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Mamitu

Mamitu (Mammitum, Mammitu, Mammi[1]) was a Mesopotamian goddess associated with the underworld. She was regarded as the wife of Nergal, or sometimes of other gods regarded as analogous to him, such as Erra. Her importance in Mesopotamian religion was minor, and she was most likely chiefly worshiped in Kutha, though attestations are available from other cities too. It is possible that she was the forerunner of Mandean Amamit.

Mamitu
Underworld goddess
Major cult centerKutha
Personal information
SpouseNergal or Erra
Equivalents
Mandean equivalentAmamit

Name and character Edit

Multiple variants of the theonym Mamitu are attested in cuneiform texts, including (d)ma-ma, dma-mi and dma-mi-tum.[1] As the short form of her name is homophonous with Mami, a goddess of birth or "divine midwife",[2][a] some researchers treat them as one deity.[5] However, while in theophoric names with elements such as ma-ma the identification of the deity invoked is not always possible, they are kept apart in ancient Mesopotamian god lists, such as the Weidner god list, the Nippur god list and both An = Anum and its Old Babylonian forerunner.[1] Longer forms of the name, such as Mammītu, with the exception of a single passage from the Epic of Gilgamesh were never used to refer to Mami or any analogous deity.[6] The goddess Mammītu who is responsible for the declaration of destiny alongside "Anunnaku, the great gods" in this composition (tablet X, lines 319–322) is commonly identified as Mami rather than Mammitum by modern translators.[7] The opposite approach was common in early editions, but Rim Nurullin points out that the parallel passage in Atrahasis confirms that this interpretation is incorrect.[6]

It has been suggested that like in the case of Mami, Mamitu's name goes back to a lallwort for mother, though it is also possible that might instead derive from the terms "oath" or "frost" (Akkadian mammû; also "ice").[1] If the last of these possibilities is correct, its meaning might be "wintry".[8]

Mamitu was associated with the underworld.[9]

Associations with other deities Edit

As already attested in Old Babylonian sources, Mammitum's spouse was Nergal.[1] Wilfred G. Lambert noted that pairing them with each other was standard in this period, but from the Kassite period onward Mamitu came to be replaced by Laṣ.[10] The god list An = Anum mentions both of them and equates them with each other.[5] However, in Nippur god list Laṣ occurs separately from Nergal,[11] while Mamitum is listed alongside him.[12] It is possible that they coexisted in Kutha in the second millennium BCE.[13] While a further goddess, Ereshkigal, could also be regarded as the wife of Nergal,[14] there is no evidence that she was ever equated with Mamitu.[15]

Mamitu could also be regarded as the wife of Erra,[2] who came to be identified with Nergal from the Old Babylonian period onward.[16] In the Epic of Erra, she appears as the wife of the eponymous god,[17] though in this text he is referred both as Erra and Nergal at various points.[18] An = Anum also refers to her as the wife of Meslamtaea, though in this context he is directly identified with Nergal.[1]

Douglas Frayne has proposed that in Tell al-Wilayah in the Ur III period Mamitu was regarded as the spouse of the local god Aški, who he interprets as an early form of Ḫuškia (later attested as a byname of Nergal; An = Anum, tablet VI line 5), as opposed to an alternate writing of Ashgi as sometimes suggested.[19]

Cinzia Pappi argues that the name of the goddess Taški(m)-Mamma is a theophoric name, possibly one originally belonging to a ruler, and that based on apparent connection to the underworld and groundwater she displays it can be presumed that it invokes Mamitu, rather than Mami.[20] This deity is known from texts from Mari, where she was already worshiped in the Šakkanakku period.[21] She also received offerings during the reign of Zimri-Lim, and textual sources indicate a temple dedicated to her existed in the city.[20]

