods, giving Enlil, An, and Nintu special attention. After
- the feast, Enlil proclaims that the Anunnaki should praise Enki. (Kramer
- 1961; pp. 62-63)
-
- "Enki and the World Order"
- The "me" were assembled by Enlil in Ekur and given to Enki to guard
- and impart to the world, beginning with Eridu, his center of
- worship. From there, he guards the "me" and imparts them on the
- people. He directs the "me" towards Ur and Meluhha and Dilmun,
- organizing the world with his decrees. (Kramer 1963 pp. 171-183)
-
- "The Dispute between Cattle and Grain"
- Enlil and Enki, at Enki's urging, create farms and fields for the
- grain goddess Ashnan and the cattle goddess Lahar. This area has places
- for Lahar to take care of the animals and Ashnan to grow the crops. The
- two agricultural deities get drunk and begin fighting, so it falls to
- Enlil and Enki to resolve their conflict - how they do so has not been
- recovered. (Kramer 1961 pp. 53-54; Kramer 1963 pp. 220-223)
-
- "Enki and Ninhursag"
- He blessed the paradisical land of Dilmun, to have plentiful water and
- palm trees. He sires the goddess Ninsar upon Ninhursag, then sires
- Ninkur upon Ninsar, finally siring Uttu, goddess of plants, upon
- Ninkur. Uttu bore eight new types of trees from Enki. He then consumed
- these tree-children and was cursed by Ninhursag, with one wound for each
- plant consumed. Enlil and a fox act on Enki's behalf to call back
- Ninhursag in order to undo the damage. She joins with Enki again and
- bears eight new children, one to cure each of the wounds. (Kramer 1963
- pp. 147-149; Kramer 1961 pp. 54-59)
-
- "Enki and Ninmah: The Creation of Man"
- The gods complain that they need assistance. At his mother Nammu's
- prompting, he directs her, along with some constructive criticism from
- Ninmah (Ninhursag), in the creation of man from the heart of the clay
- over the Abzu. Several flawed versions were created before the final
- version was made. (Kramer 1963 pp. 149-151; Kramer 1961 pp. 69-72)
-
- "Inanna's Descent to the Nether World"
- He is friendly to Inanna and rescued her from Kur by sending two
- sexless beings to negotiate with, and flatter Ereshkigal. They gave her
- the Food of Life and the Water of Life, which restored her. (Wolkstein
- and Kramer pp. 62-64)
-
- "Inanna and Enki"
- Later, Inanna comes to Enki and complains at having been given too
- little power from his decrees. In a different text, she gets Enki drunk
- and he grants her more powers, arts, crafts, and attributes - a total of
- ninety-four "me". Inanna parts company with Enki to deliver the "me" to
- her cult center at Erech. Enki recovers his wits and tries to recover
- the "me" from her, but she arrives safely in Erech with them. (Kramer &
- Maier 1989: pp. 38-68)
- (See also his Babylonian analog, Ea, in the Assyro-Babylonian Mythology FAQ)
-
-
- III B. The Seven Who Decreed Fate
- In addition to the four primary deities, there were hundreds of
- others. A group of seven "decreed the fates" - these probably included
- the first four, as well as Nanna, his son Utu, the sun god and a god of
- justice, and Nanna's daughter Inanna, goddess of love and war.
-
- Nanna (Sin, (Suen), Ashgirbabbar)
- Nanna is another name for the moon god Sin. He is the product of
- Enlil's rape of Ninlil. (Kramer, 1963, pp. 146-7.) He travels across
- the sky in his gufa, (a small, canoe-like boat made of woven twigs and
- tar), with the stars and planets about him. (Kramer 1961 p. 41) Nanna
- was the tutelary deity of Ur (Kramer 1963 p. 66), appointed as king of
- that city by An and Enlil. (Kramer 1963 pp. 83-84) He journeyed to
- Nippur by boat, stopping at five cities along the way. When he arrived
- at Nippur, he proffered gifts to Enlil and pleaded with him to ensure
- that his city of Ur would be blessed, prosperous, and thus, not be
- flooded. (Kramer 1963 pp. 145-146, Kramer 1961 pp. 47-49) Nanna was
- married to Ningal and they produced Inanna and Utu. (Wolkstein and
- Kramer pp. 30-34; Kramer 1961 p. 41) He rests in the Underworld every
- month, and there decrees the fate of the dead. (Kramer 1963 p. 132,
- 135, 210) He refuses to send aid to Inanna when she is trapped in the
- underworld. (Kramer 1963 pp. 153-154) He established Ur-Nammu as his
- mortal representative, establishing the third Ur dynasty. (Kramer 1963
- p. 84)
-
- Utu
- Utu is the son of Nanna and Ningal and the god of the Sun and of
- Justice. He goes to the underworld at the end of every day setting in
- the "mountain of the west" and rising in the "mountain of the
- east". While there decrees the fate of the dead, although he also may
- lie down to sleep at night. (Kramer 1963 p. 132, 135; Kramer 1961
- pp. 41-42) He is usually depicted with fiery rays coming out of his
- shoulders and upper arms, and carrying a saw knife. (Kramer 1961
- p. 40) When Inanna">Inanna's _huluppu_ tree is infested with unwelcome
- guests, he ignores her appeal for aid. (Wolkstein and Kramer
- pp. 6-7) He tries to set her up with Dumuzi, the shepherd, but she
- initially rebuffs him, preferring the farmer. (Wolkstein and Kramer
- pp. 30-33) He aided Dumuzi in his flight from the galla demons by
- helping him to transform into different creatures. (Wolkstein and
- Kramer pp. 72-73, 81) Through Enki's orders, he also brings water up
- from the earth in order to irrigate Dilmun, the garden paradise, the
- place where the sun rises. (Kramer 1963 p. 148) He is in charge of the
- "Land of the Living" and, in sympathy for Gilgamesh, calls off the seven
- weather heroes who defend that land. (Kramer 1963 pp. 190-193) He
- opened the "ablal" of the Underworld for the shade of Enkidu, to allow
- him to escape, at the behest of Enki. (Kramer 1963 p. 133; Kramer 1961
- p. 36)
- (See also his Babylonian analog, Shamash, in the Assyro-Babylonian
- Mythology FAQ)
-
- Inanna
- Nanna and Ningal's daughter Inanna, goddess of love and war.
