Religion:List of Hurrian deities

The Hurrian pantheon consisted of gods of varied backgrounds, some of them natively Hurrian, while others adopted from other pantheons,[1][2] for example Eblaite[3] and Mesopotamian.[4] Like the other inhabitants of the Ancient Near East, Hurrians regarded their gods as anthropomorphic.[5] They were usually represented in the form of statues holding the symbols associated with a specific deity.[6] The Yazılıkaya sanctuary, which was Hittite in origin but served as a center of the practice of Hurrian religion, is considered a valuable source of information about their iconography.[7]
Hurrians organized their gods into lists known as kaluti[8] or into similar lexical lists as the Mesopotamians.[9] The formal structure of the pantheon was most likely based on either Mesopotamian or Syrian theology.[10][4] The status of individual deities[11] and composition of the pantheon could vary between individual locations, but some can nonetheless be identified as "pan-Hurrian."[12]
The following list does not include deities only attested in the two Hurrian god lists whose names are transcriptions of Mesopotamian divine names, as it is unlikely that they were actively worshiped.[13] Identification of the Yazılıkaya reliefs used in the image column follows Piotr Taracha's analysis from the monograph Religions of Second Millennium Anatolia.[14]
Major deities
| Name | Image | Attested cult centers | Origin | Attested equivalencies | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Teššub | Kumme,[15] Halab,[16] Irrite,[17] Arrapha,[18] Kaḫat, Waššukkanni, Uḫušmāni[19] | Hurrian[18][15] | Ishkur/Hadad (Syrian and Mesopotamian),[18][20] Baal (Ugaritic),[16] Tarhunna (Hittite)[19] | Teššub was the Hurrian king of the gods, as well as a weather deity.[18] In Hurrian areas, as well as in these where the royal families were under the influence of Hurrian culture, he was often also the tutelary god of the ruling house.[21] While it is assumed that he was not necessarily regarded as the head of the pantheon from the very beginning,[4] he likely already acquired this role in the late third millennium BCE.[15] His principal sanctuaries were Kumme, located east of the Upper Tigris,[15] and Halab (modern Aleppo), where he merged with the local weather god Hadad.[16] His name could be written logographically as dIM.[15] A god with a cognate name, Teišeba, was present in the pantheon of Urartu, but his position was different.[18] | |
| Šauška | Nineveh,[11] Nuzi,[22] Šamuha, Hattarina, Lawazantiya,[23] Tameninga[24] | Hurrian[22] | Inanna/Ishtar (Mesopotamian), Ashtart (Ugaritic), possibly Anzili (Hittite)[23] | Šauška (šwšk or šušk in the Ugaritic alphabetic script[23]) was the main goddess of the Hurrian pantheon in locations like the kingdom of Arrapha, Alalakh and Ugarit.[11] Nineveh was particularly closely associated with her, and in myths she is often called the "Queen of Nineveh."[25] She was regarded as the sister of Teššub,[19] and by extension presumably as a daughter of Kumarbi and Anu, though references to the moon god as her father are also known.[26] Her spheres of influence included war, love, magic and medicine.[27] Šauška's gender could be ambiguous: in the Yazilikaya reliefs, Šauška is present both among gods and goddesses, while in a ritual text "female attributes" and "male attributes" are both mentioned.[28] Her name could be written logographically as dIŠTAR.[22] She was also introduced into the Mesopotamian pantheon, and appears in texts from Puzrish-Dagan, Umma, Isin and Uruk.[22] | |
| Kumarbi Kumurwe[28] |
Urkesh, Azuhinnu, Taite[28] | Hurrian[15] | Enlil (Mesopotamian),[29] Dagan (Syrian),[20] El (Ugaritic), Halki (Hittite)[30] | Kumarbi was regarded as the "father of gods," and as one of the parents of Teššub.[31] He might have also been the god of grain, though the evidence is inconclusive.[32] His name might mean "he of Kumar," Kumar presumably being a place name, though other proposed etymologies connect it with Kumme, the cult center of Teššub, and with the word kum, "tower."[15] He is also attested as one of the Hurrian deities from Taite in the Assyrian Takultu ritual, alongside Nabarbi and Samnuha.[28] In myths, he was described as allied with forces hostile to the rule of Teššub: the "former gods" inhabiting the underworld, gods and monsters living in the sea, and a stone giant named Ullikummi, "Destroy Kumme."[33] | |
| Ḫepat | Halab,[20] Lawazantiya[34] | Syrian[35] | Sun goddess of Arinna (Hittite),[36] Pidray (Ugaritic)[37][38] | Ḫepat was the wife of the head of the Hurrian pantheon, Teššub.[35] She was initially the wife of the storm god of Halab (Aleppo), Hadad.[20] In some western locations her position in the pantheon surpassed that of Šauška,[11] but in the eastern Hurrian centers she is only present in theophoric names and likely was not one of the major deities.[39] | |
| Šimige | No specific cult center,[40] attested in sources from Urkesh, Tigunani, Alalakh, Nuzi, Arrapha, Tell al-Rimah and Chagar Bazar[41] | Hurrian[42] | Utu/Shamash (Mesopotamian),[43] Shapash (Ugaritic),[42] Sun god of Heaven (Hittite)[30] | Šimige was the Hurrian sun god.[12] His name means "sun."[42] He also served as a god of oracles.[30]A Hurrian incantation from Mari indicates that he was believed to have seven daughters.[44] His name could be written logographically as dUTU.[17] Due to syncretism between him and Shamash, Aya was adopted into the Hurrian pantheon as his wife, and one text from Hattusa lists Sippar as his cult city.[42] It is also possible that the Hittite Sun god of Heaven was patterned after him, or was outright the same deity.[30] A god with a cognate name, Šiwini, was also present in the pantheon of Urartu.[42] | |
| Kušuḫ Umbu[20] |
Kuzina (Harran),[45] Šuriniwe[46] | Hurrian[47] | Sin (Mesopotamian),[48] Yarikh (Ugaritic),[49] Arma (Anatolian)[50] | Kušuḫ was the Hurrian moon god.[40] He was also the god of oaths.[30] His name might be derived from Kuzina,[40][47] the Hurrian name of Harran.[45] In a single text he is named as the father of Teššub.[51] His name could be represented logographically as dEN.ZU[48] or dXXX.[52] It is unclear if Umbu was his alternate name, a manifestation linked to a specific phase of the moon, or a separate moon god originating in an unidentified Anatolian or Syrian pantheon.[53] Origin in the northern part of Jezirah has been proposed,[20] though a Hurrian etymology is also not implausible.[54] In Kizzuwatna, Kušuḫ was syncretised with the Luwian moon god Arma, and they were depicted identically in art.[50] | |
| Allani Allatum[55] |
Ḫaššum, Zimudar[55] | Hurrian[56] | Ereshkigal (Mesopotamian),[57] Lelwani (Hattic/Hittite),[58] Sun goddess of the Earth (Hittite),[59] Arsay (Ugaritic)[60] | Allani ("the lady") was the goddess of the underworld.[56] She resided in a palace located at the gates of the land of the dead.[61] While according to Gernot Wilhelm she was only worshiped in the western Hurrian areas,[62] Tonia Sharlach in a more recent publication points out that Mesopotamian sources seem to associate her with Zimudar, a city in the Diyala area.[55] She is well attested in theophoric names from the Tur Abdin area as well.[55] | |
| Ishara | Ebla, Alalakh,[63] Emar,[64] Kizzuwatna[65][63] | Syrian (Eblaite)[66] | Ishara was originally one of the deities of Ebla in the third millennium BCE, and served as the tutelary goddess of the royal family.[67] Later she came to be incorporated into the pantheons of various cultures of ancient Anatolia, Syria and Mesopotamia.[2] She had a variety of functions, including those of a love goddess, guardian of oaths, disease deity and underworld goddess associated with divine ancestors.[68] She was frequently associated with Allani, most likely based on their shared association with the underworld,[65] and they could be worshiped as a dyad.[59] | ||
| Hayya Ea[48] |
Hattusa[69] | Mesopotamian[48] | Kothar-wa-Khasis (Ugaritic)[70] | Hayya was the Hurrian spelling of the name of the Mesopotamian god of wisdom Ea,[48] who most likely was incorporated into Hurrian religion in the Sargonic period.[71] He was referred to with his Akkadian epithets, such as "lord of wisdom," and played the same role as in Mesopotamia in Hurrian sources.[48] According to Alfonso Archi, his position in the Hurrian pantheon was comparable to that of gods like Kumarbi or Kušuḫ,[52] and to that he held in Babylonia.[72] THe is well attested in Mitanni sources.[73] | |
| Hutena and Hutellura | Ugarit,[74] Halab, Hattusa[75] | Hurrian[76] | Gulšes and Ḫannaḫanna (Hittite),[77][78] Kotharāt (Ugaritic),[37] Šassūrātu (Mesopotamian)[79] | Hutena and Hutellura were goddesses of fate[75] and divine midwives.[80] It is possible they were similarly believed to be responsible for forming the child during pregnancy.[81] It has been proposed that Hutena means "she of favoring"[75] and Hutellura (or Hutelluri) - "midwife."[76] Piotr Taracha assumes the names might only refer to a pair of goddesses,[82] but it has also been proposed that the term referred to a heptad of deities similar to Ugaritic Kotharāt.[80] It is also possible that Hutena and Hutellura were based on the latter group.[83] | |
| Nabarbi | Taite[28][84] | Hurrian[15] or Syrian[77] | possibly Belet Nagar (Syrian)[15] | Nabarbi ("she of Nawar," from Hurrian naw, "pasture"[15]) was a goddess worshiped chiefly in the Upper Khabur area.[84] Piotr Taracha argues that Nabarbi is one and the same as Belet Nagar,[84] and therefore believes she should not be considered a Hurrian deity in origin.[77] However, according to Alfonso Archi Nawar from Nabarbi s name and Nagar from Belet Nagar s name were two distinct places.[15] At the same time, he does not rule out the possibility that Nabarbi and Belet Nagar were identified with each other.[15] Nabarbi is also attested as one of the Hurrian deities from in the Neo-Assyrian Takultu text, alongside Kumarbi and Samnuha.[28] | |
