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Sarpanit

Zarpanitu (also romanized as Ṣarpānītu) was a Mesopotamian goddess regarded as the spouse of Marduk. Not much is known about her character, though late sources indicate that she was associated with pregnancy and that she could be assigned similar roles as her husband, including that of queen of the gods. She was originally worshiped in Zarpan, a village near Babylon, though the latter city itself also served as her cult center.

Zarpanitu
Queen of the gods, goddess of pregnancy
Tablet with a hymn to Marduk and Zarpanitu attributed to Ashurbanipal. British Museum.
Other namesErua, Papnunanki, Elagu, Laḫamun[1]
Major cult centerZarpan, Babylon
Personal information
SpouseMarduk
ChildrenNabu, Ṣilluš-ṭāb, Katunna

Name edit

The most common spelling of Zarpanitu's name in cuneiform was dzar-pa-ni-tum.[2] It is romanized as Ṣarpānītu instead by Jeremy Black and Anthony Green,[3] but this choice has been criticized by Wilfred G. Lambert, who points out that while cuneiform does not differentiate between the sounds z and , supplementary evidence for the former option is provided both by various scholarly etymologies of the name and by texts written in the Aramaic alphabet, which does differentiate between z and .[4] The Aramaic spelling zrpnt is known from the Sefire inscriptions.[2] Authors such as Paul-Alain Beaulieu,[5] Andrew R. George,[6] Joan Goodnick Westenholz[7] and Takayoshi Oshima (who was responsible for the relevant entry in the Reallexikon der Assyriologie) also favor romanizing the name with a z.[2] However, romanizations starting with also continue to be used in Assyriological literature.[8][9]

Zarpanitu's name has Akkadian origin.[10] Two different possible etymologies are well documented in primary sources, "the lady of the city of Zarpan" and "creatress of seed" (from zēr-bānītu).[11] Today it is assumed the name was most likely derived from the toponym Zarpan, a settlement located near Babylon, though seemingly according to a folk etymology it was named after the goddess instead, as attested in a myth known only from a fragmentary tablet from the library of Ashurbanipal.[2] While attempts have been made to etymologize the name as "silvery" instead, this view is now regarded as unsubstantiated.[11]

Additional names edit

Two names which originally designated the spouse of Asalluhi, Erua and Papnunanki, came to be used as names of Zarpanitu after her husband Marduk was equated with that god in the eighteenth century BCE.[2] However, this tradition is not yet documented in the Old Babylonian forerunner to the later god list An = Anum, where both of these names are stated to refer to the same goddess, but without identification with Zarpanitu.[12] The theonym Erua could be used either as a sumerogram meant to be read as Zarpanitu or as an epithet, while Papnunanki typically appears in place of her standard name.[2] An early case has been identified in a text from the reign of Samsu-Ditana, who in a formula written in Sumerian refers to Zarpanitu as Papnunanki, in contrast with his predecessors Sumu-la-El, Hammurabi and Samsu-iluna, who all used her primary name in texts written in this language.[10]

According to a god list, secondary names of Zarpanitu were Elagu and Laḫamun, glossed as used in Elam and Dilmun, respectively.[1] However, it has already been pointed out by Friedrich Wilhelm König [de] in the 1930s that Elagu appears exclusively in Mesopotamian, as opposed to Elamite, texts.[13] The second name, while sometimes quoted among Dilmunite theonyms in Assyriological literature as recently as in the 1990s, is similarly known only from sources from Mesopotamia.[4]

Character edit

Not much is known about Zarpanitu's character.[11] Joan Goodnick Westenholz has suggested that she and Tashmetum were simply "prototypical divine wives".[14] In late sources she could be characterized as a motherly figure connected to birth.[15] She was worshiped under the byname Erua as a goddess associated with pregnancy.[12]

In the first millennium BCE, Zarpanitu's role as the wife of Marduk made her a high ranking deity, which was reflected in the epithets applied to her, such as bēlet ("lady"), bēltīya ("my lady"), šarratu ("queen"), bēlet Bābili ("lady of Babylon"), šarrat Bābili ("queen of Babylon"), bēlet Esagil ("lady of Esagil") or šarrat Esagil ("queen of Esagil").[1] In some cases, she was effectively portrayed as Marduk's feminine counterpart, with similar characteristics, including a connection to divination, and analogous position in the pantheon, that of queen of the gods.[16] The so-called Archive of Mystic Heptads calls her the "mistress-of-the-goddesses" (dbe-let-i-la-a-ti), which presumably reflects her status as the foremost female deity in late Babylonian theology.[17] At the same time, she was not included in royal statements of rulers acknowledging their dependence on Marduk.[18]