-
- "Gilgamesh, Enkidu, and the Underworld"
- A woman planted the huluppu tree in Inanna's garden, but the
- Imdugud-bird (Anzu bird?) made a nest for its young there, Lilith (or
- her predecessor, a lilitu-demon) made a house in its trunk, and a
- serpent made a home in its roots. Inanna appeals to Utu about her
- unwelcome guests, but he is unsympathetic. She appeals to Gilgamesh,
- here her brother, and he is receptive. He tears down the tree and makes
- it into a throne and bed for her. In return for the favor, Inanna
- manufactures a "pukku" and "mikku" for him. (Wolkstein and Kramer pp. 5-9)
-
- "Gilgamesh and the Bull of Heaven"
- Later, Inanna seeks out Gilgamesh as her lover. When he spurns her
- she sends the Bull of Heaven to terrorize his city of Erech. (Kramer
- 1963 p. 262)
-
- "The Courtship of Inanna and Dumuzi"
- Her older brother Utu tries to set her up with Dumuzi, the shepherd,
- but she initially rebuffs him, preferring the farmer. He assures her
- that his parents are as good as hers and she begins to desire him. Her
- mother, Ningal, further assures her. The two consummate their
- relationship and with their exercise in fertility, the plants and grains
- grow as well. After they spend time in the marriage bed, Inanna
- declares herself as his battle leader and sets his duties as including
- sitting on the throne and guiding the path of weapons. At Ninshubur's
- request, she gives him power over the fertility of plants and
- animals. (Wolkstein and Kramer pp. 30-50)
-
- "Inanna's Descent to the Nether World"
- Inanna also visits Kur, which results in a myth reminiscent of the
- Greek seasonal story of Persephone. She sets out to witness the funeral
- rites of her sister-in-law Ereshkigal's husband Gugalanna, the Bull of
- Heaven. She takes precaution before setting out, by telling her servant
- Ninshubur to seek assistance from Enlil, Nanna, or Enki at their
- shrines, should she not return. Inanna knocks on the outer gates of Kur
- and the gatekeeper, Neti, questions her. He consults with queen
- Ereshkigal and then allows Inanna to pass through the seven gates of the
- underworld. After each gate, she is required to remove adornments and
- articles of clothing, until after the seventh gate, she is naked. The
- Annuna pass judgment against her and Ereshkigal killed her and hung her
- on the wall. (Wolkstein & Kramer 1983 pp. 52-60)
-
- Inanna is rescued by the intervention of Enki. He creates two sexless
- creatures that empathize with Ereshkigal's suffering, and thereby gain
- a gift - Inanna's corpse. They restore her to life with the Bread of
- Life and the Water of Life, but the Sumerian underworld has a
- conservation of death law. No one can leave without providing someone
- to stay in their stead. Inanna is escorted by galla/demons past
- Ninshubur and members of her family. She doesn't allow them to claim
- anyone until she sees Dumuzi on his throne in Uruk. They then seize
- Dumuzi, but he escapes them twice by transforming himself, with the aid
- of Utu. Eventually he is caught and slain. Inanna spies his sister,
- Geshtinanna, in mourning and they go to Dumuzi. She allows Dumuzi, the
- shepherd, to stay in the underworld only six months of the year, while
- Geshtinanna will stay the other six. (Wolkstein & Kramer pp. 60-89) As
- with the Greek story of the kidnapping of Persephone, this linked the
- changing seasons, the emergence of the plants from the ground, with the
- return of a harvest deity from the nether world. Geshtinanna is also
- associated with growth, but where her brother rules over the spring
- harvested grain, she rules over the autumn harvested vines (Wolkstein &
- Kramer p. 168).
-
- "Inanna and Mount Ebih"
- Inanna complains to An about Mount Ebih (Kur?) demanding that it
- glorify her and submit lest she attack it. An discourages her from
- doing so because of its fearsome power. She does so anyway, bringing a
- storehouse worth of weapons to bear on it. She destroys it. Because
- she is known as the Destroyer of Kur in certain hymns, Kramer identifys
- Mt. Ebih with Kur. (Kramer 1961 pp. 82-83)
-
- "Inanna and Enki"
- The "me" (see section V.) were universal decrees of divine authority -
- the invocations that spread arts, crafts, and civilization. Enki became
- the keeper of the "me". Inanna comes to Enki and complains at having been
- given too little power from his decrees. In a different text, she gets Enki
- drunk and he grants her more powers, arts, crafts, and attributes - a total
- of ninety-four "me". Inanna parts company with Enki to deliver the "me" to
- her cult center at Erech. Enki recovers his wits and tries to recover the
- "me" from her, but she arrives safely in Erech with them. (Kramer &
- Maier 1989: pp. 38-68)
- (See also her Babylonian analog, Ishtar, in the Assyro-Babylonian
- Mythology FAQ)
-
- III. C. The Annuna (Anunnaki) and others
- At the next level were fifty "great gods", possibly the same as the
- Annuna, although several gods confined to the underworld are specifically
- designated Annuna, An's children. The Annuna are also said to live in
- Dulkug or Du-ku, the "holy mound" (Kramer 1963: pp. 122-123, Black and
- Green p. 72, Kramer 1961, p. 73). In the "Descent of Inanna to the
- Nether World" the Anunnaki are identified as the seven judges of the
- nether world. (Kramer 1963 p. 154; Kramer 1961 p. 119)
-
- Ereshkigal
- Ereshkigal is the queen of the underworld, who is either given to Kur
- in the underworld or given dominion over the underworld in the prelude
- to "Gilgamesh, Enkidu, and the Underworld". (Wolkstein and Kramer p.
