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Anu

Anu (Akkadian: 𒀭𒀭 ANU, from 𒀭 an “Sky”, “Heaven”) or Anum, originally An (Sumerian: 𒀭 An),[10] was the divine personification of the sky, king of the gods, and ancestor of many of the deities in ancient Mesopotamian religion. He was regarded as a source of both divine and human kingship, and opens the enumerations of deities in many Mesopotamian texts. At the same time, his role was largely passive, and he was not commonly worshipped. It is sometimes proposed that the Eanna temple located in Uruk originally belonged to him, rather than Inanna, but while he is well attested as one of its divine inhabitants, there is no evidence that the main deity of the temple ever changed, and Inanna was already associated with it in the earliest sources. After it declined, a new theological system developed in the same city under Seleucid rule, resulting in Anu being redefined as an active deity. As a result he was actively worshipped by inhabitants of the city in the final centuries of the history of ancient Mesopotamia.

Anu
𒀭𒀭
Sky Father, King of the Gods
Symbols of various deities, including Anu (bottom right corner) on a kudurru of Ritti-Marduk, from Sippar, Iraq, 1125–1104 BCE
Abodeheaven
Symbolhorned crown on a pedestal
Number60
Personal information
Parents
Consort
Children
Enki, Ishkur, Bau, Ninisina, Ninkarrak, Amurru, Gibil, Urash, Nisaba (sometimes),[1] Enlil (sometimes),[2][3] Inanna (sometimes)
Equivalents
Greek equivalentZeus (disputed),[5] Uranus[6]
Elamite equivalentJabru[7]
Hurrian equivalentHamurnu[8]
Achaemenid equivalentAhura Mazda[5] (disputed)[9]

Multiple traditions regarding the identity of Anu's spouse existed, though three of them—Ki, Urash, and Antu—were at various points in time equated with each other, and all three represented earth, similar to how he represented heaven. In a fourth tradition, more sparsely attested, his wife was the goddess Nammu instead. In addition to listing his spouses and children, god lists also often enumerated his various ancestors, such as Anshar or Alala. A variant of one such family tree formed the basis of the Enūma Eliš.

Anu briefly appears in the Akkadian Epic of Gilgamesh, in which his daughter Ishtar (the Akkadian counterpart of Inanna) persuades him to give her the Bull of Heaven so that she may send it to attack Gilgamesh. The incident results in the death of the Bull of Heaven and a leg being thrown at Ishtar's head. In another myth, Anu summons the mortal hero Adapa before him for breaking the wing of the south wind. Anu orders for Adapa to be given the food and water of immortality, which Adapa refuses, having been warned beforehand by Enki that Anu will offer him the food and water of death. In the Hurrian myths about Kumarbi, known chiefly from their Hittite translations, Anu is a former ruler of the gods, who was overthrown by Kumarbi, who bit off his genitals and gave birth to the weather god Teshub. It is possible that this narrative was later the inspiration for the castration of Ouranos in Hesiod's Theogony. It has also been proposed that in the Hellenistic period Anu might have been identified with Zeus, though this remains uncertain.

Character

Anu was a divine representation of the sky,[11] as indicated by his name, which simply means "sky" in Sumerian.[12] In Akkadian, it was spelled as Anu, and was written either logographically (dAN) or syllabically (da-nu(m)).[10] In Sumerian texts, unlike the names of other deities, his was never prefaced by the dingir sign, referred to as the "divine determinative" in modern literature, since it would result in unnecessary repetition, as the same sign was also read as an.[13] In addition to referring to sky and heaven and to Anu, the same sign could also be read as dingir or ilu, the generic term "god" in, respectively, Sumerian and Akkadian.[10] As the number 60 was associated with him,[14] the corresponding numeral could represent his name,[10] and in esoteric texts by extension also the other readings of the sign DINGIR.[15]

Anu was regarded as the supreme god,[10][16] and the major god lists, such as An = Anum, place him on top of the pantheon.[9] He could be described as the king of the gods,[17] and was believed to be the source of all legitimate power, who bestowed the right to rule upon gods and kings alike.[16][10] The highest god in the pantheon was said to possess the anûtu or anuti (da-nu-ti), which means "heavenly power"[10] or more literally Anuship.[18] In the Babylonian Enûma Eliš, the gods praise Marduk, shouting "Your word is Anu!"[10]

Although Anu was a very important deity, his nature was often ambiguous and ill-defined.[16] The number of myths focusing on him is small[19] and he was only rarely actively worshiped.[20] His position has therefore been described as that of a "figurehead" and "otiose deity" by Assyriologist Paul-Alain Beaulieu.[21] Wilfred G. Lambert characterized his position as head of the pantheon as "always somewhat nominal" and noted that "Enlil in practice wielded greater power" according to the Mesopotamians.[22] Beaulieu similarly states that functionally the active head god was Enlil and later Marduk in Babylonia and Ashur in Assyria, not Anu.[23] Evidence from Lagash indicates that at least in the Early Dynastic period, during the reign of Eannatum and Entemena, it was Enlil, rather than Anu, who was the head of the pantheon of this city, though later offering lists provide evidence on the contrary, possibly indicating a change occurred during the reign of either the Sargonic dynasty or Gudea.[24] Xianhua Wang points out that in the Early Dynastic period, the rulers who mention Anu in the inscriptions and refer to him as lugal kur-kur, "king of the lands," seem to be connected with either Ur or Uruk, while elsewhere the same epithet designates Enlil instead.[25] A text known from copies from Shuruppak and Ebla only refers to Anu as the divine "king of Uruk."[26] In later inscriptions from the period of the Old Babylonian Empire, Enlil could be mentioned both alongside Anu or on his own as the head of the pantheon.[27] A trinity consisting of both of them and Ea is also attested.[28] Only in Uruk in the final centuries of the first millennium BCE a change occurred, and Anu was reinvented by theologians as an active god.[23]

Astral role

In Mesopotamian astronomy, the sky was divided into three zones, with the stars closest to the pole belonging to Enlil and those close to the equator to Ea.[28] The stars located between these two zones were the domain of Anu.[28] All three were referred to as the "Ways" of the respective deities.[29] Astronomer John G. Rogers assumes that the boundaries of each Way were at 17°N and 17°S.[30] The division is best attested in the astronomical treatise MUL.APIN.[28] The date of its composition is unknown, though it is known that it is more recent than the Old Babylonian period, and the oldest reference to the tripartite division of the sky comes from a document from the thirteenth century BCE, a version of the so-called Prayer to the Gods of the Night, whose oldest copies do not mention this concept yet.[28]

In Seleucid Uruk, Anu's astral role was extended further, and in a text composed in year 71 of the Seleucid era (216/215 BCE) he is described as responsible for the entire firmament.[31] Furthermore, two circumpolar stars started to be called the "Great Anu and Antu of Heaven," and received offerings as if they were deities.[31] They typically appear alongside the other seven major celestial bodies which were known to Mesopotamian astronomers in the late first millennium BCE: the sun, the moon, and the planets Nebēru (Jupiter), Dilbat (Venus), Šiḫṭu (Mercury), Kayamānu (Saturn), and Ṣalbatānu (Mars).[32]

Iconography

Anu almost never appears in Mesopotamian artwork and has no known recognizable anthropomorphic iconography.[16] References to him holding typical symbols of divine kingship, such as a scepter and a ring-shaped object, are known from textual sources.[33]

A text from the Kassite period explains that Anu's symbol was a horned crown on a pedestal.[34] It is attested on some kudurru (boundary stones),[34] where it is typically present in the upper half of the decoration, below the symbols of Ishtar, Shamash and Sin, who were depicted on the very top of such monuments due to representing celestial bodies.[35] Anu was also depicted in the form of a horned crown in Neo-Assyrian reliefs.[36] According to Andrew R. George, references to the "seat" of a deity known from various topographical texts from both Babylonia and Assyria likely also refer to a representation in the form of an emblem placed on a pedestal.[37] It has been pointed out that Anu's symbolic depictions were identical to Enlil's.[38] A similar symbol could also represent Assur in the Neo-Assyrian period.[36] All three of these gods could be depicted in this form in the same reliefs.[36]

Associations with other deities

Spouses

 
A foundation figurine of king Lugal-kisalsi. The inscription mentions Nammu and Anu as wife and husband.[39]

Ki, "earth," is well attested as Anu's spouse.[13] Her name was commonly written without a divine determinative, and she was usually not regarded as a personified goddess.[40][13] Another of Anu's spouses was Urash.[41] According to Frans Wiggermann, she is his most commonly attested wife.[4] She is well attested starting with the Sargonic period and continues to appear as a wife of Anu often until the Old Babylonian period.[42] A different, male, deity named Urash served as the tutelary god of Dilbat.[43] Wiggermann proposes that while Ki, as generally agreed, represented earth as a cosmogonic element,[40] Urash was a divine representation of arable land.[44] He suggests translating her name as "tilth,"[4] though its etymology and meaning continue to be a matter of debate.[42] A single Neo-Assyrian god list known from three copies appears to combine Ki and Urash into a single deity, dki-uraš.[45][46] An early incorrect reading of this entry was dki-ib, which early Assyriologist Daniel David Luckenbill assumed to be a reference to the Egyptian god Geb, an identification now regarded as impossible.[47][46]

The goddess Antu is also attested as a wife of Anu.[48] Her name is etymologically an Akkadian feminine form of Anu.[46] The god list An = Anum equates her with Ki,[49] while a lexical text from the Old Babylonian period – with Urash.[46] There is evidence that like the latter, she could be considered a goddess associated with the earth.[40] She is already attested in the third millennium BCE, possibly as early as in the Early Dynastic period in a god list from Abu Salabikh,[46] though no references to her are known from Uruk from before the first millennium BCE, and even in the Neo-Babylonian period she only appears in a single letter.[50] However, she is attested as Anu's wife in documents from the Seleucid period from this city,[31] and at that point in time became its lead goddess alongside her husband.[51]

An inscription on a votive figurine of king Lugal-kisalsi (or Lugal-giparesi), who ruled over Uruk and Ur in the twenty-fourth century BCE, refers to Nammu as the wife of Anu.[39] Julia Krul proposes that this was a traditional pairing in Early Dynastic Uruk,[52] but according to Frans Wiggermann no other direct references to Nammu as Anu's wife are known.[4] A possible exception is an Old Babylonian incantation which might refer to her as "pure one of An," but this attestation is uncertain.[4]

In older literature, an epithet of Ashratum was often translated as "bride of An," but this is now considered to be a mistake.[53] The Sumerian term used in it, é-gi4-a, equivalent of Akkadian kallatum, meant both "daughter-in-law" and "bride," but the latter meaning relied on the social practice of fathers picking the brides of their sons.[53] As an epithet of goddesses, it denotes their status as a daughter-in-law of a specific deity.[54] For example, Aya was often called kallatum due to her position as the daughter-in-law of Sin and wife of his son Shamash.[55]

A goddess named Ninursala is described as Anu's dam-bànda, possibly to be translated as "concubine," in the god list An = Anum.[56] According to Antoine Cavigneaux and Manfred Krebernik, she is also attested in an Old Babylonian god list from Mari.[56]

Children

Many deities were regarded as Anu's descendants,[57] and he could be called "the father of the great gods."[58] It has been argued that Anu's primary role in the Sumerian pantheon was as an ancestor figure,[16] and that the term Anunna (also Anunnaki, Anunna-anna), which referred to various Mesopotamian deities collectively,[59] means "offspring of Anu"[60] and designates specific gods as particularly prominent.[61]

Ishkur (Adad), the weather god, was consistently regarded as a son of Anu.[62] While some literary texts may refer to Enlil as his father instead, this view was less common and is no longer attested in any sources later than the Old Babylonian period.[62] The only source to directly name his mother places Urash in this role.[63] Another god frequently regarded as Anu's son was Enki.[64] Nammu was the mother of Enki in the local tradition of Eridu and in the myth Enki and Ninmah, but a hymn from the reign of Ishme-Dagan confirms that a tradition in which his mother was Urash instead also existed.[4] In texts dedicated to Ishkur, he and Enki could be referred to as twins, but no analogous epithet can be found in compositions which focus on the latter god, according to Daniel Schwmer because due to his higher rank in the pantheon he would not benefit from being called the brother of a comparatively lower ranked deity.[65]

Enlil could be called a son of Anu,[66] as already attested in an inscription of Lugalzagesi.[67] Xianhua Wang proposes that this development was meant to reconcile a northern tradition, in which the king of the gods was Enlil, with a southern one, where the same role was played by Anu,[26] though even in the south Lagash seemingly belonged to this proposed Enlil tradition.[68] Another source which presents Enlil as Anu's son is the myth Enki and the World Order, which also specifies that he was the older brother of Enki.[3] However, Enlil's parentage was variable.[2][3] The tradition in which his ancestors were the so-called Enki-Ninki deities is now considered conventional by Assyriologists, though materials pertaining to it are difficult to interpret.[69] Enki, the ancestor of Enlil, is not to be confused with the god Enki, as indicated by the different spelling of their names in cuneiform.[70] In yet another tradition, Enlil's father was Lugaldukuga, but the texts placing him in this role are relatively late.[71] It is first attested in the god list An = Anum,[8] most likely composed in the Kassite period.[72]

Amurru (Martu) was universally regarded as a son of Anu.[73] Dietz-Otto Edzard argued that the fact he was not regarded as a son of Enlil instead might stem from his secondary role in Mesopotamian religion.[73] It is also possible that the comparisons between him and Ishkur contributed to the development of this genealogy.[73] It has additionally been argued that a variant writing of Amurru's name, AN.dMARTU (AN.AN.MAR.TU[74]) represents a conjoined deity consisting of Amurru and Anu.[75] However, according to Paul-Alain Beaulieu it most likely should simply be read as the Akkadian phrase dIl Amurrim, "the god of Amurru," as indicated by a Hurrian translation known from a bilingual text from Emar, de-ni a-mu-ri-we, which has the same meaning.[74]

Texts from the reign of Rim-Sîn I and Samsu-iluna identify the love goddess Nanaya as a daughter of Anu.[76] This notion is also present in an inscription of Esarhaddon.[77] Paul-Alain Beaulieu speculates that Nanaya developed in the context of a local theological system in which Anu and Inanna were viewed as a couple, and that she was initially regarded as their daughter.[78] However, as noted by Olga Drewnowska-Rymarz, direct references to Nanaya as the daughter of Inanna are not common, and it is possible this epithet was not treated literally, but rather as an indication of closeness between them.[76] Furthermore, Nanaya could also be regarded as a daughter of the male Urash, and was sometimes specifically called his firstborn daughter.[79]

