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Shala

Shala (Šala) was a Mesopotamian goddess of weather and grain and the wife of the weather god Adad. It is assumed that she originated in northern Mesopotamia and that her name might have Hurrian origin. She was worshiped especially in Karkar and in Zabban, regarded as cult centers of her husband as well. She is first attested in the Old Babylonian period, but it is possible that an analogous Sumerian goddess, Medimsha, was already the wife of Adad's counterpart Ishkur in earlier times.

Shala
Mesopotamian goddess of the weather and grain
Impression of a Syrian cylinder seal showing a goddess riding on a bull and spreading her dress. Similar images have been tentatively identified as depictions of Shala.[1]
Major cult centerKarkar, Zabban
Symbollightning bolts, ear of the corn
Mounta lion-dragon chimera or a bull
Personal information
ConsortAdad
ChildrenHalbinunna, Namashmash, Minunesi, Misharu, Uṣur-amāssu
Equivalents
Sumerian equivalentMedimsha

Both in a number of relatively late Mesopotamian texts and in modern scholarship she is sometimes conflated or confused with Shalash, a Syrian goddess regarded as the spouse of Dagan.

Name

It is accepted that Shala's name has no plausible Akkadian etymology,[2] and it is possible that it was derived from the Hurrian word šāla, daughter.[3] Researchers attributing Hurrian origin to Shala include Gary Beckman[4] and Daniel Schwemer.[5] A theory regarded as less plausible considers it to be a cognate of the Hebrew word šālah, "to be carefree" or "to be unconcerned."[6] Frans Wiggermann proposes that it had its origin in a Semitic language and that it might mean "well-being."[7]

Sumerian and Akkadian texts spell the name as dŠa-la.[8] A variant spelling with a long wovel, dŠa-a-la, is also attested.[9] Logographic spellings of the name are very rare, though one text attests dME.DIM.ŠA as a logogram meant to be read as "Shala."[10]

In the god list An = Anum, the alternate names of Shala include Medimsha (Sumerian: "possessing lovely limbs"[11]), Shuzabarku (Sumerian: "she with a shining bronze hand"[12]), Mushmehush, Kinnusum and Enmelulu.[13] Only the first two of these names are attested outside god lists.[14] In one case in a bilingual text Shala appears in the Akkadian version and Shuzabarku in Sumerian.[8] A further name known from bilingual sources is Muhuranki.[15] A balag song from the library of Ashurbanipal lists Minunesi and Shubanuna among her names.[8] The same composition also addresses her by the epithet dumu-é-a,[8] translated as "child of the house"[16] or "daughter of the house,"[17] which was also applied to the love goddess Nanaya and to Gunura, daughter of the medicine goddess Ninisina.[8] In a late explanatory text, Shuzabarku is defined as "Shala of wisdom," Medimsha as "Shala of totality," and Shala under her primary name as "Shala of people and dew."[18]

Associations with other deities

Shala's genealogy is unknown.[19] She always appears alongside her husband Adad in known sources, and her character was largely defined by this connection.[20] Texts commonly refer to her as his "great wife" or "beloved wife who gladdens the heart."[21] In a balag song from the library of Ashurbanipal, written in first person, Shala/Medimsha (both names are used in the same text in this case) describes herself as the righteous wife of Adad/Ishkur.[8] Shala and Ishkur are the second most commonly invoked divine couple in cylinder seal inscriptions from Sippar after Aya and Shamash.[22] However, no attestations of Shala are known from the third millennium BCE,[23] and it is assumed she most likely originated in the eastern part of Upper Mesopotamia[24] in the Old Babylonian period.[14] Further west, in Halab (modern Aleppo) and presumably the middle Euphrates area, the wife of the weather god, Hadad, was instead the goddess Hebat.[25] Hebat was also incorporated into Hurrian religion as the wife of his counterpart Teshub.[3] She is absent from later Aramaic sources from the same areas, where the wife of the weather god is also Shala like in Mesopotamia.[26]

Medimsha, treated as an alternate name of Shala in later periods,[11] was initially a different goddess, who appears already in sources from the Fara period though they don't provide any information about her role.[27] Daniel Schwemer suggests that it is not unlikely that she was already viewed as the wife of Ishkur and lack of direct evidence for such a relation between them, known from later god lists, is the result of preservation bias.[14] He additionally proposes that some depictions of a naked rain goddess on cylinder seals might be Medimsha.[28] It has also been proposed that some of such images might represent the Hurrian goddess Shaushka,[29] typically regarded as the sister of Teshub in known sources postdating the pairing of the Hurrian weather god with Syrian Hebat and never labeled as his spouse, though the earlier nature of their relationship is impossible to discern.[30]