- 157-158; Kramer 1961 p. 37-38) She has a palace there with seven gates
- and is due a visit by those entering Kur. (Kramer 1963 pp. 131, 134)
- She was married to Gugalanna">Gugalanna, the Bull of Heaven, and is
- Inanna's older sister. When Inanna trespassed on her domain, Ereshkigal
- first directs her gatekeeper to open the seven gates a crack and remove
- her garments. (Wolkstein and Kramer pp. 55-57) Then when Inanna arrives
- she:
-
- ...fastened on Inanna the eye of death.
- She spoke against her the word of wrath.
- She uttered against her the cry of guilt
- She struck her.
- Inanna was turned into a corpse,
- ...And was hung from a hook on the wall.
- (Wolkstein & Kramer 1983 p. 60)
-
- Later, when Enki's messengers arrive, she is moaning in pain. When
- they empathize with her, she grants them a boon. They request Inanna's
- corpse and she accedes. (Wolkstein & Kramer pp. 64-67)
-
- Nergal (Meslamtaea)
- Nergal is the second son of Enlil and Ninlil. (Kramer 1961 pp. 44-45)
- He is perhaps the co-ruler of Kur with Ereshkigal where he has a palace
- and is due reverence by those who visit. He is more prominent in
- Babylonian literature. He holds Enkidu fast in the underworld after
- Enkidu broke several taboos while trying to recover Gilgamesh's
- "pukku" and "mikku".
- (See also the Babylonian version of Nergal in the Assyro-Babylonian
- Mythology FAQ)
-
- Ninlil
- Ninlil was the intended bride of Enlil and the daughter of Nunbarshegunu,
- the old woman of Nippur. Enlil raped her and was then banished to the
- nether world (kur). She follows him to the nether world, where she gives
- birth to the moon god Sin (also known as Nanna). They have three more
- children in the nether world including Meslamtaea/(Nergal) and Ninazu
- who remain there so that Sin may be allowed to leave. (Kramer, Sumerians
- 1963: pp.146-7; Kramer 1961 pp. 43-46). In some texts she is Enlil's
- sister while Ninhursag is his bride. (Jacobsen p.105) Her chief shrine
- was in the Tummal district of Nippur.
- (See also the Babylonian version of Ninlil in the Assyro-Babylonian
- Mythology FAQ)
-
- Ningal
- She is Nanna's wife and the mother of Inanna and Utu. She begs and
- weeps before An and Enlil for them not to flood her city, Ur.
- (see also the Babylonian version of Ningal and Nikkal of the Canaanites
- in their respective FAQ's)
-
- Nanshe
- Nanshe is a goddess of the city of Lagash who takes care of orphans
- and widows. She also seeks out justice for the poor and casts judgement
- on New Year's Day. She is supported by Nidaba and her husband, Haia.
- (Kramer 1963 pp. 124-125)
-
- Nidaba
- The goddess of writing and the patron deity of the "edubba" (palace
- archives). She is an assistant to Nanshe. (Kramer 1963 pp. 124-125)
-
- Ninisinna (Nininsinna)
- The patron goddess of the city Isin. She is the "hierodule of An"
-
- Ninkasi ("The Lady who fills the mouth")
- She is the goddess of brewing or alcohol, born of "sparkling-fresh
- water". (Kramer 1963 pp. 111, 206) She is one of the eight healing
- children born by Ninhursag for Enki She is born in response to Enki's
- mouth pain and Ninhursag declares that she should be the goddess who
- "sates the heart". (Kramer 1961 p. 58)
- (see http://beer.tcm.hut.fi/Misc/SumerianBeer.html )
-
- Ninurta
- Ninurta is Enlil's son and a warrior deity, the god of the south wind.
- (Kramer 1963 p. 145; Kramer 1961 p. 80) In "The Feats and Exploits of
- Ninurta", that deity sets out to destroy the Kur. Kur initially
- intimidates Ninurta into retreating, but when Ninurta returns with greater
- resolve, Kur is destroyed. This looses the waters of the Abzu, causing
- the fields to be flooded with unclean waters. Ninurta dams up the Abzu
- by piling stones over Kur's corpse. He then drains these waters into
- the Tigris. (Kramer 1961 pp. 80-82). The identification of Ninurta's
- antagonist in this passage as Kur appears to be miscast. Black and
- Green identify his foe as the demon Asag, who was the spawn of An and
- Ki, and who produced monstrous offspring with Kur. The remainder of the
- details of this story are the same as in Kramer's account, but with Asag
- replacing Kur. In other versions, Ninurta is replaced by Adad/Ishkur.
- (Black & Green pp. 35-36)
- (See also the Babylonian version of Ninurta in the Assyro-Babylonian
- Mythology FAQ)
-
- Ashnan
- The kindly maid. Ashnan is a grain goddess, initially living in Dulkug
- (Du-ku). (Kramer 1961 p. 50) Enlil and Enki, at Enki's urging, create farms
- and fields for her and for the cattle god Lahar. This area has places
- for Lahar to take care of the animals and Ashnan to grow the crops. The
- two agricultural deities get drunk and begin fighting, so it falls to
- Enlil and Enki to resolve their conflict - how they do so has not been
- recovered. (Kramer 1961 pp. 53-54)
-
- Lahar
- Lahar is the cattle-goddess, initially living in Duku (Dulkug).
- Enlil and Enki, at Enki's urging, create farms and fields for him
- and the grain goddess Ashnan. This area has places for Lahar to take
- care of the animals and Ashnan to grow the crops. The two agricultural
- deities get drunk and begin fighting, so it falls to Enlil and Enki to
- resolve their conflict - how they do so has not been recovered. (Kramer
- 1961 pp. 53-54; Kramer 1963 pp. 220-223)
-
- Emesh
- Created by Enlil this god is responsible for agriculture. He quarrels
- with his brother Enten, and makes a claim to be the 'farmer of the gods',
- bringing his claim to Enlil after Enten. When Enlil judges Enten's claim
- to be stronger, Emesh relents, brings him gifts, and reconciles. (Kramer
- 1961 pp. 49-51)
-
- Enten
- He is a farmer god, and is Enlil's field worker and herdsman. He
- quarrels with his brother Emesh and makes an appeal to Enlil that he
- deserves to be 'farmer of the gods'. Enlil judges Enten's claim to be
- the stronger and the two reconcile with Emesh bringing Enten gifts.
