Eḫursag ( Sumerian : 𒂍𒄯𒊕 ) is a Sumerian term meaning "house of the mountains".
48-407: Sumerian ÉḪURSAG is written as a special ligature (ÉPAxGÍN 𒂍𒉺𒂅), sometimes etymologized as É.ḪAR.SAG ( 𒂍𒄯𒊕 ), written with the signs É "temple" (or "house"), ḪAR "mountain" and SAG "head". Ehursag is commonly associated with a temple of Enlil discovered by Sir. Charles Leonard Woolley during excavations at Ur in modern-day Iraq . He originally considered this to be a palace , a view that
96-487: A diminutive , but there is no root to derive it from, and no semantic reason for the diminutive formation. Forms such as mathooke , motthook and mathook were produced by folk etymology . Although used to prepare whale blubber, which the Inuit call " mattaq ", no such connection is known. While the noun mattock is attested from Old English onwards, the transitive verb "to mattock" or "to mattock up" first appeared in
144-462: A disturbance. The disturbance causes a flood, which forces the resident gods of Nippur under the leadership of Enlil to take shelter in the Eshumesha temple to Ninurta . Enlil is enraged at Marduk's transgression and orders the gods of Eshumesha to take Marduk and the other Anunnaki as prisoners. The Anunnaki are captured, but Marduk appoints his front-runner Mushteshirhablim to lead a revolt against
192-438: A flood again. When Enlil sees that Utnapishtim and his family have survived, he is outraged, but his son Ninurta speaks up in favor of humanity, arguing that, instead of causing floods, Enlil should simply ensure that humans never become overpopulated by reducing their numbers using wild animals and famines. Enlil goes into the boat; Utnapishtim and his wife bow before him. Enlil, now appeased, grants Utnapishtim immortality as
240-434: A genitive construction, suggesting that Enlil was seen as the personification of LÍL rather than merely the cause of LÍL. Piotr Steinkeller has written that the meaning of LÍL may not actually be a clue to a specific divine domain of Enlil's, whether storms, spirits, or otherwise, since Enlil may have been "a typical universal god [...] without any specific domain." Piotr Steinkeller and Piotr Michalowski have doubts about
288-474: A pick and an adze ( pick mattock ). A cutter mattock is similar to a Pulaski used in fighting fires. It is also commonly known in North America as a " grub axe ". A mattock has a shaft, typically made of wood, which is 3–4 ft (0.9–1.2 m) long. The head consists of two ends, opposite each other and separated by a central eye. A mattock head typically weighs 3–7 lb (1.4–3.2 kg). The form of
336-537: A reward for his loyalty to the gods. Plucks at the roots, tears at the crown, the pickax spares the... plants; the pickax, its fate is decreed by father Enlil, the pickax is exalted. A nearly complete 108-line poem from the Early Dynastic Period ( c. 2900–2350 BC) describes Enlil's invention of the mattock , a key agricultural pick, hoe, ax, or digging tool of the Sumerians. In the poem, Enlil conjures
384-526: A shepherd and a farmer, respectively. The two gods argue and Emesh lays claim to Enten's position. They take the dispute before Enlil, who rules in favor of Enten; the two gods rejoice and reconcile. In the Sumerian poem Lugale (ETCSL 1.6.2 ), Enlil gives advice to his son, the god Ninurta , advising him on a strategy to slay the demon Asag . This advice is relayed to Ninurta by way of Sharur , his enchanted talking mace, which had been sent by Ninurta to
432-564: A simple but effective tool, mattocks have a long history. Their shape was already established by the Bronze Age in Asia Minor and ancient Greece . According to Sumerian mythology , the mattock was invented by the god Enlil . Mattocks ( Greek : μάκελλα ) are the most commonly depicted tool in Byzantine manuscripts of Hesiod 's Works and Days . Mattocks made from antlers first appear in
480-399: A sinner. The Sumerians believed that the sole purpose of humanity's existence was to serve the gods. They thought that a god's statue was a physical embodiment of the god himself. As such, cult statues were given constant care and attention and a set of priests were assigned to tend to them. People worshipped Enlil by offering food and other human necessities to him. The food, which
