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Pabilsaĝ

Pabilsaĝ (Sumerian: 𒀭𒉺𒉈𒊕 /pabilsaŋ/; also romanized as Pabilsag[3]) was a Mesopotamian god. Not much is known about his role in Mesopotamian religion, though it is known that he could be regarded as a bow-armed warrior deity, as a divine cadastral officer or a judge. He might have also been linked to healing, though this remains disputed. In his astral aspect, first attested in the Old Babylonian period, he was a divine representation of the constellation Sagittarius.

Pabilsaĝ
Warrior god, divine cadastral official
Other namesLugal-Isin, Erimabinutuku
Major cult centerLarak, Isin
Weaponbow
Symbolthe constellation Sagittarius
Personal information
ParentsEnlil and Nintur[a]
SpouseNinisina
ChildrenDamu, Gunura, Šumaḫ[1]

A spousal relationship between Pabilsaĝ and the medicine goddess Ninisina is well attested. It is presumed he was implicitly regarded as the father of her children, Damu, Gunura, Šumaḫ. Sometimes he is instead attested alongside other medicine goddesses, such as Gula or Ninkarrak, though not necessarily in the role of a spouse. He was also closely associated with Ninurta, and possibly through syncretism with him came to be viewed as a son of Enlil.

Larak, a lost city possibly located near Isin, was the main cult center of Pabilsaĝ. He was also worshiped in Isin, Nippur and Lagash. Additional attestations come from Ur, Umma, Sippar, Babylon, Assur and Kurba'il [pl]. However, he was overall a minor deity, and was not venerated all across Mesopotamia.

Name edit

A number of different cuneiform writings of Pabilsaĝ's name are known.[4] Two are already attested in the Early Dynastic period, dGIŠ.BIL.PAP-sag and dBIL.PAP-sag.[5] Its etymology remains unclear, and past proposals, such as "arrow shooter" (from Sumerian sìg-gi9-sag), "the elder (is) the leader" (per analogy between /pabil/ and pa-bíl-ga, "paternal uncle" or "paternal grandfather") and "presbiter", found no widespread acceptance and generally are regarded as implausible.[6]

Due to Pabilsaĝ's role as the spouse of Ninisina it is presumed that he might have been designated by the similar masculine theonym Lugal-Isin.[7]

According to Wilfred G. Lambert, it is possible that in the Old Babylonian period Pabilsaĝ could be also referred to as Erimabinutuku.[8] A god bearing this name is appointed as the deity of Isin in a passage from the myth Enmešarra's Defeat dealing with the assignment of cities to individual members of the Mesopotamian pantheon.[9] This text is known from only one copy, which dates to the Seleucid of Parthian period,[10] but it cannot be ascertained yet when it was originally composed.[11] Erimabinutuku is otherwise unknown, with the exception of texts which appear to present this theonym as the name of a divine weapon belonging to Ninurta, and Lambert states that while it is plausible that it originally was the weapon of Pabilsaĝ instead, it is difficult to explain how its name instead came to designate its owner.[8]

A shortened writing of Pabilsaĝ's name, dPA, is attested in god lists.[12] With a different determinative, mulPA, it could be used to refer to his astral aspect.[6]

Character and iconography edit

 
The constellation Sagittarius, identified with Pabilsaĝ in Mesopotamian astronomy.

Pabilsaĝ's original character is difficult to ascertain, as it is uncertain which of his attested aspects constitute his original nature, which were acquired due to syncretism with Ninurta, and which are related to his marriage to Ninisina.[13][3] As already attested in the Early Dynastic period, he could be perceived as a warrior god.[14] His weapon was a bow.[6]

Manfred Krebernik [de] argues that much like his wife, Pabilsaĝ was in part a deity associated with medicine.[13] However, Irene Sibbing-Plantholt argues that he did not possess healing qualities himself,[15] with the only possible exception being an unusual Old Babylonian text, PBS 10/213 , whose translation is uncertain and which might equate him with Damu rather than ascribe such character directly to him.[16]

It is additionally assumed that Pabilsaĝ was a judge deity, as in association with the Erabriri temple he was referred to as "lord high judge", and it is possible he was sometimes associated with the prison goddess Manungal in his judiciary role.[17] Cadastral functions are attested both for him and his wife Ninisina, referred to as "cadastral director of An" on occasion.[18]

Same sources appear to point at an association between Pabilsaĝ and the underworld as well.[13] In the incantation series Udug Hul he is addressed as its "administrator", and he is accompanied by deities well known for their connection to the world of the dead, such as Ningishzida, Hušbišag and Bidu.[19] It has been proposed that this aspect of his character reflected a connection to either Manungal[13] or Meslamtaea (Nergal).[3]

As first documented in Old Babylonian texts from Kish and Nippur, Pabilsaĝ also had an astral aspect.[2] He represented a constellation corresponding to modern Sagittarius in Mesopotamian astronomy.[20] It has been pointed out that constellations representing closely related Gula (She-goat, modern Lyra) and Damu (Pig, variously interpreted as modern Delphinus, Vulpecula or part of Draco), are often listed alongside it.[21]

In art Pabilsaĝ was depicted as a zazzaku, a type of official, identified by Manfred Krebernik as a cadastral officer, but it is also possible that based on the similarity of a figure sometimes depicted on kudurru (inscribed boundary stones) with the representation of Sagittarius in the Dendera Zodiac, it can be assumed that in later times in his astral aspect he could be represented as a centaur-like archer with a horse's body and a scorpion's tail.[18]

