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Ancient Mesopotamian underworld

The ancient Mesopotamian underworld, most often known in Sumerian as Kur, Irkalla, Kukku, Arali, or Kigal and in Akkadian as Erṣetu, although it had many names in both languages, was a dark, dreary cavern located deep below the ground,[1][2] where inhabitants were believed to continue "a transpositional version of life on earth".[1] The only food or drink was dry dust, but family members of the deceased would pour sacred mineral libations from the earth for them to drink. In the Sumerian underworld, it was initially believed that there was no final judgement of the deceased and the dead were neither punished nor rewarded for their deeds in life.

Ancient Sumerian cylinder seal impression showing the god Dumuzid being tortured in the underworld by galla demons

The ruler of the underworld was the goddess Ereshkigal, who lived in the palace Ganzir, sometimes used as a name for the underworld itself. Her husband was either Gugalanna, the "canal-inspector of Anu", or, especially in later stories, Nergal, the god of war. After the Akkadian Period (c. 2334–2154 BC), Nergal sometimes took over the role as ruler of the underworld. The seven gates of the underworld are guarded by a gatekeeper, who is named Neti in Sumerian. The god Namtar acts as Ereshkigal's sukkal, or divine attendant. The dying god Dumuzid spends half the year in the underworld, while, during the other half, his place is taken by his sister, the scribal goddess Geshtinanna, who records the names of the deceased. The underworld was also the abode of various demons, including the hideous child-devourer Lamashtu, the fearsome wind demon and protector god Pazuzu, and galla, who dragged mortals to the underworld.

Names edit

The Sumerians had a large number of different names which they applied to the underworld, including Arali, Irkalla, Kukku, Kur, Kigal, and Ganzir.[3] All of these terms were later borrowed into Akkadian.[3] The rest of the time, the underworld was simply known by words meaning "earth" or "sand", including the terms Kur and Ki in Sumerian and the word erṣetu in Akkadian.[3] When used in reference to the underworld, the word Kur usually means "ground",[3][4][a] but sometimes this meaning is conflated with another possible meaning of the word Kur as "mountain".[3] The cuneiform sign for Kur was written ideographically with the cuneiform sign 𒆳, a pictograph of a mountain.[7] Sometimes the underworld is called the "land of no return", the "desert", or the "lower world".[3] The most common name for the earth and the underworld in Akkadian is erṣetu,[8] but other names for the underworld include: ammatu, arali / arallû, bīt ddumuzi ("House of Dumuzi"), danninu, erṣetu la târi ("Earth of No Return"), ganzer / kanisurra, ḫaštu, irkalla, kiūru, kukkû ("Darkness"), kurnugû ("Earth of No Return"), lammu, mātu šaplītu, and qaqqaru.[8] In the myth "Nergal and Ereshkigal" it is also referred to as Kurnugi.[9]

Conditions edit

 
Detail of the "Peace" panel of the Standard of Ur from the Royal Cemetery at Ur, showing a man playing a lyre. The Sumerians believed that, for the highly privileged, music could alleviate the bleak conditions of the underworld.[10]

All souls went to the same afterlife,[1][3] and a person's actions during life had no effect on how the person would be treated in the world to come.[1] Unlike in the ancient Egyptian afterlife, there was no process of judgement or evaluation for the deceased;[3] they merely appeared before Ereshkigal, who would pronounce them dead,[3] and their names would be recorded by the scribal goddess Geshtinanna.[3] The souls in Kur were believed to eat nothing but dry dust[11] and family members of the deceased would ritually pour libations into the dead person's grave through a clay pipe, thereby allowing the dead to drink.[12] For this reason, it was considered essential to have as many offspring as possible so that one's descendants could continue to provide libations for the dead person to drink for many years.[13] Those who had died without descendants would suffer the most in the underworld, because they would have nothing to drink at all,[14] and were believed to haunt the living.[15] Sometimes the dead are described as naked or clothed in feathers like birds.[3]

Nonetheless, there are assumptions according to which treasures in wealthy graves had been intended as offerings for Utu and the Anunnaki, so that the deceased would receive special favors in the underworld.[2] During the Third Dynasty of Ur (c. 2112 – c. 2004 BC), it was believed that a person's treatment in the afterlife depended on how they were buried;[12] those that had been given sumptuous burials would be treated well,[12] but those who had been given poor burials would fare poorly.[12] Those who did not receive a proper burial, such as those who had died in fires and whose bodies had been burned or those who died alone in the desert, would have no existence in the underworld at all, but would simply cease to exist.[14] The Sumerians believed that, for the highly privileged, music could alleviate the bleak conditions of the underworld.[10]

Geography edit

A staircase led down to the gates of the underworld.[3] The underworld itself is usually located even deeper below ground than the Abzu, the body of freshwater which the ancient Mesopotamians believed lay deep beneath the earth.[3] In other, conflicting traditions, however, it seems to be located at a remote and inaccessible location on Earth, possibly somewhere in the far west.[3] This alternate tradition is hinted at by the fact that the underworld is sometimes called "desert"[3] and by the fact that actual rivers located far away from Sumer are sometimes referred to as the "river of the underworld".[3] The underworld was believed to have seven gates, through which a soul needed to pass.[1] All seven gates were protected by bolts.[16] The god Neti was the gatekeeper.[17][18] Ereshkigal's sukkal, or messenger, was the god Namtar.[19][17] The palace of Ereshkigal was known as Ganzir.[16]