528-538: A slit to plant into. They can also be used to dig holes for planting into, and are particularly useful where there is a thick layer of matted sod . The use of a mattock can be tiring because of the effort needed to drive the blade into the ground, and the amount of bending and stooping involved. The adze of a mattock is useful for digging or hoeing , especially in hard soil. Cutter mattocks ( Swahili : jembe-shoka ) are used in rural Africa for removing stumps from fields, including unwanted banana suckers . As
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#1732851726893576-492: A warning from Damkianna (another name for Ninhursag) to the gods and to humanity, pleading them not to repeat the war between the Anunnaki and the gods of Eshumesha. Mattock A mattock ( / ˈ m æ t ə k / ) is a hand tool used for digging, prying, and chopping. Similar to the pickaxe , it has a long handle and a stout head which combines either a vertical axe blade with a horizontal adze ( cutter mattock ), or
624-432: Is a nearly complete 152-line Sumerian poem describing the affair between Enlil and the goddess Ninlil . First, Ninlil's mother Nunbarshegunu instructs Ninlil to go bathe in the river. Ninlil goes to the river, where Enlil seduces her and impregnates her with their son, the moon-god Nanna . Because of this, Enlil is banished to Kur , the Sumerian underworld. Ninlil follows Enlil to the underworld, where he impersonates
672-612: Is first attested as the chief deity of the Sumerian pantheon , but he was later worshipped by the Akkadians , Babylonians , Assyrians , and Hurrians . Enlil's primary center of worship was the Ekur temple in the city of Nippur , which was believed to have been built by Enlil himself and was regarded as the "mooring-rope" of heaven and earth. He is also sometimes referred to in Sumerian texts as Nunamnir . According to one Sumerian hymn, Enlil himself
720-732: The British Isles in the Late Mesolithic . They were probably used chiefly for digging, and may have been related to the rise of agriculture . Mattocks made of whalebone were used for tasks including flensing – stripping blubber from the carcass of a whale – by the broch people of Scotland and by the Inuit . The word mattock is of unclear origin; one theory traces it from Proto-Germanic, from Proto-Indo-European. There are no clear cognates in other Germanic languages , and similar words in various Celtic languages are borrowings from
768-651: The realm of the gods to seek counsel from Enlil directly. In the Old, Middle, and Late Babylonian myth of Anzû and the Tablet of Destinies , the Anzû , a giant, monstrous bird, betrays Enlil and steals the Tablet of Destinies , a sacred clay tablet belonging to Enlil that grants him his authority, while Enlil is preparing for a bath. The rivers dry up and the gods are stripped of their powers. The gods send Adad , Girra , and Shara to defeat
816-405: The "man of the gate". Ninlil demands to know where Enlil has gone, but Enlil, still impersonating the gatekeeper, refuses to answer. He then seduces Ninlil and impregnates her with Nergal , the god of death. The same scenario repeats, only this time Enlil instead impersonates the "man of the river of the nether world, the man-devouring river"; once again, he seduces Ninlil and impregnates her with
864-503: The "mooring-rope" of heaven and earth, meaning that it was seen as "a channel of communication between earth and heaven". A hymn written during the reign of Ur-Nammu , the founder of the Third Dynasty of Ur , describes the E-kur in great detail, stating that its gates were carved with scenes of Imdugud , a lesser deity sometimes shown as a giant bird, slaying a lion and an eagle snatching up
912-538: The Anzû, but all of them fail. Finally, Ea proposes that the gods should send Ninurta, Enlil's son. Ninurta successfully defeats the Anzû and returns the Tablet of Destinies to his father. As a reward, Ninurta is granted a prominent seat on the council of the gods. A badly damaged text from the Neo-Assyrian Period (911–612 BC) describes Marduk leading his army of Anunnaki into the sacred city of Nippur and causing