Associations with other deities edit

Family and court edit

Zarpanitu's status as the spouse Marduk is seemingly already indicated by a reference to these two deities in a year name of Samsuiluna.[11] The tradition of pairing them with each other might have originated as early as in the third millennium BCE, and they already appear next to each other in the Weidner god list.[2] Other texts belonging to this genre also pair them together, with the exception of Old Babylonian god lists from Nippur, which do not allude to any relationship between them.[2] Zarpanit is instead placed in the section which otherwise lists deities related to Inanna in this case, which according to Joan Goodnick Westenholz is unusual for her.[7] It was believed that Zarpanitu could intercede with Marduk on behalf of petitioners, though Céline Debourse remarks that texts documenting this function could portray her in an ambivalent light, as she could both slander and praise these who asked her to mediate on their behalf, which can be considered a parallel to Marduk being portrayed both as a forgiving and punishing figure himself.[19] Due to being regarded as the wife of Marduk, Zarpanit was also considered the daughter-in-law of Ea.[2]

Nabu was regarded as the son of Zarpanitu and Marduk.[20] This god was initially regarded as the divine "vizier" (sukkal) of the latter, as documented for example in Middle Assyrian An = Anum, but in a late tradition became a member of this god's family instead.[21]

Two minor goddesses, Ṣilluš-ṭāb and Katunna, were considered the hairdressers of Zarpanitu, and could be referred to as the "daughters of Esagil", which presumably reflected their status as daughters of the main deities worshiped in this temple.[22] They were venerated in the Eḫilisigga ("house of beautiful allure"), a shrine located in the temple Erabriri, presumably in Babylon.[23] Similar duos of so-called "divine daughters" are known from other cities too: Borsippa (Kazbaba and Kanisurra, "daughters of the Ezida"), Kutha (Dadamušda and Bēlet-ilī, "daughters of the Emeslam"), Kish (Iqbi-damiq and Ḫussinni, "daughters of the Eduba"), Sippar (Mami and Ninegina, "daughters of the Ebabbar [pl]"), Dilbat (Ipte-bīta and Bēlet-Eanni, "daughters of the E-ibbi-Ani") and Larsa (Mannu-šāninšu and Larsam-iti, "daughters of the E-Ningubla").[22]

The mythical creature uridimmu (from Sumerian ur-idim, "mad lion"[24]) could be described as the door keeper of both Zarpanitu and Marduk, and in a late incantation is implored to intercede with both of these deities on behalf of the petitioner.[25] The same being is also mentioned in a hymn to these two deities attributed to Ashurbanipal, but in this case it appears in a context seemingly indicating influence from its portrayal in Enūma Eliš instead.[26]

Syncretism edit

In Assyria, Zarpanitu could be identified with Šerua, which reflected the syncretism between their respective spouses, Marduk and Ashur, first documented under Sennacherib, and was further facilitated by the phonetic similarity between the name of the Assyrian goddess and the secondary name Erua.[27]

Through the eighth and seventh centuries BCE, attempts have been made to subordinate the local theology of Uruk to Babylon, with Babylonian rulers aiming to assimilate both Ishtar of Babylon and Ishtar of Uruk with Zarpanitu.[28] Paul-Alain Beaulieu notes that in the Eanna archive from Uruk in texts from between the reigns of Marduk-apla-iddina II and Nabopolassar the title bēltīya, which typically designated Zarpanitu, is instead used in contexts which indicate Ishtar was meant.[29] He suggests the attempts to syncretize the two to reassert the supremacy of Babylon over Uruk might have originally started in the eighth century BCE, as some accounts of Nabu-shuma-ishkun's reign indicate that the image of Ishtar was removed from Eanna and replaced by a different goddess, deemed "improper" by the chroniclers, with the original only restored in the sixth century BCE by Nebuchadnezzar II.[30] It is possible that some of the syncretic efforts relied on confusion which could be caused by the use of Ishtar's name as a generic term for goddesses, known for example from tablet XI of the Epic of Gilgamesh, as well as the use of the logogram referring to the Sumerian form of the name, Inanna, to spell the generic title bēltu.[31] In later sources from Babylon Zarpanitu and Ishtar of Babylon appear as two separate deities in distinct roles, for example in a text dealing with the relationship between Marduk and Zarpanitu referred to as Love Lyrics, Ishtar of Babylon plays the role of a paramour.[32] However, there is no evidence that the relationship between Zarpanitu, Marduk and Ishtar of Uruk was imagined similarly in Neo-Babylonian Uruk.[33]

Worship edit

Zarpanitu presumably was originally venerated in Zarpan, a town located in the immediate proximity of Babylon, though she is much better attested than this settlement itself.[34] It is known from a Neo-Babylonian (or later) fragment of a topographical text from Sippar (BM 66534), which mentions its city gates, as well as from a fragmentary myth confirming its association with Zarpanitu.[35] Babylon also served as her cult center, and she worshiped in this city in the Esagil temple complex dedicated to Marduk in a cella known under the ceremonial names E-dara-anna ("house of the ibex of heaven") or E-ḫili-ĝar ("house endowed with luxuriance").[27] Her seat inside it was known as the Eḫalanki ("house of the secrets of heaven and the netherworld").[36]