Associations with other deities edit

Parentage edit

Pabilsaĝ 's parents were Enlil, the head of the pantheon, and Nintur, in this context to be identified as the wife of the former, Ninlil.[2] An Early Dynastic riddle from Lagash calls him the "hero of Enlil" (ur-sag den-líl-lá).[5] However, this epithet does not necessarily designate him as his son, and the evidence for a parental relation first appears in sources from the Old Babylonian period.[22]

A zi-hé-pà formula from the Old Babylonian period calls Pabilsaĝ a son of Anu instead.[19] However, this attestation is isolated and it is not certain if it reflects a fully separate distinct tradition.[22]

Pabilsaĝ and Ninisina edit

A connection between Pabilsaĝ and the circle of Mesopotamian healing deities is well attested.[15] He was regarded as the husband of Ninisina.[23] They are one of the multiple examples of Mesopotamian divine couples consisting of a medicine goddess and a warrior god.[23] As noted by John Z. Wee, he "often seems overshadowed by his spouse" in Mesopotamian texts.[21] Cities in which they were worshiped as a couple include Isin, Larak and Lagash.[24] They are attested together in offering lists, literary compositions and other sources from the Ur III period onward.[2] They came to be regarded as spouses no later than at this time, though it has been noted Pabilsaĝ is already attested in Ninisina's cult center, Isin, in the Early Dynastic and Old Akkadian periods.[25] As attested in records from the ninth year of Amar-Sin's reign, a festival connected to Pabilsaĝ and his cult center Larak involved the travel of Ninisina to this city by boat.[18] There is also evidence that Ninisina could be called the "Lady of Erabriri", Erabriri being the ceremonial name of a temple dedicated to Pabilsaĝ.[26]

It is possible that originally in Larak Pabilsaĝ's spouse was instead Gašan-ašte.[27] This goddess, whose name can be translated as "throne lady", occurs only in Emesal laments, and the hypothetical standard Sumerian ("Emegir") form Nin-ašte is not attested.[28] She presumably at some point came to be equated with Ninisina.[13][27] Irene Sibbing-Plantholt proposes that this process reflected an attempt at providing Ninisina with a husband representing a city which traditionally held ideological significance, and that she might have completely absorbed Pabilsaĝ's previous spouse after Larak lost political relevance.[25]

Despite the connection between Pabilsaĝ and Ninisina, no known texts directly address him as the father of her children, Damu and Gunura.[25] It is nonetheless presumed that he was implicitly understood as the father of both of them as well as of another minor god similarly associated with Ninisina, Šumaḫ.[2] A document from Puzrish-Dagan from Ibbi-Sin’s reign attests that offerings were provided in Isin for Pabilsaĝ and his family: Ninisina, Gunura, Damu and Šumaḫ.[26]

Pabilsaĝ and other healing goddesses edit

Pabilsaĝ could alternatively be regarded as the husband of other healing goddesses.[29] A small number of sources from Old Babylonian Mari connect Ninkarrak, usually paired with Ishara instead in local tradition, with him, which might depend on a preexisting connection between Ninisina and this goddess.[30] Two contemporary seals, one from Tell Harmal and one of unknown provenance, pair them together as well.[29] Ninkarrak is also addressed as his wife in Bulluṭsa-rabi's hymn to Gula.[31]

While an apparent association between Pabilsaĝ and Gula is present in offering lists from Old Babylonian Nippur, according to Irene Sibbing-Plantholt they were not regarded as spouses in this context,[15] though she does accept the possibility that their juxtaposition did reflect the close association between Gula and Ninisina.[32] It is possible that in the local tradition of Nippur Pabilsaĝ s spouse was the sparsely attested deity Enanun, who came to be represented as a healing goddess in sources from the first millennium BCE.[15] However, Gula is identified as his spouse in the god list An = Anum (tablet V, line 125).[29] They were also associated with each other in Assyrian sources from Assur and Kurba'il [pl] (for example the so-called tākultu ritual) and in Babylon.[26]

Pabilsaĝ is paired with Nintinugga in an Old Babylonian incantation in which multiple divine couples are asked to judge the patient, with the other deities mentioned including Tishpak and Ukulla, Zababa and Bau, Ninurta and Ninnibru and Ningishzida and Azimua.[33] Elsewhere her spouse was Endaga.[34] Manfred Krebernik argues that this god might have been viewed as a hypostasis of Pabilsaĝ.[12]

Pabilsaĝ and Ninurta edit

Pabilsaĝ was partially syncretised with Ninurta, as attested in lexical lists such as the Nippur god list and the late Sultantepe god list.[12] This process most likely began in the Old Babylonian period.[2] An early instance of the identification between them is attested in a širnamšub composition dedicated to Ninurta originally composed during the reign of the First Dynasty of Isin.[35] In some cases, Pabilsaĝ was by extension also identified with Ningirsu.[22][b] The syncretism between these three gods was enabled by their shared warlike character.[36] Joan Goodnick Westenholz pointed out that interchange of traits between certain deities was also likely facilitated by the existence of multiple couples consisting of a warrior god and a healing goddess, citing Pabilsaĝ and Ninisina, Ningirsu and Bau and Ninurta and Ninnibru as examples.[23] Manuel Ceccarelli argues that the syncretism had a political dimension, as by identifying Pabilsaĝ with Ninurta the rulers of Isin could elevate the position of Ninisina and directly connect her to the family of the head of the pantheon, Enlil, by making her his daughter-in-law due to Pabilsaĝ becoming his son like Ninurta.[37] He points out inserting various deities into the family tree for political reasons would have a plausible precedent in the development of the traditions presenting Ningirsu and Nanna as Enlil's sons respectively during the reign of Gudea and the Third Dynasty of Ur.[38]

