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Kumme

Kumme (Akkadian Kummu or Kummum, Hittite Kummiya[1]) was a Hurrian city, known from textual sources from both second and first millennium BCE. Its precise location is unknown, but it is mentioned in cuneiform texts from multiple other sites. It might have been located close to modern Zakho or Beytüşşebap. From the Old Babylonian period until Neo-Assyrian times it served as a religious center of transregional significance due to its association with the Hurrian weather god, Teshub. Its religious role is first mentioned in texts from Mari, and later recurs in Hurrian and Hittite sources. In the Neo-Assyrian period, it was apparently the center of a small independent buffer state on Assyrian borders. Its ultimate fate remains unknown, as from the reign of Sennacherib onward it is no longer mentioned in any texts.

Name edit

As argued by Gernot Wilhelm [de], the toponym Kumme has a plausible Hurrian etymology, and can be interpreted as a combination of the root kum-, which according to him refers to building activity, and the suffix -me, well attested in other Hurrian words.[2] This explanation is also accepted by Daniel Schwemer [de][3] and Volkert Haas, who suggests meanings “to build” or “to pile up” for kum-.[4] The same root is presumed to form the basis of the reconstructed toponym *Kumar, from which the theonym Kumarbi was likely derived.[5] It is also attested in the word kumdi, “tower”, and in personal names in the texts from Nuzi.[6] An alternate proposal is to link it with the Akkadian term kummu, “cella” or “sanctuary”.[7]

The name of Kumme is also attested in Akkadian texts as Kummu or Kummum and in Hittite ones as Kummiya.[1] An additional Hittite form might be Kumma, though it is possible an unrelated city named Kumma existed in the proximity of Ḫurma[8] in southern Anatolia.[9] Karen Radner additionally lists Qumenu as an Urartian form of the name.[10] However, according to Schwmer, while this view is commonly accepted in scholarship, it is doubtful if these two names refer to the same city.[11]

Kumme is to be distinguished from Kummanni (classical Comana), a city in the north of Kizzuwatna,[12] though the latter toponym might also be derived from the root kum-.[13] It should also not be confused with Qumānu, a kingdom which was located in the plains around modern Alqosh.[10]

Proposed location edit

The precise location of Kumme is uncertain.[14] Based on sources from Tell Shemshara and Tell al-Rimah dated to the eighteenth century BCE, including letters and an account of wine rations prepared for a man from Kumme, possibly a guide, and a Gutian general, the city was a stop on a route leading from mountainous areas east of the Tigris to Jezirah, at least if the Nineveh area was to be avoided.[7] Volkert Haas concluded it was located on the modern border between Turkey and Iraq.[15] Daniel Schwemer suggests it is to be found in the proximity of modern Zakho.[16] This possibility is also accepted by Steven W. Holloway.[17] However, it has been criticized by Karen Radner, who argues that based on letters of Sargon II it can be assumed it was located in a more mountainous area and closer to Urartu, which according to her might indicate it is to be found further upstream on the Lesser Khabur, in the proximity of modern Beytüşşebap.[14]

Textual attestations edit

Second millennium BCE edit

First references to Kumme occur in texts from Old Babylonian Mari.[2] Due to the possible etymology of its name, it is assumed that it was a Hurrian city from the beginning of its history.[1] In a treaty between Zimri-Lim and a king of Kurdā, the weather god of Kumme (dIŠKUR be-el ku-um-miki) is invoked among the divine witnesses, separately from the weather god of Aleppo [de].[18] The same king at one point offered a vase to this deity.[19] The city is also mentioned in a Hurrian incantation from Mari, which directly refers to its main god with the name Teshub instead of using a logogram.[16] Various textual sources indicate that Kumme was regarded as the main cult center of this god, and that as a result it was considered a religious site of “transregional significance” by the inhabitants of the Ancient Near East.[1] A temple dedicated to him existed there.[20] However, despite its religious importance, direct references to Kumme are relatively uncommon outside of literary texts dealing with its main deity.[3]

Kumme was recognized as a major religious site by both Hurrians and Hittites through the second half of the second millennium BCE.[7] Hurrian myths portray Kumme as the residence of Teshub, while one of his enemies bears the name Ullikummi, “Destroy Kumme!”.[2] The tale of Appu indicates that it was conventionally associated with him in a similar manner as Nineveh was with Šauška, Sippar with Shamash or Babylon with Marduk.[21] This association is also mentioned in a fragment of a Hurrian adaptation of the Epic of Gilgamesh.[22] Other deities worshiped in Kumme included Kumarbi, as indicated by an Ugaritic text referring to him as “Kumarbi Urkini Kummeni” (kmrb urgnkmn) and the “lady of Kumme”, according to Volkert Haas to be identified as Šauška.[23] While Hurrian myths also mention a temple of Ḫepat located in Kumme, it is not certain if they reflect historical reality.[24]