The oldest reference to Zarpanitu which can be dated with certainty occurs in the twenty-fourth year name of Sumu-la-El.[11] It commemorated the fashioning of a statue representing her.[37] Another early reference to her can be found in the nineteenth year name of Samsu-iluna, which mentions the construction of thrones for her and Marduk.[37] An inscription dealing with the preparation of a cultic object dated to the reign of either Samsu-iluna or Hammurabi which mentions Zarpanitu, Marduk and Esagil is also known from a copy discovered in Nippur, and according to Douglas Frayne it can be assumed that it pertains to the same event.[38] Many additional references to Zarpanitu occur in letters from the Old Babylonian period, where she is one of the most commonly referenced goddesses, next to Ishtar, Annunitum, Ninsianna, Gula and Aya.[39]

In a New Year (akitu) ritual from Babylon presumed to precede the rise of Marduk to the position of the head of the pantheon under Nebuchadnezzar I, Zarpanitu is listed as one of the deities present during the celebrations, alongside Marduk, Nabu, Nanaya, Sutītu, Zababa, Bau, Nergal, Laṣ and Mammitum.[40] One of the inscriptions of Sargon II (722–705 BCE) commemorating his participation in the akitu festival in the same location mentions Zarpanitu among the recipients of gifts provided by him.[41]

A list of deities worshiped in Assur indicates that Zarpanitu was one of the nineteen deities who were believed to reside in the temple of Gula in this city, with a variant which instead places Annunitum in her position being considered an ancient scribal error as the sequence of deities also contains Ea, his wife Damkina and Marduk.[27]

Theophoric names invoking Zarpanitu are known from sources from the Neo-Babylonian period, though for the most part only women bore them, in contrast with names invoking many other goddesses, for example Bau, Gula, Ishtar, Nanaya or Ningal, which are attested for men too.[42] Only two exceptions are known, Ardi-Ṣarpanitu and Ardi-Erua, both of which are masculine theophoric names invoking her under respectively her primary name and an epithet.[43] They are regarded as atypical.[44]

Outside Mesopotamia edit

In the corpus of Ugaritic texts Zarpanitu is mentioned in an incantation against Lamashtu which pairs her with Marduk and invokes them in parallel with Anu and Antu, Enlil and Ninlil, Ea and Damkina and Papsukkal and Amasagnudi.[45] It is one of the twelve examples of texts from this site written in standard cuneiform which are assumed to be patterned after similar Mesopotamian compositions.[46] Direct parallels to individual passages have been identified in the corpus of Mesopotamian incantations against Lamashtu.[47]

In Emar Zarpanitu is attested exclusively in colophons.[8]

Mythology edit

In literary texts Zarpanitu typically appears alongside Marduk.[48]

A short myth focused on Zarpanitu describes how the town Zarpan was named after her and then gifted to her by Enlil, here identified as her father.[34] Afterwards Ea praises her virtues and suggests to his son Marduk that she would be suitable for him and that they should rule over the sea together.[49] It has been suggested that the name Ninabdubur, "lady of the sea foundation", which is attributed to her in god lists, might reflect this section of the myth.[2]

Zarpanitu is also referenced in Ludlul bēl nēmeqi, where the protagonist prays to her at the Kaḫilisu ("gate sprinkled with luxuriance"), presumably the gate of her cella in Esagil.[27] Andrew R. George points out that it is also attested in inscriptions of Ashurbanipal and Nebuchadnezzar II.[50]