- (Kramer 1961 pp. 42, 49-51)
-
- Uttu
- She is the goddess of weaving and clothing (Kramer 1963 p. 174;
- Black and Green p. 182) and was previously thought to be the goddess
- of plants. She is both the child of Enki and Ninkur, and she bears
- eight new child/trees from Enki. When he then ate Uttu's children,
- Ninhursag cursed him with eight wounds and disappears. (Kramer 1961
- pp. 57-59)
-
- Enbilulu
- The "knower" of rivers. He is the god appointed in charge of the
- Tigris and Euphrates by Enki. (Kramer 1961 p. 61)
-
- Ishkur
- God appointed to be in charge of the winds by Enki. He is in
- charge of "the silver lock of the 'heart' of heaven". (Kramer 1961 p. 61)
-
- Enkimdu
- God placed in charge of canals and ditches by Enki. (Kramer 1961 p. 61)
-
- Kabta
- God placed in charge of the pickax and brickmold by Enki. (Kramer
- 1961 p. 61)
-
- Mushdamma
- God placed in charge of foundations and houses by Enki. (Kramer 1961 p. 61)
-
- Sumugan
- The god of the plain or "king of the mountain", he is the god placed
- in charge of the plant and animal life on the plain of Sumer by Enki.
- (Kramer 1961 pp. 61-62; Kramer 1963 p. 220)
-
-
- III. D. Demigods, mortal Heroes, and Monsters
-
- Dumuzi (demigod) (Tammuz)
- A shepherd, he is the son of Enki and Sirtur. (Wolkstein & Kramer
- p. 34) He is given charge of stables and sheepfolds, filled with milk
- and fat by Enki. (Kramer 1961 p. 62) He has a palace in Kur, and is
- due a visit by those entering Kur. He is Inanna's husband. In life, he
- was the shepherd king of Uruk.
-
- "The Courtship of Inanna and Dumuzi"
- Utu tries to set Inanna up with him but she initially rebuffs him,
- preferring the farmer. He assures her that his parents are as good as
- hers and she begins to desire him. The two consummate their relationship
- and with their exercise in fertility, the plants and grains grow as well.
- After they spend time in the marriage bed, Inanna declares herself as his
- battle leader and sets his duties as including sitting on the throne and
- guiding the path of weapons. At Ninshubur's request, she gives him power
- over the fertility of plants and animals. (Wolkstein and Kramer pp. 30-50)
-
- "Descent of Inanna to the Nether World"
- Upon her rescue from the dead, he was pursued by galla demons, which
- he eluded for a time with the aid of Utu. Eventually he was caught and
- slain; however, he was partially freed from his stay in the underworld
- by the actions of his sister Geshtinanna. Now he resides there only
- half of the year, while she lives there the other half year; this
- represents seasonal change (see Inanna and Geshtinanna). (Wolkstein and
- Kramer pp. 71-89)
- (See also his Babylonian analog, Tammuz, in the Assyro-Babylonian
- Mythology FAQ.)
-
- Geshtinanna (demigoddess)
- She is Dumuzi's sister. After his death, she visited him in the
- underworld with Inanna, and was allowed to take his place there for six
- months out of the year. Her time in the underworld and her periodic
- emergence from it are linked with her new divine authority over the
- autumn vines and wine. (see also Inanna and Dumuzi)
-
- Ziusudra (Ziusura)
- In the Sumerian version of the flood story, the pious Ziusudra of
- Shuruppak (Kramer 1963 p. 26), the son of Ubartutu (or of Shuruppak?)
- (Kramer 1963 p. 224) is informed of the gods decision to destroy mankind
- by listening to a wall. He weathers the deluge and wind-storms aboard
- a huge boat. The only surviving detail of the boat is that it had a
- window. The flood lasts for seven days before Utu appears dispersing
- the flood waters. After that, Ziusudra makes appropriate sacrifices
- and protrations to Utu, An and Enlil. He is given eternal life in
- Dilmun by An and Enlil. (Kramer 1963 pp. 163-164; Kramer 1961
- pp. 97-98)
-
- Jacobsen reports a more complete version of "The Eridu Genesis" than
- Kramer or Black and Green which is close to the Babylonian story of
- Atrahasis. In this account, man had been directed to live in cities by
- Nintur but as they thrived, the noise irritated Enlil, who thus started
- the flood. In this account, Enki warns Ziusudra, instructing him to
- build the boat for his family and for representatives of the animals.
- The remainder is consistent with the accounts of Kramer and Black and
- Green. (Jacobsen p. 114)
-
- Gilgamesh (demigod)
- The son, either of a nomad or of the hero-king Lugalbanda and of the
- goddess Ninsun, Gilgamesh, may have been a historical King of Erech,
- during the time of the first Ur dynasty. His kingship is mentioned in
- various places, including the Sumerian King list and he was also an
- "en", a spiritual head of a temple. He was also the lord of Kulab and
- by one account, the brother of Inanna. He was "the prince beloved of
- An", (Kramer p. 260, 188) and "who performs heroic deeds for
- Inanna" (Kramer 1963 p. 187)
-
- "Gilgamesh and Agga" - (Pritchard pp.44-47; Kramer 1963 pp. 187-190)
- King Agga of Kish sent an ultimatum to Erech. Gilgamesh tried to convince
- the elders that Erech should sack Kish in response, but the elders wanted
- to submit. He responded by taking the matter to the men of the city, who
- agreed to take up arms. Agga laid seige to Erech and Gilgamesh resisted
- with the help of his servant, Enkidu. He sent a soldier through the gate
- to Agga. The soldier is captured and tortured with a brief respite while
- another of Gilgamesh's soldiers climbs over the wall. Gilgamesh himself
- then climbs the wall and Agga's forces are so taken aback by the sight of
- them that Agga capitulates. Gilgamesh graciously accepts Agga's surrender,
- prasing him for returning his city.
