Category Archives: Minor Gods

Ningikuga Quotes From Texts

Ningikuga = Ningal’s mother, Nannar’s Mother-In-Law

Lover of Enki’s, Goddess of Reeds and Marshes, & Weaving of Reeds

 

(Texts: All Artifacts, Color Coding, & Writings in Bold Type With Italics Inside Parenthesis, are Added by Editor R. Brown, not the Authors, Translators, or Publishers!)

(gods in blue)

 

         “a young Anunnaki goddess called Ningikuga (Nannar’s mother-in-law).

It was she who brought to humankind the art of binding and weaving reeds,

it was by her craft that the huts to live and worship were first built..

And it was by looking at the way Ningikuga weave the long reeds in a patterned way …”

 

Ningikuga looked at the expanse of the Great Reeds,

contemplated with pride her work and then turned to Enki.

As a Craftsperson, she understood Enki and his Request with her Mind, Body, Heart and Soul.

She smiled at the Water God: …”

 

Ningikuga laughed at the contagious enthusiasm of the Water God: ,,,”

 

Faithful to her promise, Ningikuga had come with the Igigi and the Anunnaki,

who brought Enki gifts for the journey.

Thus he was cloaked with chain mail to protect his body, helmet to guide his Reason and Decisions,

a Sacred Horn so that he would never run out of food and drink

and Spear to focus his Will and to pierce the heart of the fiercest enemy.

With a graceful leap, Enki got into the boat.

There he stood for a while, contemplating the seashore, losing himself in Ningikuga´s eyes.

This last salute was for her …”

 

Enki turned then his back to the Underworld,

with a firm resolve to enter again the Worlds Above, to return to Eridu.

He was truly coming back home! To Ningikuga perhaps?

Enki smiled to himself, his old confidence surfacing again: …”

 

         “your own mother Ningikuga.

         Ningal, I shall go with you to your house…”

 

         “Young Ningal lived out in the marshlands

         close to the ancient settlement of Eridu,

         the beloved daughter of Ningikuga, the Goddess of Reeds,

         and Enki, the God of Magic, Crafts and Wisdom…”

 

         “Mother Ningikuga would nod, but not say a word.

         She, the wise Goddess of Reeds, Sovereign of the Marshlands,

         Enki’s dear friend, and the diligent Weaver

         who had brought to humankind the art of binding reeds for the first ruts and temples of the land,

         knew what the maiden’s natural shyness could not, would not yet reveal:

         Ningal had fallen in love with Nanna.

         Thus Ningikuga watched over Ningal,…”

 

         “Ningikuga knew Ningal would soon come to her power.

         Then she would know whom to choose,

         she would announce her choice in a love song.

         Would he be Nanna though?…”

 

         “Mother Ningikuga’s eyes followed her through the grooming rites.

         Ningikuga did raise an eyebrow and opened her mouth

         to utter a couple of questions but did not say a word in the end…”

 

         “(Ningal addresses Nanna:)

         ‘……, my beloved, if only I could come to you without my mother to ……!

         If only I could come to you without Ningikuga (?)’…”

 

          “If it were not for my mother Ningal,

         he would be chasing me along the dark (?) paths of the desert!

         If it were not for Ningikuga,

         he would be chasing me along the dark (?) paths of the desert!

         If it were not for Father Suen (Nannar / Sin),

         he would be chasing me along the dark (?) paths of the desert…”

Namtar Quotes From Texts

Namtar = Ereshkigal‘s son

Gatekeeper to the Underworld, Messenger God for the Goddess Ereshkigal

 

(Texts: All Artifacts, Color Coding, & Writings in Bold Type With Italics Inside Parenthesis, are Added by Editor R. Brown, not the Authors, Translators, or Publishers!)

(gods in bluemixed-breed demigods in teal…)

(Enki‘s & Ninhursag’s creation = Enkidu)

 

At each of the seven gates, one of Inanna’s accoutrements and weapons was from her removed, Then, unclothed and powerless before Ereshkigal’s throne, Of scheming an heir by Nergal, Dumuzi’s brother, she was accused! Trembling with fury, Ereshkigal to her sister’s explanations would not listen.

         “Let loose against her the sixty diseases!

         Ereshkigal her vizier, Namtar, in anger ordered …”

 

To Namtar (Ereshkigal‘s son & vizier), who decrees all the fates,

in his palace, the shepherd Ur-Namma offered perfectly wrought jewelery,

a golden ring cast (?) as a …… barge, …”

 

To Hucbisag, the wife of Namtar, in her palace, …”

 

When before Ereshkigal they came, Ereshkigal by their appearance was puzzled:

Are you Anunnaki? Are you Earthlings?

With bewilderment she asked them.

Namtar the magical weapons of power against them directed, but unharmed the two were.

To the lifeless body of Inanna he took them, hanging from a stake she was …”

 

         “SukkalNamtar, the young woman from the Worlds Above requests to be seen by the Great Queen,’

         provided Neti. Namtar nodded and appraised Ninlil with cold  assurance …”

 

         “Follow me,’ Namtar answered after a time that looked like eternity. …”

 

         “is it your will to get into the domains of the Great Queen Ereshkigal?’ asked quietly Namtar …”

 

        “Ninlil followed Namtar across the silent courtyard, countless passageways, chambers and staircases.