In the epic of Anzû, Pabilsag is said to be the name of Ninurta applied to him in the Egalmaḫ,[39] according to Andrew R. George to be understood as the temple of Ninisina in Isin rather than any of the other houses of worship bearing the same ceremonial name.[40] This passage assigns a total of eighteen names to Ninurta in order to syncretize him with other originally separate figures.[41] Pabilsaĝ is also mentioned in Bulluṭsa-rabi's hymn to Gula, in which the spouse of this goddess is similarly identified with a number of other gods.[42]

In the later text KAR 142, Pabilsaĝ is listed as a member of a group addressed as the "seven Ninurtas".[35] Its other six members are given as Ninurta himself, Urash, Zababa, Nabu, Nergal and dDI.KUD.[12]

Worship edit

Pabilsaĝ already appears in Early Dynastic god lists from Fara and Abu Salabikh.[14] However, he was a minor god, and in contrast with deities such as Enlil or Ninurta he was not worshiped all across Mesopotamia.[43] It is presumed that he originated in the city of Larak,[25] whose tutelary deity he was.[44] This settlement only rarely appears in textual sources, and its location remains unknown.[25] It is possible that it was located close to Isin; identification with Tell al-Wilayah has been proposed too but was not conclusively proved.[45] From Ur III to Middle Babylonian times Larak appears exclusively in lexical lists, literary texts and theophoric names, and while a city bearing the same name does appear in Neo-Assyrian historical records it is not certain if it can be identified with the earlier cult center of Pabilsaĝ.[18]

In Isin, his other cult center,[43] Pabilsaĝ was worshiped as early as in the Old Akkadian period.[25] His temple in this city was likely known under the ceremonial Sumerian name Erabriri,[26][c] "house of the shackle which holds in check".[47] He was also venerated in the temple of his wife Ninisina, Egalmaḫ,[26] "exalted palace".[40] Both of these houses of worship commonly appear side by side in laments.[48] One of the city gates of Isin was also named after him.[26]

It has been argued that the worship of Pabilsaĝ was important in the state of Lagash as well.[24] However, in the Early Dynastic period he is only attested there in an early literary text, a compilation of riddles, and in the theophoric name Ur-Pabilsaĝ.[5] Douglas Frayne notes that based on the former it is possible to speculate that he was the main deity of a hitherto unidentified settlement in Lagashite territory.[49] In the Ur III period he was worshiped in this area in the city of Urub, and in offering lists often appears alongside his wife Ninisina.[18]

A further city in which Pabilsaĝ was worshiped was Nippur.[43] He is already mentioned in sources from the Old Akkadian and Ur III periods, in the latter case appearing alongside Ninisina in offering lists.[26] In similar Old Babylonian texts, he was grouped with Dumuzi and Gula.[15] Gudu4 priests in his service are mentioned in texts from this period as well.[26]

Evidence for the worship of Pabilsaĝ in Ur also exists.[28] The seal of an ereš-dingir priestess of Pabilsaĝ, a certain Gan-kuĝ-sig, has been discovered in the Early Dynastic royal tombs of Ur, and it is possible that she belonged to the city's royal family.[50] Additionally, a fragment of a bowl inscribed with the name of the king Ur-Pabilsaĝ has been found in the same city.[51] Douglas Frayne suggests that he might have been Gan-kuĝ-sig's son, relying on the possible identification of two tombs (PG 779 and PG 777) located close to the findspot of her seal (PG 580) as belonging to, respectively, Ur-Pabilsaĝ and his wife, but admits the proposal is ultimately conjectural.[50] It is not certain if Ur-Pabilsaĝ was a native ruler of Ur in the first place, and his reign cannot be dated conclusively.[52] A different individual bearing the name Ur-Pabilsaĝ is attested from a text from Ur from the Ur III period as well.[28]

An Early Dynastic inscription of E-abzu, a ruler of Umma, might mention Pabilsaĝ, but the restoration of the theonym is uncertain.[53] Texts from the same city from the reigns of Shulgi and Amar-Sin mention grain offerings made to him there by his gudu4 priests.[28] The theophoric name Ur-Pabilsaĝ is attested in Umma too.[26]

A text from Mari identified as a draft of an inscription for a stele commemorating a victory of Zimri-Lim mentions Pabilsaĝ.[30] A single Old Babylonian seal inscription from Sippar mentions Pabilsaĝ alongside Gula.[54]

In Babylon, a shrine dedicated to Pabilsaĝ existed in the temple of Mandanu.[48]

In Assyria Pabilsaĝ was worshiped in Assur and Kurba'il [pl].[26] As an astral figure, he is well attested in Neo-Assyrian omen compendiums.[2]

Mythology edit

In the composition Ninisina and the gods (Nin-Isina F in the ETCSL naming system), Pabilsaĝ is addressed as the "beloved spouse" of the eponymous goddess, who "spent time joyously with him".[24]

