Zababa

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Wikidata imageTemplate:Compare image with Wikidata Zababa (𒀭𒍝𒂷𒂷, dza-ba4-ba4, Template:IPAc-en) was a Mesopotamian god. He was the tutelary deity of the city of Kish and was regarded as a god of war. He was initially seen as a son of Enlil, though in Assyria during the reign of Sennacherib, he started to be viewed as a son of Ashur instead. The goddess Bau came to be viewed as his wife after her introduction to Kish in the Old Babylonian period.

The worship of Zababa is first documented in sources from the Early Dynastic period, including texts from both Kish and other cities in Mesopotamia, for example the Zame Hymns from Abu Salabikh. His importance declined in the Sargonic and Ur III period, but he regained a more prominent position in the Old Babylonian period. Through the first millennium BCE he was worshiped both in Babylonia and in Assyria.

No myths focused on Zababa are known, though he is referenced in an UD.GAL.NUN composition about the construction of Enlil's temple, in a number of legends about rulers of the Akkadian Empire, and in texts known from late copies such as Urash and Marduk and Enmesharra's Defeat.

Name

Zababa's name was written in cuneiform as dza-ba4-ba4.Template:Sfn In Early Dynastic sources the spelling dza7-ba4-ba4 also occurs, though it is agreed za7 was only an early form of the sign za.Template:Sfn According to Gonzalo Rubio, the name has no plausible Sumerian or Semitic etymologies, and can be compared with other structurally similar theonyms such as Alala or Bunene.Template:Sfn Piotr Steinkeller assumes he was originally worshiped by Akkadians, but states his name cannot be necessarily classified as originating in Akkadian or another Semitic language.Template:Sfn However, such an origin has been proposed as a possibility by Template:Ill, though without a specific etymology.Template:Sfn

Explanatory texts could provide Zababa's name with artificial Akkadian etymologies likely based on homophony, alternate readings of signs or literary allusions, such as "crusher of stones" (dā’iš abnī)Template:Sfn or "lord of the lands" (bēlu mātātum).Template:Sfn

Character

Zababa was regarded as a war god.Template:Sfn However, inscription on kudurru (decorated boundary stones) and lists of deities in treaties indicate his importance was often considered secondary compared to Ninurta and Nergal.Template:Sfn In texts from the reign of Hammurabi of Babylon Zababa, rather than Ninurta, appears as the primary war god, which according to Walther Sallaberger represents a development reflecting the proximity between Babylon and his cult center, Kish.Template:Sfn His warlike character was reflected in the epithet qarrādum rabium, "great hero", though qarrādum ("hero was routinely used to refer to many warrior deities.Template:Sfn

The eagle was considered Zababa's symbolic animal, though it is unclear how the nature of this connection was understood.Template:Sfn On kudurru he was represented by a staff topped with an image of this bird.Template:Sfn

A constellation named after Zababa was recognized in Mesopotamian astronomy, and its individual stars, presumed to correspond to parts of modern Aquila, Ophiuchus and Serpens, could be referred to as parts of his body and clothing, with some of the attested examples including "Crown of Zababa", "Eye of Zababa" (Eta Ophiuchi), "Shoulder of Zababa", "Middle of Zababa" (Nu Ophiuchi), "Shin of Zababa" (Eta Serpentis) and "Foot of Zababa" (Lambda Aquilae).Template:Sfn

Associations with other deities

Family and court

Zababa could be regarded as a son of Enlil.Template:Sfn Walther Sallaberger argues that it can be considered an example of a broader pattern of identifying warlike city gods as his sons, with other examples including Ningirsu and Nergal.Template:Sfn In Assyria during the reign of Sennacherib Zababa started to be considered a son of Ashur instead.Template:Sfn Wilfred G. Lambert assumed that much like contemporary references to Ninlil as Ashur's wife and Ninurta as another of his sons it is an example of assigning Enlil's family members to him to strengthen his new identity as the "Assyrian Enlil".Template:Sfn A reference to Ashur being Zababa's father is known from Sennacherib's oracular inquiry meant to verify his parentage before the construction of a new temple dedicated to him and Bau in Assur, but this tradition is otherwise sparsely attested.Template:Sfn

Bau, originally the wife of Ningirsu,Template:Sfn could also be regarded as Zababa's wife.Template:Sfn An early reference to this tradition can be found in the Lament for Sumer and Ur.Template:Sfn In the god list An = Anum, Bau appears both in Zababa's (tablet V, line 48) and Ningirsu's (tablet V, line 56) sections.Template:Sfn From the Middle Babylonian period onward, pairing her with Zababa became common.Template:Sfn They appear as a couple in both Babylonian and Assyrian sources, for example in oath formulas and on kudurru.Template:Sfn The pairing of Zababa with Bau reflects a broader archetypal pattern of couples consisting of a warrior god and a medicine goddess.Template:Sfn Examples include Ningirsu and Bau, Ninisina and Pabilsaĝ, and Ninurta and Ninnibru.Template:Sfn