        Finally, they stopped in the Grand Hall. Namtar bowed deeply.

        Ninlil wisely imitated him before raising her eyes and to see what laid before her eyes. …”

 

        “Ereshkigal made her voice heard and spake, she addressed her words to her vizier Namtar,

        ‘O Namtar my vizier, I shall send you to the heaven of our father Anu.

        Namtar, go up the long stairway of heaven.

        Take from the table and accept a present for me.

        Whatever Anu gives to you, you must present to me.’ …”

 

        “The evil demons and the evil demonesses who beset mankind,

        Dim-me and Dim- mea who enter by night, Namtar and Asag who will not leave a man alone, …”

 

         “But Enkidu answered Gilgamesh:

She the tallest who discriminates not,

She Namtar, awful Fate,

She will devour.

          Namtar knows no distinctions. …”

Kusu Quotes From Texts

Kusu = Enlil‘s daughter, Gibil‘s spouse

(Texts: All Artifacts, Color Coding, & Writings in Bold Type With Italics Inside Parenthesis, are Added by Editor R. Brown, not the Authors, Translators, or Publishers!)

(gods in blue)

 

        “Kusu establishes the lustration rituals created in their specific house —

         the oven for oxen, sheep and bread beside the interior of the bathing chamber (?),

         those sacred lustration rituals beside the shrine!

         Kusu purifies the oil for the house.

         It is placed in readiness and the limbs are …….

         To ensure the sacred lustration rituals are not neglected,..”

 

         “In their …… Kusu has consecrated the ……, she has purified the oven.

         ……, she has filled the …… purified …….

        Kusu has then put numerous bulls and numerous sheep into the great oven.

        Kusu has then put numerous bulls and numerous loaves into the great oven…”

 

        “From Eridug (?) praise to lady Kusu, the princess of the holy abzu, …….”

 

        “So that you should place sacred hands upon your offering table

        in the banqueting hall, the great place, your steward Kusu

        she who purifies hands and cleanses hands — consecrates the hands…”

Isimud Quotes From Sitchin’s Books, etc.

 

See Sitchin’s Earth Chronicles

 

(Texts: All Artifacts, Color Coding, & Writings in Bold Type With Italics Inside Parenthesis, are Added by Editor R. Brown, not the Authors, Translators, or Publishers!)

(gods in bluemixed-breed demigods in teal…)

 

Isimud = Enki‘s vizier & minister

Isimud / Usma – arriving with Enki and the fifty Anunnaki on Earth for the first time, Isimud / Usma served as Enki’s vizier; Enki asked Isimud,

       He said to his minister Isimud:

        ‘Is this nice youngster not to be kissed?

        Is this nice Ninsar not to be kissed?’

        His minister Isimud answered him:

        ‘Is this nice youngster not to be kissed?

        Is this nice Ninsar not to be kissed?

        My master will sail, let me navigate.

        He will sail, let me navigate.’

        First he put his feet in the boat, next he put them on dry land.

        He clasped her to the bosom, kissed her, Enki poured semen into the womb …”

        “He said to his minister Isimud:

        ‘Is this nice youngster not to be kissed?

        Is this nice Ninkura not to kissed?’

        His minister Isimud answered him:

        ‘Kiss this nice youngster.

        Kiss this nice Ninkura.

        My master will sail, let me navigate.

        He will sail, let me navigate.’

        First he put his feet in the boat, next he put them on dry land.

        He clasped her to the bosom, kissed her,

       Enki poured semen into the womb …”

       “He laid eyes on Ninimma (Enki & Ninkura’s daughter) on the riverbank

       and said to his minister Isimud:

       ‘Have I ever kissed one like this nice youngster?

       Have I ever made love to one like nice Ninimma?’

       His minister Isimud answered him:

       ‘My master will sail, let me navigate.

       He will sail, let me navigate.’

       First he put his feet in the boat, next he put them on dry land.

       He clasped her to the bosom, lying in her crotch,

       made love to the youngster and kissed her.

       Enki poured semen into Ninimma’s womb …”

       “He said to his minister Isimud:

       ‘I have not determined the destiny of these plants.

       What is this one? What is that one?’

       His minister Isimud had the answer for him.

       ‘My master, the ‘tree’ plant,’ he said to him, cut it off for him and Enki ate it.

       ‘My master, the ‘honey’ plant,’ he said to him, pulled it up for  him and Enki ate it.

       ‘My master, the ‘vegetable’ plant,’ he said to him, cut it off for him and Enki ate it.

       ‘My master, the alfalfa grass (?),’ he said to him, pulled it up for him and Enki ate it.

       ‘My master, the atutu plant,’ he said to him, cut it off for him and Enki ate it.

       ‘My master, the actaltal plant,’ he said to him, pulled it up for him and Enki ate it.

       ‘My master, the …… plant,’ he said to him, cut it off for him and Enki ate it.

       ‘My master, the amharu plant,’ he said to him, pulled it up for him and Enki ate it.

       Enki determined the destiny of the plants, had them know it in their hearts …”

      Isimud the minister followed his master’s instructions closely.

       He let the maiden into the abzu and Eridug.

       He let Inanna into the abzu and Eridug …”

       “Enki spoke to the minister Isimud:

       ‘Isimud, my minister, my Sweet Name of Heaven!’