Takayoshi Oshima suggests that in a Neo-Assyrian[51] myth focused on Marduk the name Damkianna, normally considered to be a variant form of Damkina, the wife of Ea, is instead used to refer to Zarpanitu, in parallel with a late prayer attesting a similar situation.[52] A different interpretation has been suggested by Wilfred G. Lambert, who assumed that she is to be understood as Damkina in this context, and based on the unusual character of the text proposed that it originated in Malgium, where this goddess was commonly acknowledged in royal inscriptions, in the Kassite period.[53] The narrative deals with a conflict between Marduk and his allies and the gods of Nippur, led by Enlil, which is ultimately decided in favor of the former by the intervention of Damkianna, though it is not certain what it entailed.[54]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Oshima 2016, pp. 217–218.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Oshima 2016, p. 217.
  3. ^ Black & Green 1992, p. 160.
  4. ^ a b Lambert 1995, p. 544.
  5. ^ Beaulieu 2003, p. 30.
  6. ^ George 1993, p. 6.
  7. ^ a b Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 80.
  8. ^ a b Beckman 2002, p. 48.
  9. ^ del Olmo Lete & Márquez Rowe 2014, p. 44.
  10. ^ a b Lambert 2013, p. 254.
  11. ^ a b c d e Lambert 2013, p. 251.
  12. ^ a b Johandi 2018, p. 555.
  13. ^ König 1938, p. 324.
  14. ^ Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 92.
  15. ^ Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 93.
  16. ^ Debourse 2022, pp. 317–318.
  17. ^ Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 129.
  18. ^ Lambert 2013, p. 323.
  19. ^ Debourse 2022, p. 135.
  20. ^ Lambert 2013, p. 273.
  21. ^ Lambert 2013, pp. 251–252.
  22. ^ a b Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 113.
  23. ^ George 1993, p. 99.
  24. ^ Wiggermann 1992, p. 172.
  25. ^ Wiggermann 1992, p. 173.
  26. ^ Beaulieu 2003, pp. 355–356.
  27. ^ a b c d Oshima 2016, p. 218.
  28. ^ Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 105.
  29. ^ Beaulieu 2003, p. 76.
  30. ^ Beaulieu 2003, pp. 76–77.
  31. ^ Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, pp. 110–111.
  32. ^ Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, pp. 121–122.
  33. ^ Beaulieu 2003, p. 79.
  34. ^ a b Lambert 2013, p. 299.
  35. ^ George 1992, p. 205.
  36. ^ George 1993, p. 98.
  37. ^ a b Johandi 2018, p. 554.
  38. ^ Frayne 1990, p. 392.
  39. ^ Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 251.
  40. ^ Lambert 2013, p. 282.
  41. ^ Debourse 2022, p. 39.
  42. ^ Cousin & Watai 2018, p. 249.
  43. ^ Cousin & Watai 2018, p. 251.
  44. ^ Cousin & Watai 2018, p. 252.
  45. ^ del Olmo Lete & Márquez Rowe 2014, pp. 43–44.
  46. ^ del Olmo Lete & Márquez Rowe 2014, p. 36.
  47. ^ del Olmo Lete & Márquez Rowe 2014, p. 39.
  48. ^ Debourse 2022, p. 317.
  49. ^ Lambert 2013, p. 300.
  50. ^ George 1993, p. 107.
  51. ^ Oshima 2010, p. 145.
  52. ^ Oshima 2010, pp. 146–147.
  53. ^ Lambert 2013, pp. 322–323.
  54. ^ Oshima 2010, pp. 145–146.