Worship Edit

The earliest possible attestations of Mamitu occur in theophoric names from the Early Dynastic and Old Akkadian periods with elements such as ma-ma, which also occur in both Akkadian and Amorite onomasticon in later periods, though the identification of the deity invoked in them with certainty is impossible.[1] According to Marcos Such-Gutiérrez, it can be presumed that Mamitu appears in two names from Adab from between the Old Akkadian and Ur III periods, as the theophoric element is spelled as ma-mi-tum in this case.[22] According to Douglas Frayne, names invoking her occur commonly in texts from Tell al-Wilayah from the Ur III period.[19] Cinzia Pappi argues that she appears in theophoric names from Old Babylonian Mari as well.[20] However, according to Ichiro Nakata dma-ma and dma-am-ma most likely represent the divine midwife Mami in this text corpus.[23] Examples of Akkadian theophoric names invoking Mammitum are also known from Susa from the same period.[24] However, Christa Müller-Kessler and Karlheinz Kessler state that ultimately she was entirely unknown outside of Mesopotamia.[14]

Mamitu's importance in Mesopotamian religion was minor.[15] In the Old Babylonian period she received offerings in the Ekur temple complex in Nippur alongside Nergal.[12] However, most likely her significance was limited to Kutha and its immediate surroundings.[25] Frans Wiggermann argues that she was initially introduced to the local pantheon alongside Erra.[5] She continued to be worshiped there until the first millennium BCE.[14] A hymn to Nanaya most likely composed no later than 744-734 BCE which enumerates goddesses of various cities lists Mamitu as the deity Kutha.[26] The last available attestation of her from this city are theophoric names in a Hellenistic text dated to the year 226 BCE, though the evaluation of the scope of her cult is difficult as few cuneiform texts from late periods have been recovered from this site.[14] She was also worshiped in Babylon.[27] In a new year ritual from this city which according to Wilfred G. Lambert predates the reign of Nebuchadnezzar I and the rise of Marduk to the position of the head of the Mesopotamian pantheon which enumerates deities arriving in the akitu building, Mamitu is listed as one of the deities from Kutha alongside Nergal and Laṣ, next to Marduk, Zarpanitu and members of the pantheons of Kish (Zababa and Bau) and Borsippa (Nabu, Nanaya and Sutītu).[28] She was also worshiped in Babylon in later periods, as evidenced by attestations of theophoric names invoking her in two texts dated to the 23rd year of the reign of Nebuchadnezzar II (Mammitu-silim) and the sixth year of the reign of Cyrus (Mammitu-silat), respectively.[14]

Later relevance Edit

It is possible that due to the cult of Mamitu retaining a degree of importance in both Babylon and Kutha in late periods, she came to be incorporated into Mandaean tradition.[27][b] Christa Müller-Kessler and Karlheinz Kessler propose that Mamitu corresponds to Amamit (ˀmˀmyt, less commonly mˀmyt), who is attested as a demon in the fifth book of the Ginzā Yamina.[30] Amamit is described as a daughter of Qin and spouse of Zartai-Zartanai, and her name can also function as an epithet of Libat, the planet Venus.[31]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Another being from Mesopotamian beliefs with a homophonous name was māmītu, a type of underworld demon with a goat's head and human hands and feet, known from the late text Underworld Vision of an Assyrian Prince and absent from other sources.[3] Unlike deities, who were generally fully antropomorphic in Mesopotamian beliefs, demonic beings were often hybrids.[4]
  2. ^ It has been noted that early Mandaic sources show influence from the traditions of the area including these two cities and Borsippa in particular, while figures and traditions associated with other ancient Mesopotamian cities, such as Kish, Nippur or Uruk, find no parallels in them.[29]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Krebernik 1987, p. 330.
  2. ^ a b Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 87.
  3. ^ Wiggermann 2011, pp. 301–302.
  4. ^ Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 286.
  5. ^ a b c Wiggermann 1998, p. 220.
  6. ^ a b Nurullin 2020, pp. 564–565.
  7. ^ Nurullin 2020, pp. 563–564.
  8. ^ Nurullin 2020, p. 564.
  9. ^ Nurullin 2020, p. 565.
  10. ^ Lambert 1983, pp. 506–507.
  11. ^ Lambert 1983, p. 507.
  12. ^ a b Peterson 2009, p. 54.
  13. ^ Müller-Kessler & Kessler 1999, pp. 81–82.
  14. ^ a b c d e Müller-Kessler & Kessler 1999, p. 81.
  15. ^ a b Nurullin 2020, p. 465.
  16. ^ Wiggermann 1998, p. 217.
  17. ^ George 2013, p. 51.
  18. ^ George 2013, p. 61.
  19. ^ a b Frayne 1997, p. 422.
  20. ^ a b c Pappi 2013, p. 472.
  21. ^ Pappi 2013, pp. 471–472.
  22. ^ Such-Gutiérrez 2005, p. 23.
  23. ^ Nakata 1995, pp. 235–236.
  24. ^ Zadok 2018, p. 153.
  25. ^ Müller-Kessler & Kessler 1999, p. 80.
  26. ^ Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, pp. 116–117.
  27. ^ a b Müller-Kessler & Kessler 1999, p. 82.
  28. ^ Lambert 2013, p. 282.
  29. ^ Müller-Kessler & Kessler 1999, p. 84.
  30. ^ Müller-Kessler & Kessler 1999, pp. 82–83.
  31. ^ Müller-Kessler & Kessler 1999, p. 83.