       Enki, my master, I am at your service! What is your wish?’

       ‘Since she said that she would not yet depart from here for Unug Kulaba,

       that she would not yet depart from here to the place where Utu ……, can I still reach her?’

       But holy Inanna had gathered up the divine powers and embarked onto the Boat of Heaven.

       The Boat of Heaven had already left the quay …”

       “The minister Isimud spoke to holy Inanna:

       ‘My lady! Your father has sent me to you.

       Inanna, your father has sent me to you.

       What your father said was very serious.

       What Enki spoke was very serious.

       His important words cannot be countermanded.’

       Holy Inanna replied to him:

       ‘What has my father said to you, what has he spoken?

       Why should his important words not be countermanded?’

       ‘My master has spoken to me, Enki has said to me:

       ‘Inanna may travel to Unug,

       but you are to get the Boat of Heaven back to Eridug for me’.

       Holy Inanna spoke to the minister Isimud:

       ‘How could my father have changed what he said to me?’ …”

       “and then for the second time the prince spoke to his minister Isimud,

       Enki addressed the Sweet Name of Heaven:

       ‘Isimud, my minister, my Sweet Name of Heaven!’

       Enki, my master, I am at your service! What is your wish?’

       ‘Where has the Boat of Heaven reached now?’

       ‘It has just now reached the holy …….’

       ‘Go now! The fifty giants of Eridug

       are to take the Boat of Heaven away from her!’ …”

Ig-alim / Galalim Quotes From Texts

Ig-alim / Galalim = Ninurta‘s Son, Superintendent

(Texts: All Artifacts, Color Coding, & Writings in Bold Type With Italics Inside Parenthesis, are Added by Editor R. Brown, not the Authors, Translators, or Publishers!)

(gods in blue)

         Bau, lady …… true cream,

        As is fitting, she lets Lord Ig-alim have the scepter…”

 

       (Ninurta speaking)

        The guardians of my house and the fair-looking protective goddesses …….

        My chief superintendent, Ig-alim, is the neck-stock of my hands.

        He has been promoted to take care of my house; …….

        My messenger does not forget anything: he is the pride of the palace.

        In the city named after (?) Enlil, I recognize true and false…”

 

        Lugal-kur-dub walked in front of him (Gudea),

        Ig-alim directed him and Nin-jiczida (Ningishzidda),

        his personal god, held him by the hand throughout the time…”

 

        “With his divine duties, namely to guide the hand of the righteous one;

        to force the evil-doer´s neck into a neck stock;

        to keep the house safe; to keep the house pleasant;

        to instruct his city and the sanctuaries of Jirsu;

        to set up an auspicious throne; to hold the scepter of never-ending days;

        to raise high the head of Nin-jirsu´s shepherd, Gudea, as if he wore a blue crown;

        and to appoint to their offices in the courtyard of E-ninnu (Lagash temple) the skin-clad ones,

        the linen-clad ones and those whose head is covered,

        Gudea introduced Ig-alim, the Great Door (ig gal), the Pole (dim) of Jirnun,

        the chief bailiff of Jirsu, his beloved son to lord Nin-jirsu…”

 

        “Young woman Nin-Nibru (unidentified), lady …….

        Lord Ninurta, my king …….

        Ig-alim, my king …….

        Cul-cagana, my king …….”

 

        “For the god Gal-alim, the favorite son of the god Nin-girsu (Ninurta),

        for his king, Gudea, the patesi of Shirpurla (Lagash)

        his temple of E-me-ghush-gal-an-ki has constructed…”

 

        Gudea,...the offspring of the goddess Gutumdug (Ninsun),

        dowered with sovereignty and the scepter supreme by the god Gal-alim,…”

En-me-cara Quote From Text

En-me-cara = Enlil’s uncle

(Texts: All Artifacts, Color Coding, & Writings in Bold Type With Italics Inside Parenthesis, are Added by Editor R. Brown, not the Authors, Translators, or Publishers!)

(gods in blue)

       (Namzidtara speaking to Enlil):

       ‘”When your uncle En-me-cara was a captive,

        after taking for himself the rank of Enlil, he said:

        ‘Now I shall know the fates, like a lord.’ … “

Enheduanna Information

(Daughter to Sargon The Great)

“Biography of Enheduanna, Priestess of Inanna2285-2250 B.C.

 

by Roberta Binkley

[Copyright 1998 Roberta Binkley]

Enheduanna is at once a mystical and heroic figure, one whose image may be destined to take hold of the popular imagination in an era of emerging feminism and the reclaiming of ancient feminine images. She is the world’s oldest known author whose works were written in cuneiform approximately 4300 years ago. Two of her known works are hymns to the goddess Inanna, The Exaltation of Inanna and In-nin sa-gur-ra. A third identified work, The Temple Hymns, addresses the sacred temples and their occupants, the goddess or god to whom they were consecrated. In each of these works she steps forward to speak in the first person moving from the third.

Although Enheduanna lived 4300 hundred years ago (ca. 2285-2250 B.C.E.), her existence as a historical personage is well established. There is the disk that has been restored evacuated from Ur with her image, and written historical records indicate that she was the daughter of Sargon of Akkad, the first ruler to unite northern and southern Mesopotamia. Her mother was a Sumerian from southern Mesopotamia, perhaps a priestess. Sargon was also purported to be the son of a priestess.