At night, the sun-god Utu was believed to travel through the underworld as he journeyed to the east in preparation for the sunrise.[20] One Sumerian literary work refers to Utu illuminating the underworld and dispensing judgement there[21] and Shamash Hymn 31 (BWL 126) states that Utu serves as a judge of the dead in the underworld alongside the malku, kusu, and the Anunnaki.[21] On his way through the underworld, Utu was believed to pass through the garden of the sun-god,[20] which contained trees that bore precious gems as fruit.[20] The Sumerian hymn Inanna and Utu contains an etiological myth in which Utu's sister Inanna begs her brother Utu to take her to Kur,[22] so that she may taste the fruit of a tree that grows there,[22] which will reveal to her all the secrets of sex.[22] Utu complies and, in Kur, Inanna tastes the fruit and becomes knowledgeable of sex.[22]

Inhabitants edit

Ereshkigal and family edit

 
The "Queen of Night Relief" (c. nineteenth or eighteenth century BC), which is believed to represent either Ereshkigal or her younger sister Inanna

A number of deities were believed by the ancient Mesopotamians to reside in the underworld.[3] The queen of the underworld was the goddess Ereshkigal.[16][17][1] She was believed to live in a palace known as Ganzir.[16] In earlier stories, her husband is Gugalanna,[16] but, in later myths, her husband is the god Nergal.[16][17] Her gatekeeper was the god Neti[17] and her sukkal is the god Namtar.[16] In the poem Inanna's Descent into the Underworld, Ereshkigal is described as Inanna's "older sister".[23]

Gugalanna is the first husband of Ereshkigal, the queen of the underworld.[16] His name probably originally meant "canal inspector of An"[16] and he may be merely an alternative name for Ennugi.[16] The son of Ereshkigal and Gugalanna is Ninazu.[16] In Inanna's Descent into the Underworld, Inanna tells the gatekeeper Neti that she is descending to the underworld to attend the funeral of "Gugalanna, the husband of my elder sister Ereshkigal".[16][24][23]

During the Akkadian Period (c. 2334 – 2154 BC), Ereshkigal's role as the ruler of the underworld was assigned to Nergal, the god of death.[1][17] The Akkadians attempted to harmonize this dual rulership of the underworld by making Nergal Ereshkigal's husband.[1] Nergal is the deity most often identified as Ereshkigal's husband.[25] He was also associated with forest fires (and identified with the fire-god, Gibil[26]), fevers, plagues, and war.[25] In myths, he causes destruction and devastation.[25]

Ninazu is the son of Ereshkigal and the father of Ningishzida.[27] He is closely associated with the underworld.[27] He was mostly worshipped in Eshnunna during the third millennium BC, but he was later supplanted by the Hurrian storm god Tishpak.[27] A god named "Ninazu" was also worshipped at Enegi in southern Sumer,[27] but this may be a different local god by the same name.[27] His divine beast was the mušḫuššu, a kind of dragon, which was later given to Tishpak and then Marduk.[27]

Ningishzida is a god who normally lives in the underworld.[28] He is the son of Ninazu and his name may be etymologically derived from a phrase meaning "Lord of the Good Tree".[28] In the Sumerian poem, The Death of Gilgamesh, the hero Gilgamesh dies and meets Ningishzida, along with Dumuzid, in the underworld.[29] Gudea, the Sumerian king of the city-state of Lagash, revered Ningishzida as his personal protector.[29] In the myth of Adapa, Dumuzid and Ningishzida are described as guarding the gates of the highest Heaven.[30] Ningishzida was associated with the constellation Hydra.[31]

Other underworld deities edit

 
Terracotta plaque dating to the Amorite Period (c. 2000–1600 BC) showing a dead god (probably Dumuzid) resting in his coffin

Dumuzid, later known by the corrupted form Tammuz, is the ancient Mesopotamian god of shepherds[32] and the primary consort of the goddess Inanna.[32] His sister is the goddess Geshtinanna.[32][33] In addition to being the god of shepherds, Dumuzid was also an agricultural deity associated with the growth of plants.[34][35] Ancient Near Eastern peoples associated Dumuzid with the springtime, when the land was fertile and abundant,[34][36] but, during the summer months, when the land was dry and barren, it was thought that Dumuzid had "died".[34][37] During the month of Dumuzid, which fell in the middle of summer, people all across Sumer would mourn over his death.[38][39] An enormous number of popular stories circulated throughout the Near East surrounding his death.[38][39]

Geshtinanna is a rural agricultural goddess sometimes associated with dream interpretation.[40] She is the sister of Dumuzid, the god of shepherds.[40] In one story, she protects her brother when the galla demons come to drag him down to the underworld by hiding him successively in four different places.[40] In another version of the story, she refuses to tell the galla where he is hiding, even after they torture her.[40] The galla eventually take Dumuzid away after he is betrayed by an unnamed "friend",[40] but Inanna decrees that he and Geshtinanna will alternate places every six months, each spending half the year in the underworld while the other stays in Heaven.[40] While she is in the underworld, Geshtinanna serves as Ereshkigal's scribe.[40]