960-667: The English (e.g. Welsh : matog , Irish : matóg , Scottish Gaelic : màdog ). However, there are proposed cognates in Old High German and Middle High German, and more speculatively with words in Balto-Slavic languages , including Old Church Slavonic motyga and Lithuanian matikas , and even Sanskrit. It may be cognate to or derived from the unattested Vulgar Latin matteūca , meaning club or cudgel . The New English Dictionary of 1906 interpreted mattock as
1008-551: The Sumerian origin of Enlil. They have questioned the true meaning of the name, and identified Enlil with the Eblaite word I-li-lu . As noted by Manfred Krebernik and M. P. Streck; Enlil being referred to as Kur-gal (the Great Mountain) in Sumerian texts suggests he might have originated in eastern Mesopotamia. Enlil who sits broadly on the white dais, on the lofty dais, who perfects the decrees of power, lordship, and princeship,
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#17328517268931056-450: The earth-gods bow down in fear before him, the heaven-gods humble themselves before him... Enlil was the patron god of the Sumerian city-state of Nippur and his main center of worship was the Ekur temple located there. The name of the temple literally means "Mountain House" in ancient Sumerian. The Ekur was believed to have been built and established by Enlil himself. It was believed to be
1104-524: The flood, seeking to annihilate every living thing on earth because the humans, who are vastly overpopulated, make too much noise and prevent him from sleeping. In this version of the story, the hero is Utnapishtim , who is warned ahead of time by Ea , the Babylonian equivalent of Enki, that the flood is coming. The flood lasts for seven days; when it ends, Ishtar , who had mourned the destruction of humanity, promises Utnapishtim that Enlil will never cause
1152-595: The god Ninazu . Finally, Enlil impersonates the " man of the boat "; once again, he seduces Ninlil and impregnates her with Enbilulu , the "inspector of the canals". The story of Enlil's courtship with Ninlil is primarily a genealogical myth invented to explain the origins of the moon-god Nanna, as well as the various gods of the Underworld, but it is also, to some extent, a coming-of-age story describing Enlil and Ninlil's emergence from adolescence into adulthood. The story also explains Ninlil's role as Enlil's consort; in
1200-471: The god. Next, he sacrifices an ox and a sheep in honor of Utu. At this point, the text breaks off again. When it picks back up, Enlil and An are in the midst of declaring Ziusudra immortal as an honor for having managed to survive the flood. The remaining portion of the tablet after this point is destroyed. In the later Akkadian version of the flood story, recorded in the Epic of Gilgamesh , Enlil actually causes
1248-515: The goddess Ninlil in various guises, resulting in the conception of the moon-god Nanna and the Underworld deities Nergal , Ninazu , and Enbilulu . Enlil was regarded as the inventor of the mattock and the patron of agriculture. Enlil also features prominently in several myths involving his son Ninurta , including Anzû and the Tablet of Destinies and Lugale . Enlil's name comes from ancient Sumerian EN (𒂗), meaning "lord" and LÍL (𒆤),
1296-414: The gods of Eshumesha and sends his messenger Neretagmil to alert Nabu , the god of literacy. When the Eshumesha gods hear Nabu speak, they come out of their temple to search for him. Marduk defeats the Eshumesha gods and takes 360 of them as prisoners of war, including Enlil himself. Enlil protests that the Eshumesha gods are innocent, so Marduk puts them on trial before the Anunnaki. The text ends with
1344-411: The head determines the kind and uses of the mattock: Both are used for grubbing in hard soils and rocky terrain, with the pick mattock having the advantage of a superior penetrating tool over the cutter mattock, which excels at cutting roots. Mattocks are "the most versatile of hand-planting tools". They can be used to chop into the ground with the adze and pull the soil towards the user, opening
1392-559: The main temple, having had some of its foundations destroyed. Stamped bricks used in the construction of the foundations revealed that they were built by Ur-Nammu of the Third Dynasty of Ur . Bricks from the pavement bore the stamp of his successor, Shulgi and later ones of the Isin - Larsa period after Ur was destroyed by Elamites . Ehursag is also the name or epithet of Ninhursag 's temple at Hiza and has been suggested to have been an interchangeable word with Enamtila . The Ehursag at Ur