Joan Goodnick Westenholz argues that before the introduction of Bau to Kish in the Old Babylonian period Inanna of Kish (to be distinguished from Inanna of Uruk) was regarded as Zababa's spouse.Template:Sfn However, Ryan D. Winters points out that despite this assumption being commonly repeated in modern literature, no primary sources refer to them as a couple, and that texts where they appear together only affirm that both were both worshiped in Kish;Template:Efn he suggests it is not impossible that if a connection did exist between them, they might have equally likely been viewed as siblings in the local tradition instead.Template:Sfn Andrew R. George states that listing them together simply reflected the fact they shared the role of the tutelary deity of Kish.Template:Sfn

According to An = Anum, Papsukkal was regarded as Zababa's vizier (sukkal dza-ba4-ba4-ke4; tablet V, line 49).Template:Sfn Frans Wiggermann argues that while late sources refer to him as a son of Anu and descendant of Enmesharra, he might have originally been viewed as Zababa's son.Template:Sfn For uncertain reasons, Zababa's section in An = Anum also includes Ugur (tablet V, line 50), who fulfilled the analogous role in the court of Nergal.Template:Sfn

Two minor goddesses associated with Zababa's temple Edubba, collectively known as "Daughters of Edubba", were Iqbi-damiq ("she said 'it is fine!'") and Ḫussinni, ("Remember me!").Template:Sfn Pairs of so-called "divine daughters" such as them are also known from other temples of northern Babylonia, such as Emeslam in Kutha (Tadmuštum and Belet-ili), Eibbi-Anum in Dilbat (Ipte-bita and Belet-eanni), Ezida in Borsippa (Kanisurra and Gazbaba) and Esagil in Babylon (Katunna and Silluš-tab).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Wiggermann suggests that they pair from Kish might have been regarded as children of Zababa and his wife.Template:Sfn However, George instead assumes that all of the pairs of "divine daughters" were maidservants in the household of the major deity or deities of a given temple.Template:Sfn Wiggermann also argues that a further member of Zababa's entourage, Kūbu (a deity regarded as a stillborn infant), might have been his child as well.Template:Sfn

Udulu, "day of violent storm",Template:Sfn usually a title of Zababa and other war gods, could also be regarded as a minor god belonging to his court, and in this capacity could be depicted in the form of an eagle.Template:Sfn Wiggermann states he presumably functioned as an enforcer of Zababa's will, and compares him with Papsukkal, though he stresses the latter was not associated with birds of prey.Template:Sfn

Further members of Zababa's court are known from Late Babylonian texts from Babylon and Kish, and include the divine judge Mandanu, the Nergal-like minor god Luḫušû, and a number of deified weapons, such as Igalim, Shulshaga, Šaggāšu, Kami-tāmûšu ("who binds the one who swears by him"; already attested in the Old Babylonian period), Muštēšir-ḫabli, Kakku-Šazu, Kakku-SAĞ.NINNU (or Kakku-SAĞ.PIRIĞ), Sharur and Shargaz, some of which were also associated with other gods.Template:Sfn For instance, Igalim and Shulsaga were originally Ningirsu's sons, while Sharur and Shargaz - Ninurta's weapons.Template:Sfn

Identification with other Mesopotamian deities

Zababa's character has been compared to Ninurta's.Template:Sfn A degree of overlap is attested between their courts, and like Ninurta Zababa could be called the "crusher of stones" (dā’iš abnī), as attested in Bulluṭsa-rabi's Hymn to Gula.Template:Sfn Sometimes, as attested for example in the Epic of Anzû (tablet III, line 32), the two could be equated.Template:Sfn In the text KAR 142, the Archive of Mystic Heptads,Template:Sfn Zababa is listed as one of the "seven Ninurtas", though in this context this name is a generic designation for warlike deities.Template:Sfn In kudurru inscriptions and treaties, Zababa occurs separately from Ninurta, as a god of lesser importance.Template:Sfn

The Syncretic Hymn to Marduk (tablet BM 47406) refers to Zababa as "Marduk of warfare".Template:Sfn Beate Pongratz-Leisten argues that this reflects the absorption of other deities by the latter, and compares this process to the rise of Yahweh to prominence.Template:Sfn However, Spencer J. Allen suggests that similar statements might be metaphorical, and that their aim was not outright equating Marduk with other gods, but rather comparing him to them to portray him as equally capable as them.Template:Sfn In Zababa's case this would correspond to extolling Marduk as a similarly warlike figure.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn

