Showing posts with label Sumerian Goddess. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sumerian Goddess. Show all posts

Goddess Uttu

 



Uttu: Sumerian goddess of the arts of the home.

Uttu, who is regarded as the ideal wife, is in charge of the household and the art of weaving.

She is an expert in herbal medicine and assists in difficult childbirths.

Uttu represents the "behind-the-scenes" power that is at the root of every happy marriage and successful husband.


~Kiran Atma

Goddess Ninlil

 


 


Ninlil: Sumerian birth goddess.

Ninsun was raped (some say seduced) and pregnant several times by her husband, Enlil, who pretended to be water spirits and guardians.

She gave birth to three offspring as a result of these interludes, becoming the mother of the moon, rivers, and the underworld.

Ninlil is a goddess of barley and flora who assists in the treatment of infertility and barrenness.

She assists women in recovering from the trauma of rape and guiding them toward wholeness.


~Kiran Atma


Goddess Ninti


 


Ninti (Sumerian for "life") is a Sumerian goddess of life.

Ninti is a goddess of childbirth and healing.

Her name means "Lady of the Rib" or "Lady of Life" in English.

She fashions children' bones from their mothers' ribs, which were formerly regarded as the "bones of life" in ancient Sumer.

Ninti treats shattered bones and disorders affecting the skeleton.


~Kiran Atma


Goddess Ningal

 



Ningal: Goddess of Languages in Sumerian mythology.

Ningal is the goddess of insight and interpretation.

She decodes forgotten languages and misunderstood texts, as well as the meanings of dreams and oracular phrases.

Ningal, who is also a love deity, transforms from the moon god's maiden bride to Inanna's mother, and embraces the role by teaching her daughter everything she knows about marriage, sexuality, and the feminine mysteries.

Ningal, whose name means "Great Queen" in Sumerian and which is also known as Nikkal in Akkadian, was a Mesopotamian goddess who was thought to be the spouse of the moon deity Nanna/Sin. 

She was especially connected to his two primary cult sites, Ur and Harran, but they were also venerated in tandem in other Mesopotamian towns. 

The Third Dynasty of Ur and subsequent Larsa rulers had a special reverence for her.

While Ningal was a significant goddess in the Mesopotamian pantheon and worship of her is documented from all eras of Mesopotamian history, academics claim that the majority of her personality was "passive and supportive." Along with her husband, she served as Ur's tutelary deity; she was sometimes described to as Ur's "woman" or "mother."


It has been hypothesized that Ningal, like her husband, was a part-time astral god based on certain of her epithets.

U5-bi2 was a kind of bird that may have been connected to Ningal, although the evidence is unclear. 

However, it is considered that even in Ur, sculptures of a goddess accompanied by a water bird of the species Anserini, widely known from digs, were more likely to symbolize Nanshe

Other suggested identities for this animal are the greylag geese and the whooper swan. 

Ningal was also known as zirru, which might refer to a female bird. 

Some of Nanna's en priestesses, particularly Enheduanna, the daughter of Sargon, were also known to as zirru.

Ningal was shown in a variety of ways, and her iconography is inconsistent. 

Ningal is seen sitting on her husband's lap on the Ur-Nammu stele. 

This kind of representation, which is also found for Bau and Ningirsu, was intended to stress the deities' capacity for cooperation and to show how closely they were connected. 

Ningal has also been shown resting on a lion's throne. 

In addition, it has been suggested that Ningal may appear in artwork as a sitting goddess holding her husband's sign, the moon crescent.


The phrase "hand of Ningal" was used to describe an unnamed skin condition. 

Similar titles have been used to describe a number of other deities, including Sin, Adad, Shamash, and Geshtinanna.

The goddess Ningikuga, also known as the "woman of the clean reed" in Sumerian, was the mother of Ningal. 

Although she is merely another goddess in Enki's circle in an Old Babylonian predecessor of the god list An = Anum, it immediately links her to Damkina. 

In a single balbale composition as well as in an emesal love song, she is specifically referred to as Ningal's mother. 

As "the clean one who purifies the world," Ningikuga might also be the name of a manifestation of Ningal.

Nanna, a moon deity, was Ningal's spouse (Akkadian Sin). 

Although less often than Adad and Shala or Shamash and Aya, they were sometimes mentioned as a pair in the inscriptions on cylinder seals. 

In Hurrian (Kusuh or Umbu), Hittite, and Ugaritic (Yarikh) accounts, derivatives of Ningal were seen as being wedded to various moon gods.

Their two most famous offspring were Utu/Shamash, who stood in for the sun, and Inanna/Ishtar, who stood in for the morning star. 