Lugal-irra and Meslamta-ea are a set of twin gods who were worshipped in the village of Kisiga, located in northern Babylonia.[41] They were regarded as guardians of doorways[42] and they may have originally been envisioned as a set of twins guarding the gates of the underworld, who chopped the dead into pieces as they passed through the gates.[43] During the Neo-Assyrian Period (911 BC–609 BC), small depictions of them would be buried at entrances,[42] with Lugal-irra always on the left and Meslamta-ea always on the right.[42] They are identical and are shown wearing horned caps and each holding an axe and a mace.[42] They are identified with the constellation Gemini, which is named after them.[42]

Neti is the gatekeeper of the underworld.[44] In the story of Inanna's Descent into the Underworld, he leads Inanna through the seven gates of the underworld,[44][45] removing one of her garments at each gate so that when she comes before Ereshkigal she is naked and symbolically powerless.[44][45] Belet-Seri is a chthonic underworld goddess who was thought to record the names of the deceased as they entered the underworld.[46] Enmesarra is a minor deity of the underworld.[47] Seven or eight other minor deities were said to be his offspring.[47] His symbol was the suššuru (a kind of pigeon).[47] In one incantation, Enmesarra and Ninmesharra, his female counterpart, are invoked as ancestors of Enki and as primeval deities.[47] Ennugi is "the canal inspector of the gods".[16] He is the son of Enlil or Enmesarra[16] and his wife is the goddess Nanibgal.[16] He is associated with the underworld[47] and he may be Gugalanna, the first husband of Ereshkigal, under a different name.[16]

Demons edit

 
Bronze statuette of Pazuzu (c. 800 – c. 700 BC)
 
Close-up of Lamashtu from a lead protection plaque dating to the Neo-Assyrian Period (911–609 BC)

The ancient Mesopotamians also believed that the underworld was home to many demons,[3] which are sometimes referred to as "offspring of arali".[3] These demons could sometimes leave the underworld and terrorize mortals on earth.[3] One class of demons that were believed to reside in the underworld were known as galla;[48] their primary purpose appears to have been to drag unfortunate mortals back to Kur.[48] They are frequently referenced in magical texts,[49] and some texts describe them as being seven in number.[49] Several extant poems describe the galla dragging the god Dumuzid into the underworld.[18] Like other demons, however, galla could also be benevolent[18] and, in a hymn from King Gudea of Lagash (c. 2144 – 2124 BC), a minor god named Ig-alima is described as "the great galla of Girsu".[18] Demons had no cult in Mesopotamian religious practice since demons "know no food, know no drink, eat no flour offering and drink no libation."[50]

Lamashtu was a demonic goddess with the "head of a lion, the teeth of a donkey, naked breasts, a hairy body, hands stained (with blood?), long fingers and fingernails, and the feet of Anzû."[51] She was believed to feed on the blood of human infants[51] and was widely blamed as the cause of miscarriages and cot deaths.[51] Although Lamashtu has traditionally been identified as a demoness,[52] the fact that she could cause evil on her own without the permission of other deities strongly indicates that she was seen as a goddess in her own right.[51] Mesopotamian peoples protected against her using amulets and talismans.[51] She was believed to ride in her boat on the river of the underworld[51] and she was associated with donkeys.[51] She was believed to be the daughter of An.[51]

Pazuzu is a demonic god who was well known to the Babylonians and Assyrians throughout the first millennium BC.[53] He is shown with "a rather canine face with abnormally bulging eyes, a scaly body, a snake-headed penis, the talons of a bird and usually wings."[53] He was believed to be the son of the god Hanbi.[54] He was usually regarded as evil,[53] but he could also sometimes be a beneficent entity who protected against winds bearing pestilence[53] and he was thought to be able to force Lamashtu back to the underworld.[55] Amulets bearing his image were positioned in dwellings to protect infants from Lamashtu[54] and pregnant women frequently wore amulets with his head on them as protection from her.[54]

Šul-pa-e's name means "youthful brilliance", but he was not envisioned as a youthful god.[56] According to one tradition, he was the consort of Ninhursag, a tradition which contradicts the usual portrayal of Enki as Ninhursag's consort.[56][57] In one Sumerian poem, offerings are made to Šhul-pa-e in the underworld and, in later mythology, he was one of the demons of the underworld.[56]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In his book Sumerian Mythology, first published in 1944 and revised in 1961, the scholar Samuel Noah Kramer argued that Kur could also refer to a personal entity, a monstrous dragon-like creature analogous to the Babylonian Tiamat,[5] but this interpretation was refuted as unsubstantiated by Thorkild Jacobsen in his essay "Sumerian Mythology: A Review Article"[6] and is not mentioned in more recent sources.