As already attested in the Old Babylonian period, Kumme could also be used as a theophoric element in Hurrian names.[22] Examples include Paiš-Kumme (“Kumme may uplift”) from Nuzi, Kummen-ewri (“Kumme is the lord”) from Tikunani, Kummen-adal (“Kumme is strong”) from Mari and Ari-Kumme (“Kumme gave” or “Give, Kumme”) from a Middle Assyrian text.[22] According to Thomas Richter, such names reflect the perception of the city itself as a numen.[25] Daniel Schwemer assumes that the toponym served as a stand-in for the name of Teshub in this context.[22] A single Assyrian name alluding to Kumme is also known, Bēl-Kumme-ilā’ī.[11]

First millennium BCE edit

Later references to Kumme come from the Neo-Assyrian period.[1] It was the center of one of the small kingdoms which formed a buffer zone between Assyria and Urartu, alongside nearby Shubria, Musasir and Ukku.[26] Both linguistically and culturally, it retained its Hurrian character.[27] It is possible that it retained independence from more powerful neighbors due to its religious significance.[10]

Adad-nirari II (reigned 911-891 BCE) visited Kumme in 895 BCE during a military campaign against Habhu, apparently a polity hostile to it, and made a sacrifice to the weather god, calling him his “lord”.[19] He referred to him with the Mesopotamian name Adad, though according to Daniel Schwemer this should only be considered an Assyrian interpretation of his identity.[3] While there is no indication that Assyrian kings made offerings to the weather god of Kumme after the ninth century BCE, he is referenced in a later source, the so-called Götteraddressbuch, which records deities worshiped in Assur and a number of other major Assyrian cities.[28] Relations between Assyria and Kumme remained positive during the reign of Ashurnasirpal II (883-859 BCE), and some of its inhabitants might have fled to Assyria due to Urartian conquests of king Minua (reigned 810-785 BCE), who apparently turned the city into one of his fortresses.[19] Multiple references to Kumme are also present in letters from the reign of Sargon II, which indicate that it was once again an independent small kingdom at this point in time.[29] One of these documents states that its king at the time bore the name Ariye.[7] While formally independent, Kumme did not rule over a large territory and its rulers were effectively subordinate to Assyria, acting as providers of both resources and information.[30] An Assyrian ambassador (qēpu, literally “trusted one”) named Aššur-rēṣūwa was stationed in the city as well, and at one point seemingly came into conflict with local officials, which lead to mutual assassination attempts, the ultimate outcome of which is presently unknown.[30] If the equivalence between the toponyms Kumme and Qumenu is accepted, the city might also be attested in Urartian sources, including an inscription from Meher Kapısı [de] which mentions the “deity of the inhabitants of the city of Qumenu” (uruqu-me-nu-na-ú-e DINGIR) alongside figures associated with Ardini and Tushpa.[21] The kingdom of Ukku, which was allied with Urartu, apparently attempted to influence Kumme to follow a similar path.[31] A letter sent from Kumme to Sargon II additionally indicates that at one point the Urartian king Argishti II questioned why envoys from the city do not appear in his court, though in this text the local inhabitants reassure the Assyrian king of their loyalty, possibly to avoid a fate similar to Musasir, whose sanctuary of the god Ḫaldi was desecrated as punishment in 714.[30] In texts from the reign of Sennacherib and later rulers, Kumme is no longer mentioned, and its ultimate fate is presently unknown.[30]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Schwemer 2008, p. 3.
  2. ^ a b c Wilhelm 1994, p. 318.
  3. ^ a b c Schwemer 2001, p. 456.
  4. ^ Haas 2015, p. 167.
  5. ^ Wilhelm 1994, pp. 318–319.
  6. ^ Wilhelm 1994, pp. 316–317.
  7. ^ a b c d Radner 2012, p. 254.
  8. ^ Schwemer 2008, p. 41.
  9. ^ Schwemer 2008, p. 43.
  10. ^ a b c Radner 2012, p. 245.
  11. ^ a b Schwemer 2001, p. 457.
  12. ^ Kümmel 1983, p. 335.
  13. ^ Wilhelm 1994, p. 319.
  14. ^ a b Radner 2012, p. 255.
  15. ^ Haas 2015, p. 331.
  16. ^ a b Schwemer 2001, p. 301.
  17. ^ Holloway 2002, p. 262.
  18. ^ Schwemer 2001, pp. 301–302.
  19. ^ a b c Radner 2012, p. 256.
  20. ^ Schwemer 2001, p. 589.
  21. ^ a b Schwemer 2001, pp. 456–457.
  22. ^ a b c d Schwemer 2001, p. 458.
  23. ^ Haas 2015, p. 332.
  24. ^ Schwemer 2001, p. 461.
  25. ^ Richter 2010, p. 507.
  26. ^ Radner 2012, p. 243.
  27. ^ Radner 2012, p. 244.
  28. ^ Holloway 2002, p. 269.
  29. ^ Radner 2012, pp. 256–257.
  30. ^ a b c d Radner 2012, p. 257.
  31. ^ Radner 2012, p. 259.

