Milku | |
---|---|
God of the underworld | |
Major cult center | Ugarit, ‘Aṯtartu, Hidra’yu |
Equivalents | |
Canaanite equivalent | Milcom |
Phoenician equivalent | Melqart |
Mesopotamian equivalent | Tishpak (according to a trilingual Ugaritic god list) [1] |
Milku was a god associated with the underworld who was worshiped in the kingdoms of Ugarit and Amurru in the late Bronze Age. It is possible that he originated further south, as Ugaritic texts indicate he was worshiped in cities located in the northern part of the Transjordan region. He was also incorporated into the Hurrian pantheon under the name Milkunni. There is also evidence that he was worshiped in Hittite religion. It is possible that a closely related deity is also known from Mesopotamia.
In the alphabetic script used in Ugarit, which does not always preserve vowels, Milku's name was written the same as the word malku, "king." As a result it is sometimes difficult to tell which of these two cognate words is meant. However, it is agreed that they were vocalized differently. It has been proposed that one of Milku's epithets was a pun referencing this writing convention.
The name of an underworld deity written as mlk in the Ugaritic alphabetic script is typically vocalized as Milku. [2] Manfred Krebernik argues that the vocalization remains uncertain due to the large number of cognates in various Semitic languages, such as Akkadian and Hebrew, which can be used for comparative purposes. [3] However, he considers Milku to be a plausible option based on the syllabic spelling of a Hurrian form of this deity, Milkunni. [4] It is agreed that the name Milku was a cognate of the Ugaritic word malku, "king." [5] Since the words are not identical, Krebernik suggests that the god originated outside the city, though also in an area where another northwest Semitic language was spoken. [4] He notes that the use of a word referring to a king to an underworld deity has a parallel in the etymology of the name of the Mesopotamian god Nergal, the "lord of the great city." [6]
Based on the etymology of Milku's name, Dennis Pardee goes as far as suggesting that in Ugarit he might have functioned as the divine king of the underworld. [5] However, multiple other deities worshiped in this city were also associated with the underworld in addition to him: Resheph, [7] Arsay and Allani. [8] The Hurrian god Nupatik also appears in a single text in the role of a psychopomp. [9] A further deity possibly associated with the underworld also attested in Ugarit was Shuwala. [10] Less certain are the associations between Dagan and Horon and this sphere. [11] Mot, "death," was also associated with the underworld, but was not actively worshiped as a deity, as evidenced by his absence from offering lists. [12]
Milku was referred to as the "eternal king" (mlk ‘lm, malku ‘ālami). [13] [14] Pardee argues that this epithet might refer to the concept of "atemporality of the afterlife." [13] It is additionally possible it was understood as a pun on Milku's name and the word malku. [13] According to Aicha Rahmouni, there is no indication that epithets including the later word necessarily implied a deity was understood as a high ranking member of the pantheon. [15] Milku was also called the "powerful and august god" (‘il gṯr w yqr). [16] The term gṯr most likely functioned as the name of an independent deity in other contexts, but it is unlikely that the god Gaṯaru is meant in this passage. [17] The view that yqr should instead be interpreted as the name of a king, Yaqaru (in the past also erroneously assumed to be the first king of the ruling dynasty of Ugarit known from historical records), is implausible according to Pardee. [18] Rahmouni also considers it impossible that a proper name rather than an epithet is meant. [19] Milku could also be called a hero (rp’u). [15]
It is possible that Milku was sometimes described as a musician, presumably to indicate that at least the afterlife of kings, described in a text presumed to allude to such an activity, was considered joyful. [13]
Unambiguous evidence for the worship of Milku as a distinct deity is present in Ugaritic texts. [9] He is one of the deities invoked in two incantations against snakebite, [9] in which the sun goddess Shapash is asked to summon various deities from their cult centers. [20] The location associated with him in these texts is ‘Aṯtartu. [21] This place name is apparently with the name of a deity, Ashtart. [22] It is assumed that it was located somewhere northwest of the Sea of Galilee, [13] in the Transjordan. [23] The Ugaritic texts invoking Milku from this city appear to reflect a cosmopolitan tradition, as multiple other deities are also invoked from locations outside the kingdom: Tuttul and Mari in Upper Mesopotamia, Larugatu in central Syria, Bibbita in Anatolia, and Caphtor, corresponding to Crete. [23] An echo of this association between Milku and the city of ‘Aṯtartu might be the deity Milkaštart, who is attested in Phoenician and Punic sources. [5] [4]