In the photograph of the disk of Enheduanna, she stands second in a line of four figures, preceded by a nude male priest and followed by two male attendants. She wears a flounced dress and a rolled brimmed turban, the aga, which she refers to in The Exaltation of Inanna as ‘the true cap/the sign of (appropriate to) en-ship’ (l.107). She was the high (en)priestess of the moon god, Nanna.

On the back, in a column of eleven cases, an inscription identifies Enheduanna as the ‘wife (dam) of Nanna [the Sumerian moon god] and daughter of Sargon’ (192). Winters notes that the nude priest pouring the libation and Enheduanna share the center of the disk. If the restoration is accurate, according to Winters, ‘only Enheduanna’s head actually touches the upper margin of the frieze–the violation of isocephaly serving to emphasize her dominant position’ (192-3).

While the disk represents the four figures making a ritual offering to the moon god, it is interesting that among Enheduanna’s works so far found, her major work, the hymn The Exaltation of Inanna–translated in 1968 by Willo and J. J. A Van Dijk–addresses the goddess Inanna. Apparently her official title was en (high-priestess) to the god Nanna, yet her passionate affiliation appears to have been to the goddess Inanna. Of her five recovered works, two are long hymns to Inanna.

The combined roles of priestess and princess may have set a precedent in Sumerian history that followed for the next five centuries. Scholar William W. Hallo explains that she was a personality ‘who set standards in all three of her roles for many succeeding centuries…’ (1). The names of high priestesses appear in historical lists just as do the kings testifying to interesting political and cultural implications of power, at least of royal women. For the next 500 years between sovereigns, the priestesses provided continuity of government.

Enheduanna: An Overview of Her Writings”

(gods in bluemixed-breed demigods in teal…)

by Roberta Binkley

[Copyright 1998 Roberta Binkley]

The Exhaltation of Inanna

The Exhaltation of Inanna, translated from the cuneiform by Hallo and van Dijk in a 1968 text edition runs 153 lines. It is the most widely known of her works, perhaps because of the completeness of the translation. It is carefully set up in a format, echoing the cuneifom exemplars, of two column stanzas that can often be read down as well as across. The hymn begins with a 65-line exordium of epithets and description, all carefully selected to illustrate the characteristics of the goddess. These epithets “arranged in a conscious sequence — worthy of the wisdom of an Amos — in which the range of Inanna’s activities is brought ever closer to the (presumable) audience of the poem” (48). Enheduanna implies Inanna’s equality with An, the senior god of the Sumerian pantheon which Hallo suggests politically equates the Sargonic kings as adhering to Sumerian norms and beliefs in order to justify Akkad’s imperial rule over Sumer (7).

Next Enheduanna depicts Inanna as disciplining mankind as a goddess of battle. She thereby unites the warlike Akkadian Ishtar’s qualities to those of the gentler Sumerian goddess of love and fecundity. She likens Inanna to a great storm bird who swoops down on the lesser gods and sends them fluttering off like surprised bats. Then, in probably the most interesting part of the hymn, Enheduanna herself steps forward in the first person to recite her own past glories, establishing her credibility, and explaining her present plight. She has been banished as high priestess from the temple in the city of Ur and from Uruk and exiled to the steppe. She begs the moon god Nanna to intercede for her because the city of Uruk, under the ruler Lugalanne, has rebelled against Sargon. The rebel, Lugalanne, has even destroyed the temple Eanna, one of the greatest temples in the ancient world. Further, he has dared to equate himself as an equal to the new high priestess and–in the most ancient recorded instant of sexual harassment–made sexual advances to the high priestess, his sister-in-law.

In the swelling of the “Magnificat”–a liturgy (lines 122-35)–the long hymn reaches its title theme. Enheduanna recites the me’s, divine attributes, of and to Inanna, again exalting her to equal status with the supreme god of pantheon, An. The hymn moves on to the peroration, a passage “unique to Sumerian literature describing the process of poetic inspiration” (Hallo, Exaltation 62). The poetess characterizes her creative labors as giving birth, i.e. “conceiving the word.” Then in the next stanza (lines 143-50) Enheduanna reverts to the third person as the simultaneous exaltation of Inanna and the restoration of Enheduanna are proclaimed. The concluding three-line doxology conveys the sense of the goddess and her poetess emerging triumphant.

In The Exaltation of Inanna there is a strong authorial presence that may be unmatched in ancient literary creation until the time of Sappho. She is self-consciously present in the process of writing and in the poem. The double “I” of the creatrix, Enheduanna and Inanna, are always at the center. And the hymn becomes a rhetorical creation of passionate complexity, one of death and birth, destruction and creation . . . those things that occupy the deepest part of the psyche.

She speaks of both her own and also by extension of the creative process itself near the end of the hymn. Through Inanna, Enheduanna has received the inspiration for the poem.

136 One has heaped up the coals / prepared the lustration (in the censer),
137 The nuptial chamber awaits you / let your heart be appeased!