In late sources, Nisaba could be called a daughter of Anu.[1] However, as noted by Wilfred G. Lambert at least one text "seems to imply a desire not to have Anu as Nisaba's father,"[80] and instead makes her the daughter of Irḫan, in this context identified with Ea and understood as a cosmic river, "father of the gods of the universe."[81]

While Inanna (Ishtar) could be regarded as the daughter of Anu and Antu, the view that she was a daughter of Nanna[82] and Ningal is agreed to be the most commonly attested tradition regarding her parentage.[83] While the "Standard Babylonian" version of the Epic of Gilgamesh, an astronomical text and the Hymn to the Queen of Nippur refer to her directly as Anu's daughter, according to Paul-Alain Beaulieu it is not impossible that these statements do not reflect parentage but merely indirect descent, with an implied genealogy in which Anu was the father of Enlil, grandfather of Nanna and great-grandfather of Inanna.[82] Furthermore, the hymn in mention also addresses her as a daughter of the moon god.[84]

Ishtaran was at least sometimes described as a son of Anu and Urash, and as a result the Old Babylonian Nippur god list associates him with Uruk.[85] He also could be referred to as Anu Rabu (AN.GAL), "the great Anu,"[1] but Wouter Henkelman proposes this epithet is instead a sign that a connection existed between him and the Elamite god Napirisha, whose name was written with the same combination of cuneiform signs.[86] It is possible that in the late first millennium BCE attempts at syncretizing Ishtaran and Anu were made during a period of cooperation between the theologians from Uruk, Nippur and Der, but direct evidence is presently lacking.[87]

Further deities attested as children of Anu include the medicine goddesses Ninisina and Ninkarrak (also directly identified as daughters of his wife Urash),[88] Bau (who could be called his firstborn daughter),[89] the weaver goddess Uttu (in a single source),[90] the messenger god Papsukkal,[91] Geshtinanna (in a hymn of Shulgi, which also mentions Urash as her mother),[42] the fire god Gibil (and through association with him also Nuska),[92] Šiḫṭu, the divine representation of the planet Mercury (in Seleucid Uruk),[93] and possibly the male Urash.[94] Whether Anu was the father of Shara in the tradition of his cult center, Umma, cannot be determined with a certainty, as the most direct reference, the phrase aia DINGIR ù-TU-zu in a hymn, has two possible translations: "your father An who engendered you," or "your divine father who engendered you."[95] Additionally, some references to Anu as the father of a specific deity might be metaphorical or indirect, as in the case of Nanna (typically a son of Enlil and Ninlil)[96] or Nungal.[97]

Anu could also be regarded as the father of various demons.[98] Lamashtu was viewed his daughter.[99] A group of seven, eight or nine Asakku demons called "the sons of Anu" is also known.[100] In a text referred to as the Nippur Compendium by modern researchers, Latarak is identified both as an Asakku and as a son of Anu.[101] The Epic of Erra describes the Sebitti as his creations, subsequently given to the eponymous god as weapons.[102]

Ancestors

The earliest texts do not discuss Anu's origin, and his preeminence is simply assumed.[10] In later traditions, his father was usually Anshar,[103] whose spouse was Kishar.[104] Another tradition most likely regarded Alala and Belili as his parents.[105] A larger group of his ancestors, arranged into multiple generations, is known from mythological and scholarly sources.[48] Wilfred G. Lambert coined the term "Theogony of Anu" to refer to arrangements of these deities collectively.[70] At least five versions are known from incantations, though in three out of five the first pair are Duri and Dari, and the last – Alala and Belili.[70] A slightly different version is known from the god list An = Anum, though there are differences between individual copies as well.[106] Lambert proposes that initially at least two different traditions existed, but they were later combined into a list patterned on those associated with Enlil.[107] At least in some cases, long lists of divine ancestors were meant to help avoid the implications of divine incest, which were hard to reconcile with strong incest taboos attested from various periods of Mesopotamian history.[108]

Duri and Dari likely represented time understood as a primary force in creation, and their names are derived from an Akkadian phrase meaning "ever and ever."[47] The pairing of Alala and Belili was most likely based entirely on both of their names being iterative, and elsewhere they occur in unrelated roles independently from each other.[109] Further attested pairs of deities regarded as ancestors of Anu include Egur and Gara, whose character is unknown,[47] Lahmu and Lahamu, derived from the name of a type of aquatic mythical creature,[47] two deities whose names were written logographically as dALAM possibly representing another of the known pairs or associated with the underworld,[110] and Enurulla and Ninurulla, the "lord" and "lady" of the "primeval city," whose inclusion in Anu's family tree most likely reflected "the importance of the city in ancient Mesopotamian thought."[111] The genealogy of gods presented in the Enūma Eliš is a derivative of the lists of Anu's ancestors from earlier sources.[70] The pairs listed in this composition are Apsu and Tiamat, Lahmu and Lahamu, and Anshar and Kishar.[70] The first of them is not attested in any earlier sources.[1]

The god list An = Anum refers to Nammu as the "mother who gave birth to Heaven and Earth," dama-tu-an-ki, but as noted by Frans Wiggermann, the terms an and ki were most likely understood collectively in this case.[112] A similar reference is known from an exorcism formula assumed to predate the Middle Babylonian period.[113] There is no indication that this act of creation involved a second deity acting as Nammu's spouse.[112] She appears in a variant of Anu's genealogy in An = Anum, though as remarked by Lambert, she was "pushed out (...) into a kind of appendix."[114] Due to the sparse attestations of Nammu it is assumed today that she "was not generally acknowledged outside Eridu."[114]

A single prayer to Papsukkal might allude to a tradition in which Anu was a son of Enmesharra.[91] In another text, Anu and Enlil receive their positions from this deity, not necessarily peacefully.[91]

Due to his connection with various ancestral deities, Anu could be occasionally associated with the underworld.[115] One Assyrian explanatory text mentions Antu making funerary offerings for him.[116] However, according to Julia Krul, it is impossible to tell how widespread the recognition of this aspect of his character was, and broad statements about Anu being outright identified with deities of the underworld in the theology of Seleucid Uruk should be generally avoided.[31]

In Hurrian tradition

While it is often assumed that Hurrian Alalu was the father of Anu, similar to his Mesopotamian counterpart Alala,[105] and that Kumarbi was in turn viewed as Anu's son,[117] it has also been argued that two separate lineages of gods appear in the prologue of the Kumarbi myth, and therefore that Alalu and Anu should not be regarded as father and son in Hurrian sources.[118] Kumarbi is directly referred to as Alalu's "seed" in the Song of Kummarbi.[119] He also addresses himself as "Alalu's son" in another myth belonging to the same cycle, Song of Ḫedammu.[120] The order of deities in international treaties also supports the notion that Alalu and Kumarbi belong to the same line, but Anu does not.[121] Hittitologist Gary Beckman notes that the two lines were seemingly only united with the birth of the new generation of gods (Teshub, Tashmishu and others), a result of Kumarbi's castration of Anu,[122] which resulted in a "burden," Anu's seed, being placed inside him.[119] The process is poetically compared to production of bronze from tin and copper.[119]

Attendants

Ninshubur, the "archetypal vizier of the gods,"[123] was primarily associated with Inanna, but she could also be described as the sukkal (divine vizier, attendant deity) of Anu.[124] The association between her and Anu is attested from the reign of Third Dynasty of Ur onward.[124] Her role as a popular intercessory deity in Sumerian religion was derived from her position as a servant of major deities, which resulted in the belief that she was capable of mediating with her masters, both with Inanna and with Anu, on behalf of human petitioners.[125] Another deity who could be placed in the same role was Ilabrat.[10] In texts from the second millennium BCE, Ninshubur and Ilabrat coexisted[123] and in at least some cases Ninshubur's name, treated as masculine, was a logographic spelling of Ilabrat's, for example in Mari in personal names.[126] It has been proposed that the variance in Ninshubur's gender is related to syncretism with him.[127] The goddess Amasagnudi could be regarded as Anu's sukkal too, as attested in a single Old Babylonian lexical text.[128] Kakka is also attested in this role in a few cases,[129] though in the Enūma Eliš he is the sukkal of Anshar instead.[130]

In later periods, other sukkals of Anu were eclipsed by Papsukkal, originally associated with the god Zababa, whose rise was likely rooted simply in the presence of the word sukkal in his name.[131] In the context of the so-called "antiquarian theology" relying largely on god lists, which developed in Uruk under Achaemenid and Seleucid rule,[132] he was fully identified with Ninshubur and thus became Anu's sukkal and one of the eighteen major deities of the city.[133] He was not worshiped in this city earlier.[134]

Foreign equivalents

According to a Šurpu commentary, Anu's Elamite counterpart was Jabru.[7] However, according to the god list An = Anum, a god bearing the name Yabnu (dia-ab-na) was the "Enlil of Elam."[135] Wilfred G. Lambert concluded that Jabru and Yabnu should be considered two spellings of the same name.[7] While Jabru is described as an Elamite god in Mesopotamian sources, no known Elamite texts mention him.[7]

In the god list Anšar = Anum, one of the names of Anu is Hamurnu, derived from the Hurrian word referring to heaven.[8] However, while Hurrians did worship earth and heaven, they did not regard them as personified deities.[136] Furthermore, Anu appears under his own name in Hurrian mythology.[137]

While Robert Monti argues that the Canaanites seem to have ascribed Anu's attributes to El,[138] no equivalents of Anu were actually present in the pantheons of various ancient Syrian states.[139] Both the head of the hinterland pantheon, Dagan, and the head of the coastal pantheon, El, were regarded as analogous to Enlil, rather than Anu.[139] Monti additionally describes a god he refers to as "Shamem" as the most direct equivalent to Anu in the Canaanite pantheon and as a personification of the sky,[138] but this name was a title of the weather god Baal which developed into a separate deity, Baalshamin,[140] and Aramaic texts indicate that he was viewed as an equivalent of Hadad, rather than Anu, further east.[141]

It it sometimes proposed that in the Hellenistic period Anu was identified with the Greek god Zeus, but most Assyriologists consider this possibility to be uncertain, one exception being Eleanor Robson.[5] Julia Krul points out authors who propose it do not clarify whether they mean if "the Seleucids made such an equation themselves (...), or that the Urukean priest-scholars convinced their new kings of the similarity between the two gods (...), or even that they genuinely believed that Anu and Zeus were the same."[5] No direct evidence of any of these possibilities is available.[142] According to Walter Burkert, a researcher of ancient Greek religion, direct literary parallels exist between Anu and the Zeus.[143] According to him, the scene from Tablet VI of the Epic of Gilgamesh in which Ishtar comes before Anu after being rejected by Gilgamesh and complains to her mother Antu, but is mildly rebuked by Anu, is directly paralleled by a scene from Book V of the Iliad.[144] In this scene, Aphrodite, who Burkert regards as the later Greek development of Ishtar, is wounded by the Greek hero Diomedes while trying to save her son Aeneas.[145] She flees to Mount Olympus, where she cries to her mother Dione, is mocked by her sister Athena, and is mildly rebuked by her father Zeus.[145] Not only is the narrative parallel significant,[145] but so is the fact that Dione's name is a feminization of Zeus's own, just as Antu is a feminine form of Anu.[145] Dione does not appear throughout the rest of the Iliad, in which Zeus's consort is instead the goddess Hera.[145] Burkert therefore concludes that Dione is clearly a calque of Antu.[145]

An equivalence between Anu and Ahura Mazda has been proposed based on the assumption that non-Persian subjects of the Achaemenid Empire might have viewed the latter simply as a sky god.[5]

Worship

 
Part of the front of a Babylonian temple to Ishtar in Uruk, built c. 1415 BCE, during the Kassite Period (c. 1600—1155 BCE).[146] It has been argued in the past that it was first dedicated to Anu, and only later to Inanna,[147] but this view is no longer regarded as plausible.[148]

Anu was chiefly associated with the city of Uruk, where he was one of the major deities next to Inanna (Ishtar) and Nanaya, but before the end of the Neo-Babylonian period his cult had a smaller scope than theirs.[149] It is often assumed that the so-called "White Temple," which dates back to the Uruk IV period (3500–3100 BCE) was his original cult center, and it is even sometimes referred to as the "Anu ziggurat" in modern literature.[150] However, there is no evidence that Anu was actually worshipped in this structure.[52] His presence in the oldest texts remains a matter of debate, as it is uncertain if the cuneiform sign DINGIR present in them does not necessarily denote a specific god.[52] Paul-Alain Beaulieu concludes that whether he appears in these sources is unprovable.[151]

There is also no indication that Eanna, "House of Heaven" (Sumerian: e2-anna; Cuneiform: 𒂍𒀭 E2.AN[a]), the main temple of Uruk in historical times, was originally the abode of Anu alone, as sometimes proposed in the past.[148] It was already associated with Inanna in the fourth millennium BCE, and her role as the tutelary goddess of Uruk most likely dates at least to this period as well.[148] Julia Krul proposes that even if Anu was already worshiped in the Uruk period, he likely had to share the Eanna temple with Inanna.[52] The oldest texts do not mention the Eanna yet, and it is not certain if a sanctuary most likely called "Ean" attested in them was a temple of Anu and if it corresponded to any later structure.[151] Through the Early Dynastic, Sargonic and Ur III periods, Inanna was the main deity of the city, and Eanna was regarded as her temple first and foremost.[151] The Bassetki inscription of Naram-Sin in particular supports the view that Inanna was the goddess of Uruk and that she was perceived as more significant than Anu.[153] No references to Anu are known from inscriptions of the Ur III rulers mentioning the Eanna, even though he does appear in offering lists.[153] However, royal inscriptions from the Old Babylonian period indicate that Anu was believed to dwell in the Eanna.[52] In the Old Babylonian version of the Epic of Gilgamesh, Eanna is described only as the dwelling of Anu, but the later "Standard Babylonian" version associates it both with Ishtar and Anu.[52] It has been proposed that similar to the Bull of Heaven episode, the former tradition might simply indicate the existence of anti-Ishtar sentiment among compilers of this work.[154] Simultaneously Anu does not play any major role and Inanna is the sole owner of Eanna in the myths about Enmerkar and Lugalbanda, other legendary kings of Uruk commonly referenced in Mesopotamian literature.[155] A mythological tradition in which the Eanna originally belonged to Anu, but was later usurped by Inanna is known from multiple literary compositions,[156] but it might have only been a founding myth explaining how the first temples were established.[148]