The daughters of Shala[29][31] and Adad were Shubanuna, Namashmash (or Nabarbar; reading of the name is uncertain[32]) and Minunesi.[33] While there is presently no evidence for them ever existing as independent deities outside god lists,[34] according to Frans Wiggermann it is possible that they were depicted in a fashion similar to their mother and shared her functions.[29] In art groups of three Shala-like naked goddesses which he argues can be identified with them tend to be accompanied by a sheep-like mythical creature, most likely of astral character, whose name is presently unknown.[29] The etymology of Namashmash and Minunesi is not known, while Shubanuna's name means "the princely šuba",[34] šuba being a type of unidentified precious stone or shell associated with deities such as Ishtar and Shamash.[35] In one balag song Menunesi and Shubanuna are epithets of Shala rather than her daughters.[34] Namashmash and Shubanuna are also attested in a god list in what is assumed to be an enumeration of epithets of Ishtar[34] or Ishara.[36] Shubanuna might also be attested in the name of a month from the local calendar of Adab from the third millennium BCE.[37] This assumption remains uncertain as she is otherwise absent from the city, while a deified šuba stone (dŠuba) is present in theophoric names from between the Sargonic and Ur III periods, and therefore it would not be impossible for it to also be invoked in a month name.[37]

Further children attested in the sections of god lists dedicated to Shala and Adad include Misharu ("justice;" he could be accompanied by his spouse Išartu, "righteousness") and Uṣur-amāssu ("heed his word").[33] While Uṣur-amāssu is regarded as a male deity in god lists, there is evidence for the worship of a goddess bearing the same name in Uruk in the first millennium BCE, and in at least one case she is referred to as bukrat Adad, "daughter of Adad."[38]

A further deity belonging to the court of Adad and Shala in god lists was Nimgir ("lightning"), the sukkal of Adad/Ishkur.[33]

It is possible that on at least one seal Shala and Adad are accompanied by Aya, possibly acting as a divine representative of Sippar.[39]

Shala and Shalash

In modern scholarship, Shala is sometimes confused with Shalash, a similarly named Syrian goddess who was the wife of Dagan.[40] According to Daniel Schwemer, while a degree of confusion between the two goddesses is also present in some ancient sources, it is largely limited to scholarly Mesopotamian texts, and no older than the fourteenth century BCE.[3] According to Lluis Feliu, most evidence for it comes from the first millennium BCE.[41]

In some copies of the god list An = Anum, Shalash is listed as one of the alternate names of Shala.[13] In an explanatory text Ninkusi, glossed as "Shalash," is addressed as "Shala of the western steppe."[42] Ninkusi ("lady of gold"[15]) is recognized as a synonym of Shalash, rather than Shala, in An = Anum, where the name appears in the section dedicated to Dagan and his spouse rather than to Adad and Shala.[42] The same god list equates Shalash separately with Ninlil, to match the equation between her husband and Enlil.[42] Additionally, two names are only attested in relation to Shalash, not Shala: Ninudishara ("Mistress who amazes the world") and Ninsuhzagina ("Mistress diadem of lapis lazuli").[43]

In a single copy of a Maqlû ritual from Assur, Shala occurs in place of Shalash, present in other known copies of the same text.[41]

Lluis Felieu rejects the possibility that the two goddesses were originally the same, and especially that the confusion between them was caused by Dagan being a weather god himself and thus analogous to Adad.[41] He also notes that Shala is well attested in art as a goddess associated with the weather, while the character of Shalash, based on parallels with the wives of heads of other pantheons of the ancient Near East (for example Ninlil, wife of Enlil and Athirat, wife of El), would be unlikely to resemble that of the wife of the Mesopotamian weather god.[44] Additionally, the spelling of the name of the goddess paired with Adad in devotional inscriptions is consistent between various time periods and languages, and never ends with a sibilant.[45] Unlike Shala Shalash is also unlikely to have Hurrian origin, as she is attested in the Ebla texts, which predate the arrival of Hurrians in Syria.[46]

There is very little evidence for confusion of the two goddesses in Hurrian and Hittite sources.[47] Daniel Schwemer considers a treaty of king Shattiwaza to be one example.[5] Lluis Felieu proposes that for Hurrians and Hittites the source of confusion might have been the fact the final -š in the name of Shalash name could be interpreted as a case ending in their languages,[48] but he also remarks that the only possible instances might represent scribal mistakes.[47] This reasoning is also accepted by Daniel Schwemer.[49]

Less commonly modern authors also confuse Shala with Shuwala, a Hurrian underworld goddess.[10]

Iconography and functions

Similar to spouses of other deities, Shala was believed to intercede on behalf of human supplicants with her husband.[50]

Like her husband, Shala was a weather deity.[51] She was commonly depicted spreading her dress[52] or naked.[7] Texts frequently highlight her charm and beauty.[52] In art she often holds symbols associated with rain, such as lightning bolts.[41] Sometimes she stands on the back of a bull or lion-dragon chimera pulling her husband's chariot.[52] Such images are known from both Syria and Mesopotamia.[1]

Shala was also a goddess of agricultural produce.[3] Grain was metaphorically regarded as the product of a sexual union between her and Adad, and some artwork depicts romantic scenes between them alongside humans ploughing their fields.[53] An ear of corn was a symbol of her, especially on kudurru.[54] A star associated with her, Šer'u ("Furrow"; identified as one of the stars in the constellation Virgo), was depicted as a woman holding an ear of corn in an astronomical tablet from the Seleucid period.[55] Occasionally birds were also associated with Shala in her agricultural role,[56] and on at least one cylinder seal a bird presumably symbolizing Shala accompanies a lightning bolt representing her husband.[39]

 
An Elamite figure of a woman cupping her breasts. Louvre.