In a fragmentary Sumerian flood myth dated to the late Old Babylonian period at the earliest[28] and presumed to reflect the tradition also documented in Atrahasis and in the flood myth which formed a part of the Epic of Gilgamesh,[55] the assignment of Larak to Pabilsaĝ is mentioned in an early section of the narrative which describes the assignment of five cities, the other four being Eridu, Sippar, Bad-tibira and Shuruppak, to their corresponding tutelary deities.[56] The god responsible for this is stated to be Enlil.[28]

Notes edit

  1. ^ In this context to be identified with Ninlil[2]
  2. ^ Ningirsu and Ninurta were distinct deities before the Old Akkadian period, but became virtually interchangeable later on, as attested for example by the alternation between the two names in different versions of Lugal-e or the epic of Anzû.[35]
  3. ^ Not to be confused with identically named temples of Ennugi in Nippur and Mandanu in Babylon.[46]

References edit

  1. ^ Wagensonner 2008, p. 279.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Krebernik 2005, p. 163.
  3. ^ a b c Brisch 2013.
  4. ^ Krebernik 2005, pp. 160–161.
  5. ^ a b c Selz 1995, p. 272.
  6. ^ a b c Krebernik 2005, p. 161.
  7. ^ Sibbing-Plantholt 2022, p. 62.
  8. ^ a b Lambert 2013, p. 494.
  9. ^ Lambert 2013, p. 294.
  10. ^ Lambert 2013, p. 281.
  11. ^ Lambert 2013, p. 289.
  12. ^ a b c d Krebernik 2005, p. 162.
  13. ^ a b c d e Krebernik 2005, p. 167.
  14. ^ a b Ceccarelli 2009, p. 39.
  15. ^ a b c d e Sibbing-Plantholt 2022, p. 52.
  16. ^ Sibbing-Plantholt 2022, p. 125.
  17. ^ Krebernik 2005, pp. 166–167.
  18. ^ a b c d e Krebernik 2005, p. 164.
  19. ^ a b Geller 2015, p. 188.
  20. ^ Wee 2016, p. 135.
  21. ^ a b Wee 2016, p. 144.
  22. ^ a b c Ceccarelli 2009, p. 40.
  23. ^ a b c Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 38.
  24. ^ a b c Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 86.
  25. ^ a b c d e f Sibbing-Plantholt 2022, p. 124.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Krebernik 2005, p. 166.
  27. ^ a b Sibbing-Plantholt 2022, p. 55.
  28. ^ a b c d e f Krebernik 2005, p. 165.
  29. ^ a b c Westenholz 2010, p. 383.
  30. ^ a b Sibbing-Plantholt 2022, p. 117.
  31. ^ Westenholz 2010, p. 382.
  32. ^ Sibbing-Plantholt 2022, pp. 54–55.
  33. ^ Sibbing-Plantholt 2022, p. 60.
  34. ^ Sibbing-Plantholt 2022, p. 151.
  35. ^ a b c Wisnom 2020, p. 43.
  36. ^ Ceccarelli 2009, p. 41.
  37. ^ Ceccarelli 2009, p. 44.
  38. ^ Ceccarelli 2009, p. 46.
  39. ^ Foster 2005, p. 576.
  40. ^ a b George 1993, p. 88.
  41. ^ Wisnom 2020, p. 42.
  42. ^ Wisnom 2020, p. 45.
  43. ^ a b c Wisnom 2020, p. 50.
  44. ^ Krebernik 2005, p. 160.
  45. ^ Edzard 1983, p. 494.
  46. ^ George 1992, pp. 304–305.
  47. ^ George 1993, p. 136.
  48. ^ a b George 1992, p. 304.
  49. ^ Frayne 2009, pp. 381–382.
  50. ^ a b Frayne 2009, p. 383.
  51. ^ Frayne 2009, p. 377.
  52. ^ Frayne 2009, pp. 377–378.
  53. ^ Frayne 2009, p. 365.
  54. ^ Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 257.
  55. ^ Black 2006, p. 212.
  56. ^ Black 2006, p. 213.

Bibliography edit

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  • Ceccarelli, Manuel (2009). "Einige Bemerkungen zum Synkretismus BaU/Ninisina". In Negri Scafa, Paola; Viaggio, Salvatore (eds.). Dallo Stirone al Tigri, dal Tevere all'Eufrate: studi in onore di Claudio Saporetti (in German). Roma: Aracne. ISBN 978-88-548-2411-9. OCLC 365061350.
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  • Wagensonner, Klaus (2008). "Nin-Isina(k)s Journey to Nippur. A bilingual divine journey revisited". Wiener Zeitschrift für die Kunde des Morgenlandes. 98. Department of Oriental Studies, University of Vienna: 277–294. ISSN 0084-0076. JSTOR 23861637. Retrieved 2022-02-10.
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  • Wisnom, Laura Selena (2020). Weapons of words. Intertextual competition in Babylonian poetry: a study of Anzū, Enūma eliš, and Erra and Išum. Leiden. ISBN 978-90-04-41297-2. OCLC 1120783834.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