Starting in the Ur III period, Anu came to be seen as a member of a triad of foremost deities invoked in royal inscriptions, which also included Enlil and Enki.[157] A seat, known as Barakiskilla ("dais, pure place") and a garden dedicated to him are mentioned in documents from the reign of Ur-Nammu.[158] Their location is uncertain, but Andrew R. George tentatively proposes Ur.[158] In the following Isin-Larsa period, kings of Isin made no reference to Anu in their year formulas.[159] Rim-Sîn I of Larsa revived the tradition and invoked the traditional triad in them, possibly to show that he planned to control all of southern Babylonia.[160] It has been also suggested that one of his predecessors, Gungunum, invoked Anu, Enlil and Nanna as a similar trinity in his inscriptions to show he was in control of their major cult centers.[161] After conquering Rim-Sin I's kingdom, Hammurabi of Babylon started to invoke Anu and Enlil, though not Ea, in his own formulas.[162] Similar evidence is not available from the reign of Samsu-iluna, who only invoked Anu and Enlil in a single inscription most likely pertaining to the reconquest of southern cities.[163] Later kings of the same dynasty only infrequently mentioned the pair, most likely as a part of ceremonial formulas meant to tie their reigns to a longer tradition.[164]

In Assyria, Anu appears for the first time in an inscription of Shamshi-Adad I, who described him as one of the gods who bestowed kingship upon him.[10] A temple of Adad which he built in Assur later came to be dedicated to both the weather god and Anu.[165][166] It was accompanied by a ziggurat, Emelamanna ("house of the radiance of heaven").[167] Daniel Schwemer suggests that the pairing of those two gods was based on the common view that they were father and son.[166]

No direct references to the worship of Anu are known from the part of the Old Babylonian period during which the cults of Uruk were temporarily relocated to Kish in the north of Babylonia.[168] A possible exception is a deity or deities designated by the logogram AN.dINANNA.[168] However, it has also been proposed that it represents not Anu and Inanna as a pair, as commonly assumed,[169] but a specific manifestation of Inanna,[168] Urkitum.[170] Presently there is no agreement regarding this problem in scholarship and which deity or deities it refers to remains uncertain.[171]

In documents from the reign of the First Sealand dynasty, the dyad of Enlil and Ea (Enki) replaced the triad containing Anu.[172] The only god list known from the Sealand archives does not mention Anu at all, and simply begins with Enlil.[173] He is nonetheless attested in a few offering lists.[174] Furthermore, it is possible the name of the king Akurduana might be theophoric and should be translated as "raging flood of Anu," though this remains uncertain and the ordinary word "heaven" might be the correct translation of the sign AN in this case instead.[175]

The so-called Babylonian Temple List most likely composed in the first millennium BCE mentions no temples of Anu, though with the exception of Larsa, Ur and Eridu the southernmost cities are generally poorly represented in it.[176] A single liturgical text indicates that a temple of Anu called Ekinamma possibly existed in Kesh.[177] The hymn BRM IV 8 lists ten names of temples associated with him,[178] including the Eanki[179] and the Egalankia, possibly located in Uruk.[180]

In the Neo-Babylonian period, Anu only had a small sanctuary in Uruk.[181] He has been described as a comparatively minor deity in the religious practice of this period.[181][182] While multiple Neo-Babylonian archives from Uruk have been excavated and published, so far research revealed only a small number of people bearing theophoric names invoking Anu before the reign of Nabonidus, with a total of five being mentioned in known documents according to the highest estimate.[183] The most historically notable example is Anu-aḫu-iddin, who was the governor of Uruk during the reign of Nabopolassar.[184] The number of such names started to rise during the reign of Nabonidus.[185] Documents from the reign of Darius I show further growth, though names invoking chiefly northern Babylonian deities, as well as Nanaya, Ishtar and Shamash (from Larsa) remain numerous.[186] It has been proposed that the changed in favor of Anu accelerated during the reign of Xerxes I.[186] After a rebellion of the northern Babylonian cities against Persian rule in 484 BCE, this king seemingly reorganized the traditional structure of Mesopotamian clergy, and while Uruk did not rebel, it was not exempt from changes.[187] It has been proposed that the older priests, who were often connected to the northern cities and were predominantly involved in the cult of Ishtar, were replaced by a number of powerful local families dedicated to Anu.[187] Julia Krul suggests that their members likely planned to expand the scope of Anu's cult in the Neo-Babylonian period already, but were unable to do so due to the interests of the kings, who favored Marduk as the head of the pantheon.[188]

Theological reforms in Achaemenid and Seleucid Uruk

Xerxes' retaliation against the clergy of Uruk resulted in the collapse of Eanna as the center of Uruk's religious life and economy, and made the creation of a new system centered on the worship of Anu and his spouse of Antu, rather than Ishtar and Nanaya, possible.[188] The details of its early development are not well understood, as Mesopotamian texts from the later years of Achaemenid rule pertaining to temple administration and other religious affairs are scarce.[188] The city as a whole did not decline, and it served various administrative and military purposes, as attested for example in documents from the reign of Darius II.[188] It has even been described as the biggest and most prosperous city in Mesopotamia in the final centuries of the first millennium BCE.[189] It is assumed that Anu's ascent to the top of the official pantheon was complete by the year 420 BCE.[190] In theophoric names, he already predominates in economic documents from the reigns of Artaxerxes I and Darius II.[190] In sources from the following Seleucid period, the cult of Anu appears to be flourishing.[188] A new temple, dedicated jointly to him and Antu, the Bīt Rēš (head temple)[191] was constructed at some point and became the new center of the city s religious life.[190] Oldest dated attestation of this structure comes from a text which was apparently originally compiled during "the reign of Seleukos and Antiochos," presumably either Seleucus I Nicator and Antiochus I Soter (292/1 – 281/0 BCE) or of Antiochus I and his son Seleucus (280/79 – 267/6 BCE).[192] The Bīt Rēš complex also included a new ziggurat, the Ešarra (Sumerian: "house of the universe"),[193] the biggest such structure known from Mesopotamia and second biggest overall after the Elamite complex at Chogha Zanbil.[194] Its name was likely borrowed from a similar structure in Nippur dedicated to Enlil.[195]

Multiple explanations have been proposed for the elevation of Anu, though they must remain speculative due to lack of direct evidence.[9] It has been argued that it was modeled on the position of Ahura Mazda in religion of the Achaemenids,[196] but Paul-Alain Beaulieu points out that since first signs of it are already visible under Nabonidus, it is implausible that it was patterned on Persian religion.[9] At the same time, he considers it possible that Achaemenid administration encouraged the worship of Anu, viewing it as a way to limit the influence of Babylon and its elites on inhabitants of other Mesopotamian cities.[197] Similar connection has been proposed in the case of Anu and Zeus[31] but also remains uncertain.[142] Beaulieu instead proposes that Anu's rise was in part inspired by a network of syncretism associations between him, Anshar, who was also worshiped in Uruk, and the Assyrian head god Ashur, who in Assyria could be identified with the latter.[23] However, Julia Krul points out there is no certainty that Anshar was actually understood as Ashur in Uruk, let alone that he was regarded as a form of Anu by local clergy.[181] Beaulieu himself admits that most of the evidence which might support his theory might instead simply indicate that both the elevation of Assur and Anu relied on similar preexisting models, such as the theology centered on Enlil.[198] Since during the Neo-Babylonian period Uruk was forced to accept the theology of Babylon, it is also possible that the elevation of Anu was seen as a manifestation of local identity.[9] At the same time, it is not impossible that the new centralized Anu cult was patterned on the Babylonian theology and even a number of festivals and rituals of Anu might have been patterned after those of Marduk.[199] Instances of rewriting compositions dedicated to Marduk or Enlil to suit the new Anu cult are known too.[200] A resource commonly employed by the theologians and antiquarians working on the elevation of Anu were god lists, such as An = Anum, which provided the evidence needed to justify both this change and other examples of restructuring the city pantheon.[21] Most likely the growing interest in astronomy and astrology among the clergy also played a role.[201]

Uruk in late Seleucid and Parthian periods

While it is assumed that religious activity in Uruk continued through the late Seleucid and early Parthian periods, a large part of the Bīt Rēš complex was eventually destroyed by a fire.[202] It was rebuilt as a fortress, and while a small temple was built next to it in the Parthian period, most likely Mesopotamian deities were no longer worshipped there.[202] According to a Greek inscription dated to 111 CE, the deity worshipped in Uruk in the early first millennium was apparently otherwise unknown Gareus, whose temple was built during the reign of Vologases I of Parthia in a foreign style resembling Roman buildings.[203] The final cuneiform text from the site is an astronomical tablet dated to 79 or 80 CE, possibly the last cuneiform text written in antiquity.[204] It is assumed that the last remnants of the local religion and culture of Uruk disappeared by the time of the Sasanian conquest of Mesopotamia, even though the worship of individual deities might have outlasted cuneiform writing.[204]

Mythology

Sumerian

Sumerian creation myth

The main source of information about the Sumerian creation myth is the prologue to the epic poem Gilgamesh, Enkidu, and the Netherworld,[205][206] which briefly describes the process of creation: at first, there is only Nammu, the primeval sea.[207] Then, Nammu gives birth to An (the Sumerian name for Anu), the sky, and Ki, the earth.[207] An and Ki mate with each other, causing Ki to give birth to Enlil, the god of the wind.[207] Enlil separates An from Ki and carries off the earth as his domain, while An carries off the sky.[208]

In Sumerian, the designation "An" was used interchangeably with "the heavens" so that in some cases it is doubtful whether, under the term, the god An or the heavens is being denoted.[209][210] In Sumerian cosmogony, heaven was envisioned as a series of three domes covering the flat earth;[211][10] Each of these domes of heaven was believed to be made of a different precious stone.[211] An was believed to be the highest and outermost of these domes, which was thought to be made of reddish stone.[10]

Inanna myths

 
The original Sumerian clay tablet of Inanna and Ebiḫ, which is currently housed in the Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago

Inanna and Ebiḫ,[212] otherwise known as Goddess of the Fearsome Divine Powers, is a 184-line poem written in Sumerian by the Akkadian poet Enheduanna.[213] It describes An's granddaughter Inanna's confrontation with Mount Ebiḫ, a mountain in the Zagros mountain range.[213] An briefly appears in a scene from the poem in which Inanna petitions him to allow her to destroy Mount Ebiḫ.[213] An warns Inanna not to attack the mountain,[213] but she ignores his warning and proceeds to attack and destroy Mount Ebiḫ regardless.[213]

The poem Inanna Takes Command of Heaven is an extremely fragmentary, but important, account of Inanna's conquest of the Eanna temple in Uruk.[147] It begins with a conversation between Inanna and her brother Utu in which Inanna laments that the Eanna temple is not within their domain and resolves to claim it as her own.[147] The text becomes increasingly fragmentary at this point in the narrative,[147] but appears to describe her difficult passage through a marshland to reach the temple, while a fisherman instructs her on which route is best to take.[147] Ultimately, Inanna reaches An, who is shocked by her arrogance, but nevertheless concedes that she has succeeded and that the temple is now her domain.[147] The text ends with a hymn expounding Inanna's greatness.[147] This myth may represent an eclipse in the authority of the priests of An in Uruk and a transfer of power to the priests of Inanna.[147]

Akkadian

 
Ancient Mesopotamian terracotta relief showing Gilgamesh slaying the Bull of Heaven, which Anu gives to his daughter Ishtar in Tablet IV of the Epic of Gilgamesh after Gilgamesh spurns her amorous advances.[214]

Epic of Gilgamesh

In a scene from the Akkadian Epic of Gilgamesh, written in the late second millennium BC, Anu's daughter Ishtar, the East Semitic equivalent to Inanna, attempts to seduce the hero Gilgamesh.[215] When Gilgamesh spurns her advances,[215] Ishtar angrily goes to heaven and tells Anu that Gilgamesh has insulted her.[215] Anu asks her why she is complaining to him instead of confronting Gilgamesh herself.[215] Ishtar demands that Anu give her the Bull of Heaven[215] and swears that if he does not give it to her, she will break down the gates of the Underworld and raise the dead to eat the living.[215] Anu gives Ishtar the Bull of Heaven, and Ishtar sends it to attack Gilgamesh and his friend Enkidu.[216] A scene from the Ugaritic Epic of Aqhat in which the warrior goddess Anat confronts the head god El to demand permission to kill the eponymous hero after being rebuked by him when she asked for his bow has been compared to this section of the Epic of Gilgamesh.[217]

Adapa myth

In the myth of Adapa, which is first attested during the Kassite Period, Anu notices that the south wind does not blow towards the land for seven days.[218] He asks his sukkal Ilabrat the reason.[218] Ilabrat replies that is because Adapa, the priest of Ea (the East Semitic equivalent of Enki) in Eridu, has broken the south wind's wing.[218] Anu demands that Adapa be summoned before him,[218] but, before Adapa sets out, Ea warns him not to eat any of the food or drink any of the water the gods offer him, because the food and water are poisoned.[219] Adapa arrives before Anu and tells him that the reason he broke the south wind's wing was because he had been fishing for Ea and the south wind had caused a storm, which had sunk his boat.[220] Anu's doorkeepers Dumuzid and Ningishzida speak out in favor of Adapa.[220] This placates Anu's fury and he orders that, instead of the food and water of death, Adapa should be given the food and water of immortality as a reward.[220] Adapa, however, follows Ea's advice and refuses the meal.[220] The story of Adapa was beloved by scribes, who saw him as the founder of their trade[221] and a vast plethora of copies and variations of the myth have been found across Mesopotamia, spanning the entire course of Mesopotamian history.[222] The story of Adapa's appearance before Anu has been compared to the later Jewish story of Adam and Eve, recorded in the Book of Genesis.[223] In the same way that Anu forces Adapa to return to earth after he refuses to eat the food of immortality, Yahweh in the biblical story drives Adam out of the Garden of Eden to prevent him from eating the fruit from the tree of life.[224] Similarly, Adapa was seen as the prototype for all priests;[224] whereas Adam in the Book of Genesis is presented as the prototype of all mankind.[224]

Erra and Išum

In the epic poem Erra and Išum, which was written in Akkadian in the eighth century BC, Anu gives Erra, the god of destruction, the Sebettu, which are described as personified weapons.[10] Anu instructs Erra to use them to massacre humans when they become overpopulated and start making too much noise (Tablet I, 38ff).[10]

Hurrian

One of the myths belonging to the so-called "Kumarbi Cycle" features Anu among the deities involved.[122] While known chiefly from a Hittite translation, the myth belongs to a Hurrian cultural milieu, and is largely set in locations in Syria and Mesopotamia, rather than Anatolia.[225] It states that in the distant past, the "king in heaven" was Alalu, and Anu acted as his cupbearer, but does not explain the origin of either deity.[226] After nine years, Anu revolted against his superior, dethroned him and made him flee to the underworld.[227] However, after another nine years, his own cupbearer, Kumarbi, the "scion of Alalu," attacked him to seize kingship for himself.[227] Anu attempted to flee to heaven, but Kumarbi bites off Anu's genitals and swallowed them.[6] As a consequence of swallowing Anu's genitals, Kumarbi becomes impregnated with Anu's son Teshub (Tarḫunna in the Hittite translation) and two other deities, Tashmishu and the river Tigris.[228] Anu taunts him about this.[228] Teshub is subsequently born from Kumarbi's split skull in a manner compared by Beckman to the birth of Athena in Greek mythology,[229] and while the rest of the narrative is poorly preserved it is known that he evades Kumarbi's attempts at destroying him.[230]

Wilfred G. Lambert proposed that a hitherto unknown Mesopotamian myth about a confrontation between Alala and Anu existed and inspired the Hurro-Hittite tradition regarding their conflict.[231]

Later relevance

 
The Mutilation of Uranus by Saturn (c. 1560) by Giorgio Vasari and Cristofano Gherardi. The title uses the Latin names for Ouranos and Kronos, respectively.