The most often reported legend about Inanna's ancestry is the idea that she was a daughter of Nanna and Ningal.

The Hurrian and Elamite goddess Pinikir is described as the daughter of Sin and Ningal in an Akkadian text that may be found in a corpus of Hurro-Hittite rites due to her identification with Inanna/Ishtar.

The goddesses Amarra-uzu and Amarra-he'ea, recognized from the god list An = Anum, Ningublaga (the city god of Ki'abrig), and Numushda are additional reasonably often documented offspring of Ningal and Nanna (the city god of Kazallu).

Manzat, an Akkadian and Elamite goddess of the rainbow, makes an appearance in a single Maqlû invocation as Shamash's sister and, therefore, as the child of Ningal and Sin.

Nuska was considered as the son of Ningal and her spouse in later accounts from Harran.


The god list An = Anum attests that Ningal was thought to have a sukkal (attendant deity), like many other deities, however the pronunciation of their name, dMEkà-kàME, is still up for debate. 

Manfred Krebernik believes that this god and the holy messenger Kakka are one and the same. 

Richard L. Litke notes that the gloss is unlikely to refer to a pronunciation of the sign ME that is otherwise unknown and suggests that the god mentioned was called Meme while Kakka was included in the same position in a different version of the list. 

He makes the assumption that Kakka in this context should be viewed as a different deity from the male messenger god who is often linked with Ninkarrak. 

Mari accounts mention a medicinal goddess by the name of Kakka who is connected to Ninkarrak and Ninshubur.

Ningal, who is described as "of Nippur," coexists in an inscription with the Nisaba-like scribe goddess Ninimma, also from that city.

The primary cult centers of her husband, Ur and Harran, as well as Babylon, Isin, Kisurra, Larsa, Sippar, Urum, and Tutub, all had shrines to Ningal. 

Her relationship with Ur was exceptionally strong; literary works have likened her and the city as a mother and her kid. 

She also shows up in laments for the city, lamenting its destruction. 

The Ur-Namma stele suggests that Ningal was probably the most revered deity in Ur's pantheon at the time of his rule.


Ningal was referred to as his mother by Shulgi of Ur. 

Additionally, he converted the Sumerian temple of Nanna in Ga'esh, Ekarzida, where she was referred to as Nin-Urimma, "lady of Ur," into a Ningal shrine.

The Gipar, the home of the high priestess of Nanna, and the temple of Ningal at Ur were united into an one structure during the Old Babylonian era. 

Her main sanctuary inside it was given the ceremonial name Egarku, which is Sumerian meaning "residence, holy boudoir," and can be seen in the inscriptions of monarchs like Nur-Adad and Warad-Sin. 

Eidlurugukalamma, restored by Silli-Adad, was another temple in the Gipar dedicated to her. 

Its Sumerian name translates to "home of the river ordeal of the land." Kurigalzu I constructed a second temple of Ningal at Ur during the Kassite era; its name is still unknown.

Kings of Larsa during the Isin-Larsa era, particularly Warad-Sin and Rim-Sin, actively worshiped Ningal and regarded Ur as a city of exceptional religious and political significance. 

Kings of the Manana dynasty of Kish were also patrons of a combined worship center of Sin and Ningal, the site of which is unknown.

According to letters from Ashurbanipal's reign, Ningal and Sin took over as Kissig's tutelary gods from Inanna and Dumuzi in later times.



Nereb (Al-Nayrab), near the present city of Aleppo, was an Aramaic center of the worship of Ningal that is documented from records from the first millennium BCE. 

It was most likely influenced by the Harran temple. According to records from Ashurbanipal's reign, there was a shrine of Ningal called Egipar in Harran itself, although it was a portion of Sin's Ehulhul rather than a distinct temple.

During the Neo-Babylonian era, Ningal was still revered in Ur. Nabonidus there constructed her temple. 

Ningal was also connected to a bt ili, "house of pressing," which is said to have been a pharmacy and a garden where the components for different medications were cultivated.

The religion of Ningal extended from Mesopotamia to various places, including as the Hittite Empire, Ugarit, and Hurrian kingdoms like Kizzuwatna. 

Cultures that included Ningal into their pantheons kept the idea that she was the moon god's wife and the sun god's mother.

There are a number of Hittite theophoric names that refer to her, with queen Nikkal-mati and her child Ashmu-Nikkal serving as significant examples. 

Ugarit provides comparable evidence.


The Ugaritic Nikkal, also known as Nikkal-wa-Ib, belonged to both the Ugaritic and Hurrian pantheons of the city and is documented as the spouse of both the Hurrian Kuu and the local moon deity Yarikh. 