External links edit

pabilsaĝ, sumerian, 𒀭𒉺𒉈𒊕, pabilsaŋ, also, romanized, pabilsag, mesopotamian, much, known, about, role, mesopotamian, religion, though, known, that, could, regarded, armed, warrior, deity, divine, cadastral, officer, judge, might, have, also, been, linked, heal. Pabilsaĝ Sumerian 𒀭𒉺𒉈𒊕 pabilsaŋ also romanized as Pabilsag 3 was a Mesopotamian god Not much is known about his role in Mesopotamian religion though it is known that he could be regarded as a bow armed warrior deity as a divine cadastral officer or a judge He might have also been linked to healing though this remains disputed In his astral aspect first attested in the Old Babylonian period he was a divine representation of the constellation Sagittarius PabilsaĝWarrior god divine cadastral officialOther namesLugal Isin ErimabinutukuMajor cult centerLarak IsinWeaponbowSymbolthe constellation SagittariusPersonal informationParentsEnlil and Nintur a SpouseNinisinaChildrenDamu Gunura Sumaḫ 1 A spousal relationship between Pabilsaĝ and the medicine goddess Ninisina is well attested It is presumed he was implicitly regarded as the father of her children Damu Gunura Sumaḫ Sometimes he is instead attested alongside other medicine goddesses such as Gula or Ninkarrak though not necessarily in the role of a spouse He was also closely associated with Ninurta and possibly through syncretism with him came to be viewed as a son of Enlil Larak a lost city possibly located near Isin was the main cult center of Pabilsaĝ He was also worshiped in Isin Nippur and Lagash Additional attestations come from Ur Umma Sippar Babylon Assur and Kurba il pl However he was overall a minor deity and was not venerated all across Mesopotamia Contents 1 Name 2 Character and iconography 3 Associations with other deities 3 1 Parentage 3 2 Pabilsaĝ and Ninisina 3 3 Pabilsaĝ and other healing goddesses 3 4 Pabilsaĝ and Ninurta 4 Worship 5 Mythology 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 External linksName editA number of different cuneiform writings of Pabilsaĝ s name are known 4 Two are already attested in the Early Dynastic period dGIS BIL PAP sag and dBIL PAP sag 5 Its etymology remains unclear and past proposals such as arrow shooter from Sumerian sig gi9 sag the elder is the leader per analogy between pabil and pa bil ga paternal uncle or paternal grandfather and presbiter found no widespread acceptance and generally are regarded as implausible 6 Due to Pabilsaĝ s role as the spouse of Ninisina it is presumed that he might have been designated by the similar masculine theonym Lugal Isin 7 According to Wilfred G Lambert it is possible that in the Old Babylonian period Pabilsaĝ could be also referred to as Erimabinutuku 8 A god bearing this name is appointed as the deity of Isin in a passage from the myth Enmesarra s Defeat dealing with the assignment of cities to individual members of the Mesopotamian pantheon 9 This text is known from only one copy which dates to the Seleucid of Parthian period 10 but it cannot be ascertained yet when it was originally composed 11 Erimabinutuku is otherwise unknown with the exception of texts which appear to present this theonym as the name of a divine weapon belonging to Ninurta and Lambert states that while it is plausible that it originally was the weapon of Pabilsaĝ instead it is difficult to explain how its name instead came to designate its owner 8 A shortened writing of Pabilsaĝ s name dPA is attested in god lists 12 With a different determinative mulPA it could be used to refer to his astral aspect 6 Character and iconography edit nbsp The constellation Sagittarius identified with Pabilsaĝ in Mesopotamian astronomy Pabilsaĝ s original character is difficult to ascertain as it is uncertain which of his attested aspects constitute his original nature which were acquired due to syncretism with Ninurta and which are related to his marriage to Ninisina 13 3 As already attested in the Early Dynastic period he could be perceived as a warrior god 14 His weapon was a bow 6 Manfred Krebernik de argues that much like his wife Pabilsaĝ was in part a deity associated with medicine 13 However Irene Sibbing Plantholt argues that he did not possess healing qualities himself 15 with the only possible exception being an unusual Old Babylonian text PBS 10 213 whose translation is uncertain and which might equate him with Damu rather than ascribe such character directly to him 16 It is additionally assumed that Pabilsaĝ was a judge deity as in association with the Erabriri temple he was referred to as lord high judge and it is possible he was sometimes associated with the prison goddess Manungal in his judiciary role 17 Cadastral functions are attested both for him and his wife Ninisina referred to as cadastral director of An on occasion 18 Same sources appear to point at an association between Pabilsaĝ and the underworld as well 13 In the incantation series Udug Hul he is addressed as its administrator and he is accompanied by deities well known for their connection to the world of the dead such as Ningishzida Husbisag and Bidu 19 It has been proposed that this aspect of his character reflected a connection to either Manungal 13 or Meslamtaea Nergal 3 As first documented in Old Babylonian texts from Kish and Nippur Pabilsaĝ also had an astral aspect 2 He represented a constellation corresponding to modern Sagittarius in Mesopotamian astronomy 20 It has been pointed out that constellations representing closely related Gula She goat modern Lyra and Damu Pig variously interpreted as modern Delphinus Vulpecula