A reference to a genealogy of deities similar to Enūma Eliš, and by extension to Anu, is known from the writings of Eudemus of Rhodes, a student of Aristotle, whose work is only preserved as quotations given by Damascius, a neoplatonist writer who lived in the sixth century CE:

Of the barbarians the Babylonians seem to pass over in silence the one first principle and allow for two: Tauthē and Apasōn. They make Apasōn the husband of Tauthē, whom they call "mother of the gods." Of these was born a single child, Mōymis, which is, I understand, the rational world, which descended from the two principles. From them another generation arose, Dachē and Dachos [emend: Lachē and Lachos], then a third one arose from the same pair, Kissarē and Assōros, of whom were born the three: Anos, Illinos [emend: Illilos] and Aos. From Aos and Daukē a son was born, Bēlos, whom they say is the demiurge.[104]

It is not known what source Eudemos relied on, though Berossus can be ruled out with certainty as it is implausible that the former lived long enough to read the works of the latter.[104] Furthermore, the inclusion of Enlil (Illilos) as an equal of Ea (Aos) and Anu (Anos) indicates that while similar to the Enūma Eliš, the source used was not identical to it.[232] A further difference in Eudemus' account is the fact that the origin of Mummu (Mōymis) is clear, while the Babylonian work in mention does not directly explain it.[232]

It has been argued series of divine coups described in the Kumarbi myth later became the basis for the Greek creation story described in the long poem Theogony, written by the Boeotian poet Hesiod in the seventh century BC.[6] However, Gary Beckman points out that it is not impossible that the two myths simply developed from similar motifs present in the ancient Mediterranean shared cultural milieu ("koine") and Hesiod did not necessarily directly depend on the Kumarbi tradition.[225] In Hesiod's poem, the primeval sky-god Ouranos is overthrown and castrated by his son Kronos in much the same manner that Anu is overthrown and castrated by Kumarbi in the Hurrian story.[233][6] Kronos is then, in turn, overthrown by his own son Zeus.[6] In one Orphic myth, Kronos bites off Ouranos's genitals in exactly the same manner that Kumarbi does to Anu.[6] Nonetheless, Robert Mondi notes that Ouranos never held mythological significance to the Greeks comparable with Anu's significance to the Mesopotamians.[234] Instead, Mondi calls Ouranos "a pale reflection of Anu",[138] noting that "apart from the castration myth, he has very little significance as a cosmic personality at all and is not associated with kingship in any systematic way."[138]

In late antiquity, writers such as Philo of Byblos attempted to impose the dynastic succession framework of the Hittite and Hesiodic stories onto Canaanite mythology,[235] but these efforts are forced and contradict what most Canaanites seem to have actually believed.[235] Most Canaanites seem to have regarded El and Baal as ruling concurrently.[236]

Notes

  1. ^ é-an-na means "sanctuary" ("house" + "Heaven" ["An"] + genitive)[152]

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Further reading

  • Vv.Aa. (1951), University of California Publications in Semitic Philology, vol. 11–12, University of California Press, OCLC 977787419
  • Horry, Ruth (2016), "Enki/Ea (god)", Ancient Mesopotamian Gods and Goddesses, Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus, UK Higher Education Academy
  • Kramer, Samuel Noah (1963), The Sumerians: Their History, Culture, and Character, Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press, ISBN 0-226-45238-7
  • Leick, Gwendolyn (1998) [1991], A Dictionary of Ancient Near Eastern Mythology, New York City, New York: Routledge, ISBN 0-415-19811-9
  • Pope, Marvin H. (1955), "El in the Ugaritic Texts", Supplements to Vetus Testamentum, Leiden, The Netherlands: E. J. Brill, 2, ISSN 0083-5889
  • Stone, Adam (2016), "Enlil/Ellil (god)", Ancient Mesopotamian Gods and Goddesses, Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus, UK Higher Education Academy

External links

  •   Quotations related to Anu at Wikiquote
  •   The dictionary definition of anu at Wiktionary