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Choksi 2014.
  2. ^ a b Barret 2007, pp. 7–65.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Black & Green 1992, p. 180.
  4. ^ Kramer 1961, p. 76.
  5. ^ Kramer 1961, pp. 76–83.
  6. ^ Jacobsen 2008a, pp. 121–126.
  7. ^ Kramer 1961, p. 110.
  8. ^ a b Horowitz 1998, pp. 268–269.
  9. ^ Dalley 2008, p. 169.
  10. ^ a b Black & Green 1992, p. 25.
  11. ^ Black & Green 1992, pp. 58, 180.
  12. ^ a b c d Black & Green 1992, p. 58.
  13. ^ Black & Green 1992, pp. 180–181.
  14. ^ a b Black & Green 1992, p. 181.
  15. ^ Black & Green 1992, pp. 88–89.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Black & Green 1992, p. 77.
  17. ^ a b c d e f Nemet-Nejat 1998, p. 184.
  18. ^ a b c d Black & Green 1992, p. 86.
  19. ^ Black & Green 1992, p. 134.
  20. ^ a b c Holland 2009, p. 115.
  21. ^ a b Horowitz 1998, p. 352.
  22. ^ a b c d Leick 1998, p. 91.
  23. ^ a b Wolkstein & Kramer 1983, p. 55.
  24. ^ Kramer 1961, p. 90.
  25. ^ a b c Black & Green 1992, p. 136.
  26. ^ Kasak & Veede 2001, p. 28.
  27. ^ a b c d e f Black & Green 1992, p. 137.
  28. ^ a b Black & Green 1992, p. 138.
  29. ^ a b Black & Green 1992, p. 139.
  30. ^ Black & Green 1992, pp. 139–140.
  31. ^ Black & Green 1992, p. 140.
  32. ^ a b c Black & Green 1992, p. 72.
  33. ^ Wolkstein & Kramer 1983, pp. 74–84.
  34. ^ a b c Ackerman 2006, p. 116.
  35. ^ Jacobsen 2008b, pp. 87–88.
  36. ^ Jacobsen 2008b, pp. 83–84.
  37. ^ Jacobsen 2008b, pp. 83–87.
  38. ^ a b Black & Green 1992, p. 73.
  39. ^ a b Jacobsen 2008b, pp. 74–84.
  40. ^ a b c d e f g Black & Green 1992, p. 88.
  41. ^ Black & Green 1992, p. 123.
  42. ^ a b c d e Black & Green 1992, p. 124.
  43. ^ Black & Green 1992, pp. 123–124.
  44. ^ a b c Kramer 1961, p. 87.
  45. ^ a b Wolkstein & Kramer 1983, pp. 157–159.
  46. ^ Jordan 2002, p. 48.
  47. ^ a b c d e Black & Green 1992, p. 76.
  48. ^ a b Black & Green 1992, p. 85.
  49. ^ a b Black & Green 1992, pp. 85–86.
  50. ^ cf. line 295 in "Inanna's descent into the nether world"
  51. ^ a b c d e f g h Black & Green 1992, p. 116.
  52. ^ Black & Green 1992, pp. 115–116.
  53. ^ a b c d Black & Green 1992, p. 147.
  54. ^ a b c Black & Green 1992, p. 148.
  55. ^ Black & Green 1992, pp. 147–148.
  56. ^ a b c Black & Green 1992, p. 173.
  57. ^ George 1999, p. 225.

Works cited edit

  • Ackerman, Susan (2006) [1989], Day, Peggy Lynne (ed.), Gender and Difference in Ancient Israel, Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, ISBN 978-0-8006-2393-7
  • Barret, C. E. (2007), "Was dust their food and clay their bread?: Grave goods, the Mesopotamian afterlife, and the liminal role of Inana/Ištar", Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions, 7 (1), Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill: 7–65, doi:10.1163/156921207781375123, ISSN 1569-2116
  • Black, Jeremy; Green, Anthony (1992), Gods, Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia: An Illustrated Dictionary, Austin: University of Texas Press, ISBN 0714117056
  • Choksi, M. (2014), "Ancient Mesopotamian Beliefs in the Afterlife", World History Encyclopedia
  • Dalley, Stephanie (2008). Myths from Mesopotamia: Creation, The Flood, Gilgamesh, and Others. OUP Oxford. ISBN 9780191027215.
  • George, Andrew (1999), "Glossary of Proper Nouns", The Epic of Gilgamesh: The Babylonian Epic Poem and Other Texts in Akkadian and Sumerian, London, New York City, Melbourne, Toronto, New Delhi, Auckland, and Rosebank, South Africa: Penguin Books, ISBN 978-0-14-044919-8
  • Holland, Glenn Stanfield (2009), Gods in the Desert: Religions of the Ancient Near East, Lanham, MD; Boulder, CO; New York; Toronto; and Plymouth, UK: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., ISBN 978-0-7425-9979-6
  • Horowitz, Wayne (1998), Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography, Mesopotamian Civilizations, Winona Lake, Indiana: Eisenbrauns, ISBN 978-0-931464-99-7
  • Jacobsen, Thorkild (2008a) [1970], "Sumerian Mythology: A Review Article", in Moran, William L. (ed.), Toward the Image of Tammuz and Other Essays on Mesopotamian History and Culture, Dove Studies in Bible, Language, and History, Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, pp. 104–131, ISBN 978-1-55635-952-1
  • Jacobsen, Thorkild (2008b) [1970], "Toward the Image of Tammuz", in Moran, William L. (ed.), Toward the Image of Tammuz and Other Essays on Mesopotamian History and Culture, Dove Studies in Bible, Language, and History, Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, pp. 73–103, ISBN 978-1-55635-952-1
  • Jordan, Michael (2002) [1993], Encyclopedia of Gods, London: Kyle Cathie Limited, ISBN 978-0-8160-5923-2
  • Kasak, Enn; Veede, Raul (2001), Kõiva, Mare; Kuperjanov, Andres (eds.), "Understanding Planets in Ancient Mesopotamia" (PDF), Folklore: Electronic Journal of Folklore, 16, Tartu, Estonia: Folk Belief and Media Group of ELM: 7–33, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.570.6778, doi:10.7592/FEJF2001.16.planets, ISSN 1406-0957
  • Kramer, Samuel Noah (1961), Sumerian Mythology: A Study of Spiritual and Literary Achievement in the Third Millennium B.C.: Revised Edition, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, ISBN 978-0-8122-1047-7
  • Leick, Gwendolyn (1998) [1991], A Dictionary of Ancient Near Eastern Mythology, New York: Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-19811-0
  • Nemet-Nejat, Karen Rhea (1998), Daily Life in Ancient Mesopotamia, Daily Life, Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood, ISBN 978-0-313-29497-6
  • Wolkstein, Diane; Kramer, Samuel Noah (1983), Inanna: Queen of Heaven and Earth: Her Stories and Hymns from Sumer, New York: Harper&Row Publishers, ISBN 978-0-06-090854-6