A second city associated with Milku in Ugaritic texts is Hidra’yu. [24] It has been suggested that ‘Aṯtartu and Hidrayu correspond to the place names Aštarot and Edrei (modern Daraa [25] ), associated with biblical king Og of Bashan. [24] In older literature, Hidra’yu was sometimes incorrectly understood as the name of a deity, but this interpretation is now considered grammatically impossible. [26]
An administrative text from Ugarit mentions the preparation of barley for the horses of Milku and Resheph. [9] It is possible these two gods appear together in it because of their shared association with the underworld. [9]
While it is agreed that Milku appears in some theophoric names from Ugarit, it is sometimes difficult to tell when mlk designates the deity rather than the ordinary word "king." [27] Six examples of theophoric name invoking Milku have been identified, [27] while the word meant in further seventeen mlk names remains uncertain. [28] For example, it has been suggested that the name of the well attested scribe Ilimilku meant "Milku is my god," but Dennis Pardee and Nicolas Wyatt assume that it is more likely that the ordinary word "king" is meant in this case, and the name should be translated as "El is king." [29]
Milku was also worshiped in the kingdom of Amurru, where he most likely was one of the main deities. [30] However, very little is known about the religious life of this area due to lack of any texts directly pertaining to it. [31] Milku appears in a treaty of the local king Duppi-Teššup with the Hittite empire. [32] He also most likely appears as the theophoric element in the name of queen Ahatmilku, [30] a member of Amurru's ruling house [33] who married Niqmepa, a king of Ugarit. [34]
Milku was also incorporated into Hurrian and Hittite religious beliefs. [35]
A god named Milkunni occurs in a trilingual god list from Ugarit in the Hurrian column. [1] He corresponds to the Ugaritic Gaṯaru and Mesopotamian Tishpak in it. [1] His name is a combination of Milku and the Hurrian suffix -nni. [4]
According to Piotr Taracha , Milku was introduced to a number of settlements in Hittite territories during the reign of Tudḫaliya IV. [36] However, the dating of the texts attesting this is not certain [37] and it is possible that they do not document a planned introduction of specific deities to Anatolia, making the date from which deities mentioned in them were worshiped there uncertain. [38] Other foreign deities attested in similar contexts include Šauška of Nineveh, Adad of Assur, Ishtar of Babylon [39] and Baluhassa, the Luwian form of the name of the Balikh River, which could also function as the name of a deity. [40]
Among the Hittite settlements where Milku was worshiped were Pahhanta, [41] Parmashapa, [42] Sappitta, [43] Sallunatassi, [44] Gullanta [45] and Sapagurwanta. [46] Additionally, he is also attested in texts from Emar, [30] [1] where according to Gary Beckman he is exclusively present in rituals of Anatolian origin, most likely "irrelevant to the religious life of the indigenous population." [47]
In an offering list from the Ur III period, a deity named Malkum is attested alongside the goddess Ḫabūrītum. [48] It has been proposed that this name refers to an underworld deity derived from Syrian Milku. [48] However, Tonia Sharlach argues that it is not impossible that this god was a Mesopotamian deity in origin and simply belonged to a sparsely attested local pantheon. [49] Manfred Krebernik assumes that the term is plural and refers to deceased ancestors. [1] He points out that it appears in such a context in funerary rites from Old Babylonian Mari. [1] References to plural mlkm and dMA.LIKmeš are also known from Ugarit. [1]
A related deity, Malik (dma-lik) is also attested in the Weidner god list, [1] in a single copy of the Nippur god list [50] and in a later text describing various deities worshiped in Assur. [1]
Resheph was a god associated with war and plague, originally worshiped in Ebla in the third millennium BCE. He was one of the main members of the local pantheon, and was worshiped in numerous hypostases, some of which were associated with other nearby settlements, such as Tunip. He was associated with the goddess Adamma, who was his spouse in Eblaite tradition. Eblaites considered him and the Mesopotamian god Nergal to be equivalents, most likely based on their shared role as war deities.