this, article, about, mesopotamian, irish, goddess, goddess, other, uses, disambiguation, akkadian, 𒀭𒀭, from, 𒀭, heaven, originally, sumerian, 𒀭, divine, personification, king, gods, ancestor, many, deities, ancient, mesopotamian, religion, regarded, source, b. This article is about the Mesopotamian god For the Irish goddess see Anu goddess For other uses see Anu disambiguation Anu Akkadian 𒀭𒀭 ANU from 𒀭 an Sky Heaven or Anum originally An Sumerian 𒀭 An 10 was the divine personification of the sky king of the gods and ancestor of many of the deities in ancient Mesopotamian religion He was regarded as a source of both divine and human kingship and opens the enumerations of deities in many Mesopotamian texts At the same time his role was largely passive and he was not commonly worshipped It is sometimes proposed that the Eanna temple located in Uruk originally belonged to him rather than Inanna but while he is well attested as one of its divine inhabitants there is no evidence that the main deity of the temple ever changed and Inanna was already associated with it in the earliest sources After it declined a new theological system developed in the same city under Seleucid rule resulting in Anu being redefined as an active deity As a result he was actively worshipped by inhabitants of the city in the final centuries of the history of ancient Mesopotamia Anu𒀭𒀭Sky Father King of the GodsSymbols of various deities including Anu bottom right corner on a kudurru of Ritti Marduk from Sippar Iraq 1125 1104 BCEAbodeheavenSymbolhorned crown on a pedestalNumber60Personal informationParentsAnshar and Kishar Alala and BeliliConsortAntu Ki or Urash equated with each other Nammu in a single inscription 4 ChildrenEnki Ishkur Bau Ninisina Ninkarrak Amurru Gibil Urash Nisaba sometimes 1 Enlil sometimes 2 3 Inanna sometimes EquivalentsGreek equivalentZeus disputed 5 Uranus 6 Elamite equivalentJabru 7 Hurrian equivalentHamurnu 8 Achaemenid equivalentAhura Mazda 5 disputed 9 This article contains special characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols Multiple traditions regarding the identity of Anu s spouse existed though three of them Ki Urash and Antu were at various points in time equated with each other and all three represented earth similar to how he represented heaven In a fourth tradition more sparsely attested his wife was the goddess Nammu instead In addition to listing his spouses and children god lists also often enumerated his various ancestors such as Anshar or Alala A variant of one such family tree formed the basis of the Enuma Elis Anu briefly appears in the Akkadian Epic of Gilgamesh in which his daughter Ishtar the Akkadian counterpart of Inanna persuades him to give her the Bull of Heaven so that she may send it to attack Gilgamesh The incident results in the death of the Bull of Heaven and a leg being thrown at Ishtar s head In another myth Anu summons the mortal hero Adapa before him for breaking the wing of the south wind Anu orders for Adapa to be given the food and water of immortality which Adapa refuses having been warned beforehand by Enki that Anu will offer him the food and water of death In the Hurrian myths about Kumarbi known chiefly from their Hittite translations Anu is a former ruler of the gods who was overthrown by Kumarbi who bit off his genitals and gave birth to the weather god Teshub It is possible that this narrative was later the inspiration for the castration of Ouranos in Hesiod s Theogony It has also been proposed that in the Hellenistic period Anu might have been identified with Zeus though this remains uncertain Contents 1 Character 1 1 Astral role 1 2 Iconography 2 Associations with other deities 2 1 Spouses 2 2 Children 2 3 Ancestors 2 3 1 In Hurrian tradition 2 4 Attendants 2 5 Foreign equivalents 3 Worship 3 1 Theological reforms in Achaemenid and Seleucid Uruk 3 2 Uruk in late Seleucid and Parthian periods 4 Mythology 4 1 Sumerian 4 1 1 Sumerian creation myth 4 1 2 Inanna myths 4 2 Akkadian 4 2 1 Epic of Gilgamesh 4 2 2 Adapa myth 4 2 3 Erra and Isum 4 3 Hurrian 5 Later relevance 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksCharacter EditAnu was a divine representation of the sky 11 as indicated by his name which simply means sky in Sumerian 12 In Akkadian it was spelled as Anu and was written either logographically dAN or syllabically da nu m 10 In Sumerian texts unlike the names of other deities his was never prefaced by the dingir sign referred to as the divine determinative in modern literature since it would result in unnecessary repetition as the same sign was also read as an 13 In addition to referring to sky and heaven and to Anu the same sign could also be read as dingir or ilu the generic term god in respectively Sumerian and Akkadian 10 As the number 60 was associated with him 14 the corresponding numeral could represent his name 10 and in esoteric texts by extension also the other readings of the sign DINGIR 15 Anu was regarded as the supreme god 10 16 and the major god lists such as An Anum place him on top of the pantheon 9 He could be described as the king of the gods 17 and was believed to be the source of all legitimate power who bestowed the right to rule upon gods and kings alike 16 10 The highest god in the pantheon was said to possess the anutu or anuti da nu ti which means heavenly power 10 or more literally Anuship 18 In the Babylonian Enuma Elis the gods praise Marduk shouting Your word is Anu 10 Although Anu was a very important deity his nature was often ambiguous and ill defined 16 The number of myths focusing on him is small 19 and he was only rarely actively worshiped 20 His position has therefore been described as that of a figurehead and otiose deity by Assyriologist Paul Alain Beaulieu 21 Wilfred G Lambert characterized his position as head of the pantheon as always somewhat nominal and noted that Enlil in practice wielded greater power according to the Mesopotamians 22 Beaulieu similarly states that functionally the active head god was Enlil and later Marduk in Babylonia and Ashur in Assyria not Anu 23 Evidence from Lagash indicates that at least in the Early Dynastic period during the reign of Eannatum and Entemena it was Enlil rather than Anu who was the head of the pantheon of this city though later offering lists provide evidence on the contrary possibly indicating a change occurred during the reign of either the Sargonic dynasty or Gudea 24 Xianhua Wang points out that in the Early Dynastic period the rulers who mention Anu in the inscriptions and refer to him as lugal kur kur king of the lands seem to be connected with either Ur or Uruk while elsewhere the same epithet designates Enlil instead 25 A text known from copies from Shuruppak and Ebla only refers to Anu as the divine king of Uruk 26 In later inscriptions from the period of the Old Babylonian Empire Enlil could be mentioned both alongside Anu or on his own as the head of the pantheon 27 A trinity consisting of both of them and Ea is also attested 28 Only in Uruk in the final centuries of the first millennium BCE a change occurred and Anu was reinvented by theologians as an active god 23 Astral role Edit In Mesopotamian astronomy the sky was divided into three zones with the stars closest to the pole belonging to Enlil and those close to the equator to Ea 28 The stars located between these two zones were the domain of Anu 28 All three were referred to as the Ways of the respective deities 29 Astronomer John G Rogers assumes that the boundaries of each Way were at 17 N and 17 S 30 The division is best attested in the astronomical treatise MUL APIN 28 The date of its composition is unknown though it is known that it is more recent than the Old Babylonian period and the oldest reference to the tripartite division of the sky comes from a document from the thirteenth century BCE a version of the so called Prayer to the Gods of the Night whose oldest copies do not mention this concept yet 28 In Seleucid Uruk Anu s astral role was extended further and in a text composed in year 71 of the Seleucid era 216 215 BCE he is described as responsible for the entire firmament 31 Furthermore two circumpolar stars started to be called the Great Anu and Antu of Heaven and received offerings as if they were deities 31 They typically appear alongside the other seven major celestial bodies which were known to Mesopotamian astronomers in the late first millennium BCE the sun the moon and the planets Neberu Jupiter Dilbat Venus Siḫṭu Mercury Kayamanu Saturn and Ṣalbatanu Mars 32 Iconography Edit Anu almost never appears in Mesopotamian artwork and has no known recognizable anthropomorphic iconography 16 References to him holding typical symbols of divine kingship such as a scepter and a ring shaped object are known from textual sources 33 A text from the Kassite period explains that Anu s symbol was a horned crown on a pedestal 34 It is attested on some kudurru boundary stones 34 where it is typically present in the upper half of the decoration below the symbols of Ishtar Shamash and Sin who were depicted on the very top of such monuments due to representing celestial bodies 35 Anu was also depicted in the form of a horned crown in Neo Assyrian reliefs 36 According to Andrew R George references to the seat of a deity known from various topographical texts from both Babylonia and Assyria likely also refer to a representation in the form of an emblem placed on a pedestal 37 It has been pointed out that Anu s symbolic depictions were identical to Enlil s 38 A similar symbol could also represent Assur in the Neo Assyrian period 36 All three of these gods could be depicted in this form in the same reliefs 36 Associations with other deities EditSpouses Edit A foundation figurine of king Lugal kisalsi The inscription mentions Nammu and Anu as wife and husband 39 Ki earth is well attested as Anu s spouse 13 Her name was commonly written without a divine determinative and she was usually not regarded as a personified goddess 40 13 Another of Anu s spouses was Urash 41 According to Frans Wiggermann she is his most commonly attested wife 4 She is well attested starting with the Sargonic period and continues to appear as a wife of Anu often until the Old Babylonian period 42 A different male deity named Urash served as the tutelary god of Dilbat 43 Wiggermann proposes that while Ki as generally agreed represented earth as a cosmogonic element 40 Urash was a divine representation of arable land 44 He suggests translating her name as tilth 4 though its etymology and meaning continue to be a matter of debate 42 A single Neo Assyrian god list known from three copies appears to combine Ki and Urash into a single deity dki uras 45 46 An early incorrect reading of this entry was dki ib which early Assyriologist Daniel David Luckenbill assumed to be a reference to the Egyptian god Geb an identification now regarded as impossible 47 46 The goddess Antu is also attested as a wife of Anu 48 Her name is etymologically an Akkadian feminine form of Anu 46 The god list An Anum equates her with Ki 49 while a lexical text from the Old Babylonian period with Urash 46 There is evidence that like the latter she could be considered a goddess associated with the earth 40 She is already attested in the third millennium BCE possibly as early as in the Early Dynastic period in a god list from Abu Salabikh 46 though no references to her are known from Uruk from before the first millennium BCE and even in the Neo Babylonian period she only appears in a single letter 50 However she is attested as Anu s wife in documents from the Seleucid period from this city 31 and at that point in time became its lead goddess alongside her husband 51 An inscription on a votive figurine of king Lugal kisalsi or Lugal giparesi who ruled over Uruk and Ur in the twenty fourth century BCE refers to Nammu as the wife of Anu 39 Julia Krul proposes that this was a traditional pairing in Early Dynastic Uruk 52 but according to Frans Wiggermann no other direct references to Nammu as Anu s wife are known 4 A possible exception is an Old Babylonian incantation which might refer to her as pure one of An but this attestation is uncertain 4 In older literature an epithet of Ashratum was often translated as bride of An but this is now considered to be a mistake 53 The Sumerian term used in it e gi4 a equivalent of Akkadian kallatum meant both daughter in law and bride but the latter meaning relied on the social practice of fathers picking the brides of their sons 53 As an epithet of goddesses it denotes their status as a daughter in law of a specific deity 54 For example Aya was often called kallatum due to her position as the daughter in law of Sin and wife of his son Shamash 55 A goddess named Ninursala is described as Anu s dam banda possibly to be translated as concubine in the god list An Anum 56 According to Antoine Cavigneaux and Manfred Krebernik she is also attested in an Old Babylonian god list from Mari 56 Children Edit Many deities were regarded as Anu s descendants 57 and he could be called the father of the great gods 58 It has been argued that Anu s primary role in the Sumerian pantheon was as an ancestor figure 16 and that the term Anunna also Anunnaki Anunna anna which referred to various Mesopotamian deities collectively 59 means offspring of Anu 60 and designates specific gods as particularly prominent 61 Ishkur Adad the weather god was consistently regarded as a son of Anu 62 While some literary texts may refer to Enlil as his father instead this view was less common and is no longer attested in any sources later than the Old Babylonian period 62 The only source to directly name his mother places Urash in this role 63 Another god frequently regarded as Anu s son was Enki 64 Nammu was the mother of Enki in the local tradition of Eridu and in the myth Enki and Ninmah but a hymn from the reign of Ishme Dagan confirms that a tradition in which his mother was Urash instead also existed 4 In texts dedicated to Ishkur he and Enki could be referred to as twins but no analogous epithet can be found in compositions which focus on the latter god according to Daniel Schwmer because due to his higher rank in the pantheon he would not benefit from being called the brother of a comparatively lower ranked deity 65 Enlil could be called a son of Anu 66 as already attested in an inscription of Lugalzagesi 67 Xianhua Wang proposes that this development was meant to reconcile a northern tradition in which the king of the gods was Enlil with a southern one where the same role was played by Anu 26 though even in the south Lagash seemingly belonged to this proposed Enlil tradition 68 Another source which presents Enlil as Anu s son is the myth Enki and the World Order which also specifies that he was the older brother of Enki 3 However Enlil s parentage was variable 2 3 The tradition in which his ancestors were the so called Enki Ninki deities is now considered conventional by Assyriologists though materials pertaining to it are difficult to interpret 69 Enki the ancestor of Enlil is not to be confused with the god Enki as indicated by the different spelling of their names in cuneiform 70 In yet another tradition Enlil s father was Lugaldukuga but the texts placing him in this role are relatively late 71 It is first attested in the god list An Anum 8 most likely composed in the Kassite period 72 Amurru Martu was universally regarded as a son of Anu 73 Dietz Otto Edzard argued that the fact he was not regarded as a son of Enlil instead might stem from his secondary role in Mesopotamian religion 73 It is also possible that the comparisons between him and Ishkur contributed to the development of this genealogy 73 It has additionally been argued that a variant writing of Amurru s name AN dMARTU AN AN MAR TU 74 represents a conjoined deity consisting of Amurru and Anu 75 However according to Paul Alain Beaulieu it most likely should simply be read as the Akkadian phrase dIl Amurrim the god of Amurru as indicated by a Hurrian translation known from a bilingual text from Emar de ni a mu ri we which has the same meaning 74 Texts from the reign of Rim Sin I and Samsu iluna identify the love goddess Nanaya as a daughter of Anu 76 This notion is also present in an inscription of Esarhaddon 77 Paul Alain Beaulieu speculates that Nanaya developed in the context of a local theological system in which Anu and Inanna were viewed as a couple and that she was initially regarded as their daughter 78 However as noted by Olga Drewnowska Rymarz direct references to Nanaya as the daughter of Inanna are not common and it is possible this epithet was not treated literally but rather as an indication of closeness between them 76 Furthermore Nanaya could also be regarded as a daughter of the male Urash and was sometimes specifically called his firstborn daughter 79 In late sources Nisaba could be called a daughter of Anu 1 However as noted by Wilfred G Lambert at least one text seems to imply a desire not to have Anu as Nisaba s father 80 and instead makes her the daughter of Irḫan in this context identified with Ea and understood as a cosmic river father of the gods of the universe 81 While Inanna Ishtar could be regarded as the daughter of Anu and Antu the view that she was a daughter of Nanna 82 and Ningal is agreed to be the most commonly attested tradition regarding her parentage 83 While the Standard Babylonian version of the Epic of Gilgamesh an astronomical text and the Hymn to