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.
  • Frayne, Douglas (1997). Ur III Period (2112-2004 BC). RIM. The Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia. University of Toronto Press. doi:10.3138/9781442657069. ISBN 978-1-4426-5706-9.
  • George, Andrew R. (2013). "The Poem of Erra and Ishum: A Babylonian Poet's View of War" (PDF). Warfare and Poetry in the Middle East. I.B.Tauris. doi:10.5040/9780755607969.ch-002.
  • Krebernik, Manfred (1987), "Mamma, Mammi, Mammītum", Reallexikon der Assyriologie, retrieved 2022-02-06
  • Lambert, Wilfred G. (1983), "Laṣ", Reallexikon der Assyriologie, retrieved 2022-02-06*Lambert, Wilfred G. (2013). Babylonian creation myths. Winona Lake, Indiana: Eisenbrauns. ISBN 978-1-57506-861-9. OCLC 861537250.
  • Müller-Kessler, Christa; Kessler, Karlheinz (1999). "Spätbabylonische Gottheiten in spätantiken mandäischen Texten". Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und Vorderasiatische Archäologie. Walter de Gruyter GmbH. 89 (1). doi:10.1515/zava.1999.89.1.65. ISSN 0084-5299.
  • Nakata, Ichiro (1995). "A Study of Women's Theophoric Personal Names in the Old Babylonian Texts from Mari". Orient. The Society for Near Eastern Studies in Japan. 30–31: 234–253. doi:10.5356/orient1960.30and31.234. ISSN 1884-1392.
  • Nurullin, Rim (2020). "On Birth, Death and Gods in the Epic of Gilgamesh: Two Notes on the Standard Babylonian Version". The Third Millennium. Brill. doi:10.1163/9789004418080_026. ISBN 978-90-04-41808-0.
  • Pappi, Cinzia (2013), "Taški(m)-Mam(m)a", Reallexikon der Assyriologie, retrieved 2023-07-06
  • Peterson, Jeremiah (2009). God lists from Old Babylonian Nippur in the University Museum, Philadelphia. Münster: Ugarit Verlag. ISBN 3-86835-019-5. OCLC 460044951.
  • Such-Gutiérrez, Marcos (2005). "Untersuchungen zum Pantheon von Adab im 3. Jt". Archiv für Orientforschung (in German). Archiv für Orientforschung (AfO)/Institut für Orientalistik. 51: 1–44. ISSN 0066-6440. JSTOR 41670228. Retrieved 2023-07-06.
  • Wiggermann, Frans A. M. (1998), "Nergal A. Philological", Reallexikon der Assyriologie, retrieved 2022-02-05
  • Wiggermann, Frans A. M. (2011). "The Mesopotamian Pandemonium. A Provisional Census". Studi e materiali di storia delle religioni. 77 (2): 298–322.
  • Zadok, Ran (2018). "The Peoples of Elam". The Elamite world. Abingdon, Oxon. ISBN 978-1-315-65803-2. OCLC 1022561448.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