or part of Draco are often listed alongside it 21 In art Pabilsaĝ was depicted as a zazzaku a type of official identified by Manfred Krebernik as a cadastral officer but it is also possible that based on the similarity of a figure sometimes depicted on kudurru inscribed boundary stones with the representation of Sagittarius in the Dendera Zodiac it can be assumed that in later times in his astral aspect he could be represented as a centaur like archer with a horse s body and a scorpion s tail 18 Associations with other deities editParentage edit Pabilsaĝ s parents were Enlil the head of the pantheon and Nintur in this context to be identified as the wife of the former Ninlil 2 An Early Dynastic riddle from Lagash calls him the hero of Enlil ur sag den lil la 5 However this epithet does not necessarily designate him as his son and the evidence for a parental relation first appears in sources from the Old Babylonian period 22 A zi he pa formula from the Old Babylonian period calls Pabilsaĝ a son of Anu instead 19 However this attestation is isolated and it is not certain if it reflects a fully separate distinct tradition 22 Pabilsaĝ and Ninisina edit A connection between Pabilsaĝ and the circle of Mesopotamian healing deities is well attested 15 He was regarded as the husband of Ninisina 23 They are one of the multiple examples of Mesopotamian divine couples consisting of a medicine goddess and a warrior god 23 As noted by John Z Wee he often seems overshadowed by his spouse in Mesopotamian texts 21 Cities in which they were worshiped as a couple include Isin Larak and Lagash 24 They are attested together in offering lists literary compositions and other sources from the Ur III period onward 2 They came to be regarded as spouses no later than at this time though it has been noted Pabilsaĝ is already attested in Ninisina s cult center Isin in the Early Dynastic and Old Akkadian periods 25 As attested in records from the ninth year of Amar Sin s reign a festival connected to Pabilsaĝ and his cult center Larak involved the travel of Ninisina to this city by boat 18 There is also evidence that Ninisina could be called the Lady of Erabriri Erabriri being the ceremonial name of a temple dedicated to Pabilsaĝ 26 It is possible that originally in Larak Pabilsaĝ s spouse was instead Gasan aste 27 This goddess whose name can be translated as throne lady occurs only in Emesal laments and the hypothetical standard Sumerian Emegir form Nin aste is not attested 28 She presumably at some point came to be equated with Ninisina 13 27 Irene Sibbing Plantholt proposes that this process reflected an attempt at providing Ninisina with a husband representing a city which traditionally held ideological significance and that she might have completely absorbed Pabilsaĝ s previous spouse after Larak lost political relevance 25 Despite the connection between Pabilsaĝ and Ninisina no known texts directly address him as the father of her children Damu and Gunura 25 It is nonetheless presumed that he was implicitly understood as the father of both of them as well as of another minor god similarly associated with Ninisina Sumaḫ 2 A document from Puzrish Dagan from Ibbi Sin s reign attests that offerings were provided in Isin for Pabilsaĝ and his family Ninisina Gunura Damu and Sumaḫ 26 Pabilsaĝ and other healing goddesses edit Pabilsaĝ could alternatively be regarded as the husband of other healing goddesses 29 A small number of sources from Old Babylonian Mari connect Ninkarrak usually paired with Ishara instead in local tradition with him which might depend on a preexisting connection between Ninisina and this goddess 30 Two contemporary seals one from Tell Harmal and one of unknown provenance pair them together as well 29 Ninkarrak is also addressed as his wife in Bulluṭsa rabi s hymn to Gula 31 While an apparent association between Pabilsaĝ and Gula is present in offering lists from Old Babylonian Nippur according to Irene Sibbing Plantholt they were not regarded as spouses in this context 15 though she does accept the possibility that their juxtaposition did reflect the close association between Gula and Ninisina 32 It is possible that in the local tradition of Nippur Pabilsaĝ s spouse was the sparsely attested deity Enanun who came to be represented as a healing goddess in sources from the first millennium BCE 15 However Gula is identified as his spouse in the god list An Anum tablet V line 125 29 They were also associated with each other in Assyrian sources from Assur and Kurba il pl for example the so called takultu ritual and in Babylon 26 Pabilsaĝ is paired with Nintinugga in an Old Babylonian incantation in which multiple divine couples are asked to judge the patient with the other deities mentioned including Tishpak and Ukulla Zababa and Bau Ninurta and Ninnibru and Ningishzida and Azimua 33 Elsewhere her spouse was Endaga 34 Manfred Krebernik argues that this god might have been viewed as a hypostasis of Pabilsaĝ 12 Pabilsaĝ and Ninurta edit Pabilsaĝ was partially syncretised with Ninurta as attested in lexical lists such as the Nippur god list and the late Sultantepe god list 12 This process most likely began in the Old Babylonian period 2 An early instance of the identification between them is attested in a sirnamsub composition dedicated to Ninurta originally composed during the reign of the First Dynasty of Isin 35 In some cases Pabilsaĝ was by extension also identified with Ningirsu 22 b The syncretism between these three gods was enabled by their shared warlike character 36 Joan Goodnick Westenholz