ancient, mesopotamian, underworld, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, ancient, mesopotamian, underworld, most, often, known, sumerian, irkalla, kukku, arali, kigal, akkadian, erṣetu, although, many, names, both, languages, dark, dreary, cavern, loca. Kur redirects here For other uses see Kur disambiguation The ancient Mesopotamian underworld most often known in Sumerian as Kur Irkalla Kukku Arali or Kigal and in Akkadian as Erṣetu although it had many names in both languages was a dark dreary cavern located deep below the ground 1 2 where inhabitants were believed to continue a transpositional version of life on earth 1 The only food or drink was dry dust but family members of the deceased would pour sacred mineral libations from the earth for them to drink In the Sumerian underworld it was initially believed that there was no final judgement of the deceased and the dead were neither punished nor rewarded for their deeds in life Ancient Sumerian cylinder seal impression showing the god Dumuzid being tortured in the underworld by galla demons The ruler of the underworld was the goddess Ereshkigal who lived in the palace Ganzir sometimes used as a name for the underworld itself Her husband was either Gugalanna the canal inspector of Anu or especially in later stories Nergal the god of war After the Akkadian Period c 2334 2154 BC Nergal sometimes took over the role as ruler of the underworld The seven gates of the underworld are guarded by a gatekeeper who is named Neti in Sumerian The god Namtar acts as Ereshkigal s sukkal or divine attendant The dying god Dumuzid spends half the year in the underworld while during the other half his place is taken by his sister the scribal goddess Geshtinanna who records the names of the deceased The underworld was also the abode of various demons including the hideous child devourer Lamashtu the fearsome wind demon and protector god Pazuzu and galla who dragged mortals to the underworld Contents 1 Names 2 Conditions 3 Geography 4 Inhabitants 4 1 Ereshkigal and family 4 2 Other underworld deities 4 3 Demons 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 6 3 Works citedNames editThe Sumerians had a large number of different names which they applied to the underworld including Arali Irkalla Kukku Kur Kigal and Ganzir 3 All of these terms were later borrowed into Akkadian 3 The rest of the time the underworld was simply known by words meaning earth or sand including the terms Kur and Ki in Sumerian and the word erṣetu in Akkadian 3 When used in reference to the underworld the word Kur usually means ground 3 4 a but sometimes this meaning is conflated with another possible meaning of the word Kur as mountain 3 The cuneiform sign for Kur was written ideographically with the cuneiform sign 𒆳 a pictograph of a mountain 7 Sometimes the underworld is called the land of no return the desert or the lower world 3 The most common name for the earth and the underworld in Akkadian is erṣetu 8 but other names for the underworld include ammatu arali arallu bit ddumuzi House of Dumuzi danninu erṣetu la tari Earth of No Return ganzer kanisurra ḫastu irkalla kiuru kukku Darkness kurnugu Earth of No Return lammu matu saplitu and qaqqaru 8 In the myth Nergal and Ereshkigal it is also referred to as Kurnugi 9 Conditions edit nbsp Detail of the Peace panel of the Standard of Ur from the Royal Cemetery at Ur showing a man playing a lyre The Sumerians believed that for the highly privileged music could alleviate the bleak conditions of the underworld 10 All souls went to the same afterlife 1 3 and a person s actions during life had no effect on how the person would be treated in the world to come 1 Unlike in the ancient Egyptian afterlife there was no process of judgement or evaluation for the deceased 3 they merely appeared before Ereshkigal who would pronounce them dead 3 and their names would be recorded by the scribal goddess Geshtinanna 3 The souls in Kur were believed to eat nothing but dry dust 11 and family members of the deceased would ritually pour libations into the dead person s grave through a clay pipe thereby allowing the dead to drink 12 For this reason it was considered essential to have as many offspring as possible so that one s descendants could continue to provide libations for the dead person to drink for many years 13 Those who had died without descendants would suffer the most in the underworld because they would have nothing to drink at all 14 and were believed to haunt the living 15 Sometimes the dead are described as naked or clothed in feathers like birds 3 Nonetheless there are assumptions according to which treasures in wealthy graves had been intended as offerings for Utu and the Anunnaki so that the deceased would receive special favors in the underworld 2 During the Third Dynasty of Ur c 2112 c 2004 BC it was believed that a person s treatment in the afterlife depended on how they were buried 12 those that had been given sumptuous burials would be treated well 12 but those who had been given poor burials would fare poorly 12 Those who did not receive a proper burial such as those who had died in fires and whose bodies had been burned or those who died alone in the desert would have no existence in the underworld at all but would simply cease to exist 14 The Sumerians believed that for the highly privileged music could alleviate the bleak conditions of the underworld 10 Geography