Maurits van Loon proposes that a "gate" symbol accompanying Adad and Shala on some seals could represent the rainbow,[57] though he notes his theory does not take into account that in Mesopotamian and Elamite pantheons the rainbow was also represented by a separate goddess, Manzat.[57] He points out that the temple of Shala and Adad at Chogha Zanbil was adjacent to that of Manzat.[57] He considers it a possibility that figures of naked women cupping their breasts found at this site might represent a weather goddess (Shala or Manzat), and their jewelry - the rainbow.[57]

Worship

Eariest evidence for the worship of Shala comes from Old Babylonian Nippur, where she appears in offering lists alongside Adad.[58] One of the year names of the Babylonian king Hammurabi indicates that a statue was dedicated to Shala by him.[9] A qadištum priestess of Shala is attested in documents from Sippar.[31]

A hymn to Nanaya which enumerates various goddesses regarded as either city goddesses or wives of city gods mentions Shala in association with Karkar,[51] located close to Umma and Adab.[59] Indirect evidence indicates that it was associated with the cult of her husband's Sumerian counterpart Ishkur as early as in the Uruk period.[60] According to a list of temples, her sanctuary, most likely located in that city, was the Edurku ("house, pure abode"), which might had been a part of Eugalgal[61] ("house of great storms"), a well attested temple of Adad.[62]

The worship of Shala and Adad as a couple is attested in both Assyria and Babylonia in multiple time periods.[63] Shala appears in late Aramaic sources as well, for example in a bilingual inscription from Tell Fekheriye.[63] In the first millennium BCE Zabban was the location of an important temple of Adad and Shala, seemingly connected in some way with Sippar.[64] She was also venerated in Guzana.[26] An Assyrian temple of Adad and Shala was also located in Kalhu according to a document from the reign of Ashurnasirpal II.[65] An inscription of the neo-Assyrian king Sinsharishkun might indicate that Shala was worshiped in the joint temple of Anu and Adad in Assur.[21] Other sites where she was worshiped alongside Adad include Nineveh, Kurba'il, Ekallatu, Urakka, Suhu and Babylon.[31] In Achaemenid and Seleucid Uruk Shala was one of the goddesses accompanying Antu during a parade of deities celebrating the New Year festival.[66]

Multiple theophoric names indicating the worship of Shala are known, with Ipqu-Shala, translated as "friendly hug of Shala" by Daniel Schwemer, being particularly common.[67] Other names, with fewer attestations, include Amat-Shala ("servant of Shala"), Apil-Shala ("son of Shala"), Nur-Shala ("light of Shala"), Sha-Shala-rema ("the actions of Shala are merciful"), Shala-damquat ("Shala is good"), Shala-sharrat ("Shala is a queen"), Shala-ummi ("Shala is my mother"), Shimat-Shala ("fate determined by Shala") and Shu-Shala ("he of Shala").[68] Some of them are attested west of Mesopotamia, in Mari.[69]

In incantations Shala was invoked against dogs.[70]

In Elam

Shala was also worshiped in Elam alongside her husband.[71] While names of presumed Elamite weather deities (Kunzibami, Šihhaš and Šennukušu) appear in Mesopotamian god lists, so far none of them were found in Elamite and Akkadian inscriptions from Elam,[72] and it is assumed that Adad (dIM) and his wife were worshiped under their Mesopotamian names and were not merely stand-ins for the names of deities of Elamite origin.[71] They had a joint temple at Chogha Zanbil,[73] referred to with the term silin, for which various translations have been proposed ("rain water," "abundance," "prosperity," "growth").[74] Like a number of other terms used to describe temples forming the Chogha Zanbil complex it is a hapax legomenon.[75] Most of the evidence for worship of the pair comes from the lowlands (especially Susa).[76] Other deities whose worship is known mostly from that part of Elam include Pinikir, Lagamal and Manzat.[77]

Only the so-called Persepolis Fortification Archive from early Achaemenid times undeniably confirms the spread of Adad's cult further east.[76] It is also possible that a theophoric name attesting the worship of Shala in the highlands is known from Tall-i Malyān (ancient Anshan).[76]

Later relevance

Shala Mons, a mountain on Venus, is named after Shala. Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature in the corresponding entry incorrectly identifies her as a "Canaanite" goddess, rather than a Mesopotamian one.[78]