Bibliography edit

  • Haas, Volkert (2015) [1994]. Geschichte der hethitischen Religion. Handbook of Oriental Studies. Section 1: The Near and Middle East (in German). Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-29394-6. Retrieved 2023-03-20.
  • Holloway, Steven W. (2002). Aššur is king! Aššur is king! Religion in the exercise of power in the Neo-Assyrian Empire. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 1-4175-9092-0. OCLC 60245860.
  • Kümmel, Hans Martin (1983), "Kummanni", Reallexikon der Assyriologie (in German), retrieved 2023-03-20
  • Radner, Karen (2012). "Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Musasir, Kumme, Ukku and Šubria – the Buffer States between Assyria and Urartu". Biainili-Urartu: the proceedings of the symposium held in Munich 12-14 October 2007. Leuven: Peeters. ISBN 978-90-429-2438-3. OCLC 779881614.
  • Richter, Thomas (2010). "Ein Hurriter wird geboren... und benannt". In Becker, Jörg; Hempelmann, Ralph; Rehm, Ellen (eds.). Kulturlandschaft Syrien: Zentrum und Peripherie. Festschrift für Jan-Waalke Meyer (in German). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-86835-034-0. OCLC 587015618.
  • 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 (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.
  • Wilhelm, Gernot (1994). "Kumme und *Kumar: Zur hurritischen Ortsnamenbildung". In Calmeyer, Peter (ed.). Beiträge zur altorientalischen Archäologie und Altertumskunde: Festschrift für Barthel Hrouda zum 65. Geburtstag (in German). Wiesbaden: Harrasowitz. ISBN 9783447035033. OCLC 32285389.