In the lines above she intimates that she prepared herself to receive poetic inspiration–madness as Plato would characterize it. But Plato’s characterization of madness implies the purposelessness of chaos, and Enheduanna’s creative process is a very purposeful receiving. She heaps the coals in the censer and prepares the lustration to receive her greater self, her transcendent self, the Goddess. Her creative process appears to be one of intimate interaction with the Goddess. For a time in the middle of the night, they become one and out of that union comes the song.

I read her as at once inspired by the Goddess–she receives creative in-spiriting–and at the same time a poetess whose work comes from her own unique being while in a state of passionate and consuming love for the Goddess.

139 That which I recited to you at (mid)night
140 May the singer repeat it at noon! to you

Enheduanna’s own physical self-image also appears to be one of beauty and strength. She speaks of her “mellifluous” mouth (25, line 71) and mourns when her “choicest features are turned to dust” (line 72). She does not doubt her place:

66 Verily I had entered my holy giparu at your behest
67 I, the high priestess, I, Enheduanna!
120 (Yet) I am the brilliant high priestess of Nanna

In this work, the persona of Enheduanna appears as both physical and transcendent. She is a professional, a high priestess who is not only a possessor of the privileges of the rank and office, but she carries the burdens, the responsibilities . . . and the grief of that sometimes terrible role.

105 Like a swallow he made me fly from the window, my life is consumed.
117 (But) my own sentence is not Concluded. / A hostile judgment appears before my eyes as my judgment.
82 Let me give free vent to my tears like sweet drink for the holy Inanna!

In her personal role and her role as priestess she has had to watch the destruction of people, temple and sacred rites:

85 (Lugalanne) has altered the lustrations of holy An and all his (other rites).
86 He has stripped An Of (his temple) Eanna.
87 He has not stood in awe of An-lugal
88 That sanctuary whose attractions are irresistible, whose beauty is endless,
89 That sanctuary he has verily brought to destruction.

She speaks of her awareness of her own humanity and her limitations.

84 I cannot appease Ashimbabbar (Nannar)
92 In the place of sustenance what am I, even I?

But, finally, in the end there is a transcendence–and perhaps apotheosis–of both her person and that of her goddess when she steps back and in the third person describes the sumptuous vestments of the goddess and her priestess, vestments symbolic of both their spiritual and physical beauty.

146 The day was favorable for her, she was clothed sumptuously / she was garbed in womanly beauty.
147 Like the light of the rising moon, / how she was sumptuously attired!

Then she recounts that:

150 The (heavenly) doorsill called “Hail!”

Mircea Eliade explains the symbolic importance of a threshold in what he calls palaeo-oriental cultures (Babylon, Egypt, Israel). Thresholds, the door-sill shows the solution of continuity in space immediately and concretely; hence their great religious importance, for they are symbols and at the same time vehicles of passage from the one space to the other” (25). Thus Inanna in the form of her representative, the high priestess Enheduanna, stands at the threshold of heaven and earth, communicating between the two. Finally Enheduanna alludes the poem in praise and exaltation of Inanna.

151 For that her (Enheduanna’s) speaking to the Hierodule (Inanna) was exalted.
152 Praise be (to) the devastatrix of the lands, endowed with me’s from An,
153 (To) my lady wrapped in beauty, (to) Inanna!

The Goddess and her poet have both prevailed. Once exiled, they have been restored to their rightful places and they are both wrapped in the beauty of transcendent feminine energy and power.

Enheduanna’s long-forgotten poem–only translated in 1968- also foreshadows her own history and the history of women in religion, literacy, and western civilization for the next 4800 years.

70 They approach the light of day, about me, / the light is obscured
71 The shadows approach the light of day, / it is covered with a (sand) storm.

In-nin sa-gur-ra

Assyriologists traditionally title works by their first line, hence the title In-nin sa-gur-ra. This work, translated by Ake Sjoberg, and using 29 texts and fragments, is published (1976) as “In-nin-sa-gur-ra: A Hymn to the Goddess Inanna by the en-Priestess Enheduanna.” Although at 274 lines, it is the longest work so far discovered by Enheduanna it is much less complete than the translation of The Exaltation of Inanna. In all 57 lines are missing at important points in the composition. The text breaks off entirely at the point that Enheduanna steps forward: “I am Enheduanna, the en-Priestess of Nanna,……, I am the … Of Nanna (199). The Sjoberg translation does not begin again until line 243 with Enheduanna still speaking in the first person. When the text resumes Enheduanna still speaks of her own experience of punishment. The translator speculates her punishment may have been sent by Inanna to discipline Enheduanna: “‘I have experienced your great punishment’… this statement clearly indicates that Enheduanna had offended the goddess who then had punished her” (163). In a footnote on the same page, he notes that another translation is possible. “‘My body has experienced your great punishment,'”…referring to a disease sent against the en-Priestess by Inanna” (163). In any case, her apparent recovery must have occurred because she ends the hymn praising Inanna “My Lady, I will proclaim your greatness in all lands and your glory!” (254).

The main theme of the hymn according to Sjoberg is “Inanna’s omnipresent and omnipotent role in human affairs” (163). He criticizes the hymn as containing unnecessary repetition:

49 she turns the midday light into darkness”
177b Turning darkness into light

Sjoberg also explains that “you alone are great” occurs in both line 182 and 218 and with a variation in line 96. Such a critique is difficult to sustain since as a hymn it would be sung and the echoing lines, it could be argued, might be important in their placement. Furthermore, since Sjoberg spends only a page and three-quarters discussing the literary structure, a discussion that primarily summarizes the form and contents of the hymn, to critique it on these grounds for one-fourth of the section given the fact that so many lines are missing seems to me to be somewhat hasty.