| Nergal | Arrapha, Azuhinnu, Kurruhanni,[71] Ulamme,[85] possibly Urkesh[17] | Mesopotamian[17] | Nergal, the Mesopotamian god of war and death, was worshiped in various locations in the eastern Hurrian kingdoms, including the city of Arrapha itself.[71] In Azuhinnu he was regarded as the third most prominent member of the pantheon after Teššub and Šauška.[71] He was also worshiped in Ulamme, where he was associated with a goddess referred to as "dIŠTAR Ḫumella,"[85] whose identity remains unknown.[22] It is possible that in some cases in the west his name served as a logographic representation of one belonging to a Hurrian god (proposals include Aštabi and Kumarbi), but it also cannot be ruled out that he was worshiped under his Mesopotamian name there as well.[17] | ||
| Nupatik Lubadag,[17] Lubadig, Nubadig, Nubandag[86] |
Urkesh, Carchemish,[86] Ugarit[87] | Hurrian[86] | Nupatik was one of the "pan-Hurrian" gods,[12] but his character, functions and genealogy are poorly known.[40][88] He appears already in the inscriptions of Hurrian king Atalšen of Urkesh, where his name is spelled syllabically (dLu-ba-da-ga), rather than logographically.[86] He is also present in Hurrian texts from Ugarit, where his name is spelled in the local alphabetic script as Nbdg.[86] | ||
| Tilla | Ulamme, Nuzi,[89] Kuruḫanni[90] | Hurrian[4] | Tilla was a god worshiped in eastern Hurrian cities in the kingdom of Arrapha, such as Nuzi[89][91] and Kuruḫanni (modern Tell al-Fakhar).[90] An entu priestess dedicated to him lived in the latter city.[90] Documents from Nuzi indicate he was very commonly worshiped in the east, and he appears in theophoric names with comparable frequency to Teššub.[91] While he is commonly described as a "bull god" in modern literature,[92] there is presently no evidence that he was necessarily depicted as a bull.[93] The only exception is the myth Song of Ullikummi,[93] where he a is one of the two bulls who pull Teššub's chariot, the other one being Šeriš, but in most other sources, such as offering lists, Šeriš is paired with Hurriš, not Tilla.[94] |
Minor or local deities
| Name | Image | Attested cult centers | Origin | Attested equivalencies | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adamma | Syrian (Eblaite)[95] | Adamma was a goddess originally regarded as the spouse of Resheph in Ebla.[95] In the Hurrian pantheon she was instead associated with Kubaba.[95] | |||
| Allanzu | Allanzu was one of the two daughters of Ḫepat and Teššub.[96] She could be referred to as šiduri ("young woman").[97] In the first millennium BCE, she continued to be worshiped by Luwians under the name Alasuwa.[98] | ||||
| Ammarik | Haššum[99] | Syrian[99] | Ammarik was a mountain god already worshiped in Ebla in the third millennium BCE, later incorporated into the Hurrian pantheon.[99] | ||
| Anat | Ugarit[74] | Ugaritic[74] | Anat was an Ugaritic goddess regarded as warlike.[100] She appears regularly in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit, according to Daniel Schwemer most likely because she had no close counterpart in the Hurrian pantheon, unlike the other local gods such as Baal, Aštart, Šapšu, Yarikh or Yam.[74] The only other deity of Ugaritic origin attested in them is El,[74] her father.[101] | ||
| Aranzaḫ | Hurrian[102][103] | Aranzaḫ was a divine personification of the river Tigris.[103] In the Song of Kumarbi, his name is written with the determinative ID ("river") rather than with a dingir, the sign designating divine names in cuneiform.[104] In the poorly preserved myth about the hero Gurparanzaḫ, he appears in an active role as his ally.[102] | |||
| Aštabi | Alalakh, Ugarit, originally Ebla[95] | Syrian (Eblaite)[105][106] | Attar (Ugaritic),[107] Ninurta,[48] Lugal-Marada (Mesopotamian)[107] | Aštabi (aštb in the alphabetic script from Ugarit) was a warrior god.[95] While he was initially viewed as a god of Hurrian origin by researchers,[62] further discoveries revealed that his background was Eblaite.[106] His name could be represented logographically as dNIN.URTA.[48] He is absent from eastern Hurrian sources.[108] | |
| Ayakun | Hurrian[109] | Ninsun, Alammuš (Mesopotamian)[109] | Ayakun is a deity known from the trilingual god list from Ugarit, where this name is treated as the Hurrian explanation of two Mesopotamian deities, Ninsun and Alammuš.[109] According to Frank Simons the reasoning behind this equation is difficult to explain.[109] | ||
| Ayu-Ikalti | Mesopotamian[48] | Ayu-Ikalti was the Hurrian spelling of Aya kallatu, "Aya, the bride," the name and most common epithet of the wife of Mesopotamian sun god Shamash.[48] The Hurrians regarded her as the wife of Šimige.[30] | |||
| Belet Nagar | Nagar,[110] Urkesh[111] | Syrian[77] | Belet Nagar, "lady of Nagar," was a Syrian goddess.[110] Similar as in the case Assyrian city Assur and its god, her name was derived from the city she represented.[110] She is attested for the first time in an inscription of the Hurrian king Tishatal[111] alongside various Hurrian deities.[17] | ||
| Dadmiš Tadmiš[60] |
Ugarit[112] | Uncertain[112] | Šuzianna (Mesopotamian)[60] | Dadmiš or Tadmiš (ddmš in the Ugaritic script, but syllabically dta-ad-mi-iš)[60] is attested in Hurrian ritual texts from Ugarit.[113] Her origin is presently unknown.[112] Her name might be derived from the Akkadian word dādmu ("dwellings"), which has also been linked with Dadmum, the Amorite name for the area of modern Aleppo.[114] A different proposal connects her name with that of Tadmuštum, a Mesopotamian goddess associated with the underworld.[115] It has been suggested that Dadmiš was either a healing goddess[112] or an underworld deity associated with Resheph.[60] | |
| Damkina | Mesopotamian[48] | Damkina was the wife of the Mesopotamian god Ea, incorporated into the Hurrian pantheon alongside her husband.[48] | |||
| DINGIR.GE6 | Kizzuwatna, Šamuha[116] | Hurrian (Kizzuwatnean)[117] | possibly Ishtar (Mesopotamian)[118] | DINGIR.GE6, tentatively referred to as "Goddess of the Night"[117] or formerly as the "Black Goddess" in modern scholarship,[116] was a deity worshiped by Hurrians living in Kizzuwatna.[11] She was associated with the nighttime and dreaming.[119] She formed a dyad with Pinikir,[120] and it is possible that like her she was associated with Ishtar.[118] | |
| Ebrimuša | Hurrian[15] | Ebrimuša (also Ibrimuša; ebrmž in alphabetic Ugaritic texts) was a Hurrian god attested in an Old Assyrian document, in Hittite rituals of Hurrian origin, and in texts from Ugarit.[121] His name means "king of justice."[15] He was associated with Ḫepat, and in rituals also appears with her son Šarruma and sukkal Tiyabenti.[121] | |||
| Hašuntarhi | Kizzuwatna[95] | Hašuntarhi was a goddess sometimes listed alongside the dyad of Kubaba and Adamma in texts from Kizzuwatna.[95] | |||
| Ḫabūrītum | Sikani[122] | Syrian[123] | Ḫabūrītum was a goddess representing the river Khabur.[123] Based on the location of her presumed cult center and on the fact that she was introduced to Mesopotamia at the same time as many Hurrian goddesses, Tonia Sharlach concludes that either belonged to the Hurrian pantheon herself or at least was worshiped chiefly in a "Hurrian-dominated" area.[124] Alfonso Archi proposes that she was analogous to Belet Nagar and possibly by extension also to Nabarbi.[15] | ||
| Ḫešui | Šapinuwa[125] | Hurrian[126] | Zababa (Mesopotamian)[125] | Ḫešui was a war god.[127] The meaning of his name is unknown,[128] While annelies Kammenhauber consideref him a Hurrian god in origin,[126] according to Alfonso Archi this is presently impossible to tell with certainty.[129] He belonged to the circle of deities associated with Teššub,[125] and as such appears in kaluti (offering lists) connected with his cult.[8] | |
| Ḫupuštukar | Hurrian[125] | Ḫupuštukar was the sukkal of Ḫešui.[128] His name is derived from the Hurrian verb ḫub-, "to break."[125] In one ritual text, he appears alongside the sukkals of other deities: Izzumi, Undurumma, Tenu, Lipparuma and Mukišanu.[126] | |||
| Impaluri | Hurrian[130] | Impaluri was the sukkal of the sea god (Kiaše).[131] Volkert Haas notes that the suffix -luri appears not only in his name, but also in these of other deities, as well some mountain and stone names.[130] | |||
| Iršappa | Hattusa, Šamuha[132] | Syrian[132] | Resheph (Syrian)[132] | Iršappa (or Aršappa; eršp in the alphabetic Ugaritic script)[132] was a god from the circle of Teššub.[133] He was associated with markets,[132] and in Hittite texts he was referred to as damkarassi, a Sumerian loanword meaning "of commerce."[133] He was derived from the Syrian god Resheph,[132] who was himself associated with the marketplace in Emar.[134] | |
| Irširra | Hurrian[56] | Irširra were a group of Hurrian deities who might have been the goddesses of nursing and midwifery.[135] In the Song of Ullikummi the eponymous rock creature is placed on the primordial giant Ullikummi's right shoulder by them, as ordered by Kumarbi.[135] | |||
| Iškalli | Possibly Mesopotamian[136] | Iškalli was a sparsely attested deity from the court of Ḫepat, usually paired with Uršui.[136] She is described as the "witness of the goddess."[136] The name might be derived from Akkadian ešgallu, "great temple."[136] | |||
| dIŠTAR deities Ḫumella, Akkupaweniwe, Tupukilḫe, Putaḫḫe, Allaiwašwe, bēlat dūri[137] |
Nuzi,[137] Ulamme[85] | Uncertain[22][85] | In addition to Šauška, administrative documents from Nuzi attest the worship of other goddesses referred to with the logogram dIŠTAR (or rather with it shortened form dU4[90]), identified by the epithets Ḫumella, Akkupaweniwe, Tupukilḫe, Putaḫḫe, Allaiwašwe, and bēlat dūri.[137] It is agreed most of these epithets are either etymologically Hurrian or at least Hurrianised, but their meanings remain unknown.[22] An exception is bēlat dūri, which is Akkadian in origin and means “lady of the city walls.”[85] In Ulamme, another city located in the kingdom of Arraphe, dIŠTAR Ḫumella was closely associated with Nergal.[85] | ||