pointed out that interchange of traits between certain deities was also likely facilitated by the existence of multiple couples consisting of a warrior god and a healing goddess citing Pabilsaĝ and Ninisina Ningirsu and Bau and Ninurta and Ninnibru as examples 23 Manuel Ceccarelli argues that the syncretism had a political dimension as by identifying Pabilsaĝ with Ninurta the rulers of Isin could elevate the position of Ninisina and directly connect her to the family of the head of the pantheon Enlil by making her his daughter in law due to Pabilsaĝ becoming his son like Ninurta 37 He points out inserting various deities into the family tree for political reasons would have a plausible precedent in the development of the traditions presenting Ningirsu and Nanna as Enlil s sons respectively during the reign of Gudea and the Third Dynasty of Ur 38 In the epic of Anzu Pabilsag is said to be the name of Ninurta applied to him in the Egalmaḫ 39 according to Andrew R George to be understood as the temple of Ninisina in Isin rather than any of the other houses of worship bearing the same ceremonial name 40 This passage assigns a total of eighteen names to Ninurta in order to syncretize him with other originally separate figures 41 Pabilsaĝ is also mentioned in Bulluṭsa rabi s hymn to Gula in which the spouse of this goddess is similarly identified with a number of other gods 42 In the later text KAR 142 Pabilsaĝ is listed as a member of a group addressed as the seven Ninurtas 35 Its other six members are given as Ninurta himself Urash Zababa Nabu Nergal and dDI KUD 12 Worship editPabilsaĝ already appears in Early Dynastic god lists from Fara and Abu Salabikh 14 However he was a minor god and in contrast with deities such as Enlil or Ninurta he was not worshiped all across Mesopotamia 43 It is presumed that he originated in the city of Larak 25 whose tutelary deity he was 44 This settlement only rarely appears in textual sources and its location remains unknown 25 It is possible that it was located close to Isin identification with Tell al Wilayah has been proposed too but was not conclusively proved 45 From Ur III to Middle Babylonian times Larak appears exclusively in lexical lists literary texts and theophoric names and while a city bearing the same name does appear in Neo Assyrian historical records it is not certain if it can be identified with the earlier cult center of Pabilsaĝ 18 In Isin his other cult center 43 Pabilsaĝ was worshiped as early as in the Old Akkadian period 25 His temple in this city was likely known under the ceremonial Sumerian name Erabriri 26 c house of the shackle which holds in check 47 He was also venerated in the temple of his wife Ninisina Egalmaḫ 26 exalted palace 40 Both of these houses of worship commonly appear side by side in laments 48 One of the city gates of Isin was also named after him 26 It has been argued that the worship of Pabilsaĝ was important in the state of Lagash as well 24 However in the Early Dynastic period he is only attested there in an early literary text a compilation of riddles and in the theophoric name Ur Pabilsaĝ 5 Douglas Frayne notes that based on the former it is possible to speculate that he was the main deity of a hitherto unidentified settlement in Lagashite territory 49 In the Ur III period he was worshiped in this area in the city of Urub and in offering lists often appears alongside his wife Ninisina 18 A further city in which Pabilsaĝ was worshiped was Nippur 43 He is already mentioned in sources from the Old Akkadian and Ur III periods in the latter case appearing alongside Ninisina in offering lists 26 In similar Old Babylonian texts he was grouped with Dumuzi and Gula 15 Gudu4 priests in his service are mentioned in texts from this period as well 26 Evidence for the worship of Pabilsaĝ in Ur also exists 28 The seal of an eres dingir priestess of Pabilsaĝ a certain Gan kuĝ sig has been discovered in the Early Dynastic royal tombs of Ur and it is possible that she belonged to the city s royal family 50 Additionally a fragment of a bowl inscribed with the name of the king Ur Pabilsaĝ has been found in the same city 51 Douglas Frayne suggests that he might have been Gan kuĝ sig s son relying on the possible identification of two tombs PG 779 and PG 777 located close to the findspot of her seal PG 580 as belonging to respectively Ur Pabilsaĝ and his wife but admits the proposal is ultimately conjectural 50 It is not certain if Ur Pabilsaĝ was a native ruler of Ur in the first place and his reign cannot be dated conclusively 52 A different individual bearing the name Ur Pabilsaĝ is attested from a text from Ur from the Ur III period as well 28 An Early Dynastic inscription of E abzu a ruler of Umma might mention Pabilsaĝ but the restoration of the theonym is uncertain 53 Texts from the same city from the reigns of Shulgi and Amar Sin mention grain offerings made to him there by his gudu4 priests 28 The theophoric name Ur Pabilsaĝ is attested in Umma too 26 A text from Mari identified as a draft of an inscription for a stele commemorating a victory of Zimri Lim mentions Pabilsaĝ 30 A single Old Babylonian seal inscription from Sippar mentions Pabilsaĝ alongside Gula 54 In Babylon a shrine dedicated to Pabilsaĝ existed in the temple of Mandanu 48 In Assyria Pabilsaĝ was worshiped in Assur and Kurba il pl 26 As an astral figure he is well attested in Neo Assyrian omen compendiums 2 Mythology editIn the composition Ninisina and the gods Nin Isina F in the ETCSL naming system Pabilsaĝ is addressed as the beloved spouse of the