She is linked to the otherwise unnamed deity rb in a Ugaritic tale, who may have been seen of as her father. 

He is believed to be of Hurrian descent, much like at least some of the composition's own components.

There are relatively few non-Hurrian non-Ugaritic Nikkal attestations from regions where West Semitic languages were spoken in the first and second millennia BCE, however this may be due to selective preservation.

Nikkal is only mentioned in one magical papyrus from Egypt, where she appears as a foreign divinity who is prayed to for help with a particular ailment.


Ningal was born to Ninhursag and Enki in the city of Ur, where the first cities in the marshes of southern Mesopotamia were constructed entirely out of reeds without the use of nails or wood. 

She goes by the name Nikkal and her name means The Great Lady.

She was the first to fall in love with Nanna, the moon god, when she first saw him flying over the night sky as a young, attractive female. 

She accepts his invitation to meet him by the marshes with joy. 

She can't resist him despite being a little bashful. 

She meets Nanna near the marshes, where they spend a number of private nights together while experiencing a passionate and honeyed-mooned love.


Ningal as the Moon God's Maiden Bride.

On the eve of the Dark Moon one night, Nanna bids Ningal farewell and makes a promise to see her again in two nights. 

He ascends to the sky to return home, but soon becomes impatient and returns to Earth in the disguise of a pilgrim to ask for protection. 

He knocks on Ningal's door and urges her to accompany him back in the marshes when she answers. 

Ningal has changed since then. She is no longer as subservient as she was when they first met since she has grown up. 

This time, she is firm and urges him to wait, stating that in order for their relationship to continue, he must first grant her a number of requests. 

Her demands, however, are not made out of self-interest but rather for the good of the marshes, the land, and the progeny of both wild and domestic animals.


~Kiran Atma


Goddess Ninhursag

 



Ninhursag: Great Sumerian goddess.

Ninhursag is the primal mother who formed mankind from clay, and she is revered by all Mesopotamian societies and cults.

She is associated with serpents and cows, and the milk from her breast feeds the cosmos.

She is a goddess of healing who is in charge of herbal remedies and all sorts of vegetative fertility.

Her name means "Lady of the Mountain" in English.

Ningal was born to Ninhursag and Enki in the city of Ur, where the first cities in the marshes of southern Mesopotamia were constructed entirely out of reeds without the use of nails or wood. 


~Kiran Atma


Goddess Ninkasi

 



Ninkasi: Sumerian alcohol goddess.

Ninkasi is the mother of all beers, and it was produced by Ninhursag to cure and fulfill the heart's aspirations.

Her admirers bring her fragrances and fresh water as she dominates unheeded passion and self-assurance.


~Kiran Atma


Goddess Nammu

 



Nammu: Sumerian goddess of creation.

Nammu is the mother of heaven, earth, and the sea, having created the cosmos on her alone without the help of a spouse.

She is the life-giving water that nourishes both humans and gods, and she is accompanied by seven other goddesses who serve as her handmaidens.


~Kiran Atma

Goddess Lilith Or Lilit

 




Lilith, or Lilit: Sumerian wind goddess.

In Sumer, Lilith is regarded to be the first Queen of Heaven.

Lilith's attributes gradually blended with Inanna's, and she became Inanna's handmaiden and constant companion.

She is the goddess of the elements of air, wind, and storms, and she seduces men into temples for sexual ceremonies.

Lilith was changed into Adam's first wife and mixed with legends of witches and demons to explain her domineering personality as Hebrew traditions expanded across the Middle East.

Lilith was pictured as a full-figured lady with the wings and claws of a bird in Sumer; the Hebrews subsequently described her as half woman, half snake.

The screech owl and the black moon are her emblems.


~Kiran Atma


Goddess Inanna

 




Inanna is the Sumerian goddess of love and battle.

Inanna was revered throughout Mesopotamia as the Queen of Heaven and Earth, and was known to the Babylonians as Ishtar.

She is the morning and evening stars, and she is a lunar deity.

Her seductive and sensuous abilities made her a symbol of fertility and mating rites.

Inanna, Ereshkigal's sister, enhances the light side of the soul by teaching knowledge and life and death magick.

She safeguarded her city and people as a battle goddess, delivering justice and enforcing the rules of the realm.

The lion and the eight-pointed star are her emblems.


~Kiran Atma



Goddess Ereshkigal



 

 

Goddess of the Underworld in Sumerian mythology.

Ereshkigal was revered across Mesopotamia, with the majority of her followers in Sumer and Babylon.