| Izzummi | Mesopotamian[48] | Izzummi is the Hurrian spelling of the name of Isimud (Ušmu), the sukkal (attendant deity) of Ea, who was incorporated into Hurrian pantheon alongside his master.[48] | |||
| Karḫuḫi | Carchemish[138] | Hurrian[139] | Karḫuḫi (or Karhuha) was a god worshiped in Carchemish, first attested in the fifteenth century BCE.[140] He was associated with Kubaba.[138] It is possible that the logogram dLAMMA, which designates one of the adversaries of Teššub in the Kumarbi Cycle, refers to him.[138] While a connection between him and the Anatolian god Kurunta is commonly proposed,[140] it cannot be conclusively proved, and his character is regarded as uncertain.[141] | ||
| dKASKAL.KUR.RA | Syrian[142] | dKASKAL.KUR.RA is one of the deities listed in the treaty between Šuppiluliuma I and Šattiwaza.[143] This logogram has multiple possible readings, including the deified version of the Balikh River.[144] The notion that a deified watercourse is meant in this document is tentatively supported by Alfonso Archi.[35] | |||
| Kiaše | Ugarit[74] | Hurrian[145] | Yam (Ugaritic)[74] | The name Kiaše means "sea" in Hurrian.[145] The god is therefore sometimes simply referred to as "the Sea"[146] or "the Sea God" in modern publications.[147] He is mentioned in texts from Ugarit and Hattusa[148] and in a hymn to Teššub from Halab.[149] In myths about Kumarbi, he is one of his allies.[150] | |
| Kubaba | Carchemish,[151] Alalakh[152] | Syrian[142] | Hurrian texts provide little information about Kubaba's character.[153] According to Alfonso Archi, she was regarded as the goddess of lawsuits.[154] She belonged to the circle of Ḫepat[99] and was closely associated with Adamma.[95] She should not be confused with the Sumerian queen Kubaba (Kug-Bau),[152] whose name is theophoric and invokes the tutelary goddess of Lagash, Bau.[155] The exact linguistic origin of Kubaba's name is unknown.[95] Kubaba is also not etymologically related with the Phrygian goddess Cybele attested in later time periods.[156] | ||
| Kunzišalli | Kunzišalli was one of the two daughters of Ḫepat and Teššub.[96] | ||||
| Kurri | Kizzuwatna[157] | possibly Syrian (Eblaite)[158] | possibly Kura (Eblaite)[159] | Kurri was a god who was worshiped in the temple of Allani during the hišuwa festival.[158] It has been proposed that he is the same deity as the Eblaite god Kura, whose worshiped otherwise ceased with the first destruction of Ebla,[159] but it is impossible to establish this with certainty due to lack of information about the functions of either deity.[158] | |
| Kurwe | Azuhinnu[157] | Hurrian[160] | Kurwe was most likely the city god of Azuhinnu.[157] He precedes Kumurwe (Kumarbi) in known offering lists.[157] It has been proposed that he was the same god as Kurri from Kizzuwatna, though this is uncertain and the latter might also be connected with Eblaite Kura instead.[157] It is possible that he continued to be invoked in theophoric names from Azuhinnu in the Neo-Assyrian period.[157] | ||
| Lelluri | Haššum,[161] Kummanni[162] | Hurrian[130] | Ninmena (Mesopotamian)[163] | Lelluri was a Hurrian mountain goddess, a "lady of the mountains."[164] She has been described as a deity "associated with Hurrian identity."[165] She had a temple in Kummanni in Kizzuwatna, where she was worshiped alongside Manuzi.[166] | |
| Lipparuma | Hurrian[86] | Bunene (Mesopotamian)[30] | Lipparuma[30] or Lipparu was the sukkal of the sun god, Šimige.[86] He was regarded as analogous to Mesopotamian Bunene,[30] and the latter in one case appears as a courtier of Šimige, with his name transcribed as dWu-u-un-ni-nu-wa-an.[42] | ||
| Maliya | Kizzuwatna[167] | Anatolian[167] | Maliya was a goddess of Anatolian origin, well known from Hittite documents.[167] She was associated with gardens and could be called the "mother of wine and grain."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". She was originally associated with Kanesh.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". She was worshiped by Hurrians in Kizzuwatna, where she was associated with a group of deities of Hurrian origin referred to as Kuzzina-Kuzpazena.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". She appears alongside Hurrian deities such as Ishara, Allani and Nupatik in documents pertaining to the hišuwa festival.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". She was also commonly worshiped by Luwians.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Her cult survived in the first millennium BCE, and bilingual texts from Lycia attest an association between her and Greek Athena Polias.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Manuzi | KummaniLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Manuzi was a mountain god regarded as the husband of Lelluri.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He was associated with a mythical eagle, Eribuški,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". whose name has Hurrian origin.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Volkert Haas noted the association of deified mountains with eagles is already attested in the case of the Eblaite Adarwan in the third millennium BCE.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Manuzi could also be identified as a form of Teššub,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". and as such could be referred to as "Teššub Manuzi."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Milkunni | UgaritLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Hurrian/UgariticLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Tišpak (Mesopotamian)Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Milkunni was most likely a god associated with the underworld.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". His name is a combination of the name of an Ugaritic deity, Milku (mlk in the alphabetic texts), and the Hurrian suffix -nni.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Mitanni dynastic deities Mitra-ššil, (W)aruna-ššil, Indra and NašattiyanaLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". |
Indo-EuropeanLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | The attested Mitanni deities of Indo-European origin include Indra, Mitra, Varuna and the Nasatya twins,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". all of whom only appear in a single treaty between Šuppiluliuma I and Šattiwaza, where they act as tutelary deities of the latter king.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". The Hurrianised spellings of their names are Mitra-ššil, (W)aruna-ššil, Indra and Našattiyana.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". They most likely were only worshiped by the nobilityLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". or the ruling dynasty of this kingdom.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Mukišānu | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". or SyrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Mukišānu was the sukkal (attendant deity) of Kumarbi.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". His name was derived from Mukiš, a geographic name designating the area around the city of Alalakh,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". where a large percentage of the population spoke Hurrian.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Some researchers, such as Volkert Haas, nonetheless assume his origin was Syrian rather than Hurrian.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Mušītu | EmarLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | SyrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". or HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | The goddess Mušītu (dmu-ši-tu4, dmu-ši-tiLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".), "night,"Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". was worshiped in Emar.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". According to Gary Beckman, her name most likely originates in a West Semitic language,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". but Alfonso Archi notes it is possible she was a misunderstanding of the Hurrian theonym Mušuni.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In a ritual text found in Emar, but presumed to be of Anatolian provenance, she appears as a member of a group of Hurrian deities, consisting of Teššub, his bulls, the mountain gods Hazzi and Namni, Allani, "Madi" ("wisdom," an epithet of Ea in Hurrian texts), Nergal (according to Archi in this context possibly a logogram representing the name of another deity) and an unidentified heptad.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". She is also attested as one of the deities venerated in the local zukru festival, in which she appears in association with Saggar.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Mušuni | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Mušuni was a goddess who formed a dyad with Ḫepat.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Her name means "she of justice."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". It has been proposed that she was an underworld goddess, and in one case she appears in a ritual alongside Allani and Ishara.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Namni and Ḫazzi | possibly HalabLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | SyrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Namni and Ḫazzi were a pair of mountain gods who belonged to the retinue of Teššub.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Ḫazzi corresponded to Jebel Aqra, in the Bronze Age known as Saphon, but it is presently unknown what mountain was represented by Namni.