The structure of the hymn is similar to The Exaltation. In lines 1-90 Enheduanna praises Inanna’s power speaking in the third person, more as a distant observer of the goddess and her power, relating the deeds that show that power:

4 She is the August leader among the great gods, she makes the verdicts final.
10 Her radiance covers the great mountain, silences the road.
11 The gods of the land are panic stricken by her heavy roar.
14 Without Inanna the great An has not made a decision, Enlil has not determined the destiny. (179)

Then Enheduanna speaks of Inanna’s anger as it’s reflected by the people:

45 She washes their (?) weapons with blood and gore,….,
53 Her murderous battle no one can oppose–who rivals her?(183)

Beginning with line 91 she then speaks to Inanna in the second person addressing her as “you.” Again, she notes that Inanna rivals An and Enlil, “You sit on their seat” (187). Lines 115-172 repeat the refrain in every line “are yours, Inanna” explaining and enumerating Inanna’s attributes and her contributions to civilization.

116 To run, to escape, to quite and to pacify are yours, Inanna. (189)
124 Information, instruction, inspection, to took closely, to approve are yours, Inanna. (191)

Not until line 219 does Enheduanna step forward in the first person, “I am Enheduanna, the en-Priestess of Nanna” (199). Here the poem breaks off until line 243 where it begins:

243 Advice (…)
244 Grief, hardship…
245 My Lady,…mercy….compassion….
246 I am yours! It will always be so! May your heart cool off for me,
250 I have experienced your great punishment (199)

She concludes the hymn:

270 My Lady, Your greatness is manifest,
271 May your heart for my sake ‘return to its place’!
272 Your great deeds are unparalleled,
273 Your greatness is always praised,
274 Young woman, Inanna, your praise is sweet!

Although longer than The Exaltation, as I stated in the beginning, the rhetorical structure is similar. Both works open with an exordium of epithets and descriptions selected to illustrate the characteristics of the goddess. In the Exaltation the opening is 65 lines versus the In-nin sa-gur-ra opening of 90 lines. Both works move from an opening address of Inanna in third person to addressing her in second person. In both hymns there is a section exalting Inanna. In the Exaltation it occurs in lines 122-135 where each stanza ends with “be it known!” (31-32). In In-nin sa-gur-ra lines 115-172 end with “are yours, Inanna (189-197). Since almost the entire section of In-nin sa-gur-ra in which Enheduanna steps forward in first person are missing, 24 of the most important lines in the hymn, it cannot be compared to The Exaltation except to say that this section which is the most personal contains the reason that Enheduanna speaks to Inanna, why she writes the hymn. It is in this personal section, that Enheduanna seems to explain her motivation and her process. In The Exaltation, she adds her meta commentary that helps to illuminate the meaning of the hymn on a personal, psychological, and universal level. Finally, both works conclude with a doxology to the goddess, once more returning to the theme of exaltation.

The Temple Hymns

The Temple Hymns are very different in character from the two works just discussed. They were translated by Ake Sjoberg in collaboration with E. Bergmann, S.J. in 1969. They consist of 42 hymns of various lengths addressed to temples. Each hymn follows the same form. The hymn directly addresses the temple in second or third person describing it in epithetical statements. For example the first Temple Hymn opens:

Eunir, which has grown high, (uniting) heaven and earth,
Foundation of heaven and earth, ‘Holy of Holies’, Eridu, (17)

She concludes each hymn by identifying the temple, naming the city and the god or goddess to whom it is dedicated. The narrative moves from the outside to the inside. In each of the hymns Enheduanna speaks to the holy place describing its significant sacred structure, “you have grown high, binding heaven and earth, fixing the above and the below” (28). She then moves inside to describe the sacred activities “where pure food is eaten” and the holy objects contained within such as the drum or the ovens. (17)

At the conclusion of the hymns, Enheduanna steps forward:

The compiler of the tablet (is) Enheduanna
My Lord, that which has been created (here) no one has created (before) (49).

The Temple Hymns contain several added later by scribes, hymns to temples that did not exist at the time Enheduanna wrote. Thus, her original creation was one that scribes continued to amend in a posthumous collaboration with the author, one who may have become a deity in her own right.

Additional Works

There are two additional works translated by scholar Joan Goodnick Westenholz, one by Enheduanna that she apparently wrote on the assumption of the en-ship (office of high priestess) to the moon god Nanna. The second fragmentary work, dedicated to Enheduanna and apparently written by an anonymous scribe, indicates her apotheosis during or immediately after her death, according to Westenholz. (539)

        She is shining The en-priestess chosen for the pure “divine offices,”

        Enheduanna may the she bring you your prayer to the abzu.

        The one who is worthy for Suen, my delight/pride… (555)

Anzu / Zu Quotes From Zecharia Sitchin Books

SEE SITCHIN’S EARTH CHRONICLES, ETC.:

(Texts: All Artifacts, Color Coding, & Writings in Bold Type With Italics Inside Parenthesis, are Added by Editor R. Brown, not the Authors, Translators, or Publishers!)

