Mesopotamian mythology

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Ancient Mesopotamia
EuphratesTigris
Assyriology
Sumerian pronunciation
Cities / empires
Sumer: UrukUrEridu
KishLagashNippur
Akkadian Empire: Akkad
BabylonIsinSusa
Assyria: AssurNineveh
NuziNimrud
BabyloniaChaldea
ElamAmorites
HurriansMitanniKassites
Chronology
Kings of Sumer
Kings of Assyria
Kings of Babylon
Language
Cuneiform script
SumerianAkkadian
ElamiteHurrian
Mythology
Enûma Elish
GilgameshMarduk
Nibiru
 
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Mesopotamian mythology is the collective name given to Sumerian and Assyrian and Babylonian mythologies from the land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in modern Iraq.

The Sumerians practiced a polytheistic, henotheistic religion, with anthropomorphic gods or goddesses representing forces or presences in the world, much as in the later Greek mythology. The gods originally created humans as servants for themselves, but freed the humans when they became too much to handle.

Many stories in Sumerian religion appear homologous to stories in other middle-eastern religions. For example, the Biblical account of the creation of man as well as Noah's flood narrative resemble Sumerian tales very closely. Gods and goddesses from Sumer have distinctly similar representations in the religions of the Akkadians, Caananites, and others. A number of related stories and deities have Greek parallels as well; for example, Inanna's descent into the underworld strikingly recalls the story of Persephone

Contents

What Deities did they worship?

  • A. The Four Primary Deities
  • B. The Seven who decreed fate
  • C. The Annuna and others
  • D. The Demigods, mortal Heroes and Monsters

Deities

The Four Primary Deities

  • An, The God of Heaven
  • Ki, The Goddess of the earth
  • Enlil, The God of the air and storms
  • Enki, The God of water and earth

The Three Sky Deities

  • Nanna, The God of the moon
  • Shamash (aka Utu), The Sun God
  • Ishtar (aka Inanna), The Queen of the Heavens and goddess of love and war

Divine Relationships

The universe first appeared when Nammu, a presumably formless abyss, curled in upon herself, and in an act of self-procreation gave birth to An and Ki.

The union of An and Ki produced Enlil, who eventually became leader of the pantheon. After the banishment of Enlil from Dilmun (the home of the gods) for raping Ninlil, Ninlil had a child, Sin (god of the moon), also known as Nanna. Sin and Ningal gave birth to Inanna and to Shamash. During Enlil's banishment, he fathered three underworld deities with Ninlil, most notably Nergal.

Nammu also gave birth to Enki. Enki also controlled the Me, holy decrees that governed such basic things as physics and complex things such as social order and law.

This accounts for the origin of most of the world as we know it

Sources

The earliest known writings on the Sumerian cosmology stem from Enheduanna.

See also

External links



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