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Fragment of a myth appears to indicate that they were believed to be former enemies of Teššub, who fought him with the same weapon he earlier used in his battle against the sea god.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Namrazunna | Hurrian/MesopotamianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Namrazunna was a goddess from the entourage of Šauška.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". While she is attested in Hurrian and Hittite sources from Anatolia, her name is derived from Akkadian namru, "shining," and Zunna, a Hurrianized spelling of the name of the Mesopotamian moon god Suen,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". also attested in Hurrian text in transcription of the name of king Naram-Sin of Akkad.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Volkert Haas proposed translating Namrazunna's name as "moonlight."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Ilse Wegener instead suggests "the moon (god) shines for me."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In ritual texts she could be grouped with other servants of Šauška, namely Ninatta, Kulitta and Šintal-irti.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Naya | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Naya is a deity known from Hurrian theophoric names.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Nikkal | UgaritLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | MesopotamianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Ningal (Mesopotamian)Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Nikkal was a Hurrian derivative of the Sumerian Ningal.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In texts from Ugarit she appears both with Hurrian Kušuḫ and local Yarikh.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In kaluti of Ḫepat she is attested alongside Umbu, which lead to the theory that Umbu was not a name of a moon deity but rather an epithet of Nikkal analogous to Ugaritic Nikkal-wa-Ib, though according to Mauro Giorgieri this is not plausible.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Ninatta and Kulitta | Hattusa, UgaritLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Possibly Anatolian (Kulitta),Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". possibly Amorite (Ninatta)Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Ninatta and Kulitta were handmaidens of Šauška.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Their only Bronze Age attestations come from western Hurrian sources from Ugarit and Hattusa,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". though in later periods they are also attested in the entourages of Ishtar of Arbela,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Ishtar of Assur,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". and Assyrian Ishtar of Nineveh.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". The origins of their names are unknown, though it has been proposed that Kulitta's name might have Anatolian originLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". and that Ninatta's might be derived from the place name Ninêt (Ni-ne-etki) or Nenit (Ne-en-itki) known from documents from Mari and Tell al-Rimah, which might be an Amorite spelling of Nineveh.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In ritual texts they could be grouped with other deities from Šauška's entourage, namely Namrazunna and Šintal-irti.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Pairra | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | SebittiLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Pairra were a group of Hurrian gods whose name can be translated as "they who built."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". The singular form of the name is Pairi.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". According to a ritual text pertaining to the worship of Teššub and Ḫepat, the Pairra could appear as both auspicious figures and as malign demons.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". It has been proposed that in Hittite texts the logogram used to designate the Sebitti in Mesopotamia should be read as "Pairra."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". A formal equivalence between these two groups of deities is attested in a god list from Emar.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Partaḫi | ŠudaLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Partaḫi (also transcribed as PardahiLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".) belonged to Hurrian pantheon of Mitanni, and appears as the deity of Šuda in the treaty between Šattiwaza with Šuppiluliuma I between a number of hypostases of Teššub from specific locations and Nabarbi.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Pentikalli | Halab, Samuha, Hattarina,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". NuziLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Syrian or MesopotamianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Ninegal (Mesopotamian)Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Pentikalli was the Hurrian form of the name Belet Ekalli or Ninegal.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In Hurrian texts, she is designated as a concubine of Teššub,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". and was assimilated with Pithanu, described as a goddess who sits on Teššub's throne in a ritual text.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Pinikir PirengirLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". |
ŠamuhaLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ElamiteLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Ishtar,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Ninsianna (Mesopotamian)Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Pinikir was a goddess of Elamite originLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". worshiped by the western Hurrians.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". It is possible that she was a divine representation of the planet Venus.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". She was referred to with epithets such as "Lady of the Lands," "Lady of Gods and Kings," "Queen of Heaven"Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". and "Elamite goddess."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". She has been characterized as a "cosmopolitan deity" due to being worshiped in various locations all across the Ancient Near East, from modern Turkey to Iran.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Pinikir's gender in Hurrian texts is not entirely consistent and in some offering lists he is counted among the male deities.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Pišaišapḫi | AlalakhLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Pišaišapḫi (pḏḏpẖ in the alphabetic Ugaritic script) was a mountain god whose name is an adjective, "(he) of the mount Pišaiša."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". The corresponding landmark was most likely located close to the Mediterranean coast.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Sometimes in offering lists he forms a dyad with another deified mountain, Hatni, in which case he appears second.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". However, unlike him Hatni is never mentioned on his own.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He is attested alongside other mountains in oath formulas as well.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He appears in a myth about Šauška,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". in which he promises to tell her the story of rebellion of the mountain gods against Teššub in exchange for being forgiven for own misdeeds.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Saggar | Emar,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Kurda, Tell al-Rimah,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". KizzuwatnaLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | SyrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Saggar was one of the gods incorporated into Hurrian religion who were originally worshiped in Ebla, but did not retain their former prominence after the fall of this city.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". His name could be written logographically as dḪAR.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He was a divine representation of the Sinjar Mountains, but seemingly also a lunar deity.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He was also closely associated with Ishara.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Samnuha ŠamanminuḫiLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". |
Šadikanni,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". TaiteLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Samnuha (also spelled Samanuha) was the tutelary god of Šadikanni (modern Tell 'Ağağa).Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Šamanminuḫi, a god known from a treaty of Šattiwaza, is likely the same deity.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He continued to be invoked in theophoric names as late as in the Achaemenid period.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He is also attested as one of the three Hurrian deities from Taite in the Neo-Assyrian Takultu ritual, the other two being Kumarbi and Nabarbi.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Sarie | ApenašLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Sarie was a god whose temple was located in Apenaš in the kingdom of Arrapha.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Sumuqan | GurtaLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | MesopotamianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Sumuqan was a god associated with wild animals, herding and wool.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He was already worshiped over a wide area in the third millennium, as attested in documents from Ebla, Nabada, Mari and various cities in Mesopotamia.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He appears as the deity of Gurta in the treaty between Šattiwaza with Šuppiluliuma I.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Šaluš PidenḫiLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". |
BitinLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | SyrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Šaluš (Šalaš) was a Syrian goddess who was originally the wife of Dagan.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Due to syncretism between him and Kumarbi she came to also be viewed as the wife of the latter in Hurrian tradition.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". However, she does not appear in this role in any Hurrian myths.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In Hurrian sources she could be referred to as Pidenḫi, in reference to her cult center Piten,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". also known as Bitin.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Šarrēna | VariousLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Šarrēna was a term collectively applied to deified kings in Hurrian culture.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Lists of them known from rituals include historical Hurrian kings (Atal-Shen of Urkesh and Nawar), members of the Akkadian Sargonic dynasty (Sargon, Naram-Sin, Manishtushu and Shar-Kali-Sharri), kings of various distant locations (Autalumma of Elam, Immashku of Lullubi, Kiklip-Atal of TukrishLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".) and mythical figures (Ḫedammu and Silver known from the cycle of Kumarbi).Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Šarrēna and its singular form šarri were not the same as the terms used in royal titulature of Hurrian rulers, ewri and endan.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Šarruma |
|
Kizzuwatna,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Halab,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Anatolian,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". SyrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". or HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Šarruma was the son of Teššub and Ḫepat.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He was sometimes referred to as a "calf," possibly indicating that he could be depicted in theriomorphic form.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He was also associated with mountains.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Due to the similarity of his name to the Akkadian word šarru, "king," his name could be written as dLUGAL-da, LUGAL being a Sumerian logogram of analogous meaning.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Šayu | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Šayu (Šaju) is an element attested in feminine personal names from Nuzi, identified as a possible name of a goddess by Gernot WilhelmLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". and Thomas Richter.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Šeri and Ḫurri | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Šeri and Ḫurri were a pair of bulls believed to pull Teššub's chariot.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". While Šeri is occasionally attested on his own and he had a distinct role as a mediator between worshipers and Teššub, nothing is known about Ḫurri's characteristics and in known texts he only appears paired with the other bull.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In the Song of Ullikummi, Tilla replaces the latter of the two bull gods.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Šinan-tatukarni | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Šinan-tatukarni ("twofold at [?] love") was a deity associated with Šauška,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". only known from a single document which lists four figures who bring bad luck, the other three being Ari, Halzari and Taruwi.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Šintal-irti | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Šintal-irti ("seven-breasted") was a deity associated with Šauška.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In ritual texts she could be grouped with other deities from her entourage, namely Ninatta, Kulitta and Namrazunna.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Like them, she was believed to be a bringer of good luck.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". She is only attested in a single offering list, where her name is written without a divine determinative.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Šintal-wuri | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Šintal-wuri ("seven-eyed") was a deity associated with Šauška.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". She appears alongside Šintal-irti in an offering list.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Šuruḫḫe | HalabLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Šuruḫḫe is one of the deities mentioned in the treaty between Šattiwaza with Šuppiluliuma I, after Partaḫi and Nabarbi.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". The same deity is also attested in a list of offerings to Teššub and Ḫepat of Halab.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". The name is most likely Hurrian in origin and according to Gernot Wilhelm should be interpreted as a nisba derived from the place name Šuri.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Šuwala | MardamanLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Šuwala (ṯwl in alphabetic Ugaritic textsLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".) was an underworld goddess who served as the tutelary deity of Mardaman, a Hurrian city in the north of modern Iraq.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". She belonged to the circle of Ḫepat and could be associated with Allani, but she is best attested in a dyad with Nabarbi.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". She is attested from various locations across the ancient Near East: Nuzi in the kingdom of Arrapha, Ur in southern Mesopotamia, Hattusa in Anatolia, and Alalakh, Ugarit and Emar in Syria.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In the last of these cities she was associated with Ugur.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Takitu | UgaritLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | possibly SyrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Takitu (dqt in the Ugaritic alphabetic script; multiple spellings alternating between ta and tu and da and du are attested from Hurro-Hittite sources) was the sukkal of Ḫepat.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Her name is possibly derived from the Semitic root dqq, "small."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In myths she travels to various locations on behalf of her mistress.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Tapšuwari | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Tapšuwari is a deity known from a fragment of the Hurrian version of Song of Ullikummi, and from another literary fragment, both of which mention the sun and moon gods.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Meindert Dijkstra proposed that was the sukkal of Kušuḫ,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". while Volkert Haas considered him a courtier of Kumarbi.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Tašmišu | Kizzuwatna, especially ŠapinuwaLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Šuwaliyat (Hittite)Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Tašmišu was a god regarded as the brother and sukkalLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". of TeššubLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". and husband of Nabarbi.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". It is assumed that his name is derived from the word tašmi, which might mean "strong."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He appears in ritual texts from Kizzuwatna, especially those connected to the worship of Teššub in Šapinuwa.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Tenu | Possibly HalabLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | SyrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". or HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | In a number of ritual texts, Tenu is listed as the sukkal of Teššub in place of Tašmišu.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Daniel Schwemer proposes that this is an indication he originally belonged to the pantheon of Aleppo (Halab).Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Gary Beckman also assumes he was a Syrian deity in origin.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". However, Alfonso Archi considers him to simply be a Hurrian deity.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Tirwi | AzuhinnuLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Tirwi was a god worshiped in Azuhinnu in the kingdom of Arrapha.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". It is assumed that he was a male deity.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He appears in theophoric names, such as Akit-Tirwi.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |||