editA staircase led down to the gates of the underworld 3 The underworld itself is usually located even deeper below ground than the Abzu the body of freshwater which the ancient Mesopotamians believed lay deep beneath the earth 3 In other conflicting traditions however it seems to be located at a remote and inaccessible location on Earth possibly somewhere in the far west 3 This alternate tradition is hinted at by the fact that the underworld is sometimes called desert 3 and by the fact that actual rivers located far away from Sumer are sometimes referred to as the river of the underworld 3 The underworld was believed to have seven gates through which a soul needed to pass 1 All seven gates were protected by bolts 16 The god Neti was the gatekeeper 17 18 Ereshkigal s sukkal or messenger was the god Namtar 19 17 The palace of Ereshkigal was known as Ganzir 16 At night the sun god Utu was believed to travel through the underworld as he journeyed to the east in preparation for the sunrise 20 One Sumerian literary work refers to Utu illuminating the underworld and dispensing judgement there 21 and Shamash Hymn 31 BWL 126 states that Utu serves as a judge of the dead in the underworld alongside the malku kusu and the Anunnaki 21 On his way through the underworld Utu was believed to pass through the garden of the sun god 20 which contained trees that bore precious gems as fruit 20 The Sumerian hymn Inanna and Utu contains an etiological myth in which Utu s sister Inanna begs her brother Utu to take her to Kur 22 so that she may taste the fruit of a tree that grows there 22 which will reveal to her all the secrets of sex 22 Utu complies and in Kur Inanna tastes the fruit and becomes knowledgeable of sex 22 Inhabitants editEreshkigal and family edit nbsp The Queen of Night Relief c nineteenth or eighteenth century BC which is believed to represent either Ereshkigal or her younger sister Inanna A number of deities were believed by the ancient Mesopotamians to reside in the underworld 3 The queen of the underworld was the goddess Ereshkigal 16 17 1 She was believed to live in a palace known as Ganzir 16 In earlier stories her husband is Gugalanna 16 but in later myths her husband is the god Nergal 16 17 Her gatekeeper was the god Neti 17 and her sukkal is the god Namtar 16 In the poem Inanna s Descent into the Underworld Ereshkigal is described as Inanna s older sister 23 Gugalanna is the first husband of Ereshkigal the queen of the underworld 16 His name probably originally meant canal inspector of An 16 and he may be merely an alternative name for Ennugi 16 The son of Ereshkigal and Gugalanna is Ninazu 16 In Inanna s Descent into the Underworld Inanna tells the gatekeeper Neti that she is descending to the underworld to attend the funeral of Gugalanna the husband of my elder sister Ereshkigal 16 24 23 During the Akkadian Period c 2334 2154 BC Ereshkigal s role as the ruler of the underworld was assigned to Nergal the god of death 1 17 The Akkadians attempted to harmonize this dual rulership of the underworld by making Nergal Ereshkigal s husband 1 Nergal is the deity most often identified as Ereshkigal s husband 25 He was also associated with forest fires and identified with the fire god Gibil 26 fevers plagues and war 25 In myths he causes destruction and devastation 25 Ninazu is the son of Ereshkigal and the father of Ningishzida 27 He is closely associated with the underworld 27 He was mostly worshipped in Eshnunna during the third millennium BC but he was later supplanted by the Hurrian storm god Tishpak 27 A god named Ninazu was also worshipped at Enegi in southern Sumer 27 but this may be a different local god by the same name 27 His divine beast was the musḫussu a kind of dragon which was later given to Tishpak and then Marduk 27 Ningishzida is a god who normally lives in the underworld 28 He is the son of Ninazu and his name may be etymologically derived from a phrase meaning Lord of the Good Tree 28 In the Sumerian poem The Death of Gilgamesh the hero Gilgamesh dies and meets Ningishzida along with Dumuzid in the underworld 29 Gudea the Sumerian king of the city state of Lagash revered Ningishzida as his personal protector 29 In the myth of Adapa Dumuzid and Ningishzida are described as guarding the gates of the highest Heaven 30 Ningishzida was associated with the constellation Hydra 31 Other underworld deities edit nbsp Terracotta plaque dating to the Amorite Period c 2000 1600 BC showing a dead god probably Dumuzid resting in his coffin Dumuzid later known by the corrupted form Tammuz is the ancient Mesopotamian god of shepherds 32 and the primary consort of the goddess Inanna 32 His sister is the goddess Geshtinanna 32 33 In addition to being the god of shepherds Dumuzid was also an agricultural deity associated with the growth of plants 34 35 Ancient Near Eastern peoples associated Dumuzid with the springtime when the land was fertile and abundant 34 36 but during the summer months when the land was dry and barren it was thought that Dumuzid had died 34 37 During the month of Dumuzid which fell in the middle of summer people all across Sumer would mourn over his death 38 39 An enormous number of popular stories circulated throughout the Near East surrounding his death 38 39 Geshtinanna is a rural agricultural goddess sometimes associated with dream interpretation 40 She is the sister of Dumuzid the god of shepherds 40 In one story she