Gibil
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Gibil (Script error: No such module "Lang".), also known under the Akkadian name Girra, was a Mesopotamian god associated with fire, both in its positive and negative aspects. He also played a role in ritual purification. Textual sources indicate his symbol was a torch, though no representations of him have been identified in Mesopotamian art. Multiple genealogies could be assigned to him. The god list An = Anum indicates his spouse was Ninirigal. He was also frequently associated with deities such as Shamash, Nuska and Kusu. He is first attested in Early Dynastic texts from Shuruppak, such as offering lists. He was also a member of the pantheon of Eridu. In the Kassite period he was worshiped in Nippur. Later attestations are available from Assyria and from Uruk. He also appears in a number of literary texts.
Names
Gibil (dgibil6) is considered the conventional reading of a theonym written in cuneiform as dNE.GI (variant: dGI.NE), though Jeremiah Peterson notes that it has yet to be fully verified by primary sources.Template:Sfn Ryan D. Winters also stresses lack of direct evidence for the reading Gibil, despite its conventional status in Assyriological literature.Template:Sfn Template:Ill and Jan Lisman similarly conclude that despite being commonly used in scholarship, the reading Gibil, in contrast with Girra, is not securely supported by primary sources.Template:Sfn Peterson suggests that it is not impossible that dNE.GI was instead read as dgiraxgi, which would presumably reflect derivation from the Akkadian word girru, "fire".Template:Sfn The Akkadian form Girra was derived directly from the term girru.Template:Sfn These terms are ultimately derived from the root *ḥrr, "to burn" or "to scorch", similarly as another theonym, Erra.Template:Sfn Jeremy Black and Anthony Green treat names Gibil and Girra as referring to the same deity.Template:Sfn Johanna Tudeau argues that they were initially separate, but came to be fully merged with each other either in the Old Babylonian period or shortly after it, with later sources such as Assyrian copies of the Weidner god list indicating they were used interchangeably to refer to one figure.Template:Sfn Template:Ill describes Gibil and Girra as already analogous to each other in the context of the text corpus from Lagash from the Early Dynastic period.Template:Sfn Instances of dGIBIL6 being used as a logogram meant to be read as Girra are known from astronomical texts.Template:Sfn A further attested writing of the theonym Gibil is dGIŠ.BAR.Template:Sfn Selz argues that originally it referred to a distinct god, Gišbar or Gišbarra, attested in theophoric names such as Ur-Gišbar-izipae from the Ur III period and later conflated with Gibil.Template:Sfn
In Emesal texts, Gibil was referred to with the variant name Mubarra.Template:Sfn Additional names or epithets attributed to him include Nunbaranna (or Nunbaruna; translation uncertain), known from the god list An = Anum (tablet II, line 337), its Old Babylonian forerunner and a number of incantations from the same period;Template:Sfn Nunbarḫada ("prince with a burning white body"; An = Anum, tablet II, line 339),Template:Sfn and Nunbarḫuš ("prince with a glowing body", present both in the An = Anum forerunner and in An = Anum, tablet II, line 340).Template:Sfn Piotr Michalowski notes that the last of these names also appears as a synonym of the term ziqtu, "torch", in lexical lists from the first millennium BCE.Template:Sfn
The name Gibil was also used as a designation for a star in the Old Babylonian period, though its identification remains uncertain and is complicated by late astronomical text treating it as synonymous with the planet Mars.Template:Sfn
Character
Gibil was the god of fire.Template:Sfn He could represent this element in its positive aspect, for example in association with furnaces and kilns,Template:Sfn and in this context could be treated as a tutelary deity of metallurgists.Template:Sfn However, he also represented fire as a cause of destruction.Template:Sfn A namburbi, a type of ritual text focused on warding off the negative consequences of specific omens,Template:Sfn documents that it was believed that situations in which houses were set on fire by a lightning strike were considered a display of Gibil's wrath.Template:Sfn He could be also blamed for the burning of fields.Template:Sfn As indicated by the incantation series Maqlû and Šurpu, a further function of the fire god was warding off malevolent magic and unlucky events foretold by nightmares.Template:Sfn He additionally played a role in ritual purification.Template:Sfn It has been argued that this was his main function in the sphere of cult.Template:Sfn
While textual sources indicate that Gibil's symbol was a torch, no iconographic representations of him have been identified.Template:Sfn
Associations with other deities
Family and court