References

  1. ^ a b Otto 2008, p. 568.
  2. ^ Schwemer 2008a, pp. 565–566.
  3. ^ a b c d Schwemer 2007, p. 148.
  4. ^ Beckman 2005, p. 311.
  5. ^ a b Schwemer 2008a, p. 566.
  6. ^ Schwemer 2008a, pp. 356–366.
  7. ^ a b Wiggermann 1998, p. 51.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Schwemer 2001, p. 171.
  9. ^ a b Schwemer 2001, p. 398.
  10. ^ a b Schwemer 2008a, p. 565.
  11. ^ a b Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 56.
  12. ^ Krebernik 2013b, p. 377.
  13. ^ a b Schwemer 2001, p. 400.
  14. ^ a b c Schwemer 2007, p. 147.
  15. ^ a b Schwemer 2001, p. 402.
  16. ^ Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 84.
  17. ^ Edzard 1971, p. 701.
  18. ^ Schwemer 2001, pp. 400–401.
  19. ^ Stevens 2013.
  20. ^ Schwemer 2001, p. 412.
  21. ^ a b Schwemer 2001, p. 411.
  22. ^ Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 257.
  23. ^ Archi 2015, p. 626.
  24. ^ Schwemer 2001, p. 407.
  25. ^ Feliu 2003, p. 291.
  26. ^ a b Schwemer 2007, p. 161.
  27. ^ Schwemer 2007, p. 133.
  28. ^ Schwemer 2007, p. 149.
  29. ^ a b c d Wiggermann 1998, p. 52.
  30. ^ Schwemer 2008, p. 4-5.
  31. ^ a b c Schwemer 2008a, p. 567.
  32. ^ Krebernik 1998, p. 92.
  33. ^ a b c Schwemer 2007, p. 146.
  34. ^ a b c d Schwemer 2001, p. 69.
  35. ^ Krebernik 2013, p. 224.
  36. ^ Krebernik 2013a, p. 224.
  37. ^ a b Such-Gutiérrez 2005, p. 33.
  38. ^ Schwemer 2001, pp. 68–69.
  39. ^ a b Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 269.
  40. ^ Feliu 2007, p. 87.
  41. ^ a b c d Feliu 2007, p. 92.
  42. ^ a b c Schwemer 2001, p. 401.
  43. ^ Schwemer 2001, pp. 402–403.
  44. ^ Feliu 2007, pp. 92–93.
  45. ^ Feliu 2007, p. 90.
  46. ^ Feliu 2003, p. 289.
  47. ^ a b Feliu 2003, p. 292.
  48. ^ Feliu 2007, p. 91.
  49. ^ Schwemer 2008b, p. 590.
  50. ^ Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 273.
  51. ^ a b Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 117.
  52. ^ a b c Wiggermann 2011, p. 680.
  53. ^ Wiggermann 2011, pp. 680–681.
  54. ^ Seidl 1989, p. 138.
  55. ^ Schwemer 2007, pp. 148–149.
  56. ^ Otto 2008, p. 569.
  57. ^ a b c d van Loon 1992, p. 152.
  58. ^ Feliu 2007, p. 88.
  59. ^ Edzard 1980, p. 64.
  60. ^ Schwemer 2007, p. 131.
  61. ^ George 1993, p. 81.
  62. ^ George 1993, p. 152.
  63. ^ a b Feliu 2007, p. 89.
  64. ^ Schwemer 2007, p. 142.
  65. ^ George 1993, p. 162.
  66. ^ Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, pp. 125–126.
  67. ^ Schwemer 2001, p. 399.
  68. ^ Schwemer 2001, pp. 399–400.
  69. ^ Schwemer 2001, p. 404.
  70. ^ Asher-Greve & Westenholz 2013, p. 240.
  71. ^ a b Henkelman 2008, p. 309.
  72. ^ Henkelman 2008, pp. 307–308.
  73. ^ Henkelman 2008, p. 310.
  74. ^ Potts 2010, p. 62.
  75. ^ Potts 2010, pp. 61–62.
  76. ^ a b c Henkelman 2008, p. 313.
  77. ^ Álvarez-Mon 2015, p. 19.
  78. ^ Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature 2006.