1440-564: The mattock into existence and decrees its fate. The mattock is described as gloriously beautiful; it is made of pure gold and its head is carved from lapis lazuli . Enlil gives the tool over to the humans, who use it to build cities, subjugate their people, and pull up weeds. Enlil was believed to aid in the growth of plants. The Sumerian poem Enlil Chooses the Farmer–God (ETCSL 5.3.3 ) describes how Enlil, hoping "to establish abundance and prosperity", creates two gods Emesh and Enten ,
1488-405: The meaning of which is contentious, and which has sometimes been interpreted as meaning winds as a weather phenomenon (making Enlil a weather and sky god, "Lord Wind" or "Lord Storm"), or alternatively as signifying a spirit or phantom whose presence may be felt as stirring of the air, or possibly as representing a partial Semitic loanword rather than a Sumerian word at all. Enlil's name is not
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1536-566: The name "Elil" and the Hurrians syncretized him with their own god Kumarbi . In one Hurrian ritual, Enlil and Apantu are invoked as "the father and mother of Išḫara ". Enlil is also invoked alongside Ninlil as a member of "the mighty and firmly established gods ". During the Kassite Period ( c. 1592–1155 BC), Nippur briefly managed to regain influence in the region and Enlil rose to prominence once again. From around 1300 BC onwards, Enlil
1584-526: The other gods could not look upon him. The same hymn also states that, without Enlil, civilization could not exist. Enlil's epithets include titles such as "the Great Mountain" and "King of the Foreign Lands". Enlil is also sometimes described as a "raging storm", a "wild bull", and a "merchant". The Mesopotamians envisioned him as a creator, a father, a king, and the supreme lord of the universe. He
1632-402: The poem, Ninlil declares, "As Enlil is your master, so am I also your mistress!" The story is also historically significant because, if the current interpretation of it is correct, it is the oldest known myth in which a god changes shape. In the Sumerian version of the flood story (ETCSL 1.7.4 ), the causes of the flood are unclear because the portion of the tablet recording the beginning of
1680-446: The story has been destroyed. Somehow, a mortal known as Ziusudra manages to survive the flood, likely through the help of the god Enki . The tablet begins in the middle of the description of the flood. The flood lasts for seven days and seven nights before it subsides. Then, Utu , the god of the Sun, emerges. Ziusudra opens a window in the side of the boat and falls down prostrate before
1728-575: The symbol of a horned cap, which consisted of up to seven superimposed pairs of ox-horns. Such crowns were an important symbol of divinity; gods had been shown wearing them ever since the third millennium BC. The horned cap remained consistent in form and meaning from the earliest days of Sumerian prehistory up until the time of the Persian conquest and beyond. The Sumerians had a complex numerological system, in which certain numbers were believed to hold special ritual significance. Within this system, Enlil
1776-563: The twenty-fourth century BC, when the importance of the god An began to wane. During this time period, Enlil and An are frequently invoked together in inscriptions. Enlil remained the supreme god in Mesopotamia throughout the Amorite Period, with Amorite monarchs proclaiming Enlil as the source of their legitimacy. Enlil's importance began to wane after the Babylonian king Hammurabi conquered Sumer. The Babylonians worshipped Enlil under
1824-405: The world habitable for humans. In the Sumerian flood myth Eridu Genesis , Enlil rewards Ziusudra with immortality for having survived the flood and, in the Babylonian flood myth, Enlil is the cause of the flood himself, having sent the flood to exterminate the human race, who made too much noise and prevented him from sleeping. The myth of Enlil and Ninlil is about Enlil's serial seduction of