Bibliography edit

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  • Beaulieu, Paul-Alain (2003). The Pantheon of Uruk During the Neo-Babylonian period. Leiden Boston: Brill STYX. ISBN 978-90-04-13024-1. OCLC 51944564.
  • Beckman, Gary (2002). "The Pantheon of Emar". Silva Anatolica: Anatolian studies presented to Maciej Popko on the occasion of his 65th birthday. Warsaw: Agade. hdl:2027.42/77414. ISBN 83-87111-12-0. OCLC 51004996.
  • Black, Jeremy A.; Green, Anthony (1992). Gods, demons and symbols of ancient Mesopotamia: an illustrated dictionary. Austin. ISBN 0-292-70794-0. OCLC 26140507.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Cousin, Laura; Watai, Yoko (2018). "Onomastics and Gender Identity in First-Millennium BCE Babylonia". In Budin, Stephanie Lynn; Cifarelli, Megan; Garcia-Ventura, Agnès; Albà, Adelina Millet (eds.). Gender and methodology in the ancient Near East: Approaches from Assyriology and beyond (PDF). Edicions Universitat Barcelona. pp. 243–255. ISBN 978-84-9168-073-4.
  • Debourse, Céline (2022). Of Priests and Kings: The Babylonian New Year Festival in the Last Age of Cuneiform Culture. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-51303-7.
  • del Olmo Lete, Gregorio; Márquez Rowe, Ignacio (2014). Incantations and Anti-Witchcraft Texts from Ugarit. Boston: De Gruyter. ISBN 978-1-61451-627-9. OCLC 948655744.
  • Frayne, Douglas (1990). Old Babylonian Period (2003-1595 B.C.). University of Toronto Press. doi:10.3138/9781442678033. ISBN 978-1-4426-7803-3.
  • George, Andrew R. (1992). Babylonian Topographical Texts. Orientalia Lovaniensia analecta. Departement Oriëntalistiek. ISBN 978-90-6831-410-6. Retrieved 2022-06-18.
  • George, Andrew R. (1993). House most high: the temples of ancient Mesopotamia. Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns. ISBN 0-931464-80-3. OCLC 27813103.
  • Johandi, Andreas (2018). "Some Remarks about the Beginnings of Marduk". In Fink, Sebastian; Rollinger, Robert (eds.). Conceptualizing Past, Present and Future: Proceedings of the Ninth Symposium of the Melammu Project. Held in Helsinki / Tartu May 18-24, 2015. Ugarit Verlag. ISBN 978-3-86835-299-3.
  • König, Friedrich Wilhelm (1938), "Elagu", Reallexikon der Assyriologie (in German)
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sarpanit, zarpanitu, also, romanized, Ṣarpānītu, mesopotamian, goddess, regarded, spouse, marduk, much, known, about, character, though, late, sources, indicate, that, associated, with, pregnancy, that, could, assigned, similar, roles, husband, including, that. Zarpanitu also romanized as Ṣarpanitu was a Mesopotamian goddess regarded as the spouse of Marduk Not much is known about her character though late sources indicate that she was associated with pregnancy and that she could be assigned similar roles as her husband including that of queen of the gods She was originally worshiped in Zarpan a village near Babylon though the latter city itself also served as her cult center ZarpanituQueen of the gods goddess of pregnancyTablet with a hymn to Marduk and Zarpanitu attributed to Ashurbanipal British Museum Other namesErua Papnunanki Elagu Laḫamun 1 Major cult centerZarpan BabylonPersonal informationSpouseMardukChildrenNabu Ṣillus ṭab Katunna Contents 1 Name 1 1 Additional names 2 Character 3 Associations with other deities 3 1 Family and court 3 2 Syncretism 4 Worship 4 1 Outside Mesopotamia 5 Mythology 6 References 6 1 BibliographyName editThe most common spelling of Zarpanitu s name in cuneiform was dzar pa ni tum 2 It is romanized as Ṣarpanitu instead by Jeremy Black and Anthony Green 3 but this choice has been criticized by Wilfred G Lambert who points out that while cuneiform does not differentiate between the sounds z and ṣ supplementary evidence for the former option is provided both by various scholarly etymologies of the name and by texts written in the Aramaic alphabet which does differentiate between z and ṣ 4 The Aramaic spelling zrpnt is known from the Sefire inscriptions 2 Authors such as Paul Alain Beaulieu 5 Andrew R George 6 Joan Goodnick Westenholz 7 and Takayoshi Oshima who was responsible for the relevant entry in the Reallexikon der Assyriologie also favor romanizing the name with a z 2 However romanizations starting with ṣ also continue to be used in Assyriological literature 8 9 Zarpanitu s name has Akkadian origin 10 Two different possible etymologies are well documented in primary sources the lady of the city of Zarpan and creatress of seed from zer banitu 11 Today it is assumed the name was most likely derived from the toponym Zarpan a settlement located near Babylon though seemingly according to a folk etymology it was named after the goddess instead as attested in a myth known only from a fragmentary tablet from the library of Ashurbanipal 2 While attempts have been made to etymologize the name as silvery instead this view is now regarded as unsubstantiated 11 Additional names edit Two names which originally designated the spouse of Asalluhi Erua and Papnunanki came to be used as names of Zarpanitu after her husband Marduk was equated with that god in the eighteenth century BCE 2 However this tradition is not yet documented in the Old Babylonian forerunner to the later god list An Anum where both of these names are stated to refer to the same goddess but without identification with Zarpanitu 12 The theonym Erua could be used either as a sumerogram meant to be read as Zarpanitu or as an epithet while Papnunanki typically appears in place of her