She is the goddess of Irkalla, the realm of the dead in the underworld.

Ereshkigal, Inanna/older Ishtar's sister and counterpart, symbolizes the dark, the unseen, the shadow aspect of the soul.

Only she has the ability to make laws, pronounce judgment, and wield power in the underworld.

Nergal is her consort, and their love tale is often celebrated in Mesopotamian hymns.

~Kiran Atma


Goddess Amashilamma





    Sumerian fertility goddess Amashilamma. 


    • Amashilamma, is usually portrayed as a cow. 
    • Amashilamma bestowed wealth and lush fields to the Sumerians.





    Amashilama is also sometimes portrayed as a divine leech and the sister of the deity Damu, according to Mesopotamian mythology. 





    After her brother dies and goes to the underworld, their mother digs out his blood, chops it up, and feeds it to Amashilama along with a beer mixture in the hopes of resurrecting Damu. 


    Damu, however, understands he is dead after seeing their attempts and says that he is no longer in the "grass that will sprout for his mother again," nor in the "waters that will rise." 

    His mother blesses him, and Amashilama dies to join him in the afterlife, informing him that "the day that dawns for you will also dawn for me; the day you see, I will see."

    Elutil is her given name, which means "the temple (that provides) life to man." é meaning ‘house’ and lú ‘man’ meaning ‘temple’ and tìl meaning ‘life’.



    Ninazu and his wife Ningiridda had a son named Ningishzida. 


    A naccount of Ningirida and her son is one of the rare allusions to deities nursing in Mesopotamian literature. 

    Amashilama and Labarshilama were his sisters.




    Amashilama  according to the collection of laments, 'In the Desert by the Early Grass'. 



    Demons encourage Inanna to conquer the Underworld in 'Dumuzid and Geshtinanna'. 


    Rather, she surrenders Dumuzid to them. 

    Dumuzid's feet, wrists, and neck are bound in stocks, and he is tortured with hot pokers. 

    They strip him down to his underwear, perform "evil" on him, and cover his face with his own clothing. 

    Finally, Dumuzid asks Utu for assistance. 

    Utu changes Dumuzid into a half-eagle, half-snake monster, enabling him to return to Geshtinanna. 


    Dumuzid is pursued by the "seven terrible deputies of the netherworld" in The Most Bitter Cry, and while fleeing, he falls into a river. 


    He is taken into the Underworld beside an apple tree on the other bank, where everything "exists" and "does not exist," perhaps implying that they exist in insubstantial or immaterial forms.


    Damu, the "dead anointed one," is brought down to the Underworld by demons who blindfold him, bind him up, and stop him from resting, according to a collection of lamentations for Dumuzid titled In the Desert by the Early Grass. 

    Damu's mother attempts to accompany him into the Underworld, but he is now a ghost that "lies in" the winds, "in the lightnings, and in tornadoes." Damu's mother is similarly unable to consume or drink the food or water in the Underworld due to it being "bad." 

    Damu walks along the Underworld's Highway and meets a variety of ghosts. 


    He encounters the spirit of a tiny child, who informs him that the child has gone missing; the ghost of a singer offers to follow the child. 

    Damu requests that the spirits deliver a message to his mother, but they are unable to do so since they are dead, and the living are unable to hear the voices of the dead. 

    Amashilama, a heavenly leech and the sister of the deity Damu. 

    Damu dies and goes to the Underworld. Damu's mother digs out his blood and slices it up at her son's request. 


    She brings the congealed blood to Amashilama, who incorporates it into a beer concoction that Damu must consume in order to resurrect. 

    Damu, on the other hand, recognizes that he is no longer alive and asserts that he will not be found in the "grass that will grow for his mother again," nor in the "waters that will rise." 

    Amashilama dies to join Damu in the Underworld after Damu's mother blesses him. 

    "The day that dawns for you will likewise dawn for me; the day you see, I will also see," she says, alluding to how day in the world above is darkness in the Underworld.







    References And Further Reading:




    • Auset, P.B., 2009. The goddess guide: Exploring the attributes and correspondences of the divine feminine. Llewellyn Worldwide.
    • Ansky, S., 1992. The Harps that Once... In The Harps that Once.... Yale University Press.
    • Jacobsen, T., 1987. The Harps that once--: Sumerian poetry in translation. Yale University Press.
    • Shushan, G. ed., 2009. Conceptions of the afterlife in early civilizations: universalism, constructivism and near-death experience (Vol. 6). A&C Black.
    • Soares, L., 2019. Dicionário De Mitologia Mesopotâmica. Clube de Autores.