Foreign war gods

In Bronze Age Anatolia, Zababa's name was used as a logogram ("Akkadogram") to represent the names of multiple other gods of similar warlike character.Template:Sfn Walther Sallaberger assumes that this convention developed due to the influence of the First Dynasty of Babylon.Template:Sfn Alice Mouton assumes that in Hattian and Hittite context Zababa's name designated Wurunkatte and less commonly Šulinkatte,Template:Efn in Hurrian Aštabi, Nupatik and Ḫešui, and in Luwian possibly Iyarri.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn However, according to Template:Ill interpreting dZA.BA4.BA4 as a logographic representation of Nupatik's name is erroneous, and in the Hurrian context it consistently refers to Ḫešui, with dLAMMA designating Nupatik instead.Template:Sfn According to Alfonso Archi Aštabi's name was written as dNIN.URTA in Hurrian sources.Template:Sfn However, Aštapinu, presumed to be a variant spelling of AštabiTemplate:Sfn is identified with both Zababa and Ninurta in the Mesopotamian god listTemplate:Sfn informally referred to as "shorter An = Anum" due to sharing its namesake's first line, but not its scope.Template:Sfn He is defined in it as the counterpart of these gods in Subartu, a common designation for northern areas, which according to Ryan D. Winters reflects the attested geographic distribution of references to his cult.Template:Sfn

Wouter Henkelman proposes that the theonym Nabbazabba known from the Persepolis Fortification Archive might be an Elamite derivative of Zababa's name, possibly to be interpreted as "the god Zabba".Template:Sfn

Worship

Third millennium BCE

Zababa was the tutelary god of the city of Kish, as already attested in the oldest known source mentioning him, an early inscribed plaque.Template:Sfn It dates to Early Dynastic II period (c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 2750-2600 BCE), and records prisoners of war most likely assigned to work on a date palm plantation and their points of origin.Template:Sfn Zababa is mentioned in the final section of the text, which contains a brief reference to Kish, where the document presumably originated.Template:Sfn

Based on archeological evidence it is assumed that a temple of Zababa already existed in Kish in the Early Dynastic period.Template:Sfn Later sources indicate it bore the ceremonial Sumerian name Edubba, "storage house".Template:SfnTemplate:Efn It could also be referred to as Emeteursag, "house worthy of the hero", though in later periods this ceremonial name was only used to a cella located within as opposed to the entire complex.Template:Sfn

Zababa was also known outside Kish, further south in lower Mesopotamia.Template:Sfn It is presumed that he was considered a major deity across the region in the Early Dynastic period.Template:Sfn A reference to him has been identified in an inscription of Uḫub, an Early Dynastic ruler (ensi) of Kish, discovered in Nippur.Template:Sfn

The seventeenth of the Zame Hymns from Abu Salabikh is dedicated to ZababaTemplate:Sfn and Kish.Template:Sfn It is one of the six hymns focused on deities of the northernmost part of lower Mesopotamia and the Diyala area, as opposed to southern or central parts of Lower Mesopotamia,Template:Sfn Kish is described in it as a "goring ox" (gu4 du7).Template:Sfn Walther Sallaberger interprets this as an allusion to Zababa's warlike character.Template:Sfn According to Template:Ill and Jan Lisman, it might also reflect the city's reputation as an early political power or indicate a connection between its name and the archaic cuneiform sign GIR3, "wild bull".Template:Sfn Despite his position in the Zame Hymns, Zababa is seemingly absent from the preserved fragments of the god list from Abu Salabikh.Template:Sfn However, it has been suggested that the entry dKIŠki is a logographic representation of his name reflecting his close association with Kish.Template:Sfn

Two doxologies invoking Zababa have also been identified in texts from Ebla.Template:Sfn Sallaberger argues that it is possible to speak of a broader pattern of cultural influence of Kish on Ebla, and that the city's tutelary god Kura might have been a Zababa-like figure.Template:Sfn However, according to Alfonso Archi it should be assumed that the references to Zababa in Eblaite texts were only a result of scribes faithfully copying texts originating elsewhere, as he is not attested in any other sources from this city.Template:Sfn

The thirty fifth of the Temple Hymns is dedicated to Zababa.Template:Sfn This composition has traditionally been attributed to Enheduanna, a daughter of Sargon of Akkad.Template:Sfn However, in the Sargonic period Zababa does not occur commonly in theophoric names even in Kish, and his cult is poorly documented in the subsequent Ur III period as well.Template:Sfn

Second millennium BCE

Old Babylonian period

In the Old Babylonian period Zababa continued to be worshiped in Kish both under the reign of an independent local dynasty and later under the First Dynasty of Babylon.Template:Sfn Ašdūni-iārim, one of the members of the former, referred to himself as a "favorite" (migir) of Zababa.Template:Sfn Zababa also occurs in oaths alongside another local ruler, Iawium,Template:Sfn but according to Anne Goddeeris this situation is unique and other legal texts from the same city mention swearing oaths by kings from the Manana Dynasty or rulers of other settlements.Template:Sfn