Piotr Michalowski argues that the beliefs about the origin of Gibil reflected his proposed association with the city of Eridu, as he could be considered "the son of the Abzu".Template:Sfn According to another tradition his father was Enlil, as documented in an Old Babylonian Akkadian source (tablet BM 29383) and possibly in a Sumerian literary text from the same period.Template:Sfn Maqlû instead calls him a "scion" of Anu (tablet II, line 77).Template:Sfn The same series of incantations also refers to him as offspring of Shalash (tablet II, line 137), though a copy where Shala occurs instead in the same passage has been discovered too.Template:Sfn References to Nuska as his father are known as well.Template:Sfn
The god list An = Anum (tablet II, line 341) indicates that the goddess Ninirigal could be considered the spouse of Gibil.Template:Sfn It is not certain if they were already regarded as a couple in earlier periods.Template:Sfn The same text states that his divine attendant (sukkal) was Nablum (tablet II, line 342), "flame", who might have been linked to him due to being a divine representation of the effects of his activity, similarly to how the weather god Ishkur's sukkal was Nimgir, "lightning".Template:Sfn Furthermore, it assigns him two counselors, the divine representations of a torch (dníg.na) and a censer (dgi.izi.lá).Template:Sfn
Other associations
As already attested in an Ur III text from Nippur, Gibil was connected with the sun god Shamash (Utu), who according to Piotr Michalowski was the deity he was most commonly linked to in Mesopotamian tradition.Template:Sfn Jeremiah Peterson proposes that the connection between the two was related to the belief documented in Maqlû, according to which in some rituals, possibly these which took place during the month Abu, the fire god was believed to take the place of the sun god at night.Template:Sfn He was commonly described as his "friend" or "companion" (Akkadian tappû).Template:Sfn
Gibil was also closely associated with Nuska.Template:Sfn They are attested together in Old Babylonian seal inscriptions from Sippar.Template:Sfn He also appears after Nuska and his wife Sadarnunna in the Weidner god list, and he is explicitly linked to the former of these two deities in a boundary stone inscription from the reign of Nazi-Maruttash.Template:Sfn Andrew R. George notes that he could effectively function as an "agent" of Nuska.Template:Sfn However, the two could be identified with each other as well, which led to the development of a tradition in which Nuska, normally associated with Enlil, was instead portrayed as a son or attendant of Anu.Template:Sfn
In late commentaries on religious texts, Gibil was often paired with Kusu, a purification deity associated with censers.Template:Sfn Both of them could be grouped into a triad with Ningirima, a deity who also belonged to the sphere of ritual purification.Template:Sfn
Worship
Gibil is relatively sparsely attested in Mesopotamian texts, though he nonetheless is known from sources from various time periods and locations.Template:Sfn Most of the evidence postdates the third millennium BCE.Template:Sfn
The oldest references to Gibil occur in texts from Early Dynastic Shuruppak (Fara), where he might have been a relatively important deity, as in offering lists he occurs alongside the major members of the local pantheon.Template:Sfn Additionally, the forty-third of the Zame Hymns is dedicated to him.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn This text has been discovered in Abu Salabikh.Template:Sfn Piotr Michalowski argues that his cult center in this composition is Eridu.Template:Sfn An association between him and this city is also accepted by Julia Krul.Template:Sfn However, Manfred Krebernik and Jan Lisman instead translate the line describing Gibil's cult center as "NE.GI, pure place of the prince" (NE.GI nun ki).Template:Sfn They consider it implausible that Eridu (NUNki) is meant instead.Template:Sfn They point out that NE.GI is likely to be a logographic spelling of the name of an unknown city due to the widespread phenomenon of the same logograms designating both a deity and the corresponding cult center, attested as well for example for Sud and Shuruppak or Enlil and Nippur.Template:Sfn Jeremiah Peterson additionally suggests that like his spouse Ninirigal, he might have been associated with Uruk and Kullaba.Template:Sfn
In sources from Lagash from the Early Dynastic period, Gibil is only attested in a single theophoric name, Ur-Gibil.Template:Sfn In Adab, he occurs in a single Old Akkadian offering list and in a number of theophoric names, such as Geme-Gibil and Ur-Gibil.Template:Sfn
Only a single house of worship associated with Gibil is known.Template:Sfn Under the name Girra, he was worshiped in the Emelamḫuš ("house of awesome radiance"), the temple of Nuska in Nippur, as attested in the Canonical Temple List,Template:Sfn dated to the Kassite period.Template:Sfn Two theophoric names invoking him appear in texts from this city from the same period.Template:Sfn He also appears in Assyrian tākultu texts as a member of a group of deities associated with Shamash.Template:Sfn