-
- After this episode, he apparently took Nippur from the son of the founder
- of the Ur I dynasty.
-
- "Gilgamesh and the Land of the Living" (Pritchard pp. 47-50, Kramer
- 1963 pp. 190-197)
- Gilgamesh, saddened by the dying he sees in his city, decides to go to the
- "Land of the Living" says so to Enkidu. At Enkidu's urging, Gilgamesh makes
- a sacrifice and first speaks to Utu, who is in charge of that
- land. After he informs Utu of his motives, the god calls off his seven
- guardian weather heroes. Gilgamesh recruits fifty single men to
- accompany them and commissions swords and axes. They travel over seven
- mountains, felling trees along the way eventually finding the "cedar of
- his heart". After some broken text Gilgamesh is in a deep sleep,
- presumably after an encounter with Huwawa. Enkidu or one of the others
- wakes him. They come upon Huwawa and Gilgamesh distracts him with
- flatery, then puts a nose ring on him and binds his arms. Huwawa
- grovels to Gilgamesh and Enkidu and Gilgamesh almost releases
- him. Enkidu argues against it and when Huwawa protests, he decapitates
- Huwawa. Gilgamesh is angered by Enkidu's rash action.
-
- "Gilgamesh, Enkidu and the Netherworld" (Kramer 1963 p.197-205)
- Inanna appeals to Gilgamesh, here her brother, when her huluppu tree has
- been occupied and he is receptive. He tears down the tree and makes it
- into a throne and bed for her. In return for the favor, Inanna
- manufactures a "pukku" and "mikku" for him.
- He leaves them out, goes to sleep and can't find them where he left them
- when he awakens. They had fallen into the underworld. Enkidu asks him
- what is wrong and Gilgamesh asks him to retrieve them, giving him
- instructions on how to behave in the underworld. Enkidu enters the
- "Great Dwelling" through a gate, but he broke several of the underworld
- taboos of which Gilgamesh warned, including the wearing of clean clothes
- and sandals, 'good' oil, carrying a weapon or staff, making a noise, or
- behaving normally towards ones family (Kramer 1963: pp. 132-133). For
- these violations he was "held fast by 'the outcry of the nether world'".
- Gilgamesh appeals to Enlil, who refuses to help.
- Intervention by Enki, rescued the hero - or at least raised his shade
- for Gilgamesh to speak with.
-
- "Gilgamesh and the Bull of Heaven"
- He rejects Inanna's advances, so she sends the "Bull of Heaven" to
- ravage Erech in retribution. (Kramer 1963 p. 262)
-
- "Death of Gilgamesh" (Pritchard pp. 50-52, Kramer 1963 pp. 130-131)
- Gilgamesh is fated by Enlil to die but also to be unmatched as a
- warrior. When he dies, his wife and household servants make offerings
- (of themselves?) for Gilgamesh to the deities of the underworld.
-
- He is given a palace in the nether world and venerated as lesser god
- of the dead. It is respectful to pay him a visit upon arrival. If he
- knew you in life or is of your kin he may explain the rules of Kur to
- you - which he helps to regulate.
-
- His son and successor was either Ur-lugal or Urnungal.
- (see the Babylonian version of Gilgamesh in the Assyro-Babylonian
- Mythology FAQ)
-
- Enkidu
- Gilgamesh's servant and friend. He assists Gilgamesh in putting
- back Agga's seige of Erech.
-
- He accompanies Gilgamesh and his soldiers on the trip to the
- "Land of the Living". Probably after an initial encounter with Huwawa,
- Gilgamesh falls asleep and Enkidu awakens him. They come upon Huwawa
- and Gilgamesh distracts him with flatery, then puts a nose ring on him
- and binds his arms. Huwawa grovels to Gilgamesh and Enkidu and Gilgamesh
- almost releases him. Enkidu argues against it and when Huwawa protests,
- he decapitates Huwawa. Gilgamesh is angered by Enkidu's rash action.
-
- The main body of the Gilgamesh tale includes a trip to the nether-world.
- Enkidu enters the "Great Dwelling" through a gate, in order to recover
- Gilgamesh's "pukku" and "mikku", objects of an uncertain nature. He broke
- several taboos of the underworld, including the wearing of clean clothes
- and sandals, 'good' oil, carrying a weapon or staff, making a noise, or
- behaving normally towards ones family (Kramer 1963: pp. 132-133). For
- these violations he was "held fast by 'the outcry of the nether world'".
- Intervention by Enki, rescued the hero or at least raised his shade for
- Gilgamesh to speak with.
-
- Kur
- Kur literally means "mountain", "foreign land", or "land" and came to be
- identified both with the underworld and, more specifically, the area which
- either was contained by or contained the Abzu. (Kramer 1961 p. 76) In the
- prelude to "Gilgamesh, Enkidu and the Underworld, Ereshkigal was carried
- off into the Kur as it's prize at about the same time as An and Enlil
- carried off the heaven and the earth. Later in that same passage, Enki
- also struggled with Kur as and presumably was victorious, thereby able to
- claim the title "Lord of Kur" (the realm). Kramer suggests that Kur was
- a dragon-like creature, calling to mind Tiamat and Leviathan. The texts
- suggests that Enki's struggle may have been with instruments of the land
- of kur - its stones or its creatures hurling stones. (Kramer 1961 p. 37-38,
- 78-79) (See also the Babylonian Apsu and Tiamat in the Assyro-Babylonian
- Mythology FAQ)
-
- In "The Feats and Exploits of Ninurta", that deity sets out to destroy
- the Kur. Kur initially intimidates Ninurta into retreating, but when Ninurta
- returns with greater resolve, Kur is destroyed. This looses the waters of
- the Abzu, causing the fields to be flooded with unclean waters. Ninurta dams
- up the Abzu by piling stones over Kur's corpse. He then drains these waters
- into the Tigris. (Kramer 1961 pp. 80-82). The identification of Ninurta's
- antagonist in this passage as Kur appears to be miscast. Black and Green
- identify his foe as the demon Asag, who was the spawn of An and Ki, and who
- produced monstrous offspring with Kur. The remainder of the details of this
- story are the same as in Kramer's account, but with Asag replacing Kur. In
- other versions, Ninurta is replaced by Adad/Ishkur. (Black & Green pp. 35-36)
-
- "Inanna and Mt. Ebih":
- Inanna is also described in Hymns as a destroyer of Kur. If one, as Kramer
- does, identifies Kur with Mt. Ebih, then we learn that it has directed fear
- against the gods, the Anunnaki and the land, sending forth rays of fire
- against the land. Inanna declares to An that she will attack Mt. Ebih unless
- it submits. An warns against such an attack, but Inanna procedes anyway
- and destroys it. (Kramer 1961 pp. 82-83).