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shala, other, uses, disambiguation, Šala, mesopotamian, goddess, weather, grain, wife, weather, adad, assumed, that, originated, northern, mesopotamia, that, name, might, have, hurrian, origin, worshiped, especially, karkar, zabban, regarded, cult, centers, hu. For other uses see Shala disambiguation Shala Sala was a Mesopotamian goddess of weather and grain and the wife of the weather god Adad It is assumed that she originated in northern Mesopotamia and that her name might have Hurrian origin She was worshiped especially in Karkar and in Zabban regarded as cult centers of her husband as well She is first attested in the Old Babylonian period but it is possible that an analogous Sumerian goddess Medimsha was already the wife of Adad s counterpart Ishkur in earlier times ShalaMesopotamian goddess of the weather and grainImpression of a Syrian cylinder seal showing a goddess riding on a bull and spreading her dress Similar images have been tentatively identified as depictions of Shala 1 Major cult centerKarkar ZabbanSymbollightning bolts ear of the cornMounta lion dragon chimera or a bullPersonal informationConsortAdadChildrenHalbinunna Namashmash Minunesi Misharu Uṣur amassuEquivalentsSumerian equivalentMedimshaBoth in a number of relatively late Mesopotamian texts and in modern scholarship she is sometimes conflated or confused with Shalash a Syrian goddess regarded as the spouse of Dagan Contents 1 Name 2 Associations with other deities 2 1 Shala and Shalash 3 Iconography and functions 4 Worship 4 1 In Elam 5 Later relevance 6 References 6 1 BibliographyName EditIt is accepted that Shala s name has no plausible Akkadian etymology 2 and it is possible that it was derived from the Hurrian word sala daughter 3 Researchers attributing Hurrian origin to Shala include Gary Beckman 4 and Daniel Schwemer 5 A theory regarded as less plausible considers it to be a cognate of the Hebrew word salah to be carefree or to be unconcerned 6 Frans Wiggermann proposes that it had its origin in a Semitic language and that it might mean well being 7 Sumerian and Akkadian texts spell the name as dSa la 8 A variant spelling with a long wovel dSa a la is also attested 9 Logographic spellings of the name are very rare though one text attests dME DIM SA as a logogram meant to be read as Shala 10 In the god list An Anum the alternate names of Shala include Medimsha Sumerian possessing lovely limbs 11 Shuzabarku Sumerian she with a shining bronze hand 12 Mushmehush Kinnusum and Enmelulu 13 Only the first two of these names are attested outside god lists 14 In one case in a bilingual text Shala appears in the Akkadian version and Shuzabarku in Sumerian 8 A further name known from bilingual sources is Muhuranki 15 A balag song from the library of Ashurbanipal lists Minunesi and Shubanuna among her names 8 The same composition also addresses her by the epithet dumu e a 8 translated as child of the house 16 or daughter of the house 17 which was also applied to the love goddess Nanaya and to Gunura daughter of the medicine goddess Ninisina 8 In a late explanatory text Shuzabarku is defined as Shala of wisdom Medimsha as Shala of totality and Shala under her primary name as Shala of people and dew 18 Associations with other deities EditShala s genealogy is unknown 19 She always appears alongside her husband Adad in known sources and her character was largely defined by this connection 20 Texts commonly refer to her as his great wife or beloved wife who gladdens the heart 21 In a balag song from the library of Ashurbanipal written in first person Shala Medimsha both names are used in the same text in this case describes herself as the righteous wife of Adad Ishkur 8 Shala and Ishkur are the second most commonly invoked divine couple in cylinder seal inscriptions from Sippar after Aya and Shamash 22 However no attestations of Shala are known from the third millennium BCE 23 and it is assumed she most likely originated in the eastern part of Upper Mesopotamia 24 in the Old Babylonian period 14 Further west in Halab modern Aleppo and presumably the middle Euphrates area the wife of the weather god Hadad was instead the goddess Hebat 25 Hebat was also incorporated into Hurrian religion as the wife of his counterpart Teshub 3 She is absent from later Aramaic sources from the same areas where the wife of the weather god is also Shala like in Mesopotamia 26 Medimsha treated as an alternate name of Shala in later periods 11 was initially a different goddess who appears already in sources from the Fara period though they don t provide any information about her role 27 Daniel Schwemer suggests that it is not unlikely that she was already viewed as the wife of Ishkur and lack of direct evidence for such a relation between them known from later god lists is the result of preservation bias 14 He additionally proposes that some depictions of a naked rain goddess on cylinder seals might be Medimsha 28 It has also been proposed that some of such images might represent the Hurrian goddess Shaushka 29 typically regarded as the sister of Teshub in known sources postdating the pairing of the Hurrian weather god with Syrian Hebat and never labeled as his spouse though the earlier nature of their relationship is impossible to discern 30 The daughters of Shala 29 31 and Adad were Shubanuna Namashmash or Nabarbar reading of the name is uncertain 32 and Minunesi 33 While there is presently no evidence for them ever existing as independent deities outside god lists 34 according to Frans Wiggermann it