mamitu, this, article, about, wife, nergal, divine, midwife, mami, goddess, mammitum, mammitu, mammi, mesopotamian, goddess, associated, with, underworld, regarded, wife, nergal, sometimes, other, gods, regarded, analogous, such, erra, importance, mesopotamian. This article is about the wife of the god Nergal For the divine midwife see Mami goddess Mamitu Mammitum Mammitu Mammi 1 was a Mesopotamian goddess associated with the underworld She was regarded as the wife of Nergal or sometimes of other gods regarded as analogous to him such as Erra Her importance in Mesopotamian religion was minor and she was most likely chiefly worshiped in Kutha though attestations are available from other cities too It is possible that she was the forerunner of Mandean Amamit MamituUnderworld goddessMajor cult centerKuthaPersonal informationSpouseNergal or ErraEquivalentsMandean equivalentAmamit Contents 1 Name and character 2 Associations with other deities 3 Worship 4 Later relevance 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 BibliographyName and character EditMultiple variants of the theonym Mamitu are attested in cuneiform texts including d ma ma dma mi and dma mi tum 1 As the short form of her name is homophonous with Mami a goddess of birth or divine midwife 2 a some researchers treat them as one deity 5 However while in theophoric names with elements such as ma ma the identification of the deity invoked is not always possible they are kept apart in ancient Mesopotamian god lists such as the Weidner god list the Nippur god list and both An Anum and its Old Babylonian forerunner 1 Longer forms of the name such as Mammitu with the exception of a single passage from the Epic of Gilgamesh were never used to refer to Mami or any analogous deity 6 The goddess Mammitu who is responsible for the declaration of destiny alongside Anunnaku the great gods in this composition tablet X lines 319 322 is commonly identified as Mami rather than Mammitum by modern translators 7 The opposite approach was common in early editions but Rim Nurullin points out that the parallel passage in Atrahasis confirms that this interpretation is incorrect 6 It has been suggested that like in the case of Mami Mamitu s name goes back to a lallwort for mother though it is also possible that might instead derive from the terms oath or frost Akkadian mammu also ice 1 If the last of these possibilities is correct its meaning might be wintry 8 Mamitu was associated with the underworld 9 Associations with other deities EditAs already attested in Old Babylonian sources Mammitum s spouse was Nergal 1 Wilfred G Lambert noted that pairing them with each other was standard in this period but from the Kassite period onward Mamitu came to be replaced by Laṣ 10 The god list An Anum mentions both of them and equates them with each other 5 However in Nippur god list Laṣ occurs separately from Nergal 11 while Mamitum is listed alongside him 12 It is possible that they coexisted in Kutha in the second millennium BCE 13 While a further goddess Ereshkigal could also be regarded as the wife of Nergal 14 there is no evidence that she was ever equated with Mamitu 15 Mamitu could also be regarded as the wife of Erra 2 who came to be identified with Nergal from the Old Babylonian period onward 16 In the Epic of Erra she appears as the wife of the eponymous god 17 though in this text he is referred both as Erra and Nergal at various points 18 An Anum also refers to her as the wife of Meslamtaea though in this context he is directly identified with Nergal 1 Douglas Frayne has proposed that in Tell al Wilayah in the Ur III period Mamitu was regarded as the spouse of the local god Aski who he interprets as an early form of Ḫuskia later attested as a byname of Nergal An Anum tablet VI line 5 as opposed to an alternate writing of Ashgi as sometimes