Late attestations of the fire god are known from Seleucid texts from Uruk, though he was not yet worshiped there in the Neo-Babylonian period.Template:Sfn Most likely similarly as in the case of Kusu and Kusibanda, his introduction to the local pantheon reflected his role in craftsmanship and his importance in the eyes of āšipu and kalû clergy.Template:Sfn Despite being actively worshiped, he is absent from legal texts, and no theophoric names invoking him are attested.Template:Sfn
Literature
The Gibil imgida
An imgida text focused on Gibil has been identified by Jeremiah Peterson on a fragmentary tablet from Old Babylonian Nippur.Template:Sfn Due to its state of preservation much about its plot remains uncertain, though based on the surviving sections it can be established that it described his birth in a place referred to as AB-gal, to be read as either iri12-gal or eš3-gal.Template:Sfn This location is also described as his dwelling in other sources.Template:Sfn Peterson chooses to render it as Irigal in his translation.Template:Sfn He argues that the temple of Gibil's spouse Ninirigal in Uruk is meant, rather than the underworld, as while the latter location could be referred to with the term irigal,Template:Efn it was typically written as AB✕GAL(GAL), AB-gunû(GAL) or IRI-GAL, as opposed to AB-gal, in contrast with the theonym Ninirigal, consistently spelled dnin-AB-gal from the Ur III period onward.Template:Sfn As an alternative he proposes that the term ešgal might be used instead, as it could be a designation of many temples, for example Ekur.Template:Sfn The view that the Irigal associated with Gibil is to be understood as the underworld has originally been formulated by Piotr Michalowski.Template:Sfn Another passage of the imgida describes Gibil joining the moon god, Nanna, in the sky in the evening.Template:Sfn He is apparently responsible for providing light during the night alongside him.Template:Sfn It is possible that the rest of the text originally described his visits to the cult centers of others gods, as a fragment mentions Enlil and his temple Ekur, where Gibil apparently had to purify an oven, while in another references to Inanna and the city of Zabalam occur.Template:Sfn
Girra and Elamatum
A fragment of a myth focused on Girra, provisionally referred to as The Myth of Girra and Elamatum in absence of any references to its original title, is preserved on an Old Babylonian tablet from either Sippar or nearby Tell ed-Der (BM 78962), though based on the colophon the surviving fragments only represent the seventh part of a longer multi-tablet sequence, which might have originally consisted of a total of around three hundred and fifty lines.Template:Sfn The initial lines are not possible to decipher, but the first passage describes Enlil proclaiming the destiny decreed for Girra after his defeat of Elamatum ("the Elamite woman"), possibly either a supernatural representation of Elam as a geopolitical rival of Mesopotamian states or a personification of famine, illness or sorcery, with the last of these interpretations possibly supported by the fire god's common role as a deity countering it in incantations.Template:Sfn Her remains are apparently turned into an object visible in the sky.Template:Sfn The name appears as a designation of an unidentified group of stars in an Old Babylonian prayer among many better attested constellations, but it is absent from later compendiums of Mesopotamian astronomy.Template:Sfn It is to be distinguished from the "Star of Elam" (MUL.ELAM.MAki) identified with Mars.Template:Sfn Christopher Walker notes that parallels can be drawn between the surviving section of this myth and the celebration of Ninurta's victory in compositions such as Lugal-e or Marduk's in Enūma Eliš.Template:Sfn
Other literary texts
In the Lament for Sumer and Ur, Gibil is mentioned among the causes of destruction described in this composition.Template:Sfn He is apparently responsible for setting fire to reeds.Template:Sfn As noted by Nili Samet, a direct parallel to the passage describing this is present in the myth Inanna and Ebiḫ, where the eponymous goddess threatens that she will tell Gibil to perform the same action.Template:Sfn
In the Epic of Anzû, Girra is one of the three gods who refuse to fight the eponymous creature to recover the Tablets of Destiny, the other two being Shara and Adad.Template:Sfn
In the Enūma Eliš, Gibil is the forty sixth of the names bestowed upon Marduk after the defeat of Tiamat.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn The function attributed to Marduk under this name might be "who makes weapons hard",Template:Sfn possibly a reference to the fire god's role in metallurgy, but the passage is unclear.Template:Sfn
A literary text dealing with Shalmaneser III's campaign in UrartuTemplate:Sfn mentions Girra in passing as one of the two gods who accompanied this king, the other being Nergal.Template:Sfn
Notes
References
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Bibliography
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