standard name 2 An early case has been identified in a text from the reign of Samsu Ditana who in a formula written in Sumerian refers to Zarpanitu as Papnunanki in contrast with his predecessors Sumu la El Hammurabi and Samsu iluna who all used her primary name in texts written in this language 10 According to a god list secondary names of Zarpanitu were Elagu and Laḫamun glossed as used in Elam and Dilmun respectively 1 However it has already been pointed out by Friedrich Wilhelm Konig de in the 1930s that Elagu appears exclusively in Mesopotamian as opposed to Elamite texts 13 The second name while sometimes quoted among Dilmunite theonyms in Assyriological literature as recently as in the 1990s is similarly known only from sources from Mesopotamia 4 Character editNot much is known about Zarpanitu s character 11 Joan Goodnick Westenholz has suggested that she and Tashmetum were simply prototypical divine wives 14 In late sources she could be characterized as a motherly figure connected to birth 15 She was worshiped under the byname Erua as a goddess associated with pregnancy 12 In the first millennium BCE Zarpanitu s role as the wife of Marduk made her a high ranking deity which was reflected in the epithets applied to her such as belet lady beltiya my lady sarratu queen belet Babili lady of Babylon sarrat Babili queen of Babylon belet Esagil lady of Esagil or sarrat Esagil queen of Esagil 1 In some cases she was effectively portrayed as Marduk s feminine counterpart with similar characteristics including a connection to divination and analogous position in the pantheon that of queen of the gods 16 The so called Archive of Mystic Heptads calls her the mistress of the goddesses dbe let i la a ti which presumably reflects her status as the foremost female deity in late Babylonian theology 17 At the same time she was not included in royal statements of rulers acknowledging their dependence on Marduk 18 Associations with other deities editFamily and court edit Zarpanitu s status as the spouse Marduk is seemingly already indicated by a reference to these two deities in a year name of Samsuiluna 11 The tradition of pairing them with each other might have originated as early as in the third millennium BCE and they already appear next to each other in the Weidner god list 2 Other texts belonging to this genre also pair them together with the exception of Old Babylonian god lists from Nippur which do not allude to any relationship between them 2 Zarpanit is instead placed in the section which otherwise lists deities related to Inanna in this case which according to Joan Goodnick Westenholz is unusual for her 7 It was believed that Zarpanitu could intercede with Marduk on behalf of petitioners though Celine Debourse remarks that texts documenting this function could portray her in an ambivalent light as she could both slander and praise these who asked her to mediate on their behalf which can be considered a parallel to Marduk being portrayed both as a forgiving and punishing figure himself 19 Due to being regarded as the wife of Marduk Zarpanit was also considered the daughter in law of Ea 2 Nabu was regarded as the son of Zarpanitu and Marduk 20 This god was initially regarded as the divine vizier sukkal of the latter as documented for example in Middle Assyrian An Anum but in a late tradition became a member of this god s family instead 21 Two minor goddesses Ṣillus ṭab and Katunna were considered the hairdressers of Zarpanitu and could be referred to as the daughters of Esagil which presumably reflected their status as daughters of the main deities worshiped in this temple 22 They were venerated in the Eḫilisigga house of beautiful allure a shrine located in the temple Erabriri presumably in Babylon 23 Similar duos of so called divine daughters are known from other cities too Borsippa Kazbaba and Kanisurra daughters of the Ezida Kutha Dadamusda and Belet ili daughters of the Emeslam Kish Iqbi damiq and Ḫussinni daughters of the Eduba Sippar Mami and Ninegina daughters of the Ebabbar pl Dilbat Ipte bita and Belet Eanni daughters of the E ibbi Ani and Larsa Mannu saninsu and Larsam iti daughters of the E Ningubla 22 The mythical creature uridimmu from Sumerian ur idim mad lion 24 could be described as the door keeper of both Zarpanitu and Marduk and in a late incantation is implored to intercede with both of these deities on behalf of the petitioner 25 The same being is also mentioned in a hymn to these two deities attributed to Ashurbanipal but in this case it appears in a context seemingly indicating influence from its portrayal in Enuma Elis instead 26 Syncretism edit In Assyria Zarpanitu could be identified with Serua which reflected the syncretism between their respective spouses Marduk and Ashur first documented under Sennacherib and was further facilitated by the phonetic similarity between the name of the Assyrian goddess and the secondary name Erua 27 Through the eighth and seventh centuries BCE attempts have been made to subordinate the local theology of Uruk to Babylon with Babylonian rulers aiming to assimilate both Ishtar of Babylon and Ishtar of Uruk with Zarpanitu 28 Paul Alain Beaulieu notes that in the Eanna archive from Uruk in texts from between the reigns of Marduk apla iddina II and Nabopolassar the title beltiya which typically designated Zarpanitu is instead used in contexts which indicate Ishtar was meant 29 He suggests the attempts to syncretize the two to reassert the supremacy of Babylon over Uruk might have originally started