Irnina

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Wikidata imageTemplate:Compare image with Wikidata Irnina or IrniniTemplate:Sfn was a Mesopotamian goddess regarded as the personification of victory. The name could also be applied as an epithet to other deities.

Name and character

The theonym Irnina was usually written in cuneiform as dir-ni-na or dir-ni-ni.Template:Sfn An additional partially preserved logographic spelling using the sign MUŠ is known from the god list An = Anum.Template:Sfn It can be translated as "victory", and the goddess can accordingly be understood as a personification of this concept, a Victoria-like figure.Template:Sfn Jeremiah Peterson describes her as a deity associated with the underworld.Template:Sfn Margaret Jaques suggests comparing her with Irḫan.Template:Sfn She points out that the former appears in sequence with Kumulmul and Ušaḫara, the spouses of Shara, in the An = Anum forerunner, and the latter in zi-pad litanies.Template:Sfn

As an epithet of other deities

The distinct deity Irnina is to be separated from the use of this title to refer to a warlike aspect of Ishtar.Template:Sfn Margaret Jaques argues that the name originally referred to the former, but came to be used as an epithet of Ishtar possibly due to shared dangerous and unpredictable characteristics of the two.Template:Sfn Irnina is also an epithet of the warlike aspect of Ishtar in the Agushaya poem.Template:Sfn The Hymn to the City of Arbela identifies Ishtar of Arbela with Irnina.Template:Sfn The name could also function as a title of NanayaTemplate:Sfn and Damkina.Template:Sfn Furthermore, a syncretistic hymn to Marduk, which otherwise features only male deities, includes Irnina among the names rassigned to his aspects.Template:Sfn

Attestations

Irnina is well attested in literary texts dealing with the campaigns of rulers of the Akkadian Empire, especially Sargon and Naram-Sin.Template:Sfn In the so-called Naram-Sin Epic, which describes the confrontation between the eponymous ruler and the king of Apišal and his allies,Template:Sfn Irnina is one of the deities assisting the former.Template:Sfn

An inscription of the Assyrian king Ashur-resh-ishi I dealing with the reconstruction of the temple of Ishtar in NinevehTemplate:Sfn lists Irnina among the deities favorable to this king, alongside Enlil, Ashur, Anu and Ea.Template:Sfn

In the god list An = Anum Irnina occurs in the entourage of Ningishzida (tablet V, lines 260-261).Template:Sfn Her exact position in his court is not known.Template:Sfn Frans Wiggermann suggests that their association reflected Ningishzida's ability to guarantee victory, which he sees as one of the features of his character as a "reliable god".Template:Sfn He also suggests that Irnina might have been regarded as a hypostasis of his warlike aspect.Template:Sfn Irnina is also attested in the Weidner god list, where she is listed after Ereshkigal, Allatum and Irkalla and before Dannina, which might reflect a connection with the underworld.Template:Sfn Either Irnina or Irkalla might be present in a fragmentary non-standard god list from Old Babylonian Nippur, though the restoration of the name is uncertain.Template:Sfn Only the determinative and the first sign are preserved.Template:Sfn

In the so-called "Standard Babylonian" edition of the Epic of Gilgamesh, Ninsun mentions that she is aware that her son Gilgamesh is destined to be associated with deities such as Irnina and Ningishzida while she implores Shamash to help him.Template:Sfn This passage reflects the portrayal of Irnina as an underworld deity.Template:Sfn Later the Cedar Forest to which the hero and his companion Enkidu venture is described as the property of "Irnini", though according to Andrew R. George in this context the name might be used as a generic designation for goddesses, not as a specific deity,Template:Sfn as it occurs in parallel with īli, "gods".Template:Sfn

References

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Bibliography

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