is possible that they were depicted in a fashion similar to their mother and shared her functions 29 In art groups of three Shala like naked goddesses which he argues can be identified with them tend to be accompanied by a sheep like mythical creature most likely of astral character whose name is presently unknown 29 The etymology of Namashmash and Minunesi is not known while Shubanuna s name means the princely suba 34 suba being a type of unidentified precious stone or shell associated with deities such as Ishtar and Shamash 35 In one balag song Menunesi and Shubanuna are epithets of Shala rather than her daughters 34 Namashmash and Shubanuna are also attested in a god list in what is assumed to be an enumeration of epithets of Ishtar 34 or Ishara 36 Shubanuna might also be attested in the name of a month from the local calendar of Adab from the third millennium BCE 37 This assumption remains uncertain as she is otherwise absent from the city while a deified suba stone dSuba is present in theophoric names from between the Sargonic and Ur III periods and therefore it would not be impossible for it to also be invoked in a month name 37 Further children attested in the sections of god lists dedicated to Shala and Adad include Misharu justice he could be accompanied by his spouse Isartu righteousness and Uṣur amassu heed his word 33 While Uṣur amassu is regarded as a male deity in god lists there is evidence for the worship of a goddess bearing the same name in Uruk in the first millennium BCE and in at least one case she is referred to as bukrat Adad daughter of Adad 38 A further deity belonging to the court of Adad and Shala in god lists was Nimgir lightning the sukkal of Adad Ishkur 33 It is possible that on at least one seal Shala and Adad are accompanied by Aya possibly acting as a divine representative of Sippar 39 Shala and Shalash Edit Further information Shalash In modern scholarship Shala is sometimes confused with Shalash a similarly named Syrian goddess who was the wife of Dagan 40 According to Daniel Schwemer while a degree of confusion between the two goddesses is also present in some ancient sources it is largely limited to scholarly Mesopotamian texts and no older than the fourteenth century BCE 3 According to Lluis Feliu most evidence for it comes from the first millennium BCE 41 In some copies of the god list An Anum Shalash is listed as one of the alternate names of Shala 13 In an explanatory text Ninkusi glossed as Shalash is addressed as Shala of the western steppe 42 Ninkusi lady of gold 15 is recognized as a synonym of Shalash rather than Shala in An Anum where the name appears in the section dedicated to Dagan and his spouse rather than to Adad and Shala 42 The same god list equates Shalash separately with Ninlil to match the equation between her husband and Enlil 42 Additionally two names are only attested in relation to Shalash not Shala Ninudishara Mistress who amazes the world and Ninsuhzagina Mistress diadem of lapis lazuli 43 In a single copy of a Maqlu ritual from Assur Shala occurs in place of Shalash present in other known copies of the same text 41 Lluis Felieu rejects the possibility that the two goddesses were originally the same and especially that the confusion between them was caused by Dagan being a weather god himself and thus analogous to Adad 41 He also notes that Shala is well attested in art as a goddess associated with the weather while the character of Shalash based on parallels with the wives of heads of other pantheons of the ancient Near East for example Ninlil wife of Enlil and Athirat wife of El would be unlikely to resemble that of the wife of the Mesopotamian weather god 44 Additionally the spelling of the name of the goddess paired with Adad in devotional inscriptions is consistent between various time periods and languages and never ends with a sibilant 45 Unlike Shala Shalash is also unlikely to have Hurrian origin as she is attested in the Ebla texts which predate the arrival of Hurrians in Syria 46 There is very little evidence for confusion of the two goddesses in Hurrian and Hittite sources 47 Daniel Schwemer considers a treaty of king Shattiwaza to be one example 5 Lluis Felieu proposes that for Hurrians and Hittites the source of confusion might have been the fact the final s in the name of Shalash name could be interpreted as a case ending in their languages 48 but he also remarks that the only possible instances might represent scribal mistakes 47 This reasoning is also accepted by Daniel Schwemer 49 Less commonly modern authors also confuse Shala with Shuwala a Hurrian underworld goddess 10 Iconography and functions EditSimilar to spouses of other deities Shala was believed to intercede on behalf of human supplicants with her husband 50 Like her husband Shala was a weather deity 51 She was commonly depicted spreading her dress 52 or naked 7 Texts frequently highlight her charm and beauty 52 In art she often holds symbols associated with rain such as lightning bolts 41 Sometimes she stands on the back of a bull or lion dragon chimera pulling her husband s chariot 52 Such images are known from both Syria and Mesopotamia 1 Shala was also a goddess of agricultural produce 3 Grain was metaphorically regarded as the product of a sexual union between her and Adad and some artwork depicts romantic scenes between them alongside humans ploughing their fields 53 An ear of corn was a symbol of her especially on kudurru 54 A star associated with her Ser u Furrow identified as one of the stars in the constellation Virgo was depicted as a woman