the Queen of Nippur refer to her directly as Anu s daughter according to Paul Alain Beaulieu it is not impossible that these statements do not reflect parentage but merely indirect descent with an implied genealogy in which Anu was the father of Enlil grandfather of Nanna and great grandfather of Inanna 82 Furthermore the hymn in mention also addresses her as a daughter of the moon god 84 Ishtaran was at least sometimes described as a son of Anu and Urash and as a result the Old Babylonian Nippur god list associates him with Uruk 85 He also could be referred to as Anu Rabu AN GAL the great Anu 1 but Wouter Henkelman proposes this epithet is instead a sign that a connection existed between him and the Elamite god Napirisha whose name was written with the same combination of cuneiform signs 86 It is possible that in the late first millennium BCE attempts at syncretizing Ishtaran and Anu were made during a period of cooperation between the theologians from Uruk Nippur and Der but direct evidence is presently lacking 87 Further deities attested as children of Anu include the medicine goddesses Ninisina and Ninkarrak also directly identified as daughters of his wife Urash 88 Bau who could be called his firstborn daughter 89 the weaver goddess Uttu in a single source 90 the messenger god Papsukkal 91 Geshtinanna in a hymn of Shulgi which also mentions Urash as her mother 42 the fire god Gibil and through association with him also Nuska 92 Siḫṭu the divine representation of the planet Mercury in Seleucid Uruk 93 and possibly the male Urash 94 Whether Anu was the father of Shara in the tradition of his cult center Umma cannot be determined with a certainty as the most direct reference the phrase aia DINGIR u TU zu in a hymn has two possible translations your father An who engendered you or your divine father who engendered you 95 Additionally some references to Anu as the father of a specific deity might be metaphorical or indirect as in the case of Nanna typically a son of Enlil and Ninlil 96 or Nungal 97 Anu could also be regarded as the father of various demons 98 Lamashtu was viewed his daughter 99 A group of seven eight or nine Asakku demons called the sons of Anu is also known 100 In a text referred to as the Nippur Compendium by modern researchers Latarak is identified both as an Asakku and as a son of Anu 101 The Epic of Erra describes the Sebitti as his creations subsequently given to the eponymous god as weapons 102 Ancestors Edit The earliest texts do not discuss Anu s origin and his preeminence is simply assumed 10 In later traditions his father was usually Anshar 103 whose spouse was Kishar 104 Another tradition most likely regarded Alala and Belili as his parents 105 A larger group of his ancestors arranged into multiple generations is known from mythological and scholarly sources 48 Wilfred G Lambert coined the term Theogony of Anu to refer to arrangements of these deities collectively 70 At least five versions are known from incantations though in three out of five the first pair are Duri and Dari and the last Alala and Belili 70 A slightly different version is known from the god list An Anum though there are differences between individual copies as well 106 Lambert proposes that initially at least two different traditions existed but they were later combined into a list patterned on those associated with Enlil 107 At least in some cases long lists of divine ancestors were meant to help avoid the implications of divine incest which were hard to reconcile with strong incest taboos attested from various periods of Mesopotamian history 108 Duri and Dari likely represented time understood as a primary force in creation and their names are derived from an Akkadian phrase meaning ever and ever 47 The pairing of Alala and Belili was most likely based entirely on both of their names being iterative and elsewhere they occur in unrelated roles independently from each other 109 Further attested pairs of deities regarded as ancestors of Anu include Egur and Gara whose character is unknown 47 Lahmu and Lahamu derived from the name of a type of aquatic mythical creature 47 two deities whose names were written logographically as dALAM possibly representing another of the known pairs or associated with the underworld 110 and Enurulla and Ninurulla the lord and lady of the primeval city whose inclusion in Anu s family tree most likely reflected the importance of the city in ancient Mesopotamian thought 111 The genealogy of gods presented in the Enuma Elis is a derivative of the lists of Anu s ancestors from earlier sources 70 The pairs listed in this composition are Apsu and Tiamat Lahmu and Lahamu and Anshar and Kishar 70 The first of them is not attested in any earlier sources 1 The god list An Anum refers to Nammu as the mother who gave birth to Heaven and Earth dama tu an ki but as noted by Frans Wiggermann the terms an and ki were most likely understood collectively in this case 112 A similar reference is known from an exorcism formula assumed to predate the Middle Babylonian period 113 There is no indication that this act of creation involved a second deity acting as Nammu s spouse 112 She appears in a variant of Anu s genealogy in An Anum though as remarked by Lambert she was pushed out into a kind of appendix 114 Due to the sparse attestations of Nammu it is assumed today that she was not generally acknowledged outside Eridu 114 A single prayer to Papsukkal might allude to a tradition in which Anu was a son of Enmesharra 91 In another text Anu and Enlil receive their positions from this deity not necessarily peacefully 91 Due to his connection with various ancestral deities Anu could be occasionally associated with the underworld 115 One Assyrian explanatory text mentions Antu making funerary offerings for him 116 However according to Julia Krul it is impossible to tell how widespread the recognition of this aspect of his character was and broad statements about Anu being outright identified with deities of the underworld in the theology of Seleucid Uruk should be generally avoided 31 In Hurrian tradition Edit While it is often assumed that Hurrian Alalu was the father of Anu similar to his Mesopotamian counterpart Alala 105 and that Kumarbi was in turn viewed as Anu s son 117 it has also been argued that two separate lineages of gods appear in the prologue of the Kumarbi myth and therefore that Alalu and Anu should not be regarded as father and son in Hurrian sources 118 Kumarbi is directly referred to as Alalu s seed in the Song of Kummarbi 119 He also addresses himself as Alalu s son in another myth belonging to the same cycle Song of Ḫedammu 120 The order of deities in international treaties also supports the notion that Alalu and Kumarbi belong to the same line but Anu does not 121 Hittitologist Gary Beckman notes that the two lines were seemingly only united with the birth of the new generation of gods Teshub Tashmishu and others a result of Kumarbi s castration of Anu 122 which resulted in a burden Anu s seed being placed inside him 119 The process is poetically compared to production of bronze from tin and copper 119 Attendants Edit Ninshubur the archetypal vizier of the gods 123 was primarily associated with Inanna but she could also be described as the sukkal divine vizier attendant deity of Anu 124 The association between her and Anu is attested from the reign of Third Dynasty of Ur onward 124 Her role as a popular intercessory deity in Sumerian religion was derived from her position as a servant of major deities which resulted in the belief that she was capable of mediating with her masters both with Inanna and with Anu on behalf of human petitioners 125 Another deity who could be placed in the same role was Ilabrat 10 In texts from the second millennium BCE Ninshubur and Ilabrat coexisted 123 and in at least some cases Ninshubur s name treated as masculine was a logographic spelling of Ilabrat s for example in Mari in personal names 126 It has been proposed that the variance in Ninshubur s gender is related to syncretism with him 127 The goddess Amasagnudi could be regarded as Anu s sukkal too as attested in a single Old Babylonian lexical text 128 Kakka is also attested in this role in a few cases 129 though in the Enuma Elis he is the sukkal of Anshar instead 130 In later periods other sukkals of Anu were eclipsed by Papsukkal originally associated with the god Zababa whose rise was likely rooted simply in the presence of the word sukkal in his name 131 In the context of the so called antiquarian theology relying largely on god lists which developed in Uruk under Achaemenid and Seleucid rule 132 he was fully identified with Ninshubur and thus became Anu s sukkal and one of the eighteen major deities of the city 133 He was not worshiped in this city earlier 134 Foreign equivalents Edit According to a Surpu commentary Anu s Elamite counterpart was Jabru 7 However according to the god list An Anum a god bearing the name Yabnu dia ab na was the Enlil of Elam 135 Wilfred G Lambert concluded that Jabru and Yabnu should be considered two spellings of the same name 7 While Jabru is described as an Elamite god in Mesopotamian sources no known Elamite texts mention him 7 In the god list Ansar Anum one of the names of Anu is Hamurnu derived from the Hurrian word referring to heaven 8 However while Hurrians did worship earth and heaven they did not regard them as personified deities 136 Furthermore Anu appears under his own name in Hurrian mythology 137 While Robert Monti argues that the Canaanites seem to have ascribed Anu s attributes to El 138 no equivalents of Anu were actually present in the pantheons of various ancient Syrian states 139 Both the head of the hinterland pantheon Dagan and the head of the coastal pantheon El were regarded as analogous to Enlil rather than Anu 139 Monti additionally describes a god he refers to as Shamem as the most direct equivalent to Anu in the Canaanite pantheon and as a personification of the sky 138 but this name was a title of the weather god Baal which developed into a separate deity Baalshamin 140 and Aramaic texts indicate that he was viewed as an equivalent of Hadad rather than Anu further east 141 It it sometimes proposed that in the Hellenistic period Anu was identified with the Greek god Zeus but most Assyriologists consider this possibility to be uncertain one exception being Eleanor Robson 5 Julia Krul points out authors who propose it do not clarify whether they mean if the Seleucids made such an equation themselves or that the Urukean priest scholars convinced their new kings of the similarity between the two gods or even that they genuinely believed that Anu and Zeus were the same 5 No direct evidence of any of these possibilities is available 142 According to Walter Burkert a researcher of ancient Greek religion direct literary parallels exist between Anu and the Zeus 143 According to him the scene from Tablet VI of the Epic of Gilgamesh in which Ishtar comes before Anu after being rejected by Gilgamesh and complains to her mother Antu but is mildly rebuked by Anu is directly paralleled by a scene from Book V of the Iliad 144 In this scene Aphrodite who Burkert regards as the later Greek development of Ishtar is wounded by the Greek hero Diomedes while trying to save her son Aeneas 145 She flees to Mount Olympus where she cries to her mother Dione is mocked by her sister Athena and is mildly rebuked by her father Zeus 145 Not only is the narrative parallel significant 145 but so is the fact that Dione s name is a feminization of Zeus s own just as Antu is a feminine form of Anu 145 Dione does not appear throughout the rest of the Iliad in which Zeus s consort is instead the goddess Hera 145 Burkert therefore concludes that Dione is clearly a calque of Antu 145 An equivalence between Anu and Ahura Mazda has been proposed based on the assumption that non Persian subjects of the Achaemenid Empire might have viewed the latter simply as a sky god 5 Worship Edit Part of the front of a Babylonian temple to Ishtar in Uruk built c 1415 BCE during the Kassite Period c 1600 1155 BCE 146 It has been argued in the past that it was first dedicated to Anu and only later to Inanna 147 but this view is no longer regarded as plausible 148 Anu was chiefly associated with the city of Uruk where he was one of the major deities next to Inanna Ishtar and Nanaya but before the end of the Neo Babylonian period his cult had a smaller scope than theirs 149 It is often assumed that the so called White Temple which dates back to the Uruk IV period 3500 3100 BCE was his original cult center and it is even sometimes referred to as the Anu ziggurat in modern literature 150 However there is no evidence that Anu was actually worshipped in this structure 52 His presence in the oldest texts remains a matter of debate as it is uncertain if the cuneiform sign DINGIR present in them does not necessarily denote a specific god 52 Paul Alain Beaulieu concludes that whether he appears in these sources is unprovable 151 There is also no indication that Eanna House of Heaven Sumerian e2 anna Cuneiform 𒂍𒀭 E2 AN a the main temple of Uruk in historical times was originally the abode of Anu alone as sometimes proposed in the past 148 It was already associated with Inanna in the fourth millennium BCE and her role as the tutelary goddess of Uruk most likely dates at least to this period as well 148 Julia Krul proposes that even if Anu was already worshiped in the Uruk period he likely had to share the Eanna temple with Inanna 52 The oldest texts do not mention the Eanna yet and it is not certain if a sanctuary most likely called Ean attested in them was a temple of Anu and if it corresponded to any later structure 151 Through the Early Dynastic Sargonic and Ur III periods Inanna was the main deity of the city and Eanna was regarded as her temple first and foremost 151 The Bassetki inscription of Naram Sin in particular supports the view that Inanna was the goddess of Uruk and that she was perceived as more significant than Anu 153 No references to Anu are known from inscriptions of the Ur III rulers mentioning the Eanna even though he does appear in offering lists 153 However royal inscriptions from the Old Babylonian period indicate that Anu was believed to dwell in the Eanna 52 In the Old Babylonian version of the Epic of Gilgamesh Eanna is described only as the dwelling of Anu but the later Standard Babylonian version associates it both with Ishtar and Anu 52 It has been proposed that similar to the Bull of Heaven episode the former tradition might simply indicate the existence of anti Ishtar sentiment among compilers of this work 154 Simultaneously Anu does not play any major role and Inanna is the sole owner of Eanna in the myths about Enmerkar and Lugalbanda other legendary kings of Uruk commonly referenced in Mesopotamian literature 155 A mythological tradition in which the Eanna originally belonged to Anu but was later usurped by Inanna is known from multiple literary compositions 156 but it might have only been a founding myth explaining how the first temples were established 148 Starting in the Ur III period Anu came to be seen as a member of a triad of foremost deities invoked in royal inscriptions which also included Enlil and Enki 157 A seat known as Barakiskilla dais pure place and a garden dedicated to him are mentioned in documents from the reign of Ur Nammu 158 Their location is uncertain but Andrew R George tentatively proposes Ur 158 In the following Isin Larsa period kings of Isin made no reference to Anu in their year formulas 159 Rim Sin I of Larsa revived the tradition and invoked the traditional triad in them possibly to show that he planned to control all of southern Babylonia 160 It has been also suggested that one of his predecessors Gungunum invoked Anu Enlil and Nanna as a similar trinity in his inscriptions to show he was in control of their major cult centers 161 After conquering Rim Sin I s kingdom Hammurabi of Babylon started to invoke Anu and Enlil though not Ea in his own formulas 162 Similar evidence is not available from the reign of Samsu iluna who only invoked Anu and Enlil in a single inscription most likely pertaining to the reconquest of southern cities 163 Later kings of the same dynasty only infrequently mentioned the pair most likely as a part of ceremonial formulas meant to tie their reigns to a longer tradition 164 In Assyria Anu appears for the first time in an inscription of Shamshi Adad I who described him as one of the gods who bestowed kingship upon him 10 A temple of Adad which he built in Assur later came to be dedicated to both the weather god and Anu 165 166 It was accompanied by a ziggurat Emelamanna house of the radiance of heaven 167 Daniel Schwemer suggests that the pairing of those two gods was based on the common view that they were father and son 166 No direct references to the worship of Anu are known from the part of the Old Babylonian period during which the cults of Uruk were temporarily relocated to Kish in the north of Babylonia 168 A possible exception is a deity or deities designated by the logogram AN dINANNA 168 However it has also been proposed that it represents not Anu and Inanna as a pair as commonly assumed 169 but a specific manifestation of Inanna 168 Urkitum 170 Presently there is no agreement regarding this problem in scholarship and which deity or deities it refers to remains uncertain 171 In documents from the reign of the First