| Tiyabenti | KizzuwatnaLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Tiyabenti was a deity of unclear gender who could serve as Ḫepat's sukkal.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". The name can be translated "he who speaks favorably" or "she who speaks favorably."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In many sources, Takitu is identified as Ḫepat's sukkal,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". but she can appear alongside Tiyabenti in ritual texts, and it is unlikely that one of them was merely an epithet of the other.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Ugur ŠaumatarLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". |
Arrapha,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". EmarLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | MesopotamianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Ugur was originally the sukkal of Nergal, the Mesopotamian god of war of death.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In Mesopotamian sources his name eventually became a logographic representation of Nergal's.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". The Hurrians viewed him as a god of war and as an underworld deity.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He is attested in theophoric names from Nuzi.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Under the epithet Šaum(m)atar he could be considered a member of a triad whose two other members were Nupatik and Aštabi.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In Emar he appears in ritual texts alongside Šuwala.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Undurumma | Undurumma was the sukkal of Šauška, though only a single attestation of this deity is known.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". It is uncertain if Unudurupa ( or Unduruwa), who appears in another document in association with Allani, should be considered identical with Undurumma.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||||
| Uršui | possibly UršuLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Uršui (or Uršue) was a goddess included in the circle of either Ḫepat or Šauška.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". She was always paired with Iškalli, though the latter sporadically occurs alone.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". The name might be derived from the name of the city Uršu(m),Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". likely located in the proximity of modern Gaziantep.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Alfonso Archi proposes that the joint name Uršui-Iškalli could initially mean "the great temple of the city of Uršu."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In the past a different etymology of Uršui's name has been proposed by Emmanuel Laroche, who explained it as a combination of the Hurrian words ur-, "to be available" and šui, "all."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". It has also been proposed that Uršui was not a separate goddess but merely an epithet of Iškalli.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Zarwan | Apenaš, AzuhinnuLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Zarwan was a god worshiped in Apenaš and Azuhinnu in the kingdom of Arrapha.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". It is assumed that he was a male deity.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He is attested in theophoric names such as Itḫiz-Zarwa.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". |
Primordial beings and mythical antagonists
| Name | Image | Origin | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ammatina Enna | VariousLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Ammatina Enna, whose name can be translated as "former gods" or "primordial gods," were a special type of Hurrian deities.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Typically twelve of them were listed at a time.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". The standard group included Nara, Napšara, Minki, Tuḫuši, Ammunki, Ammizzadu, Alalu, Anu, Antu, Apantu, Enlil and Ninlil.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Additional names attested in various source include Eltara, Ta(i)štara, Muntara, Mutmuntara,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Aduntarri, Zulki Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". and Irpitiga.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Some of these deities were Mesopotamian in origin (for example Anu, Enlil and their spouses), while others have names which cannot be presently classified and possibly originate in Syria.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Alalu | MesopotamianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Alalu was a primordial deityLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". of Mesopotamian origin.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He is mentioned in the proem of the first part of the Kumarbi Cycle according to which he was originally the king of the gods but later was dethroned by his cupbearer Anu and had to flee to the underworld.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". While it is sometimes assumed in scholarship that he was the father of Anu and grandfather of Kumarbi,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". most likely two separate dynasties of gods are described in the passage in mention, and Alalu and Anu were not regarded as father and son in Hurrian tradition.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Another myth directly refers to Kumarbi as his son.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". A Mesopotamian text equates him with another primordial deity, Enmesharra.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Anu | MesopotamianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | The Mesopotamian god Anu commonly appears in Hurrian enumerations of primordial deities.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He is also attested in the offering lists of the circle of Teššub from Šapinuwa.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In the Song of Kumarbi, he is one of the three former kings of gods, but his origin is not explained.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He initially acts as Alalu's cupbearer, but after nine years dethrones him.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". After the same period of time, his own cupbearer Kumarbi dethrones him too and bits off his genitals while he tries to flee to heaven.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Teššub, the weather god, is his son.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Silver UšḫuneLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". |
HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Silver was the son of Kumarbi and a mortal woman.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". His name was written without the divine determinative,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". and he was not worshiped as a deity.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In the myth Song of Silver he most likely temporarily became the king of the gods and dragged the Sun and the Moon down from heaven.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Ḫedammu ḪidamLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". |
Ḫedammu was a sea monster who was the son of Kumarbi and Šertapšuruḫi.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He is described as destructive and voracious.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Most likely in the end of the corresponding myth, known as Song of Ḫedammu, he was defeated by Šauška.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | ||
| Šertapšuruḫi | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Šertapšuruḫi was the daughter of the sea god Kiaše.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". She is mentioned in the myth Song of Hedammu.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". It is possible that her name means "belonging to Šertapšuri" (a term of unknown meaning).Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Ullikummi | Hurrian | Ullikummi was a stone giant created by Kumarbi to defeat Teššub.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". His name means "Destroy Kumme!"Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". It has been proposed that a monster depicted on the golden bowl of Hasanlu who has a human head but whose lower body is a mountain might be Ullikummi, and that the rest of the sculpted figures can be interpreted other characters and events from the same myth.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Upelluri | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Upelluri was a giant believed to bear the world on his back.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In the Song of Ullikummi, the eponymous monster is placed on his shoulder by Kumarbi's servants to let him grow away from the sight of Teššub and his allies.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Enlil | MesopotamianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Enlil, the head of the Mesopotamian pantheon,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". commonly appears in Hurrian enumerations of primordial deities.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In Hurrian tradition he was regarded as the father of Ishara.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Enlil and Kumarbi could be equated with each other in theological texts due to sharing the role of father of gods in their respective pantheons.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". At the same time, in Hurrian myths they are treated as two different figures.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". For example, in the Song of Kumarbi Enlil is among the deities invited to listen to the story of Kumarbi, while in the Song of Ullikummi he decries the latter god's intrigue as evil.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Eltara | Possibly UgariticLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Eltara was one of the deities who could be counted among the Ammatina Enna.