in the eighth century BCE as some accounts of Nabu shuma ishkun s reign indicate that the image of Ishtar was removed from Eanna and replaced by a different goddess deemed improper by the chroniclers with the original only restored in the sixth century BCE by Nebuchadnezzar II 30 It is possible that some of the syncretic efforts relied on confusion which could be caused by the use of Ishtar s name as a generic term for goddesses known for example from tablet XI of the Epic of Gilgamesh as well as the use of the logogram referring to the Sumerian form of the name Inanna to spell the generic title beltu 31 In later sources from Babylon Zarpanitu and Ishtar of Babylon appear as two separate deities in distinct roles for example in a text dealing with the relationship between Marduk and Zarpanitu referred to as Love Lyrics Ishtar of Babylon plays the role of a paramour 32 However there is no evidence that the relationship between Zarpanitu Marduk and Ishtar of Uruk was imagined similarly in Neo Babylonian Uruk 33 Worship editZarpanitu presumably was originally venerated in Zarpan a town located in the immediate proximity of Babylon though she is much better attested than this settlement itself 34 It is known from a Neo Babylonian or later fragment of a topographical text from Sippar BM 66534 which mentions its city gates as well as from a fragmentary myth confirming its association with Zarpanitu 35 Babylon also served as her cult center and she worshiped in this city in the Esagil temple complex dedicated to Marduk in a cella known under the ceremonial names E dara anna house of the ibex of heaven or E ḫili ĝar house endowed with luxuriance 27 Her seat inside it was known as the Eḫalanki house of the secrets of heaven and the netherworld 36 The oldest reference to Zarpanitu which can be dated with certainty occurs in the twenty fourth year name of Sumu la El 11 It commemorated the fashioning of a statue representing her 37 Another early reference to her can be found in the nineteenth year name of Samsu iluna which mentions the construction of thrones for her and Marduk 37 An inscription dealing with the preparation of a cultic object dated to the reign of either Samsu iluna or Hammurabi which mentions Zarpanitu Marduk and Esagil is also known from a copy discovered in Nippur and according to Douglas Frayne it can be assumed that it pertains to the same event 38 Many additional references to Zarpanitu occur in letters from the Old Babylonian period where she is one of the most commonly referenced goddesses next to Ishtar Annunitum Ninsianna Gula and Aya 39 In a New Year akitu ritual from Babylon presumed to precede the rise of Marduk to the position of the head of the pantheon under Nebuchadnezzar I Zarpanitu is listed as one of the deities present during the celebrations alongside Marduk Nabu Nanaya Sutitu Zababa Bau Nergal Laṣ and Mammitum 40 One of the inscriptions of Sargon II 722 705 BCE commemorating his participation in the akitu festival in the same location mentions Zarpanitu among the recipients of gifts provided by him 41 A list of deities worshiped in Assur indicates that Zarpanitu was one of the nineteen deities who were believed to reside in the temple of Gula in this city with a variant which instead places Annunitum in her position being considered an ancient scribal error as the sequence of deities also contains Ea his wife Damkina and Marduk 27 Theophoric names invoking Zarpanitu are known from sources from the Neo Babylonian period though for the most part only women bore them in contrast with names invoking many other goddesses for example Bau Gula Ishtar Nanaya or Ningal which are attested for men too 42 Only two exceptions are known Ardi Ṣarpanitu and Ardi Erua both of which are masculine theophoric names invoking her under respectively her primary name and an epithet 43 They are regarded as atypical 44 Outside Mesopotamia edit In the corpus of Ugaritic texts Zarpanitu is mentioned in an incantation against Lamashtu which pairs her with Marduk and invokes them in parallel with Anu and Antu Enlil and Ninlil Ea and Damkina and Papsukkal and Amasagnudi 45 It is one of the twelve examples of texts from this site written in standard cuneiform which are assumed to be patterned after similar Mesopotamian compositions 46 Direct parallels to individual passages have been identified in the corpus of Mesopotamian incantations against Lamashtu 47 In Emar Zarpanitu is attested exclusively in colophons 8 Mythology editIn literary texts Zarpanitu typically appears alongside Marduk 48 A short myth focused on Zarpanitu describes how the town Zarpan was named after her and then gifted to her by Enlil here identified as her father 34 Afterwards Ea praises her virtues and suggests to his son Marduk that she would be suitable for him and that they should rule over the sea together 49 It has been suggested that the name Ninabdubur lady of the sea foundation which is attributed to her in god lists might reflect this section of the myth 2 Zarpanitu is also referenced in Ludlul bel nemeqi where the protagonist prays to her at the Kaḫilisu gate sprinkled with luxuriance presumably the gate of her cella in Esagil 27 Andrew R George points out that it is also attested in inscriptions of Ashurbanipal and Nebuchadnezzar II 50 Takayoshi Oshima suggests that in a Neo Assyrian 51 myth focused on Marduk the name Damkianna normally considered to be a variant form of Damkina the wife of Ea is instead used to refer to Zarpanitu in parallel with a late prayer