-
- Gugalanna (Gugal-ana)
- He is Ereshkigal's husband, and according to Kramer, the Bull of Heaven.
- (Wolkstein and Kramer p. 55) Black and Green tentatively identify him with
- Ennugi, god of canals and dikes, rather than the Bull of Heaven. (Black
- and Green p. 77) After Gilgamesh spurned Inanna, she sends the Bull of
- Heaven to terrorize Erech. (Kramer 1963 p. 262)
-
- Huwawa
- Guardian of the cedar of the heart in the the "Land of the living",
- Huwawa has dragon's teeth, a lion's face, a roar like rushing flood water,
- huge clawed feet and a thick mane. He lived there in a cedar house. He
- appears to have attacked Gilgamesh, Enkidu and company when they felled
- that cedar. They then come upon Huwawa and Gilgamesh distracts him with
- flatery, then puts a nose ring on him and binds his arms. Huwawa grovels
- to Gilgamesh and Enkidu and Gilgamesh almost releases him. Enkidu argues
- against it and when Huwawa protests, he decapitates Huwawa.
- (See also the his Babylonian analog, Humbaba, in the Assyro-Babylonian
- Mythology FAQ)
-
-
- Gods in Kur with palaces who are due reverence:
- Namtar - "Fate", the demon responsible for death. Namtar has no hands
- or feet and does not eat or drink. (Pritchard p. 51)
- Hubishag
- Ningishzida - the god of dawn
-
- Dimpemekug - due gifts, no palace
- Neti - the chief gatekeeper
- the scribe of Kur - due gifts, no palace
-
- The Sumerians had many other deities as well, most of which appear to
- have been minor.
-
- IV. What about the Underworld?
- The underworld of the Sumerians is revealed, to some extent,
- by a composition about the death and afterlife of the king and
- warlord Ur-Nammu. After having died on the battlefield, Ur-
- Nammu arrives below, where he offers sundry gifts and sacrifices
- to the "seven gods" of the nether world:
-
- ...Nergal, [the deified] Gilgamesh, Ereshkigal [the queen of
- the underworld, who is either given to Kur in the underworld
- or given dominion over the underworld in the prelude to
- Gilgamesh (Kramer & Maier 1989: p. 83) (Wolkstein & Kramer
- 1983: p. 4)] , Dumuzi [the shepherd, Inanna's husband], Namtar,
- Hubishag, and Ningishzida - each in his own palace; he also
- presented gifts to Dimpimekug and to the "scribe of the nether-
- world."... [After arriving at his assigned spot] ...certain of
- the dead were turned over to him, perhaps to be his attendants,
- and Gilgamesh, his beloved brother, explained to him the rules
- and regulations of the nether world. (Kramer 1963: p. 131)
-
- Another tablet indicates that the sun, moon, and their respective gods,
- spent time in the underworld as well. The sun journeyed there after
- setting, and the moon rested there at the end of the month. Both Utu
- and Nanna '''decreed the fate' of the dead" while there. (Kramer 1963:
- p. 132) Dead heroes ate bread, drank, and quenched the dead's thirst
- with water. The gods of the nether world, the deceased, and his city,
- were prayed to for the benefit of the dead and his family.
-
- The Sumerian version of Gilgamesh includes a trip to the nether
- world as well. In the prologue, Enki sails for the Kur, presumably to
- rescue Ereshkigal after she was given over to Kur. He is assailed by
- creatures with stones. The main body of the tale includes a trip to the
- nether world as well. Enkidu enters the "Great Dwelling" through a gate,
- in order to recover Gilgamesh's pukku and mikku, objects of an uncertain
- nature. He broke several taboos of the underworld, including the wearing
- of clean clothes and sandals, 'good' oil, carrying a weapon or staff,
- making a noise, or behaving normally towards ones family (Kramer
- 1963: pp. 132-133). For these violations he was "held fast by 'the
- outcry of the nether world'". Intervention by Enki, rescued the hero.
-
- When Enlil visits the nether world, he must pass by a gatekeeper,
- followed by a "man of the river" and a "man of the boat" - all of whom
- act as guardians. (Kramer 1961 pp. 45-47)
-
- Inanna also visits Kur, which results in a myth reminiscent of the
- Greek seasonal story of Persephone. She sets out to witness the funeral
- rites of her sister-in-law Ereshkigal's husband Gugalanna, the Bull of
- Heaven. She takes precaution before setting out, by telling her servant
- Ninshubur to seek assistance from Enlil, Nanna, or Enki at their shrines,
- should she not return. Inanna knocks on the outer gates of Kur and the
- gatekeeper, Neti, questions her. He consults with queen Ereshkigal and
- then allows Inanna to pass through the seven gates of the underworld.