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In this context he was paired with the deity Ta(i)štara.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". His name is assumed to be a combination of the name of the Ugaritic god El and the suffix -tara.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". El himself appears in Hurrian offering lists from Ugarit.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". A poorly preserved myth describes a period during which Eltara was the king of the gods, and additionally alludes to a conflict involving the mountains.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Eni attanni | Hurrian/UgariticLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | The concept of eni attanni, the "god father", developed among Hurrians living in Ugarit as an equivalent of the local deity Ilib, and functioned as a representation of a "generic ancestor of the gods".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Earth and Heaven | HurrianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | The Hurrian term referring to the deified Earth and Heaven was eše hawurni.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". The worship of this concept is attested in sources from all areas inhabited by the Hurrians, similar to the major deities such as Teššub,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". but there is no indication that Earth and Heaven were regarded as personified deities themselves.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". |
Deities assumed to have Hurrian origin
| Name | Image | Pantheon | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hahharnum and Hayyashum | MesopotamianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Hahharnum (Ḫamurnu) and Hayyashum were the Mesopotamian reflection of the Hurrian deified Heaven and Earth.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". They appear as a pair of primordial deities in a small number of texts,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". for example in the myth Theogony of Dunnu.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Hahharnum is also attested alone in the god list Anšar = Anum which equates him with Anu.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| ḪiriḫibiLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | UgariticLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Ḫiriḫibi (Ḫrḫb) is a god only known from the Ugaritic myth Marriage of Nikkal and Yarikh.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". He is assumed to have Hurrian origin,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". which is also proposed for the myth itself.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". It is possible that his name means "he of the mountain Ḫiriḫ(i)," and that it ends with suffix -bi (Ḫiriḫ(i)bi), similar to these of Hurrian deities Kumarbi and Nabarbi.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Kašku | HatticLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | It has been suggested that the presumed name of the Hattic moon god Kašku might be the evidence of early contact between the speakers of Hattic and Hurrian, as it resembles the name of Kušuḫ.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". However, it has been recently proposed that the correct reading of the name is Kab, rather than Kašku.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Maḏḏara | UgariticLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | It has been proposed that the name of the deity Maḏḏara, who is only attested Ugaritic offering lists,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". might have Hurrian origin.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". This theory is based on the similarity between the syllabic writing of the name, dma-za-ra,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". and the Hurrian word maziri, "help."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". This proposal is not universally accepted.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Pidar | UgariticLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | According to Manfred Krebernik, it is possible that the name of Pidar, an Ugaritic god associated with Baal, was derived from the Hurrian word pedari, "bull."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". It is also possible his name is connected with that of the goddess Pidray from the same pantheon.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| dSu-ra-su-gu-WA | UgariticLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | The name of the Ugaritic deity dSu-ra-su-gu-WA (reading of the final sign uncertain), only known from a single offering list, might be Hurrian in origin.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Šala | MesopotamianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | The name of Šala, a goddess who was the wife of the Mesopotamian weather god Adad, is assumed to be derived from the Hurrian word šāla, "daughter."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". She might also be attested in the treaty between Šuppiluliuma I and Šattiwaza,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". but according to Daniel Schwemer it is possible that this is a scribal mistake and the goddess meant there is instead Šalaš.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Šaraššiya | UgariticLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Šaraššiya is only known from offering lists from Ugarit.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". His name is most likely derived from Hurrian šarašše-, "kingship."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In Hurro-Hittite texts an essive form of this word, šaraššiya, "for kingship," functioned as a designation of offerings.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". It is assumed that the god Šaraššiya was a divine personification of kingship.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Šiduri | MesopotamianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Šiduri is the name assigned to an originally nameless divine alewife in the so-called "Standard Babylonian" version of the Epic of Gilgamesh.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". The etymology of her name is a matter of debate, but it is possible it was derived from the Hurrian word šiduri, "young woman."Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". In Hurrian and Hitttie translations of the Epic of Gilgamesh known from Hattusa, the alewife is named, Naḫmazulel or Naḫmizulen (an ordinary Hurrian given name), but she is described as a šiduri.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". Gary Beckman proposes that his was the origin of her name in the Standard Babylonian version.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Tišpak | MesopotamianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | While many researchers today favor the view that Tishpak, the city god of Eshnunna, had Elamite origin,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". the possibilities that he was either derived directly from TeššubLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". or an Elamite reflection of him have also been proposed.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | |
| Umbidaki | MesopotamianLua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". | Umbidaki was a god worshiped in the temple of Ishtar of Arbela in Neo-Assyrian times who might have been derived from Nupatik, possibly introduced to this city after a war which led to Assyrians acquiring a statue of him.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24". |
References
- ↑ Wilhelm 1989, p. 49.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Archi 2002, p. 31.
- ↑ Archi 1997, pp. 417-418.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Taracha 2009, p. 120.
- ↑ Wilhelm 1989, p. 63.
- ↑ Wilhelm 1989, p. 67.
- ↑ Taracha 2009, p. 93.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Taracha 2009, p. 118.
- ↑ Wilhelm 1989, p. 78.
- ↑ Feliu 2003, p. 300.
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 Wilhelm 1989, p. 51.
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 Archi 2013, pp. 7-8.
- ↑ Tugendhaft 2016, p. 177.
- ↑ Taracha 2009, pp. 94-95.
- ↑ 15.00 15.01 15.02 15.03 15.04 15.05 15.06 15.07 15.08 15.09 15.10 15.11 15.12 15.13 15.14 Archi 2013, p. 7.
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 Wilhelm 1989, p. 50.
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 17.5 17.6 Archi 2013, p. 8.
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 18.2 18.3 18.4 Schwemer 2008, p. 3.
- ↑ 19.0 19.1 19.2 Schwemer 2008, p. 4.
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 20.2 20.3 20.4 20.5 Archi 2013, p. 12.
- ↑ Taracha 2009, p. 92.
- ↑ 22.0 22.1 22.2 22.3 22.4 22.5 22.6 Trémouille 2011, p. 99.
- ↑ 23.0 23.1 23.2 Trémouille 2011, p. 100.
- ↑ Trémouille 2011, p. 102.
- ↑ Archi 2009, p. 214.
- ↑ Trémouille 2011, pp. 100-101.
- ↑ Trémouille 2011, p. 101.
- ↑ 28.0 28.1 28.2 28.3 28.4 28.5 Wilhelm 1989, p. 52.
- ↑ Archi 2013, p. 1.
- ↑ 30.0 30.1 30.2 30.3 30.4 30.5 30.6 30.7 30.8 Taracha 2009, p. 127.
- ↑ Archi 2004, p. 319.
- ↑ Feliu 2003, p. 282.
- ↑ Schwemer 2008, pp. 5-6.
- ↑ Wilhelm 1997, p. 498.
- ↑ 35.0 35.1 35.2 Archi 2013, p. 9.
- ↑ Schwemer 2008, p. 22.
- ↑ 37.0 37.1 Pardee 2002, p. 279.
- ↑ Schwemer 2008, pp. 13-14.
- ↑ Wilhelm 1989, pp. 55-56.
- ↑ 40.0 40.1 40.2 40.3 Wilhelm 1989, p. 53.
- ↑ Giorgieri 2011, pp. 614-615.
- ↑ 42.0 42.1 42.2 42.3 42.4 42.5 Giorgieri 2011, p. 614.
- ↑ Taracha 2009, p. 89.
- ↑ Wilhelm 1989, p. 57.
- ↑ 45.0 45.1 Haas 2015, p. 374.
- ↑ Haas 2015, p. 545.
- ↑ 47.0 47.1 Trémouille 2000, p. 126.
- ↑ 48.00 48.01 48.02 48.03 48.04 48.05 48.06 48.07 48.08 48.09 48.10 48.11 48.12 48.13 Archi 2013, p. 10.
- ↑ Pardee 2002, p. 281.
- ↑ 50.0 50.1 Taracha 2009, p. 110.