kumme, confused, with, kummanni, akkadian, kummu, kummum, hittite, kummiya, hurrian, city, known, from, textual, sources, from, both, second, first, millennium, precise, location, unknown, mentioned, cuneiform, texts, from, multiple, other, sites, might, have,. Not to be confused with Kummanni Kumme Akkadian Kummu or Kummum Hittite Kummiya 1 was a Hurrian city known from textual sources from both second and first millennium BCE Its precise location is unknown but it is mentioned in cuneiform texts from multiple other sites It might have been located close to modern Zakho or Beytussebap From the Old Babylonian period until Neo Assyrian times it served as a religious center of transregional significance due to its association with the Hurrian weather god Teshub Its religious role is first mentioned in texts from Mari and later recurs in Hurrian and Hittite sources In the Neo Assyrian period it was apparently the center of a small independent buffer state on Assyrian borders Its ultimate fate remains unknown as from the reign of Sennacherib onward it is no longer mentioned in any texts Contents 1 Name 2 Proposed location 3 Textual attestations 3 1 Second millennium BCE 3 2 First millennium BCE 4 References 4 1 BibliographyName editAs argued by Gernot Wilhelm de the toponym Kumme has a plausible Hurrian etymology and can be interpreted as a combination of the root kum which according to him refers to building activity and the suffix me well attested in other Hurrian words 2 This explanation is also accepted by Daniel Schwemer de 3 and Volkert Haas who suggests meanings to build or to pile up for kum 4 The same root is presumed to form the basis of the reconstructed toponym Kumar from which the theonym Kumarbi was likely derived 5 It is also attested in the word kumdi tower and in personal names in the texts from Nuzi 6 An alternate proposal is to link it with the Akkadian term kummu cella or sanctuary 7 The name of Kumme is also attested in Akkadian texts as Kummu or Kummum and in Hittite ones as Kummiya 1 An additional Hittite form might be Kumma though it is possible an unrelated city named Kumma existed in the proximity of Ḫurma 8 in southern Anatolia 9 Karen Radner additionally lists Qumenu as an Urartian form of the name 10 However according to Schwmer while this view is commonly accepted in scholarship it is doubtful if these two names refer to the same city 11 Kumme is to be distinguished from Kummanni classical Comana a city in the north of Kizzuwatna 12 though the latter toponym might also be derived from the root kum 13 It should also not be confused with Qumanu a kingdom which was located in the plains around modern Alqosh 10 Proposed location editThe precise location of Kumme is uncertain 14 Based on sources from Tell Shemshara and Tell al Rimah dated to the eighteenth century BCE including letters and an account of wine rations prepared for a man from Kumme possibly a guide and a Gutian general the city was a stop on a route leading from mountainous areas east of the Tigris to Jezirah at least if the Nineveh area was to be avoided 7 Volkert Haas concluded it was located on the modern border between Turkey and Iraq 15 Daniel Schwemer suggests it is to be found in the proximity of modern Zakho 16 This possibility is also accepted by Steven W Holloway 17 However it has been criticized by Karen Radner who argues that based on letters of Sargon II it can be assumed it was located in a more mountainous area and closer to Urartu which according to her might indicate it is to be found further upstream on the Lesser Khabur in the proximity of modern Beytussebap 14 Textual attestations editSecond millennium BCE edit First references to Kumme occur in texts from Old Babylonian Mari 2 Due to the possible etymology of its name it is assumed that it was a Hurrian city from the beginning of its history 1 In a treaty between Zimri Lim and a king of Kurda the weather god of Kumme dISKUR be el ku um miki is invoked among the divine witnesses separately from the weather god of Aleppo de 18 The same king at one point offered a vase to this deity 19 The city is also mentioned in a Hurrian incantation from Mari which directly refers to its main god with the name Teshub instead of using a logogram 16 Various textual sources indicate that Kumme was regarded as the main cult center of this god and that as a result it was considered a religious site of transregional significance by the inhabitants of the Ancient Near East 1 A temple dedicated to him existed there 20 However despite its religious importance direct references to Kumme are relatively uncommon outside of literary texts dealing with its main deity 3 Kumme was recognized as a major religious site by both Hurrians and Hittites through the second half of the second millennium BCE 7 Hurrian myths portray Kumme as the residence of Teshub while one of his enemies bears the name Ullikummi Destroy Kumme 2 The tale of Appu indicates that it was conventionally associated with him in a similar manner as Nineveh was with Sauska Sippar with Shamash or Babylon with Marduk 21 This association is also mentioned in a fragment of a Hurrian adaptation of the Epic of Gilgamesh 22 Other deities worshiped in Kumme included Kumarbi as indicated by an Ugaritic text referring to him as Kumarbi Urkini Kummeni kmrb urgnkmn and the lady of Kumme according to Volkert Haas to be identified as Sauska 23 While Hurrian myths also mention a temple of Ḫepat located in Kumme it is not certain if they reflect historical reality 24 As already attested in the Old Babylonian period Kumme could also be used as a theophoric element in Hurrian names 22 Examples include