- After each gate, she is required to remove adornments and articles of
- clothing, until after the seventh gate, she is naked. The Annuna pass
- judgment against her and Ereshkigal slays her and hangs her on the wall
- (Wolkstein & Kramer 1983 p. 60)
-
- Inanna is rescued by the intervention of Enki. He creates two sexless
- creatures that empathize with Ereshkigal's suffering, and thereby gain a
- gift - Inanna's corpse. They restore her to life with the Bread of Life
- and the Water of Life, but the Sumerian underworld has a conservation of
- death law. No one can leave without providing someone to stay in their
- stead. Inanna is escorted by galla/demons past Ninshubur and members of
- her family. She doesn't allow them to claim anyone until she sees Dumuzi
- on his throne in Uruk. They then seize Dumuzi, but he escapes them twice
- by transforming himself, with the aid of Utu. Eventually he is caught
- and slain. Inanna spies his sister, Geshtinanna, in mourning and they go
- to Dumuzi. She allows Dumuzi, the shepherd, to stay in the underworld
- only six months of the year, while Geshtinanna will stay the other six.
- (Wolkstein & Kramer pp. 60-89) As with the Greek story of the kidnapping
- of Persephone, this linked the changing seasons, the emergence of the
- plants from the ground, with the return of a harvest deity from the
- nether world. Although he had always been a shepherd (and possibly a
- mortal king) he was blessed with the powers of fertility following the
- consummation of his marriage to Inanna in "The Courtship of Inanna and
- Dumuzi".
-
- As the farmer, let him make the fields fertile,
- As the shepherd, let him make the sheepfolds multiply,
- Under his reign let there be vegetation,
- Under his reign let there be rich grain (Wolkstein & Kramer p. 45)
-
- Geshtinanna is also associated with growth, but where her brother rules
- over the spring harvested grain, she rules over the autumn harvested
- vines (Wolkstein & Kramer p. 168)
-
- V. What are "me" anyway?
-
- Another important concept in Sumerian theology, was that of "me".
- The "me" were universal decrees of divine authority. They are the
- invocations that spread arts, crafts, and civilization. The "me" were
- assembled by Enlil in Ekur and given to Enki to guard and impart to the
- world, beginning with Eridu, his center of worship. From there, he
- guards the "me" and imparts them on the people. He directs the "me"
- towards Ur and Meluhha and Dilmun, organizing the world with his decrees.
- Later, Inanna comes to Enki and complains at having been given too
- little power from his decrees. In a different text, she gets Enki
- drunk and he grants her more powers, arts, crafts, and attributes - a
- total of ninety-four "me". Inanna parts company with Enki to deliver
- the "me" to her cult center at Erech. Enki recovers his wits and tries
- to recover the "me" from her, but she arrives safely in Erech with them.
- (Kramer & Maier 1989: pp. 38-68)
-
- VI. I've heard that there are a lot of Biblical parallels in Sumerian
- literature. What are they?
-
- Traces of Sumerian religion survive today and are reflected in
- writings of the Bible. As late as Ezekiel, there is mention of a Sumerian
- deity. In Ezekiel 8:14, the prophet sees women of Israel weeping for
- Tammuz (Dumuzi) during a drought.
-
- The bulk of Sumerian parallels can, however be found much earlier, in
- the book of Genesis. As in Genesis, the Sumerians' world is formed out of
- the watery abyss and the heavens and earth are divinely separated from one
- another by a solid dome. The second chapter of Genesis introduces the
- paradise Eden, a place which is similar to the Sumerian Dilmun, described
- in the myth of "Enki and Ninhursag". Dilmun is a pure, bright, and holy
- land - now often identified with Bahrain in the Persian Gulf. It is
- blessed by Enki to have overflowing, sweet water. Enki fills it with
- lagoons and palm trees. He impregnates Ninhursag and causes eight new
- plants to grow from the earth. Eden, "in the East" (Gen. 2:8) has a
- river which also "rises" or overflows, to form four rivers including the
- Tigris and Euphrates. It too is lush and has fruit bearing trees. (Gen.
- 2:9-10) In the second version of the creation of man "The Lord God formed
- man out of the clay of the ground and blew into his nostrils the breath of
- life, and so man became a living being." Enki and Ninmah (Ninhursag) use
- a similar method in creating man. Nammu, queen of the abyss and Enki's
- mother, bids Enki to "Kneed the 'heart' of the clay that is over the Abzu
- " and "give it form" (Kramer & Maier p. 33) From there the similarities
- cease as the two create several malformed humans and then the two deities
- get into an argument.
-
- Returning to Enki and Ninhursag, we find a possible parallel to the
- creation of Eve. Enki consumed the plants that were Ninhursag's children
- and so was cursed by Ninhursag, receiving one wound for each plant
- consumed. Enlil and a fox act on Enki's behalf to call back Ninhursag in
- order to undo the damage. She joins with him again and bears eight new
- children, each of whom are the cure to one of his wounds. The one who
- cures his rib is named Ninti, whose name means the Queen of months,
- (Kramer & Maier 1989: pp. 28-30) the lady of the rib, or she who makes
- live. This association carries over to Eve. (Kramer, History Begins at
- Sumer 1981: pp. 143-144) In Genesis, Eve is fashioned from Adam's rib and
- her name hawwa is related to the Hebrew word hay or living. (New American
- Bible p. 7.) The prologue of "Gilgamesh, Enkidu and the Underworld" may
- contain the predecessor to the tree of knowledge of good and evil. This
- tree not only contains a crafty serpent, but also Lilith, the legendary
- first wife of Adam. The huluppu tree is transplanted by Inanna from the
- banks of the Euphrates to her garden in Uruk, where she finds that:
-
- ...a serpent who could not be charmed
- made its nest in the roots of the tree,
- The Anzu bird set his young in the branches of the tree,
- And the dark maid Lilith built her home in the trunk.