eponymous goddess who spent time joyously with him 24 In a fragmentary Sumerian flood myth dated to the late Old Babylonian period at the earliest 28 and presumed to reflect the tradition also documented in Atrahasis and in the flood myth which formed a part of the Epic of Gilgamesh 55 the assignment of Larak to Pabilsaĝ is mentioned in an early section of the narrative which describes the assignment of five cities the other four being Eridu Sippar Bad tibira and Shuruppak to their corresponding tutelary deities 56 The god responsible for this is stated to be Enlil 28 Notes edit In this context to be identified with Ninlil 2 Ningirsu and Ninurta were distinct deities before the Old Akkadian period but became virtually interchangeable later on as attested for example by the alternation between the two names in different versions of Lugal e or the epic of Anzu 35 Not to be confused with identically named temples of Ennugi in Nippur and Mandanu in Babylon 46 References edit Wagensonner 2008 p 279 a b c d e f g Krebernik 2005 p 163 a b c Brisch 2013 Krebernik 2005 pp 160 161 a b c Selz 1995 p 272 a b c Krebernik 2005 p 161 Sibbing Plantholt 2022 p 62 a b Lambert 2013 p 494 Lambert 2013 p 294 Lambert 2013 p 281 Lambert 2013 p 289 a b c d Krebernik 2005 p 162 a b c d e Krebernik 2005 p 167 a b Ceccarelli 2009 p 39 a b c d e Sibbing Plantholt 2022 p 52 Sibbing Plantholt 2022 p 125 Krebernik 2005 pp 166 167 a b c d e Krebernik 2005 p 164 a b Geller 2015 p 188 Wee 2016 p 135 a b Wee 2016 p 144 a b c Ceccarelli 2009 p 40 a b c Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 38 a b c Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 86 a b c d e f Sibbing Plantholt 2022 p 124 a b c d e f g h i j Krebernik 2005 p 166 a b Sibbing Plantholt 2022 p 55 a b c d e f Krebernik 2005 p 165 a b c Westenholz 2010 p 383 a b Sibbing Plantholt 2022 p 117 Westenholz 2010 p 382 Sibbing Plantholt 2022 pp 54 55 Sibbing Plantholt 2022 p 60 Sibbing Plantholt 2022 p 151 a b c Wisnom 2020 p 43 Ceccarelli 2009 p 41 Ceccarelli 2009 p 44 Ceccarelli 2009 p 46 Foster 2005 p 576 a b George 1993 p 88 Wisnom 2020 p 42 Wisnom 2020 p 45 a b c Wisnom 2020 p 50 Krebernik 2005 p 160 Edzard 1983 p 494 George 1992 pp 304 305 George 1993 p 136 a b George 1992 p 304 Frayne 2009 pp 381 382 a b Frayne 2009 p 383 Frayne 2009 p 377 Frayne 2009 pp 377 378 Frayne 2009 p 365 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 257 Black 2006 p 212 Black 2006 p 213 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 Black Jeremy A 2006 The Literature of Ancient Sumer Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 929633 0 Retrieved 2023 05 12 Brisch Natalie 2013 Pabilsag god Ancient Mesopotamian Gods and Goddesses Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus UK Higher Education Academy Ceccarelli Manuel 2009 Einige Bemerkungen zum Synkretismus BaU Ninisina In Negri Scafa Paola Viaggio Salvatore eds Dallo Stirone al Tigri dal Tevere all Eufrate studi in onore di Claudio Saporetti in German Roma Aracne ISBN 978 88 548 2411 9 OCLC 365061350 Edzard Dietz Otto 1983 Larak Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German retrieved 2023 05 12 Foster Benjamin R 2005 Before the muses an anthology of Akkadian literature Bethesda Md CDL Press ISBN 1 883053 76 5 OCLC 57123664 Frayne Douglas 2009 Pre Sargonic Period Toronto University of Toronto Press doi 10 3138 9781442688865 ISBN 978 1 4426 8886 5 Geller Markham J 2015 Healing Magic and Evil Demons De Gruyter doi 10 1515 9781614513094 ISBN 978 1 61451 309 4 George Andrew R 1992 Babylonian Topographical Texts Orientalia Lovaniensia analecta Departement Orientalistiek ISBN 978 90 6831 410 6 Retrieved 2023 05 12 George Andrew R 1993 House Most High the Temples of Ancient Mesopotamia Winona Lake Eisenbrauns ISBN 0 931464 80 3 OCLC 27813103 Krebernik Manfred 2005 Pabilsaĝ a Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German retrieved 2023 05 12 Lambert Wilfred G 2013 Babylonian Creation Myths Winona Lake Indiana Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1 57506 861 9 OCLC 861537250 Selz Gebhard J 1995 Untersuchungen zur Gotterwelt des altsumerischen Stadtstaates von Lagas in German Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Museum ISBN 978 0 924171 00 0 OCLC 33334960 Sibbing Plantholt Irene 2022 The Image of Mesopotamian Divine Healers Healing Goddesses and the Legitimization of Professional Asus in the Mesopotamian Medical Marketplace Boston Brill ISBN 978 90 04 51241 2 OCLC 1312171937 Wagensonner Klaus 2008 Nin Isina k s Journey to Nippur A bilingual divine journey revisited Wiener Zeitschrift fur die Kunde des Morgenlandes 98 Department of Oriental Studies University of Vienna 277 294 ISSN 0084 0076 JSTOR 23861637 Retrieved 2022 02 10 Wee John Z 2016 A Late Babylonian Astral Commentary on Marduk s Address to the Demons Journal of Near Eastern Studies 75 1 University of Chicago Press 127 167 doi 10 1086 684845 ISSN 0022 2968 S2CID 163333166 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 Wisnom Laura Selena 2020 Weapons of words Intertextual competition in Babylonian poetry a study of Anzu Enuma elis and Erra and Isum Leiden ISBN 978 90 04 41297 2 OCLC 1120783834 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link External links editNinisina and the gods in the Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature Pabilsaĝ s journey to Nibru in the Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pabilsaĝ amp oldid 1220302938, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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