suggested 19 Cinzia Pappi argues that the name of the goddess Taski m Mamma is a theophoric name possibly one originally belonging to a ruler and that based on apparent connection to the underworld and groundwater she displays it can be presumed that it invokes Mamitu rather than Mami 20 This deity is known from texts from Mari where she was already worshiped in the Sakkanakku period 21 She also received offerings during the reign of Zimri Lim and textual sources indicate a temple dedicated to her existed in the city 20 Worship EditThe earliest possible attestations of Mamitu occur in theophoric names from the Early Dynastic and Old Akkadian periods with elements such as ma ma which also occur in both Akkadian and Amorite onomasticon in later periods though the identification of the deity invoked in them with certainty is impossible 1 According to Marcos Such Gutierrez it can be presumed that Mamitu appears in two names from Adab from between the Old Akkadian and Ur III periods as the theophoric element is spelled as ma mi tum in this case 22 According to Douglas Frayne names invoking her occur commonly in texts from Tell al Wilayah from the Ur III period 19 Cinzia Pappi argues that she appears in theophoric names from Old Babylonian Mari as well 20 However according to Ichiro Nakata dma ma and dma am ma most likely represent the divine midwife Mami in this text corpus 23 Examples of Akkadian theophoric names invoking Mammitum are also known from Susa from the same period 24 However Christa Muller Kessler and Karlheinz Kessler state that ultimately she was entirely unknown outside of Mesopotamia 14 Mamitu s importance in Mesopotamian religion was minor 15 In the Old Babylonian period she received offerings in the Ekur temple complex in Nippur alongside Nergal 12 However most likely her significance was limited to Kutha and its immediate surroundings 25 Frans Wiggermann argues that she was initially introduced to the local pantheon alongside Erra 5 She continued to be worshiped there until the first millennium BCE 14 A hymn to Nanaya most likely composed no later than 744 734 BCE which enumerates goddesses of various cities lists Mamitu as the deity Kutha 26 The last available attestation of her from this city are theophoric names in a Hellenistic text dated to the year 226 BCE though the evaluation of the scope of her cult is difficult as few cuneiform texts from late periods have been recovered from this site 14 She was also worshiped in Babylon 27 In a new year ritual from this city which according to Wilfred G Lambert predates the reign of Nebuchadnezzar I and the rise of Marduk to the position of the head of the Mesopotamian pantheon which enumerates deities arriving in the akitu building Mamitu is listed as one of the deities from Kutha alongside Nergal and Laṣ next to Marduk Zarpanitu and members of the pantheons of Kish Zababa and Bau and Borsippa Nabu Nanaya and Sutitu 28 She was also worshiped in Babylon in later periods as evidenced by attestations of theophoric names invoking her in two texts dated to the 23rd year of the reign of Nebuchadnezzar II Mammitu silim and the sixth year of the reign of Cyrus Mammitu silat respectively 14 Later relevance EditIt is possible that due to the cult of Mamitu retaining a degree of importance in both Babylon and Kutha in late periods she came to be incorporated into Mandaean tradition 27 b Christa Muller Kessler and Karlheinz Kessler propose that Mamitu corresponds to Amamit ˀmˀmyt less commonly mˀmyt who is attested as a demon in the fifth book of the Ginza Yamina 30 Amamit is described as a daughter of Qin and spouse of Zartai Zartanai and her name can also function as an epithet of Libat the planet Venus 31 Notes Edit Another being from Mesopotamian beliefs with a homophonous name was mamitu a type of underworld demon with a goat s