Kotharat were a group of seven goddesses associated with conception, pregnancy, birth and marriage, worshiped chiefly in northern part of modern Syria in the Bronze Age. They are attested in texts from Mari, Ugarit and Emar. There is no agreement among translators over whether they had individual names in Ugaritic tradition. They were considered analogous to the Mesopotamian Šassūrātu, a collective term referring to assistants of the goddess Ninmah, and to Hurrian Hutena and Hutellura. It has been suggested that the latter were at least in part patterned after the Kotharat.
Šarruma, also romanized as Šarrumma or Sharruma, was a Hurrian god. He could be depicted in both anthropomorphic form, sometimes riding on the back of a leopard, and in the theriomorphic form as a bull. His character is not fully understood, though it is known that he could function as a mountain god. He was regarded as a son of Ḫepat and Teshub. He was also linked to various moon deities. Additionally, the only mythological text he appears in addresses him as a messenger (sukkalu) of Kumarbi. He was worshiped by Hurrians in southeastern Anatolia and northern Syria, for example in Kummanni and Lawazantiya in Kizzuwatna. From this kingdom he was introduced to the Hittite pantheon as well. Hittite influence in turn resulted in his introduction to cities such as Aleppo, Emar and Ugarit. He was also venerated in Luwian religion in the first millennium BCE, with theophoric names invoking him attested from as late as the Hellenistic period in Cilicia and Lycia.
Kušuḫ, also known under the name Umbu, was the god of the moon in Hurrian pantheon. He is attested in cuneiform texts from many sites, from Hattusa in modern Turkey, through Ugarit, Alalakh, Mari and other locations in Syria, to Nuzi, located near modern Kirkuk in Iraq, but known sources do not indicate that he was associated with a single city. His name might be derived from the toponym Kuzina, possibly the Hurrian name of Harran, a city in Upper Mesopotamia, but both this etymology and identification of this sparsely attested place name remain uncertain. He was a popular, commonly worshiped god, and many theophoric names invoking him are known. In addition to serving as a divine representation of the moon, he was also associated with oaths, oracles and pregnancy. Some aspects of his character were likely influenced by his Mesopotamian counterpart Sin, while he in turn was an influence on the Ugaritic god Yarikh and Luwian Arma.
Yarikh was a moon god worshiped in the Ancient Near East. He is best attested in sources from the Amorite city of Ugarit in the north of modern Syria, where he was one of the principal deities. His primary cult center was most likely Larugadu, located further east in the proximity of Ebla. He is also attested in other areas inhabited by Amorites, for example in Mari, but also in Mesopotamia as far east as Eshnunna. In the Ugaritic texts, Yarikh appears both in strictly religious context, in rituals and offering lists, and in narrative compositions. He is the main character in The Marriage of Nikkal and Yarikh, a myth possibly based on an earlier Hurrian composition. The eponymous goddess was regarded as his wife in Ugarit, but she is not attested in documents from most other Syrian cities, and most likely only entered the Ugaritic pantheon due to the influence of Hurrian religion.