attesting a similar situation 52 A different interpretation has been suggested by Wilfred G Lambert who assumed that she is to be understood as Damkina in this context and based on the unusual character of the text proposed that it originated in Malgium where this goddess was commonly acknowledged in royal inscriptions in the Kassite period 53 The narrative deals with a conflict between Marduk and his allies and the gods of Nippur led by Enlil which is ultimately decided in favor of the former by the intervention of Damkianna though it is not certain what it entailed 54 References edit a b c Oshima 2016 pp 217 218 a b c d e f g h i j Oshima 2016 p 217 Black amp Green 1992 p 160 a b Lambert 1995 p 544 Beaulieu 2003 p 30 George 1993 p 6 a b Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 80 a b Beckman 2002 p 48 del Olmo Lete amp Marquez Rowe 2014 p 44 a b Lambert 2013 p 254 a b c d e Lambert 2013 p 251 a b Johandi 2018 p 555 Konig 1938 p 324 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 92 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 93 Debourse 2022 pp 317 318 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 129 Lambert 2013 p 323 Debourse 2022 p 135 Lambert 2013 p 273 Lambert 2013 pp 251 252 a b Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 113 George 1993 p 99 Wiggermann 1992 p 172 Wiggermann 1992 p 173 Beaulieu 2003 pp 355 356 a b c d Oshima 2016 p 218 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 105 Beaulieu 2003 p 76 Beaulieu 2003 pp 76 77 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 pp 110 111 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 pp 121 122 Beaulieu 2003 p 79 a b Lambert 2013 p 299 George 1992 p 205 George 1993 p 98 a b Johandi 2018 p 554 Frayne 1990 p 392 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 251 Lambert 2013 p 282 Debourse 2022 p 39 Cousin amp Watai 2018 p 249 Cousin amp Watai 2018 p 251 Cousin amp Watai 2018 p 252 del Olmo Lete amp Marquez Rowe 2014 pp 43 44 del Olmo Lete amp Marquez Rowe 2014 p 36 del Olmo Lete amp Marquez Rowe 2014 p 39 Debourse 2022 p 317 Lambert 2013 p 300 George 1993 p 107 Oshima 2010 p 145 Oshima 2010 pp 146 147 Lambert 2013 pp 322 323 Oshima 2010 pp 145 146 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 Academic Press Fribourg ISBN 978 3 7278 1738 0 Beaulieu Paul Alain 2003 The Pantheon of Uruk During the Neo Babylonian period Leiden Boston Brill STYX ISBN 978 90 04 13024 1 OCLC 51944564 Beckman Gary 2002 The Pantheon of Emar Silva Anatolica Anatolian studies presented to Maciej Popko on the occasion of his 65th birthday Warsaw Agade hdl 2027 42 77414 ISBN 83 87111 12 0 OCLC 51004996 Black Jeremy A Green Anthony 1992 Gods demons and symbols of ancient Mesopotamia an illustrated dictionary Austin ISBN 0 292 70794 0 OCLC 26140507 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Cousin Laura Watai Yoko 2018 Onomastics and Gender Identity in First Millennium BCE Babylonia In Budin Stephanie Lynn Cifarelli Megan Garcia Ventura Agnes Alba Adelina Millet eds Gender and methodology in the ancient Near East Approaches from Assyriology and beyond PDF Edicions Universitat Barcelona pp 243 255 ISBN 978 84 9168 073 4 Debourse Celine 2022 Of Priests and Kings The Babylonian New Year Festival in the Last Age of Cuneiform Culture Brill ISBN 978 90 04 51303 7 del Olmo Lete Gregorio Marquez Rowe Ignacio 2014 Incantations and Anti Witchcraft Texts from Ugarit Boston De Gruyter ISBN 978 1 61451 627 9 OCLC 948655744 Frayne Douglas 1990 Old Babylonian Period 2003 1595 B C University of Toronto Press doi 10 3138 9781442678033 ISBN 978 1 4426 7803 3 George Andrew R 1992 Babylonian Topographical Texts Orientalia Lovaniensia analecta Departement Orientalistiek ISBN 978 90 6831 410 6 Retrieved 2022 06 18 George Andrew R 1993 House most high the temples of ancient Mesopotamia Winona Lake Eisenbrauns ISBN 0 931464 80 3 OCLC 27813103 Johandi Andreas 2018 Some Remarks about the Beginnings of Marduk In Fink Sebastian Rollinger Robert eds Conceptualizing Past Present and Future Proceedings of the Ninth Symposium of the Melammu Project Held in Helsinki Tartu May 18 24 2015 Ugarit Verlag ISBN 978 3 86835 299 3 Konig Friedrich Wilhelm 1938 Elagu Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German Lambert Wilfred G 1995 Reviewed Work Gods Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia An Illustrated Dictionary by Jeremy Black Anthony Green Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London 58 3 Cambridge University Press 543 544 doi 10 1017 S0041977X00012982 ISSN 1474 0699 JSTOR 620110 S2CID 162979006 Retrieved 2023 06 17 Lambert Wilfred G 2013 Babylonian creation myths Winona Lake Indiana Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1 57506 861 9 OCLC 861537250 Oshima Takayoshi 2010 Damkina shall not bring back her Burden in the future A new Mythological Text of Marduk Enlil and Damkianna In Horowitz Wayne Gabbay Uri Vukosavovic Filip eds A woman of valor Jerusalem Ancient near eastern studies in honor of Joan Goodnick Westenholz Madrid Consejo Superior de Investigaciones ISBN 978 84 00 09182 8 OCLC 753379173 Oshima Takayoshi 2016 Zarpanitu m Reallexikon der Assyriologie retrieved 2023 06 09 Wiggermann Frans A M 1992 Mesopotamian protective spirits the ritual texts Groningen STYX amp PP Publications ISBN 978 90 72371 52 2 OCLC 27914917 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sarpanit amp oldid 1211688874, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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