Sealand dynasty the dyad of Enlil and Ea Enki replaced the triad containing Anu 172 The only god list known from the Sealand archives does not mention Anu at all and simply begins with Enlil 173 He is nonetheless attested in a few offering lists 174 Furthermore it is possible the name of the king Akurduana might be theophoric and should be translated as raging flood of Anu though this remains uncertain and the ordinary word heaven might be the correct translation of the sign AN in this case instead 175 The so called Babylonian Temple List most likely composed in the first millennium BCE mentions no temples of Anu though with the exception of Larsa Ur and Eridu the southernmost cities are generally poorly represented in it 176 A single liturgical text indicates that a temple of Anu called Ekinamma possibly existed in Kesh 177 The hymn BRM IV 8 lists ten names of temples associated with him 178 including the Eanki 179 and the Egalankia possibly located in Uruk 180 In the Neo Babylonian period Anu only had a small sanctuary in Uruk 181 He has been described as a comparatively minor deity in the religious practice of this period 181 182 While multiple Neo Babylonian archives from Uruk have been excavated and published so far research revealed only a small number of people bearing theophoric names invoking Anu before the reign of Nabonidus with a total of five being mentioned in known documents according to the highest estimate 183 The most historically notable example is Anu aḫu iddin who was the governor of Uruk during the reign of Nabopolassar 184 The number of such names started to rise during the reign of Nabonidus 185 Documents from the reign of Darius I show further growth though names invoking chiefly northern Babylonian deities as well as Nanaya Ishtar and Shamash from Larsa remain numerous 186 It has been proposed that the changed in favor of Anu accelerated during the reign of Xerxes I 186 After a rebellion of the northern Babylonian cities against Persian rule in 484 BCE this king seemingly reorganized the traditional structure of Mesopotamian clergy and while Uruk did not rebel it was not exempt from changes 187 It has been proposed that the older priests who were often connected to the northern cities and were predominantly involved in the cult of Ishtar were replaced by a number of powerful local families dedicated to Anu 187 Julia Krul suggests that their members likely planned to expand the scope of Anu s cult in the Neo Babylonian period already but were unable to do so due to the interests of the kings who favored Marduk as the head of the pantheon 188 Theological reforms in Achaemenid and Seleucid Uruk Edit Xerxes retaliation against the clergy of Uruk resulted in the collapse of Eanna as the center of Uruk s religious life and economy and made the creation of a new system centered on the worship of Anu and his spouse of Antu rather than Ishtar and Nanaya possible 188 The details of its early development are not well understood as Mesopotamian texts from the later years of Achaemenid rule pertaining to temple administration and other religious affairs are scarce 188 The city as a whole did not decline and it served various administrative and military purposes as attested for example in documents from the reign of Darius II 188 It has even been described as the biggest and most prosperous city in Mesopotamia in the final centuries of the first millennium BCE 189 It is assumed that Anu s ascent to the top of the official pantheon was complete by the year 420 BCE 190 In theophoric names he already predominates in economic documents from the reigns of Artaxerxes I and Darius II 190 In sources from the following Seleucid period the cult of Anu appears to be flourishing 188 A new temple dedicated jointly to him and Antu the Bit Res head temple 191 was constructed at some point and became the new center of the city s religious life 190 Oldest dated attestation of this structure comes from a text which was apparently originally compiled during the reign of Seleukos and Antiochos presumably either Seleucus I Nicator and Antiochus I Soter 292 1 281 0 BCE or of Antiochus I and his son Seleucus 280 79 267 6 BCE 192 The Bit Res complex also included a new ziggurat the Esarra Sumerian house of the universe 193 the biggest such structure known from Mesopotamia and second biggest overall after the Elamite complex at Chogha Zanbil 194 Its name was likely borrowed from a similar structure in Nippur dedicated to Enlil 195 Multiple explanations have been proposed for the elevation of Anu though they must remain speculative due to lack of direct evidence 9 It has been argued that it was modeled on the position of Ahura Mazda in religion of the Achaemenids 196 but Paul Alain Beaulieu points out that since first signs of it are already visible under Nabonidus it is implausible that it was patterned on Persian religion 9 At the same time he considers it possible that Achaemenid administration encouraged the worship of Anu viewing it as a way to limit the influence of Babylon and its elites on inhabitants of other Mesopotamian cities 197 Similar connection has been proposed in the case of Anu and Zeus 31 but also remains uncertain 142 Beaulieu instead proposes that Anu s rise was in part inspired by a network of syncretism associations between him Anshar who was also worshiped in Uruk and the Assyrian head god Ashur who in Assyria could be identified with the latter 23 However Julia Krul points out there is no certainty that Anshar was actually understood as Ashur in Uruk let alone that he was regarded as a form of Anu by local clergy 181 Beaulieu himself admits that most of the evidence which might support his theory might instead simply indicate that both the elevation of Assur and Anu relied on similar preexisting models such as the theology centered on Enlil 198 Since during the Neo Babylonian period Uruk was forced to accept the theology of Babylon it is also possible that the elevation of Anu was seen as a manifestation of local identity 9 At the same time it is not impossible that the new centralized Anu cult was patterned on the Babylonian theology and even a number of festivals and rituals of Anu might have been patterned after those of Marduk 199 Instances of rewriting compositions dedicated to Marduk or Enlil to suit the new Anu cult are known too 200 A resource commonly employed by the theologians and antiquarians working on the elevation of Anu were god lists such as An Anum which provided the evidence needed to justify both this change and other examples of restructuring the city pantheon 21 Most likely the growing interest in astronomy and astrology among the clergy also played a role 201 Uruk in late Seleucid and Parthian periods Edit While it is assumed that religious activity in Uruk continued through the late Seleucid and early Parthian periods a large part of the Bit Res complex was eventually destroyed by a fire 202 It was rebuilt as a fortress and while a small temple was built next to it in the Parthian period most likely Mesopotamian deities were no longer worshipped there 202 According to a Greek inscription dated to 111 CE the deity worshipped in Uruk in the early first millennium was apparently otherwise unknown Gareus whose temple was built during the reign of Vologases I of Parthia in a foreign style resembling Roman buildings 203 The final cuneiform text from the site is an astronomical tablet dated to 79 or 80 CE possibly the last cuneiform text written in antiquity 204 It is assumed that the last remnants of the local religion and culture of Uruk disappeared by the time of the Sasanian conquest of Mesopotamia even though the worship of individual deities might have outlasted cuneiform writing 204 Mythology EditSumerian Edit Sumerian creation myth Edit Main article Sumerian creation myth The main source of information about the Sumerian creation myth is the prologue to the epic poem Gilgamesh Enkidu and the Netherworld 205 206 which briefly describes the process of creation at first there is only Nammu the primeval sea 207 Then Nammu gives birth to An the Sumerian name for Anu the sky and Ki the earth 207 An and Ki mate with each other causing Ki to give birth to Enlil the god of the wind 207 Enlil separates An from Ki and carries off the earth as his domain while An carries off the sky 208 In Sumerian the designation An was used interchangeably with the heavens so that in some cases it is doubtful whether under the term the god An or the heavens is being denoted 209 210 In Sumerian cosmogony heaven was envisioned as a series of three domes covering the flat earth 211 10 Each of these domes of heaven was believed to be made of a different precious stone 211 An was believed to be the highest and outermost of these domes which was thought to be made of reddish stone 10 Inanna myths Edit The original Sumerian clay tablet of Inanna and Ebiḫ which is currently housed in the Oriental Institute at the University of ChicagoInanna and Ebiḫ 212 otherwise known as Goddess of the Fearsome Divine Powers is a 184 line poem written in Sumerian by the Akkadian poet Enheduanna 213 It describes An s granddaughter Inanna s confrontation with Mount Ebiḫ a mountain in the Zagros mountain range 213 An briefly appears in a scene from the poem in which Inanna petitions him to allow her to destroy Mount Ebiḫ 213 An warns Inanna not to attack the mountain 213 but she ignores his warning and proceeds to attack and destroy Mount Ebiḫ regardless 213 The poem Inanna Takes Command of Heaven is an extremely fragmentary but important account of Inanna s conquest of the Eanna temple in Uruk 147 It begins with a conversation between Inanna and her brother Utu in which Inanna laments that the Eanna temple is not within their domain and resolves to claim it as her own 147 The text becomes increasingly fragmentary at this point in the narrative 147 but appears to describe her difficult passage through a marshland to reach the temple while a fisherman instructs her on which route is best to take 147 Ultimately Inanna reaches An who is shocked by her arrogance but nevertheless concedes that she has succeeded and that the temple is now her domain 147 The text ends with a hymn expounding Inanna s greatness 147 This myth may represent an eclipse in the authority of the priests of An in Uruk and a transfer of power to the priests of Inanna 147 Akkadian Edit Ancient Mesopotamian terracotta relief showing Gilgamesh slaying the Bull of Heaven which Anu gives to his daughter Ishtar in Tablet IV of the Epic of Gilgamesh after Gilgamesh spurns her amorous advances 214 Epic of Gilgamesh Edit In a scene from the Akkadian Epic of Gilgamesh written in the late second millennium BC Anu s daughter Ishtar the East Semitic equivalent to Inanna attempts to seduce the hero Gilgamesh 215 When Gilgamesh spurns her advances 215 Ishtar angrily goes to heaven and tells Anu that Gilgamesh has insulted her 215 Anu asks her why she is complaining to him instead of confronting Gilgamesh herself 215 Ishtar demands that Anu give her the Bull of Heaven 215 and swears that if he does not give it to her she will break down the gates of the Underworld and raise the dead to eat the living 215 Anu gives Ishtar the Bull of Heaven and Ishtar sends it to attack Gilgamesh and his friend Enkidu 216 A scene from the Ugaritic Epic of Aqhat in which the warrior goddess Anat confronts the head god El to demand permission to kill the eponymous hero after being rebuked by him when she asked for his bow has been compared to this section of the Epic of Gilgamesh 217 Adapa myth Edit In the myth of Adapa which is first attested during the Kassite Period Anu notices that the south wind does not blow towards the land for seven days 218 He asks his sukkal Ilabrat the reason 218 Ilabrat replies that is because Adapa the priest of Ea the East Semitic equivalent of Enki in Eridu has broken the south wind s wing 218 Anu demands that Adapa be summoned before him 218 but before Adapa sets out Ea warns him not to eat any of the food or drink any of the water the gods offer him because the food and water are poisoned 219 Adapa arrives before Anu and tells him that the reason he broke the south wind s wing was because he had been fishing for Ea and the south wind had caused a storm which had sunk his boat 220 Anu s doorkeepers Dumuzid and Ningishzida speak out in favor of Adapa 220 This placates Anu s fury and he orders that instead of the food and water of death Adapa should be given the food and water of immortality as a reward 220 Adapa however follows Ea s advice and refuses the meal 220 The story of Adapa was beloved by scribes who saw him as the founder of their trade 221 and a vast plethora of copies and variations of the myth have been found across Mesopotamia spanning the entire course of Mesopotamian history 222 The story of Adapa s appearance before Anu has been compared to the later Jewish story of Adam and Eve recorded in the Book of Genesis 223 In the same way that Anu forces Adapa to return to earth after he refuses to eat the food of immortality Yahweh in the biblical story drives Adam out of the Garden of Eden to prevent him from eating the fruit from the tree of life 224 Similarly Adapa was seen as the prototype for all priests 224 whereas Adam in the Book of Genesis is presented as the prototype of all mankind 224 Erra and Isum Edit In the epic poem Erra and Isum which was written in Akkadian in the eighth century BC Anu gives Erra the god of destruction the Sebettu which are described as personified weapons 10 Anu instructs Erra to use them to massacre humans when they become overpopulated and start making too much noise Tablet I 38ff 10 Hurrian Edit One of the myths belonging to the so called Kumarbi Cycle features Anu among the deities involved 122 While known chiefly from a Hittite translation the myth belongs to a Hurrian cultural milieu and is largely set in locations in Syria and Mesopotamia rather than Anatolia 225 It states that in the distant past the king in heaven was Alalu and Anu acted as his cupbearer but does not explain the origin of either deity 226 After nine years Anu revolted against his superior dethroned him and made him flee to the underworld 227 However after another nine years his own cupbearer Kumarbi the scion of Alalu attacked him to seize kingship for himself 227 Anu attempted to flee to heaven but Kumarbi bites off Anu s genitals and swallowed them 6 As a consequence of swallowing Anu s genitals Kumarbi becomes impregnated with Anu s son Teshub Tarḫunna in the Hittite translation and two other deities Tashmishu and the river Tigris 228 Anu taunts him about this 228 Teshub is subsequently born from Kumarbi s split skull in a manner compared by Beckman to the birth of Athena in Greek mythology 229 and while the rest of the narrative is poorly preserved it is known that he evades Kumarbi s attempts at destroying him 230 Wilfred G Lambert proposed that a hitherto unknown Mesopotamian myth about a confrontation between Alala and Anu existed and inspired the Hurro Hittite tradition regarding their conflict 231 Later relevance Edit The Mutilation of Uranus by Saturn c 1560 by Giorgio Vasari and Cristofano Gherardi The title uses the Latin names for Ouranos and Kronos respectively A reference to a genealogy of deities similar to Enuma Elis and by extension to Anu is known from the writings of Eudemus of Rhodes a student of Aristotle whose work is only preserved as quotations given by Damascius a neoplatonist writer who lived in the sixth century CE Of the barbarians the Babylonians seem to pass over in silence the one first principle and allow for two Tauthe and Apasōn They make Apasōn the husband of Tauthe whom they call mother of the gods Of these was born a single child Mōymis which is I understand the rational world which descended from the two principles From them another generation arose Dache and Dachos emend Lache and Lachos then a third one arose from the same pair Kissare and Assōros of whom were born the three Anos Illinos emend Illilos and Aos From Aos and Dauke a son was born Belos whom they say is the demiurge 104 It is not known what source Eudemos relied on though Berossus can be ruled out with certainty as it is implausible that the former lived long enough to read the works of the latter 104 Furthermore the inclusion of Enlil Illilos as an equal of Ea Aos and Anu Anos indicates that while similar to the Enuma Elis the source used was not identical to it 232 A further difference in Eudemus account is the fact that the origin of Mummu Mōymis is clear while the Babylonian work in mention does not directly explain it 232 It has been argued series of divine coups described in the Kumarbi myth later became the basis for the Greek creation story described in the long poem Theogony written by the Boeotian poet Hesiod in the seventh century BC 6 However Gary Beckman points out that it is not impossible that the two myths simply developed from similar motifs present in the ancient Mediterranean shared cultural milieu koine and Hesiod did not necessarily directly depend on the Kumarbi tradition 225 In Hesiod s poem the primeval sky god Ouranos is overthrown and castrated by his son Kronos in much the same manner that Anu is overthrown and castrated by Kumarbi in the Hurrian story 233 6 Kronos is then in turn overthrown by his own son Zeus 6 In one Orphic myth Kronos bites off Ouranos s genitals in exactly the same manner that Kumarbi does to Anu 6 