1872-485: Was a continuous, symmetrical circle around the north celestial pole , but those of An and Enki were believed to intersect at various points. Enlil was associated with the constellation Boötes . The main source of information about Sumerian creation mythology is the prologue to the epic poem Gilgamesh, Enkidu, and the Netherworld ( ETCSL 1.8.1.4 ), which briefly describes the process of creation: originally, there
1920-492: Was also known as "Nunamnir" and is referred to in at least one text as the "East Wind and North Wind". Kings regarded Enlil as a model ruler and sought to emulate his example. Enlil was said to be supremely just and intolerant towards evil. Rulers from all over Sumer would travel to Enlil's temple in Nippur to be legitimized. They would return Enlil's favor by devoting lands and precious objects to his temple as offerings. Nippur
1968-426: Was associated with the number fifty, which was considered sacred to him. Enlil was part of a triad of deities, which also included An and Enki. These three deities together were the embodiment of all the fixed stars in the night sky. An was identified with all the stars of the equatorial sky , Enlil with those of the northern sky , and Enki with those of the southern sky . The path of Enlil's celestial orbit
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2016-449: Was later rejected in replace for a temple. The location of the royal palace at Ur remains unknown. No graves were discovered under the Ekursag during these excavations. Woolley eventually conceded that it was a "minor temple of some sort." Modern scholars still vary on their interpretations of it as a temple, palace, or administrative building. It has even been suggested to be a wing or annex of
2064-409: Was only Nammu , the primeval sea. Then, Nammu gave birth to An , the sky, and Ki , the earth. An and Ki mated with each other, causing Ki to give birth to Enlil. Enlil separated An from Ki and carried off the earth as his domain, while An carried off the sky. Enlil marries his mother, Ki, and from this union all the plant and animal life on earth is produced. Enlil and Ninlil (ETCSL 1.2.1 )
2112-513: Was restored in 1961 using ancient and modern bricks, a 2008 report for the British Museum noted that this had collapsed in some areas, especially the northwest corner. This article relating to a myth or legend from the ancient Middle East is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Enlil Enlil , later known as Elil and Ellil , is an ancient Mesopotamian god associated with wind, air, earth, and storms. He
2160-445: Was ritually laid out before the god's cult statue in the form of a feast, was believed to be Enlil's daily meal, but, after the ritual, it would be distributed among his priests. These priests were also responsible for changing the cult statue's clothing. The Sumerians envisioned Enlil as a benevolent, fatherly deity, who watches over humanity and cares for their well-being. One Sumerian hymn describes Enlil as so glorious that even
2208-582: Was so holy that not even the other gods could look upon him. Enlil rose to prominence during the twenty-fourth century BC with the rise of Nippur. His cult fell into decline after Nippur was sacked by the Elamites in 1230 BC and he was eventually supplanted as the chief god of the Mesopotamian pantheon by the Babylonian national god Marduk . Enlil plays a vital role in the ancient near eastern cosmology ; he separates An (heaven) from Ki (earth), thus making
2256-513: Was syncretized with the Assyrian national god Aššur , who was the most important deity in the Assyrian pantheon. Then, in 1230 BC, the Elamites attacked Nippur and the city fell into decline, taking the cult of Enlil along with it. Approximately one hundred years later, Enlil's role as the head of the pantheon was given to Marduk , the national god of the Babylonians. Enlil was represented by
2304-494: Was the only Sumerian city-state that never built a palace; this was intended to symbolize the city's importance as the center of the cult of Enlil by showing that Enlil himself was the city's king. Even during the Babylonian Period, when Marduk had superseded Enlil as the supreme god, Babylonian kings still traveled to the holy city of Nippur to seek recognition of their right to rule. Enlil first rose to prominence during
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