- (Wolkstein and Kramer 1983: p. 8)
-
- It should be noted that Kramer's interpretation that this creature is
- Lilith has come into quiestion of late. See
- http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~humm/Topics/Lilith/relief_question.html#KRAEMERCRIT
-
- Another possible Sumerian carry-over related to the Fall of man is the
- lack of "pangs of childbearing" for those in Dilmun. In particular,
- Ninhursag gives birth in nine days, not nine months, and the pass "like
- good princely cream" (Kramer 1981: p. 142,145) or "fine oil" (Kramer &
- Maier 1989: p. 25)
-
- The quarrels between herder god and farmer deity pairs such as Lahar
- and Ashnan or Enten and Emesh are similar in some respects to the quarrels
- of Cain and Abel. In the Sumerian versions death appears to be avoided,
- although we do not have the complete Lahar and Ashnan story. (Kramer 1961
- pp. 49-51, 53-54)
-
- The ten patriarchs in Genesis born prior to the flood lived very long
- lives, most in excess of 900 years. The seventh patriarch, Enoch, lived
- _only_ 365 years before he "walked with God". (Genesis 5) The eight
- antediluvian kings of in the Sumerian King List also lived for hundreds
- of years. (Kramer 1963 p. 328)
-
- The clearest Biblical parallel comes from the story of the Flood. In
- the Sumerian version, the pious Ziusudra is informed of the gods decision
- to destroy mankind by listening to a wall. He too weathers the deluge
- aboard a huge boat. Noah's flood lasts a long time, but Ziusudra comes
- to rest within seven days and not the near year of the Bible. He does not
- receive a covenant, but is given eternal life. (Kramer 1963
- pp. 163-164; Kramer 1961 pp. 97-98)
-
- As far as the New Testament goes, many also draw a parallel between
- Dumuzi and Jesus because Dumuzi is a shepherd and he is resurrected from
- the dead. This is perhaps appealing to some as Dumuzi's Akkadian analog,
- Tammuz, appears in the Bible, however Dumuzi's periodic return from the
- underworld is not unique even in Sumerian literature. His sister,
- Geshtinanna, also rises from the dead, and if one counts those born as
- deities, Inanna does as well. Periodic death and rebirth is a common theme
- in agricultural myths where the return of the deities from the earth mirrors
- a return to life of plants.
-
- VII. Sources
-
- Black, Jeremy and Green, Anthony, _Gods, Demons and Symbols of Ancient
- Mesopotamia: An Illustrated Dictionary_, University of Texas Press,
- Austin, 1992. This up-to-date and thorough resource on Mesopotamian
- mythology has great photos and illustrations by Tessa Rickards and
- very useful entries which often indicate the times and places when
- variant tales were current. My only complaint is that it is not always
- clear whether information in an entry is applicable to the Sumerian,
- Akkadian, or both versions of a particular deity or hero.
- Crawford, Harriet, _Sumer and the Sumerians_, Cambridge University Press,
- Cambridge, 1991. (This is a briefer but more up to date archaeological
- look at the Sumerians than you'll find with Kramer. There isn't much
- mythic content in this one, but there are many wonderful figures
- detailing city plans, and the structure of temples and other
- buildings.)
- Kramer, Samuel Noah, and Maier, John, _Myths of Enki, the Crafty God_,
- Oxford University Press, New York,1989. The most recent work that
- I've been able to find by Kramer. They translate and analyze all
- of the availible myths which include Enki. I've only seen it availible
- in hardcover and I haven't seen it in a bookstore yet.
- Kramer, Samuel Noah, _Sumerian Mythology_, Harper & Brothers, New York,
- 1961. This slim volume contains much of the mythological material that
- wound up in _The Sumerians_ but concentrated in one spot and without
- much cultural or historical detail. Many of the myths are more developed
- here, some of which are only glossed over in _The Sumerians_, however in
- some cases _The Sumerians_ holds the more complete or updated myth.
- Kramer, Samuel Noah _The Sumerians_ The University of Chicago Press,
- Chicago,1963. This is a more thorough work than Kramer's
- Section at the end of _Inanna_, but the intervening 20 or so years
- of additional research and translation allow _Inanna_'s section
- to be perhaps more complete, regarding mythology.
- Wolkstein, Diane and Kramer, Samuel Noah, _Inanna: Queen of Heaven and
- Earth_, Harper & Row, NY, 1983. Ms. Wolkstein's verse
- translations of the Inanna/Dummuzi cycle of myths are excellent,
- and Kramer gives a 30 or so page description of Sumerian cosmology
- and society at the end.
- _The New American Bible_, Catholic Book Publishing Co., New York,
- 1970.
-
- VIII. Other books of interest
-
- Algaze, Guillermo, "The Uruk Expansion", Current Anthropology, Dec.
- 1989. This article helped with the introduction material.
- Hooke, S. H. _Middle Eastern Mythology_, Penguin Books, New York,
- 1963.
- This work covers Sumerian, Babylonian, Canaanite/Ugaritic, Hittite,
- and Hebrew mythologic material in brief and with comparisons.
- Fagan, B. M., _People of the Earth_, Glenview Il, Scott Forsman,
- 1989. This archaeology text book helped provide some of the
- introductory material.
- Jacobsen, Thorkild, _The Treasures of Darkness_, Yale University Press,
- New Haven, 1976. A good alternative to Kramer, Jacobsen explores
- Mesopotamian religious development from early Sumerian times through
- the Babylonian Enuma Elish. Most of the book winds up being on
- the Sumerians.
- Kramer, Samuel Noah, _History Begins at Sumer_, University of
- Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 1981. This text runs through a bunch
- of "firsts" that Kramer attributes to the Sumerians. I only looked at
- it briefly, but it seemed to contain about the same information as
- was in _The Sumerians_ only in a "Wow neat!" format instead of
- something more coherent.
- Pritchard J. B., _Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament_,
- Princeton, 1955. I understand that there is a later edition of this
- work. It seems to be the authoritative source for all complete texts
- of the Sumerians, Babylonians, Canaanites, Hittites, and perhaps
- other groups as well. It's pricy but many libraries have a copy.
- Stephenson, Neal, _Snowcrash_, Bantam Books, New York, 1992. Cyberpunk
- meets "Inanna, Enki, and the "me"".
- Wooley, C. Leonard, _Excavations at Ur_, 1954. This is one of the
- earlier works on the subject, and as such is not as complete as
- the others although it is of historical interest.
-
- See also the Assyro-Babylonian Mythology FAQ.
-
-