holding an ear of corn in an astronomical tablet from the Seleucid period 55 Occasionally birds were also associated with Shala in her agricultural role 56 and on at least one cylinder seal a bird presumably symbolizing Shala accompanies a lightning bolt representing her husband 39 An Elamite figure of a woman cupping her breasts Louvre Maurits van Loon proposes that a gate symbol accompanying Adad and Shala on some seals could represent the rainbow 57 though he notes his theory does not take into account that in Mesopotamian and Elamite pantheons the rainbow was also represented by a separate goddess Manzat 57 He points out that the temple of Shala and Adad at Chogha Zanbil was adjacent to that of Manzat 57 He considers it a possibility that figures of naked women cupping their breasts found at this site might represent a weather goddess Shala or Manzat and their jewelry the rainbow 57 Worship EditEariest evidence for the worship of Shala comes from Old Babylonian Nippur where she appears in offering lists alongside Adad 58 One of the year names of the Babylonian king Hammurabi indicates that a statue was dedicated to Shala by him 9 A qadistum priestess of Shala is attested in documents from Sippar 31 A hymn to Nanaya which enumerates various goddesses regarded as either city goddesses or wives of city gods mentions Shala in association with Karkar 51 located close to Umma and Adab 59 Indirect evidence indicates that it was associated with the cult of her husband s Sumerian counterpart Ishkur as early as in the Uruk period 60 According to a list of temples her sanctuary most likely located in that city was the Edurku house pure abode which might had been a part of Eugalgal 61 house of great storms a well attested temple of Adad 62 The worship of Shala and Adad as a couple is attested in both Assyria and Babylonia in multiple time periods 63 Shala appears in late Aramaic sources as well for example in a bilingual inscription from Tell Fekheriye 63 In the first millennium BCE Zabban was the location of an important temple of Adad and Shala seemingly connected in some way with Sippar 64 She was also venerated in Guzana 26 An Assyrian temple of Adad and Shala was also located in Kalhu according to a document from the reign of Ashurnasirpal II 65 An inscription of the neo Assyrian king Sinsharishkun might indicate that Shala was worshiped in the joint temple of Anu and Adad in Assur 21 Other sites where she was worshiped alongside Adad include Nineveh Kurba il Ekallatu Urakka Suhu and Babylon 31 In Achaemenid and Seleucid Uruk Shala was one of the goddesses accompanying Antu during a parade of deities celebrating the New Year festival 66 Multiple theophoric names indicating the worship of Shala are known with Ipqu Shala translated as friendly hug of Shala by Daniel Schwemer being particularly common 67 Other names with fewer attestations include Amat Shala servant of Shala Apil Shala son of Shala Nur Shala light of Shala Sha Shala rema the actions of Shala are merciful Shala damquat Shala is good Shala sharrat Shala is a queen Shala ummi Shala is my mother Shimat Shala fate determined by Shala and Shu Shala he of Shala 68 Some of them are attested west of Mesopotamia in Mari 69 In incantations Shala was invoked against dogs 70 In Elam Edit Shala was also worshiped in Elam alongside her husband 71 While names of presumed Elamite weather deities Kunzibami Sihhas and Sennukusu appear in Mesopotamian god lists so far none of them were found in Elamite and Akkadian inscriptions from Elam 72 and it is assumed that Adad dIM and his wife were worshiped under their Mesopotamian names and were not merely stand ins for the names of deities of Elamite origin 71 They had a joint temple at Chogha Zanbil 73 referred to with the term silin for which various translations have been proposed rain water abundance prosperity growth 74 Like a number of other terms used to describe temples forming the Chogha Zanbil complex it is a hapax legomenon 75 Most of the evidence for worship of the pair comes from the lowlands especially Susa 76 Other deities whose worship is known mostly from that part of Elam include Pinikir Lagamal and Manzat 77 Only the so called Persepolis Fortification Archive from early Achaemenid times undeniably confirms the spread of Adad s cult further east 76 It is also possible that a theophoric name attesting the worship of Shala in the highlands is known from Tall i Malyan ancient Anshan 76 Later relevance EditShala Mons a mountain on Venus is named after Shala Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature in the corresponding entry incorrectly identifies her as a Canaanite goddess rather than a Mesopotamian one 78 References Edit a b Otto 2008 p 568 Schwemer 2008a pp 565 566 a b c d Schwemer 2007 p 148 Beckman 2005 p 311 a b Schwemer 2008a p 566 Schwemer 2008a pp 356 366 a b Wiggermann 1998 p 51 a b c d e f Schwemer 2001 p 171 a b Schwemer 2001 p 398 a b Schwemer 2008a p 565 a b Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 56 Krebernik 2013b p 377 a b Schwemer 2001 p 400 a b c Schwemer 2007 p 147 a b Schwemer 2001 p 402 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 84 Edzard 1971 p 701 Schwemer 2001 pp 400 401 Stevens 2013 Schwemer 2001 p 412 a b Schwemer 2001 p 411 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 257 Archi 2015 p 626 Schwemer 2001 p 407 Feliu 2003 p 291 a b Schwemer 2007 p 161 Schwemer 2007 p 133 Schwemer 2007 p 149 a b c d Wiggermann 1998 p 52 Schwemer 2008 p 4 5 a b c Schwemer 2008a p 567 Krebernik 1998 p 92 a b c Schwemer 2007 p 146 a b c d Schwemer 