protects her brother when the galla demons come to drag him down to the underworld by hiding him successively in four different places 40 In another version of the story she refuses to tell the galla where he is hiding even after they torture her 40 The galla eventually take Dumuzid away after he is betrayed by an unnamed friend 40 but Inanna decrees that he and Geshtinanna will alternate places every six months each spending half the year in the underworld while the other stays in Heaven 40 While she is in the underworld Geshtinanna serves as Ereshkigal s scribe 40 Lugal irra and Meslamta ea are a set of twin gods who were worshipped in the village of Kisiga located in northern Babylonia 41 They were regarded as guardians of doorways 42 and they may have originally been envisioned as a set of twins guarding the gates of the underworld who chopped the dead into pieces as they passed through the gates 43 During the Neo Assyrian Period 911 BC 609 BC small depictions of them would be buried at entrances 42 with Lugal irra always on the left and Meslamta ea always on the right 42 They are identical and are shown wearing horned caps and each holding an axe and a mace 42 They are identified with the constellation Gemini which is named after them 42 Neti is the gatekeeper of the underworld 44 In the story of Inanna s Descent into the Underworld he leads Inanna through the seven gates of the underworld 44 45 removing one of her garments at each gate so that when she comes before Ereshkigal she is naked and symbolically powerless 44 45 Belet Seri is a chthonic underworld goddess who was thought to record the names of the deceased as they entered the underworld 46 Enmesarra is a minor deity of the underworld 47 Seven or eight other minor deities were said to be his offspring 47 His symbol was the sussuru a kind of pigeon 47 In one incantation Enmesarra and Ninmesharra his female counterpart are invoked as ancestors of Enki and as primeval deities 47 Ennugi is the canal inspector of the gods 16 He is the son of Enlil or Enmesarra 16 and his wife is the goddess Nanibgal 16 He is associated with the underworld 47 and he may be Gugalanna the first husband of Ereshkigal under a different name 16 Demons edit nbsp Bronze statuette of Pazuzu c 800 c 700 BC nbsp Close up of Lamashtu from a lead protection plaque dating to the Neo Assyrian Period 911 609 BC The ancient Mesopotamians also believed that the underworld was home to many demons 3 which are sometimes referred to as offspring of arali 3 These demons could sometimes leave the underworld and terrorize mortals on earth 3 One class of demons that were believed to reside in the underworld were known as galla 48 their primary purpose appears to have been to drag unfortunate mortals back to Kur 48 They are frequently referenced in magical texts 49 and some texts describe them as being seven in number 49 Several extant poems describe the galla dragging the god Dumuzid into the underworld 18 Like other demons however galla could also be benevolent 18 and in a hymn from King Gudea of Lagash c 2144 2124 BC a minor god named Ig alima is described as the great galla of Girsu 18 Demons had no cult in Mesopotamian religious practice since demons know no food know no drink eat no flour offering and drink no libation 50 Lamashtu was a demonic goddess with the head of a lion the teeth of a donkey naked breasts a hairy body hands stained with blood long fingers and fingernails and the feet of Anzu 51 She was believed to feed on the blood of human infants 51 and was widely blamed as the cause of miscarriages and cot deaths 51 Although Lamashtu has traditionally been identified as a demoness 52 the fact that she could cause evil on her own without the permission of other deities strongly indicates that she was seen as a goddess in her own right 51 Mesopotamian peoples protected against her using amulets and talismans 51 She was believed to ride in her boat on the river of the underworld 51 and she was associated with donkeys 51 She was believed to be the daughter of An 51 Pazuzu is a demonic god who was well known to the Babylonians and Assyrians throughout the first millennium BC 53 He is shown with a rather canine face with abnormally bulging eyes a scaly body a snake headed penis the talons of a bird and usually wings 53 He was believed to be the son of the god Hanbi 54 He was usually regarded as evil 53 but he could also sometimes be a beneficent entity who protected against winds bearing pestilence 53 and he was thought to be able to force Lamashtu back to the underworld 55 Amulets bearing his image were positioned in dwellings to protect infants from Lamashtu 54 and pregnant women frequently wore amulets with his head on them as protection from her 54 Sul pa e s name means youthful brilliance but he was not envisioned as a youthful god 56 According to one tradition he was the consort of Ninhursag a tradition which contradicts the usual portrayal of Enki as Ninhursag s consort 56 57 In one Sumerian poem offerings are made to Shul pa e in the underworld and in later mythology he was one of the demons of the underworld 56 See also editAncient Mesopotamian religion Western Asian body of religious beliefs Ghosts in Mesopotamian religions Land of Darkness Mythical land Sumerian religion First religion of the Mesopotamia region which is tangible by writing World of Darkness Underworld in MandaeismReferences editNotes edit In his