(gods in blue)

 

ANZU VRS. NINURTA (later version)

As Enlil is taking his daily swim in the pool, Anzu steals the Tablets of Destinies.

        “At the entrance of the sanctuary,which he had been viewing,

        Zu awaits the start of the day.

        As Enlil was washing with pure water—

        his crown having been removed and deposited on the throne—

        Zu seized the Tablets of Destinies in his hands, took away the Enlilship.

        Suspended were the Divine Formulas;

        Stillness spread all over; silence prevailed….

        The Sanctuary’s brilliance was taken off.

        Father Enlil was speechless….”

Anu asked,

        “Which of the gods will smiteZu?

        His name shall be greatest of all!…”

To oppose Zu while he held the powers of Enlil was

        “he who opposes him becomes like clay…”

Ninhursag, mother of Enlil’s rightfull heir, Ninurta, calls upon her son to gain back the Tablets of Destinies and the Enlilship much needed for the royal rulership in Heaven and on Earth.

       “Launch thy offensive…capture the fugitive Zu….

        Let thy terrifying offensive rage against him….

        Slit his throat! Vanquish Zu!

        Let thy seven ill Winds go against him….

        Cause the entire Whirlwind to attack him….

        Let thy Radiance go against him….

        Let thy Winds carry his Wings to a secret place….

        Let sovereignty return to Ekur;

        Let the Divine Formulas return to the father who begot thee…”

 

Ninurta used “arrows” against Zu, but

        “the arrows could not approach Zu’s body…

        while he bore the Tablets of Destinies of the gods in his hand…”

       “Weapons were stopped in the midst…”

Ea / Enki advised Ninurta to use the “til-lum” on the weapons and aim at the”pinions” of Zu’s “wings”. Screaming “Wing to wing”, Ninurta did as Ea / Enki instructed and shot down Zu’s flying apparatus and successfully restored the Enlilship back to his father Enlil. Til in Hebrew means “missile”.

The action begins as the Igigi,“being gathered from all parts,” decided to appeal to Enlil.Their complaint was

        “until that time for the Igigi a break-taking place had not been built…”

To voice their complaint they selected Zu to be their spokesman, sending him to Enlil’s center in Nippur.

Enlil:

        “the father of the gods, in the Dur-An-Ki, saw him,

        and thought of what they (the Igigi) said…”

 

       “As “in his mind he pondered the request,

        he studied the heavenly Zu closely…”

Ea spoke up…Igigi could be postponed if Zu were delayed at Enlil’s headquarters.

       “’Your service let him enter” Ea said to Enlil;

        ‘in the sanctuary, to the innermost seat, let him be the one to block the way.’…”

       “To the words that Ea spoke to him the god (Enlil) consented.

        At the sanctuary Zu took up his position…

        At the entrance to the chamber

        Enlil had assigned him.”

Zu

        “constantly views Enlil, the father of the gods,

        the god of the Bond-Heaven-Earth…

        his celestial Tablet of Destinies Zu constantly views…”

And soon a scheme took shape:

        “The removal of the Enlilship he conceives in his heart…”

       “I will take the celestial Tablet of Destinies;

       The decrees of the gods I will govern;

        I will establish my throne, be master of the Heavenly Decrees;

        The Igigi in their space I will command!”…

       “His heart having thus plotted aggression…”

Zu saw his chance one day as Enlil went to take a cooling swim.

        “He seized the Tablet of Destinies in his hand…”

and in his Bird

        “took off and flew to safety in the HUR-SAG-MU…”

(“mountain of the skychambers”) No soner had this happened than everything came to a standstill:

        “Suspended were the Divine Formulas

        The lighted brightness petered out;

        Silence prevailed.

        In space, the Igigi were confounded;

        The sanctuary’s brilliance was taken off…”

At first “father Enlil was speechless.”

As the communications were restored:

        “the gods on Earth gathered one by one at the news…”

Several of the younger gods known for their valor were approached. But none dare track Zu…for he was now as powerful as Enlil, having also stolen the “Brilliance” of Enlil;

        “and he who opposes him shall become as clay…

        at his brilliance the gods waste away…”

When the gods looked for a volunteer to fight Zu, they promised the vanquisher of Zu:

        “Thy name shall be the greatest in the Assembly of the Great Gods;

        Among the gods, thy brothers, thy shall have no equal;

        Glorified before the gods and potent shall be thy name!…”

It was then that Ninurta, Enlil’s legal heir, stepped forth to undertake the task. Ninhursag... advised him to attack Zu…she lent Ninurta her own:

        “seven whirlwinds that stir up the dust…”

Ninurta…attatched the wirlwinds that stir up the dust, and set out against Zu;

        “to launch a terrifying war, a fierce battle:…”

        “Zu and Ninurta met at the mountainside.

        When Zu perceived him, he broke out in rage.

        With his Brilliance, he made the mountainside bright as daylight;

        He let loose rays in a rage…”

Zu shouted to Ninurta:

        I have carried off all Authority, the decrees of the gods I (now) direct!

        Who are thou to come fight with me?

        Explain thy self!”…

But Ninurta continued to “advance aggressively” against Zu. Zu “cut off his Brilliance” and“the face of the mountain was covered with darkness.”