2001 p 69 Krebernik 2013 p 224 Krebernik 2013a p 224 a b Such Gutierrez 2005 p 33 Schwemer 2001 pp 68 69 a b Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 269 Feliu 2007 p 87 a b c d Feliu 2007 p 92 a b c Schwemer 2001 p 401 Schwemer 2001 pp 402 403 Feliu 2007 pp 92 93 Feliu 2007 p 90 Feliu 2003 p 289 a b Feliu 2003 p 292 Feliu 2007 p 91 Schwemer 2008b p 590 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 273 a b Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 117 a b c Wiggermann 2011 p 680 Wiggermann 2011 pp 680 681 Seidl 1989 p 138 Schwemer 2007 pp 148 149 Otto 2008 p 569 a b c d van Loon 1992 p 152 Feliu 2007 p 88 Edzard 1980 p 64 Schwemer 2007 p 131 George 1993 p 81 George 1993 p 152 a b Feliu 2007 p 89 Schwemer 2007 p 142 George 1993 p 162 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 pp 125 126 Schwemer 2001 p 399 Schwemer 2001 pp 399 400 Schwemer 2001 p 404 Asher Greve amp Westenholz 2013 p 240 a b Henkelman 2008 p 309 Henkelman 2008 pp 307 308 Henkelman 2008 p 310 Potts 2010 p 62 Potts 2010 pp 61 62 a b c Henkelman 2008 p 313 Alvarez Mon 2015 p 19 Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature 2006 Bibliography Edit Alvarez Mon Javier 2015 Like a thunderstorm storm gods Sibitti warriors from Highland Elam AION Annali dell Universita degli Studi di Napoli L Orientale 74 1 4 17 46 ISSN 0393 3180 Retrieved 2022 01 29 Archi Alfonso 2015 Ebla and Its Archives De Gruyter doi 10 1515 9781614517887 ISBN 978 1 61451 716 0 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 Beckman Gary 2005 Pantheon A II Bei den Hethitern Pantheon A II In Hittite tradition Reallexikon der Assyriologie retrieved 2022 03 05 Edzard Dietz Otto 1971 Gunura Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German retrieved 2022 02 24 Edzard Dietz Otto 1980 IM Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German retrieved 2022 03 21 Feliu Lluis 2003 The god Dagan in Bronze Age Syria Leiden Boston MA Brill ISBN 90 04 13158 2 OCLC 52107444 Feliu Lluis 2007 Two brides for two gods The case of Sala and Salas He unfurrowed his brow and laughed Munster Ugarit Verlag ISBN 978 3 934628 32 8 OCLC 191759910 George Andrew R 1993 House most high the temples of ancient Mesopotamia Winona Lake Eisenbrauns ISBN 0 931464 80 3 OCLC 27813103 Henkelman Wouter F M 2008 The other gods who are studies in Elamite Iranian acculturation based on the Persepolis fortification texts Leiden Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten ISBN 978 90 6258 414 7 Krebernik Manfred 1998 NaMASMAS Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German retrieved 2022 03 05 Krebernik Manfred 2013 Suba Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German retrieved 2022 03 05 Krebernik Manfred 2013a Suba nuna Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German retrieved 2022 03 05 Krebernik Manfred 2013b Su zabar ku Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German retrieved 2022 03 05 Otto Adelheid 2008 Sala B Archaologisch Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German retrieved 2022 03 05 Potts Daniel T 2010 Elamite Temple Building From the foundations to the crenellations essays on temple building in the Ancient Near East and Hebrew Bible Munster Ugarit Verlag ISBN 978 3 86835 031 9 OCLC 618338811 Schwemer Daniel 2001 Die Wettergottgestalten Mesopotamiens und Nordsyriens im Zeitalter der Keilschriftkulturen Materialien und Studien nach den schriftlichen Quellen in German Wiesbaden Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3 447 04456 1 OCLC 48145544 Schwemer Daniel 2007 The Storm Gods of the Ancient Near East Summary Synthesis Recent Studies Part I PDF Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions Brill 7 2 121 168 doi 10 1163 156921207783876404 ISSN 1569 2116 Schwemer Daniel 2008 The Storm Gods of the Ancient Near East Summary Synthesis Recent Studies Part II Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions Brill 8 1 1 44 doi 10 1163 156921208786182428 ISSN 1569 2116 Schwemer Daniel 2008a Sala A Philologisch Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German retrieved 2022 02 28 Schwemer Daniel 2008b Salus Salas Reallexikon der Assyriologie in German retrieved 2022 02 28 Seidl Ursula 1989 Die babylonischen Kudurru reliefs Symbole mesopotamischer Gottheiten PDF in German Freiburg Schweiz Gottingen Universitatsverlag Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht ISBN 3 7278 0603 6 OCLC 19715002 Stevens Kathryn 2013 Sala goddess Ancient Mesopotamian Gods and Goddesses Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus UK Higher Education Academy retrieved 2022 03 05 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 2022 05 17 van Loon Maurits 1992 The Rainbow in Ancient West Asian Iconography PDF Natural phenomena their meaning depiction and description in the ancient Near East Amsterdam North Holland Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences ISBN 0 444 85759 1 OCLC 32242903 Wiggermann Frans A M 1998 Nackte Gottin A Philologisch Naked goddess A Philological Reallexikon der Assyriologie retrieved 2022 02 24 Wiggermann Frans A M 2011 Agriculture as Civilization Sages Farmers and Barbarians Oxford Handbooks Online Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199557301 013 0031 Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature 2006 Planetary Names Mons montes Shala Mons on Venus Retrieved 2022 03 05 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shala amp oldid 1146693739, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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