Ishara (Išḫara) was a goddess originally worshipped in Ebla and other nearby settlements in the north of modern Syria in the third millennium BCE. The origin of her name is disputed, and due to lack of evidence supporting Hurrian or Semitic etymologies it is sometimes assumed it might have originated in a linguistic substrate. In Ebla, she was considered the tutelary goddess of the royal family. An association between her and the city is preserved in a number of later sources from other sites as well. She was also associated with love, and in that role is attested further east in Mesopotamia as well. Multiple sources consider her the goddess of the institution of marriage, though she could be connected to erotic love as well, as evidenced by incantations. She was also linked to oaths and divination. She was associated with reptiles, especially mythical bašmu and ḫulmiẓẓu, and later on with scorpions as well, though it is not certain how this connection initially developed. In Mesopotamian art from the Kassite and Middle Babylonian periods she was only ever represented through her scorpion symbol rather than in anthropomorphic form. She was usually considered to be an unmarried and childless goddess, and she was associated with various deities in different time periods and locations. In Ebla, the middle Euphrates area and Mesopotamia she was closely connected with Ishtar due to their similar character, though they were not necessarily regarded as identical. In the Ur III period, Mesopotamians associated her with Dagan due to both of them being imported to Ur from the west. She was also linked to Ninkarrak. In Hurrian tradition she developed an association with Allani.
Nikkal or Nikkal-wa-Ib was a goddess worshiped in various areas of the ancient Near East west of Mesopotamia. She was derived from the Mesopotamian goddess Ningal, and like her forerunner was regarded as the spouse of a moon god, whose precise identity varied between locations. While well attested in Hurrian and Hittite sources, as well as in Ugarit, she is largely absent from documents from the western part of ancient Syria.
Allani, also known under the Akkadian name Allatu was the Hurrian goddess of the underworld. She was also associated with the determination of fate. She was closely linked with Ishara, and they could be invoked or receive offerings together. She also developed connection with other underworld deities from neighboring cultures, such as Mesopotamian Ereshkigal, Anatolian Sun goddess of the Earth and Lelwani, and possibly Ugaritic Arsay. It is presumed she was chiefly worshiped in western areas inhabited by the Hurrians, though the location of her main cult center is uncertain. She is attested in texts from sites such as Tigunani, Tuttul and Ugarit. She was also incorporated into the Mesopotamian pantheon, and was venerated in Ur, Nippur and Sippar. Hittite sources mentioning her are known too.
Arsay was a goddess worshiped in the city of Ugarit in the late Bronze Age. Her standing in the Ugaritic pantheon and her role in Ugaritic religion remain uncertain. It has been proposed that she was associated with the underworld or with groundwater, though neither theory found universal support. She was most likely regarded as a daughter of the weather god Baal, though neither of the goddesses most often associated with him, Anat and Ashtart, was ever described as her mother. In a single passage from the Baal Cycle she appears alongside Pidray and Tallay, and as a result these three goddesses are often grouped in scholarship, but there is no evidence that they were associated with her in other contexts.
Pidar was a god worshiped in Ugarit in the late Bronze Age. He was associated with the weather god Baal, and it is often assumed his name is related to that of the goddess Pidray, but his character remains largely unknown.
The Hurrian religion was the polytheistic religion of the Hurrians, a Bronze Age people of the Near East who chiefly inhabited the north of the Fertile Crescent. While the oldest evidence goes back to the third millennium BCE, it is best attested in cuneiform sources from the second millennium BCE written not only in the Hurrian language, but also Akkadian, Hittite and Ugaritic. It was shaped by the contacts between Hurrians and various cultures they coexisted with. As a result, the Hurrian pantheon included both natively Hurrian deities and those of foreign origin, adopted from Mesopotamian, Syrian, Anatolian and Elamite beliefs. The culture of the Hurrians was not entirely homogeneous, and different local religious traditions are documented in sources from Hurrian kingdoms such as Arrapha, Kizzuwatna and Mitanni, as well as from cities with sizeable Hurrian populations, such as Ugarit and Alalakh.