From the“breast”of his vehicle, he let loose a Lightning at Zu,

        “but the shot could not approach Zu; it turned back…”

With the powers Zu had obtained, no lightning bolt could “approach his body”.

So,

        “the battle was stilled, the conflict ceased;

        the weapons were stopped in the midst of the mountain;

        they vanquished not Zu…”

       “Ishkur, the prince, took the report;

       the news of the battle he reported to Enlil…”

Enlil instructed Ishkur to go back and tell Ninurta:

        “In the battle do not tire; prove thy strength!…”

Ninurta in his “Whirlwind Bird,” should come as close as possible to the Bird of Zu, until they are “wing to wing”. ” Then he should aim the missile at thepinions” of Zu’s Whirlbird, and

       “let the missile fly like a lightning;

        when the Fiery Brilliance will engulf the pinions

        his wings will vibrate like butterflies; then will Zu be vanquished…”

The final battle scenes are missing from all the tablets, but we know that more than one “Whirlwind” participated in the combat.

Ninurta arrayed “seven whirlwinds which stir up the dust”, armed his chariots with the “Ill Winds” weapons and attacked Zu as suggested by his father.

        “The earth shook…the…became dark,

        the skies became black…

        the pinions of Zu were overcome…”

Zu was captured and brought back before Enlil in Nippur:

        “Lordship again entered the Ekur the Divine Formulas were returned…”

The captured Zu was put on trial before a court-martial…he was found guilty and sentenced to death; Ninurta, his vanquisher, “cut his throat”.

 

Amasilama Quotes From Texts

Amasilama = Ereshkigal‘s Daughter, Ningishzidda‘s Older Sister

(Texts: All Artifacts, Color Coding, & Writings in Bold Type With Italics Inside Parenthesis, are Added by Editor R. Brown, not the Authors, Translators, or Publishers!)

(gods in blue)

 

       “His older sister removed the cover (?) from {the boat’s cabin}

        {(1 ms. has instead:) the cabin at the boat’s stern}:

        ‘Let me sail away with you, let me sail away with you, {brother}

        {(1 ms. has instead:) my brother}, let me sail away with you.

        {(2 mss. add 1 line:)

        My brother, let me sail on your barge with you, my brother, let me sail away with you.

        {(1 ms. adds 1 further line:)

        Let me sail on your splendid barge with you, my brother, let me sail away with you.}} ‘…”

 

       “Ama-šilama (Ninĝišzida‘s sister) said to Ninĝišzida:

        ‘The ill-intentioned demon may accept something — there should be a limit to it for you.

        My brother, your demon may accept something, there should be a limit to it for you.

        For him let me …… from my hand the ……, there should be a limit to it for you.

        For him let me …… from my hand the ……, there should be a limit to it for you.

        For him let me …… from my hips the dainty lapis lazuli beads, there should be a limit to it for you.

        For him let me …… from my hips the …… my lapis lazuli beads, there should be a limit to it for you.’ …”

 

       “You are a beloved ……, there should be a limit to it for you.

        How they treat you, how they treat you! — there should be a limit to it for you.

        My brother, how they treat you, how haughtily they treat you! — there should be a limit to it for you.

        ‘I am hungry, but the bread has slipped away from me!’ — there should be a limit to it for you.

        ‘I am thirsty, but the water has slipped away from me!’ – there should be a limit to it for you.’ …”

 

       “The evil demon who was in their midst,

        the clever demon, that great demon who was in their midst,

        called out to the man at the boat’s bow and to the man at the boat’s stern:

        ‘Don’t let the mooring stake be pulled out, don’t let the mooring stake be pulled out,

        so that she may come on board to her brother, that this lady may come on board the barge.’ …”

 

       “When Ama-šilama had gone on board the barge,

        a cry approached the heavens, a cry approached the earth,

        that great demon set up an enveloping cry before him on the river:

        ‘Urim (Ur), at my cry to the heavens lock your houses, lock your houses, city, lock your houses!’ …”

 

       “He …… to the empty river, the rejoicing (?) river:

        ‘You (addressing Ama-šilima ) shall not draw near to this house, …….

        …… to the place of Ereškigala (Ereshkigal).

        My mother …… out of her love.’ …”

Abu Quotes From Texts

Abu = son to Enki & Ninhursag via Uttu

Minor vegetation god, “king of the grasses”, “master of plants”

 

(Texts: All Artifacts, Color Coding, & Writings in Bold Type With Italics Inside Parenthesis, are Added by Editor R. Brown, not the Authors, Translators, or Publishers!)

(gods in blue)

 

        “Enki heard Ninhursag‘s voice resonate all over his being:

        ‘ The first seed you ate and made you ill,

        I take its power into my myself and transform it into a newly born god,

        a younger brother and son to you, dearest.

        I therefore have given birth to the god Abu to set your body free.’ …”

 

        “(Ninhursaja asked:)

        ‘My brother, what part of you hurts you?’

        ‘The top of my head (ugu-dili) hurts me.’

        She gave birth to Ab-u out of it …”

      

        “Let Abu be the master of plants; …”

 

        “(She (Ninhursag) said:)

        ‘For the little ones to whom I have given birth may rewards not be lacking.

        Ab-u shall become king of the grasses,’ …”