- ↑ Schwemer 2008, p. 6.
- ↑ 52.0 52.1 Archi 1993, p. 28.
- ↑ Schwemer 2022, p. 374.
- ↑ Giorgieri 2014, p. 333.
- ↑ 55.0 55.1 55.2 55.3 Sharlach 2002, p. 99.
- ↑ 56.0 56.1 56.2 Archi 2013, p. 6.
- ↑ Archi 2013a, pp. 16-17.
- ↑ Archi 2013a, p. 17.
- ↑ 59.0 59.1 Taracha 2009, p. 124.
- ↑ 60.0 60.1 60.2 60.3 60.4 Krebernik 2013, p. 205.
- ↑ Hoffner 1998, p. 67.
- ↑ 62.0 62.1 Wilhelm 1989, p. 55.
- ↑ 63.0 63.1 Taracha 2009, p. 122.
- ↑ Archi 2002, p. 32.
- ↑ 65.0 65.1 Archi 2002, p. 33.
- ↑ Archi 2002, p. 28.
- ↑ Archi 2002, pp. 27-28.
- ↑ Taracha 2009, pp. 123-124.
- ↑ Archi 1993, p. 33.
- ↑ Pardee 2002, p. 278.
- ↑ 71.0 71.1 71.2 71.3 Wilhelm 1989, p. 54.
- ↑ Archi 1993, p. 30.
- ↑ Wilhelm 1989, pp. 54-55.
- ↑ 74.0 74.1 74.2 74.3 74.4 74.5 74.6 Schwemer 2001, p. 547.
- ↑ 75.0 75.1 75.2 Archi 2013a, p. 13.
- ↑ 76.0 76.1 Archi 2013, pp. 6-7.
- ↑ 77.0 77.1 77.2 77.3 Taracha 2009, p. 119.
- ↑ Archi 2013a, p. 125.
- ↑ Archi 2013a, p. 14.
- ↑ 80.0 80.1 Archi 2013a, p. 15.
- ↑ Archi 2013a, p. 18.
- ↑ Taracha 2009, p. 128.
- ↑ Archi 2013, p. 19.
- ↑ 84.0 84.1 84.2 Taracha 2009, p. 121.
- ↑ 85.0 85.1 85.2 85.3 85.4 85.5 Wilhelm 2014a, p. 305.
- ↑ 86.0 86.1 86.2 86.3 86.4 86.5 86.6 Archi 2013, p. 11.
- ↑ Krebernik 2013, p. 201.
- ↑ Pardee 2002, p. 282.
- ↑ 89.0 89.1 Wilhelm 2014, p. 46.
- ↑ 90.0 90.1 90.2 90.3 Deiner 1976, p. 34.
- ↑ 91.0 91.1 Haas 2015, p. 318.
- ↑ Taracha 2009, p. 67.
- ↑ 93.0 93.1 Schwemer 2001, p. 483.
- ↑ Schwemer 2008, pp. 6-7.
- ↑ 95.0 95.1 95.2 95.3 95.4 95.5 95.6 95.7 95.8 Archi 2013, p. 15.
- ↑ 96.0 96.1 Taracha 2009, p. 94.
- ↑ George 2003, p. 149.
- ↑ Haas 2015, p. 392.
- ↑ 99.0 99.1 99.2 99.3 Archi 2013, p. 16.
- ↑ Schwemer 2001, p. 535.
- ↑ Schwemer 2001, p. 544.
- ↑ 102.0 102.1 Wilhelm 1989, p. 62.
- ↑ 103.0 103.1 Schwemer 2001, p. 448.
- ↑ Archi 2009, p. 212.
- ↑ Pardee 2002, p. 275.
- ↑ 106.0 106.1 Archi 2013, pp. 15-16.
- ↑ 107.0 107.1 Ayali-Darshan 2014, p. 98.
- ↑ Archi 2002, p. 22.
- ↑ 109.0 109.1 109.2 109.3 Simons 2017, p. 83.
- ↑ 110.0 110.1 110.2 Cavigneaux & Krebernik 1998, p. 475.
- ↑ 111.0 111.1 Matthews & Eidem 1993, p. 203.
- ↑ 112.0 112.1 112.2 112.3 Pardee 2002, p. 277.
- ↑ Válek 2021, p. 53.
- ↑ Bonechi 1998, p. 78.
- ↑ Krebernik 2013b, p. 398.
- ↑ 116.0 116.1 Beal 2002, p. 197.
- ↑ 117.0 117.1 Miller 2008, p. 67.
- ↑ 118.0 118.1 Beckman 1999, p. 30.
- ↑ Beal 2002, p. 201.
- ↑ Miller 2008, p. 68.
- ↑ 121.0 121.1 Otten 1980, p. 23.
- ↑ Sharlach 2002, p. 104.
- ↑ 123.0 123.1 Feliu 2003, p. 55.
- ↑ Sharlach 2002, p. 114.
- ↑ 125.0 125.1 125.2 125.3 125.4 Haas 2015, p. 364.
- ↑ 126.0 126.1 126.2 Kammenhuber 1972, p. 370.
- ↑ Haas 2015, p. 170.
- ↑ 128.0 128.1 Kammenhuber 1972, p. 369.
- ↑ Archi 2004, p. 330.
- ↑ 130.0 130.1 130.2 Haas 2015, p. 409.
- ↑ Frantz-Szabó 1980, p. 74.
- ↑ 132.0 132.1 132.2 132.3 132.4 132.5 Archi 2013, p. 14.
- ↑ 133.0 133.1 Rutherford 2019, p. 83.
- ↑ Rutherford 2019, p. 84.
- ↑ 135.0 135.1 Haas 2015, p. 309.
- ↑ 136.0 136.1 136.2 136.3 Archi 2013, p. 13.
- ↑ 137.0 137.1 137.2 Beckman 1998, p. 2.
- ↑ 138.0 138.1 138.2 Archi 2009, p. 217.
- ↑ Marchesi & Marchetti 2019, pp. 528-529.
- ↑ 140.0 140.1 Marchesi & Marchetti 2019, p. 528.
- ↑ Archi 2009, p. 218.
- ↑ 142.0 142.1 Beckman 2002, p. 45.
- ↑ Haas 2015, p. 543.
- ↑ Peterson 2009, p. 89.
- ↑ 145.0 145.1 Rutherford 2001, p. 600.
- ↑ Dijkstra 2012, p. 69.
- ↑ Hoffner 1998, p. 51.
- ↑ Tugendhaft 2011, p. 712.
- ↑ Rutherford 2001, pp. 603-604.
- ↑ Hoffner 1998, p. 41.
- ↑ Marchesi & Marchetti 2019, p. 532.
- ↑ 152.0 152.1 Hawkins 1983, p. 257.
- ↑ Hawkins 1983, p. 258.
- ↑ Archi 2011, p. 7.
- ↑ Marchesi 2002, p. 163.
- ↑ Hutter 2017, pp. 119-120.
- ↑ 157.0 157.1 157.2 157.3 157.4 157.5 Sallaberger 2018, p. 112.
- ↑ 158.0 158.1 158.2 Sallaberger 2018, p. 114.
- ↑ 159.0 159.1 Archi 2019, p. 44.
- ↑ Schwemer 2001, p. 384.
- ↑ Wilhelm 1992, p. 28.
- ↑ Taracha 2009, pp. 119-120.
- ↑ Haas 2015, p. 563.
- ↑ Haas 1982, p. 102.
- ↑ Pongratz-Leisten 2015, p. 71.
- ↑ Haas 2015, p. 849.
- ↑ 167.0 167.1 167.2 Taracha 2009, p. 115.
Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter has terminated with signal "24".
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