Šimige was the Hurrian sun god. Known sources do not associate him with any specific location, but he is attested in documents from various settlements inhabited by the Hurrians, from Kizzuwatnean cities in modern Turkey, through Ugarit, Alalakh and Mari in Syria, to Nuzi, in antiquity a part of the kingdom of Arrapha in northeastern Iraq. His character was to a large degree based on his Mesopotamian counterpart Shamash, though they were not identical. Šimige was in turn an influence on the Hittite Sun god of Heaven and Luwian Tiwaz.
Kubaba was a goddess of uncertain origin worshiped in ancient Syria. Despite the similarity of her name to these of legendary queen Kubaba of Kish and Phrygian Cybele, she is considered a distinct figure from them both. Her character is poorly known. Multiple local traditions associating her with other deities existed, and they cannot necessarily be harmonized with each other. She is first documented in texts from Kanesh and Alalakh, thoug her main cult center was Carchemish. She was among the deities worshiped in northern Syria who were incorporated into Hurrian religion, and in Hurrian context she occurs in some of the Ugaritic texts. She was also incorporated into Hittite religion through Hurrian intermediaties. In the first millennium BCE she was worshiped by Luwians, Arameans and Lydians, and references to her can be found in a number of Greek texts.
Adamma was a goddess worshiped in Ebla in the third millennium BCE, later also documented in Hurrian sources and in Emar. The origin and meaning of her name remain a matter of debate among researchers. It is commonly assumed that it originated in one of the Semitic languages and that it can be compared to Hebrew ʾădāmâ, "soil" or "earth". An alternate view is that it belongs to a linguistic substrate at some point spoken in part of modern Syria. Hurrian origin has been proposed as well, but is considered implausible. In Ebla, Adamma received sacrificial sheep on behalf of the royal palace. She also had clergy of her own, as evidenced by references to a dam-dingir priestess in her service. Eblaite texts indicate she was also venerated in Hadani and Tunip. She was locally regarded as the spouse of Resheph, though the connection between them is not attested in later sources. After the fall of Ebla, she was incorporated into Hurrian religion, and in this context appears in Hittite and Ugaritic sources as well, often forming a pair with Kubaba. Furthermore, she was worshiped in Emar, where under the name Adammatera she might have been perceived as a deity associated with storage areas and the underworld. It is also possible that the goddess Admu known from Mari and from the Mesopotamian god list An = Anum was the same deity.
Nupatik, in early sources known as Lubadag, was a Hurrian god of uncertain character. He is attested in the earliest inscriptions from Urkesh, as well as in texts from other Hurrian settlements and Ugarit. He was also incorporated into Hittite religion. A similarly named deity continued to be venerated in Arbela as late as in the Neo-Assyrian period.
Dadmiš or Tadmiš (dta-ad-mi-iš) was a goddess worshipped in Ugarit. She is attested in texts written both in Ugaritic and in Hurrian. Her origin and functions remain unknown.
Pidray was an Ugaritic goddess of uncertain character. She is first attested as an Amorite deity in a bilingual Mesopotamian lexical list, but she is otherwise almost exclusively from Ugaritic texts. While she is well attested in this text corpus, her role in Ugaritic religion remains uncertain. It has been proposed that she was one of the tutelary deities of the kings of Ugarit. Another proposal connects her with the weather, though this assumption is not universally accepted. The meaning of her name also continues to be disputed. In Ugaritic myths, she is described as a daughter of the weather god Baal. In the Baal Cycle, she appears alongside the goddess Tallay, regarded as her sister. In a single passage they are also joined by Arsay. Pidray alone is also mentioned in the myth Marriage of Nikkal and Yarikh.
Gaṯaru or Gašru was a god worshiped in Ugarit, Emar and Mari in modern Syria, and in Opis in historical Babylonia in Iraq. While he is relatively sparsely attested, it is known that in Ugarit he was associated with the underworld, while in Mesopotamia he was understood as similar in character to Lugalirra or Erra.
Qudšu-wa-Amrur was a minor Ugaritic god regarded as the fisherman and messenger of Athirat. He is attested in a single prayer found in Ugarit, as well as in the Baal Cycle, where he appears in his traditional role as the servant of his mistress.