book Sumerian Mythology first published in 1944 and revised in 1961 the scholar Samuel Noah Kramer argued that Kur could also refer to a personal entity a monstrous dragon like creature analogous to the Babylonian Tiamat 5 but this interpretation was refuted as unsubstantiated by Thorkild Jacobsen in his essay Sumerian Mythology A Review Article 6 and is not mentioned in more recent sources Citations edit a b c d e f g h Choksi 2014 a b Barret 2007 pp 7 65 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Black amp Green 1992 p 180 Kramer 1961 p 76 Kramer 1961 pp 76 83 Jacobsen 2008a pp 121 126 Kramer 1961 p 110 a b Horowitz 1998 pp 268 269 Dalley 2008 p 169 a b Black amp Green 1992 p 25 Black amp Green 1992 pp 58 180 a b c d Black amp Green 1992 p 58 Black amp Green 1992 pp 180 181 a b Black amp Green 1992 p 181 Black amp Green 1992 pp 88 89 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Black amp Green 1992 p 77 a b c d e f Nemet Nejat 1998 p 184 a b c d Black amp Green 1992 p 86 Black amp Green 1992 p 134 a b c Holland 2009 p 115 a b Horowitz 1998 p 352 a b c d Leick 1998 p 91 a b Wolkstein amp Kramer 1983 p 55 Kramer 1961 p 90 a b c Black amp Green 1992 p 136 Kasak amp Veede 2001 p 28 a b c d e f Black amp Green 1992 p 137 a b Black amp Green 1992 p 138 a b Black amp Green 1992 p 139 Black amp Green 1992 pp 139 140 Black amp Green 1992 p 140 a b c Black amp Green 1992 p 72 Wolkstein amp Kramer 1983 pp 74 84 a b c Ackerman 2006 p 116 Jacobsen 2008b pp 87 88 Jacobsen 2008b pp 83 84 Jacobsen 2008b pp 83 87 a b Black amp Green 1992 p 73 a b Jacobsen 2008b pp 74 84 a b c d e f g Black amp Green 1992 p 88 Black amp Green 1992 p 123 a b c d e Black amp Green 1992 p 124 Black amp Green 1992 pp 123 124 a b c Kramer 1961 p 87 a b Wolkstein amp Kramer 1983 pp 157 159 Jordan 2002 p 48 a b c d e Black amp Green 1992 p 76 a b Black amp Green 1992 p 85 a b Black amp Green 1992 pp 85 86 cf line 295 in Inanna s descent into the nether world a b c d e f g h Black amp Green 1992 p 116 Black amp Green 1992 pp 115 116 a b c d Black amp Green 1992 p 147 a b c Black amp Green 1992 p 148 Black amp Green 1992 pp 147 148 a b c Black amp Green 1992 p 173 George 1999 p 225 Works cited edit Ackerman Susan 2006 1989 Day Peggy Lynne ed Gender and Difference in Ancient Israel Minneapolis MN Fortress Press ISBN 978 0 8006 2393 7 Barret C E 2007 Was dust their food and clay their bread Grave goods the Mesopotamian afterlife and the liminal role of Inana Istar Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions 7 1 Leiden The Netherlands Brill 7 65 doi 10 1163 156921207781375123 ISSN 1569 2116 Black Jeremy Green Anthony 1992 Gods Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia An Illustrated Dictionary Austin University of Texas Press ISBN 0714117056 Choksi M 2014 Ancient Mesopotamian Beliefs in the Afterlife World History Encyclopedia Dalley Stephanie 2008 Myths from Mesopotamia Creation The Flood Gilgamesh and Others OUP Oxford ISBN 9780191027215 George Andrew 1999 Glossary of Proper Nouns The Epic of Gilgamesh The Babylonian Epic Poem and Other Texts in Akkadian and Sumerian London New York City Melbourne Toronto New Delhi Auckland and Rosebank South Africa Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 044919 8 Holland Glenn Stanfield 2009 Gods in the Desert Religions of the Ancient Near East Lanham MD Boulder CO New York Toronto and Plymouth UK Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc ISBN 978 0 7425 9979 6 Horowitz Wayne 1998 Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography Mesopotamian Civilizations Winona Lake Indiana Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 0 931464 99 7 Jacobsen Thorkild 2008a 1970 Sumerian Mythology A Review Article in Moran William L ed Toward the Image of Tammuz and Other Essays on Mesopotamian History and Culture Dove Studies in Bible Language and History Eugene OR Wipf amp Stock pp 104 131 ISBN 978 1 55635 952 1 Jacobsen Thorkild 2008b 1970 Toward the Image of Tammuz in Moran William L ed Toward the Image of Tammuz and Other Essays on Mesopotamian History and Culture Dove Studies in Bible Language and History Eugene OR Wipf amp Stock pp 73 103 ISBN 978 1 55635 952 1 Jordan Michael 2002 1993 Encyclopedia of Gods London Kyle Cathie Limited ISBN 978 0 8160 5923 2 Kasak Enn Veede Raul 2001 Koiva Mare Kuperjanov Andres eds Understanding Planets in Ancient Mesopotamia PDF Folklore Electronic Journal of Folklore 16 Tartu Estonia Folk Belief and Media Group of ELM 7 33 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 570 6778 doi 10 7592 FEJF2001 16 planets ISSN 1406 0957 Kramer Samuel Noah 1961 Sumerian Mythology A Study of Spiritual and Literary Achievement in the Third Millennium B C Revised Edition Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 1047 7 Leick Gwendolyn 1998 1991 A Dictionary of Ancient Near Eastern Mythology New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 19811 0 Nemet Nejat Karen Rhea 1998 Daily Life in Ancient Mesopotamia Daily Life Santa Barbara CA Greenwood ISBN 978 0 313 29497 6 Wolkstein Diane Kramer Samuel Noah 1983 Inanna Queen of Heaven and Earth Her Stories and Hymns from Sumer New York Harper amp Row Publishers ISBN 978 0 06 090854 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ancient Mesopotamian underworld amp oldid 1197656271, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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