head and human hands and feet known from the late text Underworld Vision of an Assyrian Prince and absent from other sources 3 Unlike deities who were generally fully antropomorphic in Mesopotamian beliefs demonic beings were often hybrids 4 It has been noted that early Mandaic sources show influence from the traditions of the area including these two cities and Borsippa in particular while figures and traditions associated with other ancient Mesopotamian cities such as Kish Nippur or Uruk find no parallels in them 29 References Edit a b c d e f g Krebernik 1987 p 330 a b Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 87 Wiggermann 2011 pp 301 302 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 286 a b c Wiggermann 1998 p 220 a b Nurullin 2020 pp 564 565 Nurullin 2020 pp 563 564 Nurullin 2020 p 564 Nurullin 2020 p 565 Lambert 1983 pp 506 507 Lambert 1983 p 507 a b Peterson 2009 p 54 Muller Kessler amp Kessler 1999 pp 81 82 a b c d e Muller Kessler amp Kessler 1999 p 81 a b Nurullin 2020 p 465 Wiggermann 1998 p 217 George 2013 p 51 George 2013 p 61 a b Frayne 1997 p 422 a b c Pappi 2013 p 472 Pappi 2013 pp 471 472 Such Gutierrez 2005 p 23 Nakata 1995 pp 235 236 Zadok 2018 p 153 Muller Kessler amp Kessler 1999 p 80 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 pp 116 117 a b Muller Kessler amp Kessler 1999 p 82 Lambert 2013 p 282 Muller Kessler amp Kessler 1999 p 84 Muller Kessler amp Kessler 1999 pp 82 83 Muller Kessler amp Kessler 1999 p 83 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 Frayne Douglas 1997 Ur III Period 2112 2004 BC RIM The Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia University of Toronto Press doi 10 3138 9781442657069 ISBN 978 1 4426 5706 9 George Andrew R 2013 The Poem of Erra and Ishum A Babylonian Poet s View of War PDF Warfare and Poetry in the Middle East I B Tauris doi 10 5040 9780755607969 ch 002 Krebernik Manfred 1987 Mamma Mammi Mammitum Reallexikon der Assyriologie retrieved 2022 02 06 Lambert Wilfred G 1983 Laṣ Reallexikon der Assyriologie retrieved 2022 02 06 Lambert Wilfred G 2013 Babylonian creation myths Winona Lake Indiana Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1 57506 861 9 OCLC 861537250 Muller Kessler Christa Kessler Karlheinz 1999 Spatbabylonische Gottheiten in spatantiken mandaischen Texten Zeitschrift fur Assyriologie und Vorderasiatische Archaologie Walter de Gruyter GmbH 89 1 doi 10 1515 zava 1999 89 1 65 ISSN 0084 5299 Nakata Ichiro 1995 A Study of Women s Theophoric Personal Names in the Old Babylonian Texts from Mari Orient The Society for Near Eastern Studies in Japan 30 31 234 253 doi 10 5356 orient1960 30and31 234 ISSN 1884 1392 Nurullin Rim 2020 On Birth Death and Gods in the Epic of Gilgamesh Two Notes on the Standard Babylonian Version The Third Millennium Brill doi 10 1163 9789004418080 026 ISBN 978 90 04 41808 0 Pappi Cinzia 2013 Taski m Mam m a Reallexikon der Assyriologie retrieved 2023 07 06 Peterson Jeremiah 2009 God lists from Old Babylonian Nippur in the University Museum Philadelphia Munster Ugarit Verlag ISBN 3 86835 019 5 OCLC 460044951 Such Gutierrez Marcos 2005 Untersuchungen zum Pantheon von Adab im 3 Jt Archiv fur Orientforschung in German Archiv fur Orientforschung AfO Institut fur Orientalistik 51 1 44 ISSN 0066 6440 JSTOR 41670228 Retrieved 2023 07 06 Wiggermann Frans A M 1998 Nergal A Philological Reallexikon der Assyriologie retrieved 2022 02 05 Wiggermann Frans A M 2011 The Mesopotamian Pandemonium A Provisional Census Studi e materiali di storia delle religioni 77 2 298 322 Zadok Ran 2018 The Peoples of Elam The Elamite world Abingdon Oxon ISBN 978 1 315 65803 2 OCLC 1022561448 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mamitu amp oldid 1163869022, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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