Pais Kumme Kumme may uplift from Nuzi Kummen ewri Kumme is the lord from Tikunani Kummen adal Kumme is strong from Mari and Ari Kumme Kumme gave or Give Kumme from a Middle Assyrian text 22 According to Thomas Richter such names reflect the perception of the city itself as a numen 25 Daniel Schwemer assumes that the toponym served as a stand in for the name of Teshub in this context 22 A single Assyrian name alluding to Kumme is also known Bel Kumme ila i 11 First millennium BCE edit Later references to Kumme come from the Neo Assyrian period 1 It was the center of one of the small kingdoms which formed a buffer zone between Assyria and Urartu alongside nearby Shubria Musasir and Ukku 26 Both linguistically and culturally it retained its Hurrian character 27 It is possible that it retained independence from more powerful neighbors due to its religious significance 10 Adad nirari II reigned 911 891 BCE visited Kumme in 895 BCE during a military campaign against Habhu apparently a polity hostile to it and made a sacrifice to the weather god calling him his lord 19 He referred to him with the Mesopotamian name Adad though according to Daniel Schwemer this should only be considered an Assyrian interpretation of his identity 3 While there is no indication that Assyrian kings made offerings to the weather god of Kumme after the ninth century BCE he is referenced in a later source the so called Gotteraddressbuch which records deities worshiped in Assur and a number of other major Assyrian cities 28 Relations between Assyria and Kumme remained positive during the reign of Ashurnasirpal II 883 859 BCE and some of its inhabitants might have fled to Assyria due to Urartian conquests of king Minua reigned 810 785 BCE who apparently turned the city into one of his fortresses 19 Multiple references to Kumme are also present in letters from the reign of Sargon II which indicate that it was once again an independent small kingdom at this point in time 29 One of these documents states that its king at the time bore the name Ariye 7 While formally independent Kumme did not rule over a large territory and its rulers were effectively subordinate to Assyria acting as providers of both resources and information 30 An Assyrian ambassador qepu literally trusted one named Assur reṣuwa was stationed in the city as well and at one point seemingly came into conflict with local officials which lead to mutual assassination attempts the ultimate outcome of which is presently unknown 30 If the equivalence between the toponyms Kumme and Qumenu is accepted the city might also be attested in Urartian sources including an inscription from Meher Kapisi de which mentions the deity of the inhabitants of the city of Qumenu uruqu me nu na u e DINGIR alongside figures associated with Ardini and Tushpa 21 The kingdom of Ukku which was allied with Urartu apparently attempted to influence Kumme to follow a similar path 31 A letter sent from Kumme to Sargon II additionally indicates that at one point the Urartian king Argishti II questioned why envoys from the city do not appear in his court though in this text the local inhabitants reassure the Assyrian king of their loyalty possibly to avoid a fate similar to Musasir whose sanctuary of the god Ḫaldi was desecrated as punishment in 714 30 In texts from the reign of Sennacherib and later rulers Kumme is no longer mentioned and its ultimate fate is presently unknown 30 References edit a b c d e Schwemer 2008 p 3 a b c Wilhelm 1994 p 318 a b c Schwemer 2001 p 456 Haas 2015 p 167 Wilhelm 1994 pp 318 319 Wilhelm 1994 pp 316 317 a b c d Radner 2012 p 254 Schwemer 2008 p 41 Schwemer 2008 p 43 a b c Radner 2012 p 245 a b Schwemer 2001 p 457 Kummel 1983 p 335 Wilhelm 1994 p 319 a b Radner 2012 p 255 Haas 2015 p 331 a b Schwemer 2001 p 301 Holloway 2002 p 262 Schwemer 2001 pp 301 302 a b c Radner 2012 p 256 Schwemer 2001 p 589 a b Schwemer 2001 pp 456 457 a b c d Schwemer 2001 p 458 Haas 2015 p 332 Schwemer 2001 p 461 Richter 2010 p 507 Radner 2012 p 243 Radner 2012 p 244 Holloway 2002 p 269 Radner 2012 pp 256 257 a b c d Radner 2012 p 257 Radner 2012 p 259 Bibliography edit Haas Volkert 2015 1994 Geschichte der hethitischen Religion Handbook of Oriental Studies Section 1 The Near and Middle East in German Brill ISBN 978 90 04 29394 6 Retrieved 2023 03 20 Holloway Steven W 2002 Assur is king Assur is king Religion in the exercise of power in the Neo Assyrian Empire Leiden Brill ISBN 1 4175 9092 0 OCLC 60245860 Kummel Hans Martin 1983 Kummanni Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German retrieved 2023 03 20 Radner Karen 2012 Between a Rock and a Hard Place Musasir Kumme Ukku and Subria the Buffer States between Assyria and Urartu Biainili Urartu the proceedings of the symposium held in Munich 12 14 October 2007 Leuven Peeters ISBN 978 90 429 2438 3 OCLC 779881614 Richter Thomas 2010 Ein Hurriter wird geboren und benannt In Becker Jorg Hempelmann Ralph Rehm Ellen eds Kulturlandschaft Syrien Zentrum und Peripherie Festschrift fur Jan Waalke Meyer in German Munster Ugarit Verlag ISBN 978 3 86835 034 0 OCLC 587015618 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 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 Wilhelm Gernot 1994 Kumme und Kumar Zur hurritischen Ortsnamenbildung In Calmeyer Peter ed Beitrage zur altorientalischen Archaologie und Altertumskunde Festschrift fur Barthel Hrouda zum 65 Geburtstag in German Wiesbaden Harrasowitz ISBN 9783447035033 OCLC 32285389 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kumme amp oldid 1150533616, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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