Nonetheless Robert Mondi notes that Ouranos never held mythological significance to the Greeks comparable with Anu s significance to the Mesopotamians 234 Instead Mondi calls Ouranos a pale reflection of Anu 138 noting that apart from the castration myth he has very little significance as a cosmic personality at all and is not associated with kingship in any systematic way 138 In late antiquity writers such as Philo of Byblos attempted to impose the dynastic succession framework of the Hittite and Hesiodic stories onto Canaanite mythology 235 but these efforts are forced and contradict what most Canaanites seem to have actually believed 235 Most Canaanites seem to have regarded El and Baal as ruling concurrently 236 Notes Edit e an na means sanctuary house Heaven An genitive 152 References Edit a b c d Lambert 2013 p 238 a b Wang 2011 p 152 a b c Lambert 2013 p 405 a b c d e f Wiggermann 1998 p 138 a b c d e Krul 2018 p 41 a b c d e f Burkert 2005 p 295 a b c d Lambert 1980 p 229 a b c Lambert 2007 p 169 a b c d e Beaulieu 2018 p 203 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Stephens 2013 Beaulieu 2003 p 115 Wang 2011 p 15 a b c Lambert 2013 pp 407 408 Lambert 2013 p 188 George 1992 p 254 a b c d e Black amp Green 1992 p 30 Lambert 2013 p 259 George 1992 pp 160 161 Lambert 2013 p 209 Schneider 2011 p 58 a b Beaulieu 1992 p 68 Lambert 2013 p 184 a b c Beaulieu 1997 p 68 Wang 2011 p 187 Wang 2011 pp 134 135 a b Wang 2011 p 136 Lambert 2013 p 261 a b c d e Lambert 2013 p 181 Rogers 1998 p 12 Rogers 1998 p 16 a b c d e Krul 2018 p 61 Krul 2018 p 66 George 1992 p 428 a b George 1992 p 9 Seidl 1989 pp 74 75 a b c Seidl 1989 p 117 George 1992 pp 9 10 Seidl 1989 p 35 a b de Laperouse 2003 p 65 a b c Henkelman 2008 p 324 Lambert 2013 p 408 a b c Krebernik 2014 p 402 Lambert 2013 p 311 Wiggermann 1992 p 282 Lambert 2013 pp 423 424 a b c d e Krebernik 2014 p 403 a b c d Lambert 2013 p 424 a b Krul 2018 p 60 Lambert 2013 p 421 Beaulieu 2003 p 310 Beaulieu 2003 p 311 a b c d e f Krul 2018 p 10 a b Wiggins 2007 p 157 Wiggins 2007 pp 157 158 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 259 a b Cavigneaux amp Krebernik 1998 p 511 Beaulieu 2018 p 204 Lambert 2013 p 267 Katz 2003 p 402 Black amp Green 1992 p 34 Katz 2003 p 403 a b Schwemer 2007 p 132 Schwemer 2001 p 168 Lambert 2013 p 317 Schwemer 2008 p 133 Lambert 2013 p 190 Wang 2011 p 7 Wang 2011 pp 236 237 Metcalf 2019 p 30 a b c d e Lambert 2013 p 417 Lambert 2007 p 168 George 1993 p 6 a b c Klein 1997 p 103 a b Beaulieu 2005 p 31 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 70 a b Drewnowska Rymarz 2008 p 30 Beaulieu 2003 p 188 Beaulieu 2003 p 317 Drewnowska Rymarz 2008 p 31 Lambert 1999 p 155 Lambert 1999 pp 153 154 a b Beaulieu 2003 p 111 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 230 Boivin 2018 p 208 Peterson 2009 p 103 Henkelman 2017 p 324 Krul 2018 p 90 Westenholz 2010 pp 382 383 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 63 George 1992 p 283 a b c Lambert 2013 p 284 Krul 2018 p 151 Krul 2018 p 81 Lambert 2013 p 312 Huber Vulliet 2011 p 32 Krebernik 1997 p 364 Sjoberg 1973 pp 22 23 Lambert 2013 p 246 Lambert 2013 p 148 Lambert 2013 pp 210 211 George 1992 p 157 George 1992 p 366 Krul 2018 p 14 a b c Lambert 2013 p 422 a b Lambert 2013 p 448 Lambert 2013 pp 418 419 Lambert 2013 p 420 Lambert 2013 p 389 Lambert 2013 p 425 Lambert 2013 pp 425 426 Lambert 2013 p 426 a b Wiggermann 1998 p 137 Lambert 2013 pp 432 433 a b Lambert 2013 p 427 Krul 2018 pp 60 61 Lambert 2013 p 245 Wilhelm 2014 p 346 Metcalf 2021 p 155 a b c Bachvarova 2013 p 155 Bachvarova 2013 p 159 Polvani 2008 p 619 a b Beckman 2011 p 26 a b Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 94 a b Wiggermann 1998a p 496 Wiggermann 1998a pp 496 497 Wiggermann 1998a p 491 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 93 Beaulieu 1992 p 65 Steinkeller 1982 p 290 Lambert 2013 p 77 Beaulieu 1992 p 64 Beaulieu 1992 pp 57 59 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 132 Krul 2018 p 75 Feliu 2006 p 245 Wilhelm 1989 p 57 Wilhelm 1989 p 59 a b c d Mondi 1990 p 170 a b Feliu 2003 p 302 Schwemer 2008 pp 15 16 Schwemer 2008 p 16 a b Krul 2018 pp 41 42 Burkert 2005 pp 295 299 300 Burkert 2005 pp 299 300 a b c d e f Burkert 2005 p 300 Piveteau 1981 pp 16 17 a b c d e f g h Harris 1991 pp 261 278 a b c d Krul 2018 p 12 Beaulieu 2018 p 196 Krul 2018 pp 9 10 a b c Beaulieu 2003 p 105 Halloran 2006 a b Beaulieu 2003 p 106 Beaulieu 2003 p 108 Beaulieu 2003 p 107 Krul 2018 pp 10 11 Boivin 2018 p 190 a b George 1993 p 72 Beaulieu 2003 p 110 Boivin 2018 pp 190 191 Boivin 2018 p 191 Boivin 2018 p 193 Boivin 2018 p 194 Boivin 2018 pp 194 195 George 1993 p 143 a b Schwemer 2007 p 141 George 1993 p 123 a b c Krul 2018 p 13 Beaulieu 2003 p 109 Krebernik 2014a p 419 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 91 Boivin 2018 p 67 Boivin 2018 pp 198 199 Boivin 2018 p 213 Boivin 2018 p 41 George 1993 p 39 George 1993 p 110 George 1993 p 8 George 1993 p 67 George 1993 p 87 a b c Krul 2018 p 15 Beaulieu 2003 p 330 Beaulieu 2018 pp 197 198 Beaulieu 2018 p 197 Beaulieu 2018 p 198 a b Beaulieu 2018 p 199 a b Krul 2018 p 18 a b c d e Krul 2018 p 19 Krul 2018 p 1 a b c Beaulieu 2018 p 191 George 1993 p 137 Krul 2018 p 32 George 1993 p 145 Krul 2018 p 29 Beaulieu 1997 pp 69 70 Krul 2018 pp 261 262 Beaulieu 2018 p 205 Beaulieu 1997 p 69 Beaulieu 2018 pp 204 205 Beaulieu 1997 pp 68 69 Krul 2018 p 20 a b Krul 2018 p 77 Krul 2018 pp 77 78 a b Krul 2018 p 78 Gilgamesh Enkidu and the Netherworld ETCSL Oxford UK Oriental Institute Oxford University 1 8 1 4 Kramer 1961 pp 30 33 a b c Kramer 1961 pp 37 40 Kramer 1961 pp 37 41 Levine 2000 p 4 Leeming amp Page 1996 p 109 a b Nemet Nejat 1998 p 180 Enheduanna Inanna and Ebiḫ alt Goddess of the Fearsome Divine Powers ETCSL Oxford UK Oriental Institute Oxford University 1 3 2 a b c d e Karahashi 2004 p 111 Dalley 1989 pp 80 82 a b c d e f Dalley 1989 p 80 Dalley 1989 pp 81 82 Wyatt 1999 p 244 a b c d McCall 1990 p 65 McCall 1990 pp 65 66 a b c d McCall 1990 p 66 Sanders 2017 pp 38 39 Sanders 2017 pp 38 65 Liverani 2004 pp 21 23 a b c Liverani 2004 p 22 a b Beckman 2011 p 25 Beckman 2011 pp 26 27 a b Beckman 2011 p 27 a b Beckman 2011 p 28 Beckman 2011 p 29 Beckman 2011 p 30 Lambert 2013 p 423 a b Lambert 2013 pp 422 423 Mondi 1990 pp 168 170 Mondi 1990 pp 169 170 a b Mondi 1990 pp 170 171 Mondi 1990 p 171 Bibliography Edit Asher Greve Julia M Westenholz Joan G 2013 Goddesses in Context On Divine Powers Roles Relationships and Gender in Mesopotamian Textual and Visual Sources PDF ISBN 978 3 7278 1738 0 Bachvarova Mary R 2013 The Hurro Hittite Kumarbi Cycle Gods heroes and monsters a sourcebook of Greek Roman and Near Eastern myths New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 064481 9 OCLC 967417697 Beaulieu Paul Alain 1992 Antiquarian Theology in Seleucid Uruk Acta Sumerologica 14 Retrieved 2022 06 05 Beaulieu Paul Alain 1997 The Cult of AN SAR Assur in Babylonia After the Fall of the Assyrian Empire State Archives of Assyria Bulletin 11 ISSN 1120 4699 Beaulieu Paul Alain 2003 The pantheon of Uruk during the neo Babylonian period Leiden Boston Brill STYX ISBN 978 90 04 13024 1 OCLC 51944564 Beaulieu Paul Alain 2005 The God Amurru as Emblem of Ethnic and Cultural Identity In Soldt Wilfred H van Kalvelagen R Katz Dina eds Ethnicity in Ancient Mesopotamia Leiden Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten ISBN 978 90 6258 313 3 OCLC 60116687 Beaulieu Paul Alain 2018 Uruk Before and After Xerxes The Onomastic and Institutional Rise of the God Anu In Waerzeggers Caroline Seire Maarja eds Xerxes and Babylonia the Cuneiform evidence Leuven Peeters Publishers ISBN 978 90 429 3809 0 OCLC 1097184152 Beckman Gary 2011 Primordial Obstetrics The Song of Emergence CTH 344 Hethitische Literatur Uberlieferungsprozesse Textstrukturen Ausdrucksformen und Nachwirken Akten des Symposiums vom 18 bis 20 Februar 2010 in Bonn Munster Ugarit Verlag ISBN 978 3 86835 063 0 OCLC 768810899 Black Jeremy Green Anthony 1992 Gods Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia An Illustrated Dictionary The British Museum Press ISBN 0 7141 1705 6 Boivin Odette 2018 The First Dynasty of the Sealand in Mesopotamia De Gruyter doi 10 1515 9781501507823 ISBN 978 1 5015 0782 3 Burkert Walter 2005 Chapter Twenty Near Eastern Connections in Foley John Miles ed A Companion to Ancient Epic New York City New York and London England Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1 4051 0524 8 Cavigneaux Antoine Krebernik Manfred 1998 Nin ursala Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German retrieved 2022 06 04 Dalley Stephanie 1989 Myths from 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the temples of ancient Mesopotamia Winona Lake Eisenbrauns ISBN 0 931464 80 3 OCLC 27813103 Halloran John A 2006 Sumerian Lexicon Version 3 0 Harris Rivkah February 1991 Inanna Ishtar as Paradox and a Coincidence of Opposites History of Religions 30 3 261 278 doi 10 1086 463228 JSTOR 1062957 S2CID 162322517 Henkelman Wouter F M 2008 The other gods who are studies in Elamite Iranian acculturation based on the Persepolis fortification texts Leiden Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten ISBN 978 90 6258 414 7 Henkelman Wouter F M 2017 Humban and Auramazda royal gods in a Persian landscape Persian religion in the Achaemenid period Wiesbaden ISBN 978 3 447 19556 0 OCLC 1086094005 Huber Vulliet Fabienne 2011 Sara Reallexikon der Assyriologie in French retrieved 2022 06 03 Karahashi Fumi April 2004 Fighting the Mountain Some Observations on the Sumerian Myths of Inanna and Ninurta Journal of Near Eastern Studies 63 2 111 118 doi 10 1086 422302 JSTOR 422302 S2CID 161211611 Katz D 2003 The Image of the Underworld in Sumerian Sources Bethesda Maryland CDL Press ISBN 978 1 883053 77 2 Klein Jacob 1997 The God Martu in Sumerian Literature In Finkel I L Geller M J eds Sumerian Gods and their Representations ISBN 978 90 56 93005 9 Kramer Samuel Noah 1961 Sumerian Mythology A Study of Spiritual and Literary Achievement in the Third Millennium B C Revised Edition Philadelphia Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 0 8122 1047 6 Krebernik Manfred 1997 Mondgott A I In Mesopotamien Reallexikon der Assyriologie retrieved 2022 06 03 Krebernik Manfred 2014 Uras A Reallexikon der Assyriologie retrieved 2022 06 04 Krebernik Manfred 2014a Urkitum Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German retrieved 2022 06 04 Krul Julia 2018 The Revival of the Anu Cult and the Nocturnal Fire Ceremony at Late Babylonian Uruk Brill doi 10 1163 9789004364943 ISBN 9789004364936 Lambert Wilfred G 1980 Jabnu Reallexikon der Assyriologie retrieved 2022 06 03 Lambert Wilfred G 1999 Literary Texts from Nimrud Archiv fur Orientforschung Archiv fur Orientforschung AfO Institut fur Orientalistik 46 47 149 155 ISSN 0066 6440 JSTOR 41668445 Retrieved 2022 06 03 Lambert Wilfred G 2007 An Exotic Babylonian God List Studies presented to Robert D Biggs June 4 2004 Chicago Illinois Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago ISBN 978 1 885923 44 8 OCLC 67873765 Lambert Wilfred G 2013 Babylonian creation myths Winona Lake Indiana Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1 57506 861 9 OCLC 861537250 Leeming David Adams Page Jack 1996 God Myths of the Male Divine Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 511387 7 Levine Etan 2000 Air in Biblical Thought Heaven and Earth Law and Love Studies in Biblical Thought Herausgegeben von Otto Kaiser Berlin Germany and New York City New York Walter de Gruyter ISBN 3 11 016952 5 Liverani Mario 2004 Myth and Politics in Ancient Near Eastern Historiography Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 7358 6 McCall Henrietta 1990 Mesopotamian Myths The Legendary Past Austin Texas University of Texas Press ISBN 0 292 75130 3 Metcalf Christopher 2019 Sumerian Literary Texts in the Schoyen Collection Penn State University Press doi 10 1515 9781646020119 ISBN 978 1 64602 011 9 S2CID 241160992 Metcalf Christopher 2021 Tales of Kings and Cup Bearers in History and Myth Gods and Mortals in Early Greek and Near Eastern Mythology Cambridge University Press pp 154 168 doi 10 1017 9781108648028 011 ISBN 9781108648028 S2CID 233538697 Mondi Robert 1990 Greek and Near Eastern Mythology Greek Mythic Thought in the Light of the Near East in Edmunds Lowell ed Approaches to Greek Myth Baltimore Maryland The Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 3864 9 Nemet Nejat Karen Rhea 1998 Daily Life in Ancient Mesopotamia Daily Life Greenwood ISBN 978 0 313 29497 6 Peterson Jeremiah 2009 God lists from Old Babylonian Nippur in the University Museum Philadelphia Munster Ugarit Verlag ISBN 978 3 86835 019 7 OCLC 460044951 Piveteau Jean 1981 1964 Man Before History in Dunan Marcel Bowle John eds The Larousse Encyclopedia of Ancient and Medieval History New York City New York Excaliber Books ISBN 0 89673 083 2 Polvani Anna Maria 2008 The god Eltara and the Theogony PDF Studi micenei ed egeo anatolici 50 1 617 624 ISSN 1126 6651 Retrieved 2022 06 23 Rogers John H 1998 Origins of the Ancient Astronomical Constellations I The Mesopotamian Traditions Journal of the British Astronomical Association London England The British Astronomical Association 108 1 9 28 Bibcode 1998JBAA 108 9R Sanders Seth L 2017 From Adapa to Enoch Scribal Culture and Religious Vision in Judea and Babylonia Tubingen Germany Mohr Siebeck ISBN 978 3 16 154456 9 Schneider Tammi J 2011 An Introduction to Ancient Mesopotamian Religion Grand Rapids Michigan William B Eerdman s Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 8028 2959 7 Schwemer Daniel 2001 Die Wettergottgestalten Mesopotamiens und Nordsyriens im Zeitalter der Keilschriftkulturen Materialien und Studien nach den schriftlichen Quellen in German Wiesbaden Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3 447 04456 1 OCLC 48145544 Schwemer Daniel 2007 The Storm Gods of the Ancient Near East Summary Synthesis Recent Studies Part I PDF Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions Brill 7 2 121 168 doi 10 1163 156921207783876404 ISSN 1569 2116 Schwemer Daniel 2008 The Storm Gods of the Ancient Near East Summary Synthesis Recent Studies Part II Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions Brill 8 1 1 44 doi 10 1163 156921208786182428 ISSN 1569 2116 Seidl Ursula 1989 Die babylonischen Kudurru reliefs Symbole mesopotamischer Gottheiten Orbis biblicus et orientalis in German Universitatsverlag ISBN 978 3 7278 0603 2 Retrieved 2022 06 04 Sjoberg Ake W 1973 Nungal in the Ekur Archiv fur Orientforschung Archiv fur Orientforschung AfO Institut fur Orientalistik 24 19 46 ISSN 0066 6440 JSTOR 41637722 Retrieved 2022 06 03 Steinkeller Piotr 1982 The Mesopotamian God Kakka Journal of Near Eastern Studies University of Chicago Press 41 4 289 294 doi 10 1086 372968 ISSN 0022 2968 JSTOR 544089 S2CID 161219123 Retrieved 2022 06 05 Stephens Kathryn 2013 An Anu god Ancient Mesopotamian Gods and Goddesses Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus UK Higher Education Academy Wang Xianhua 2011 The metamorphosis of Enlil in early Mesopotamia Munster ISBN 978 3 86835 052 4 OCLC 712921671 Westenholz Joan G 2010 Ninkarrak an Akkadian goddess in Sumerian guise Von Gottern und Menschen BRILL pp 377 405 doi 10 1163 9789004187474 020 ISBN 9789004187481 Wiggermann Frans A M 1992 Mythological Foundations of Nature Natural phenomena their meaning depiction and description in the ancient Near East Amsterdam North Holland Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences ISBN 0 444 85759 1 OCLC 32242903 Wiggermann Frans A M 1998 Nammu Reallexikon der Assyriologie retrieved 2022 06 04 Wiggermann Frans A M 1998a Nin subur Reallexikon der Assyriologie retrieved 2022 06 05 Wiggins Steve 2007 A reassessment of Asherah with further considerations of the goddess Piscataway NJ Gorgias Press ISBN 978 1 59333 717 9 OCLC 171049273 Wilhelm Gernot 1989 The Hurrians Warminster England Aris amp Phillips ISBN 978 0 85668 442 5 OCLC 21036268 Wilhelm Gernot 2014 Unterwelt Unterweltsgottheiten C In Anatolien Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German retrieved 2022 06 23 Wyatt Nicolas 1999 The Story of Aqhat Handbook of Ugaritic Studies Handbook of Oriental Studies Brill ISBN 978 90 04 10988 9 Retrieved 2022 06 05 Further reading EditVv Aa 1951 University of California Publications in Semitic Philology vol 11 12 University of California Press OCLC 977787419 Horry Ruth 2016 Enki Ea god Ancient Mesopotamian Gods and Goddesses Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus UK Higher Education Academy Kramer Samuel Noah 1963 The Sumerians Their History Culture and Character Chicago Illinois University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 45238 7 Leick Gwendolyn 1998 1991 A Dictionary of Ancient Near Eastern Mythology New York City New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 19811 9 Pope Marvin H 1955 El in the Ugaritic Texts Supplements to Vetus Testamentum Leiden The Netherlands E J Brill 2 ISSN 0083 5889 Stone Adam 2016 Enlil Ellil god Ancient Mesopotamian Gods and Goddesses Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus UK Higher Education AcademyExternal links Edit Quotations related to Anu at Wikiquote The dictionary definition of anu at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anu amp oldid 1167584223, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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