The highest ranked members of Zababa's clergy in Kish were the šangûm (temple administrator) and the gala-maḫ (chief gala).Template:Sfn The latter rank is attested in most temples of major city deities across Mesopotamia, and its holders had a wide range of duties, including overseeing other gala, as well as managing temple offices and prebends.Template:Sfn Only one person could hold the position of gala-maḫ of Zababa at a time.Template:Sfn Four holders are known by name: Ka-Inanna (possibly during the reign of Samsu-iluna), Mea’imriaĝu (during the reign of Ammi-Ditana), Nanna-šalasud (during the reigns of Ammi-Saduqa and Samsu-Ditana) and Abandasa (after the reign of Samsu-Ditana).Template:Sfn A community of nadītu dedicated to Zababa is attested as well.Template:Sfn

Multiple theophoric names invoking Zababa are known from Old Babylonian Kish.Template:Sfn Examples are also known from Sippar, though they are rare, and according to Rivkah Harris their bearers likely hailed from Kish, similarly to how Lagamal names point at an association with Dilbat and Numushda names - with Kazallu.Template:Sfn In addition to Zababa himself, his temple could be invoked in theophoric names, as evidenced by examples such as Rīš-Edubbim.Template:Sfn

There is evidence that the kings from the First Dynasty of Babylon showed a particular interest in Zababa.Template:Sfn However, no temple dedicated to him existed in Babylon.Template:Sfn Sumu-la-El of Babylon conquered Kish, and built the Emeteursag, which is first mentioned in one of his year formulas, for Zababa.Template:Sfn In the twenty-second year of his reign he rebuilt a ziggurat located in Kish which was dedicated jointly to Zababa and Inanna of Kish.Template:Sfn It bore the ceremonial name Eunirkitušmaḫ, "house, temple tower, exalted abode".Template:Sfn Hammurabi rebuilt the Emeteursag in the thirty-sixth year of his reign.Template:Sfn A hymn praising the same ruler refers to Zababa as his helper.Template:Sfn

Zababa seemingly regained some of his early importance across other regions of Mesopotamia starting with the reign of Warad-Sin of Larsa.Template:Sfn This ruler built a new temple dedicated to him in Ur, the Ekituššatenbi, "house, residence that soothes the heart", according to an inscription in order to celebrate the aid he received from this god in a struggle against his enemies.Template:Sfn Walther Sallaberger suggests that this construction project might have been an attempt to gain the favor of a god more closely associated with the kingdom of Babylon, a political rival of Larsa.Template:Sfn

Evidence for the worship of Zababa in Lagaba in the Old Babylonian period is available as well.Template:Sfn

Kassite and Isin II periods

In the Kassite period work on Zababa's temple has been undertaken during the reign of Kurigalzu I.Template:Sfn He is also attested in two theophoric names from Kassite Nippur.Template:Sfn Furthermore, he was one of the Mesopotamian gods who start to appear in the theophoric names of rulers from the Kassite dynasty after the conquests of Tukulti-Ninurta I, which constituted a change in naming patterns, as before only Enlil and Kassite deities are attested in this context.Template:Sfn The penultimate Kassite king bore the name Zababa-shuma-iddin.Template:Sfn

A ritual text from Babylon which according to Wilfred G. Lambert must document a tradition predating the reign of Nebuchadnezzar I indicates that Zababa, accompanied by Bau, represented Kish in this city during the akitu festival of Marduk, alongside the deities associated with Kutha (Nergal, Laṣ, Mamitu) and Borsippa (Nabu, Nanaya and Sutītu).Template:Sfn

A kudurru inscription of unknown provenance dated to the reign of Marduk-nadin-ahhe mentions Zababa after Anu, Enlil, Ea, Marduk, Nabu, Adad, Sin, Shamash, Ishtar, Gula, Ninurta and Nergal, and before Išḫara, Papsukkal and Anu Rabû.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn

Adad-apla-iddina from the Second Dynasty of Isin, who reigned over Babylonia in the early eleventh century BCE as an appointee of the Middle Assyrian king Ashur-bel-kala,Template:Sfn left behind an inscription dealing with renovations of Zababa's temple, which refers to it as Emeteursag.Template:Sfn

First millennium BCE

While the decades following the fall of the second dynasty of Isin are poorly documented, a reference to Zababa has been identified in a kudurru inscription from the reign of Nabû-mukin-apli from the middle of the tenth century BCE, in which he follows Anu, Enlil, Ea, Marduk, Zarpanit, Nabu, Sin, Shamash and Nergal, and precedes Adad, Ninurta, Gula and Ninmaḫ.Template:Sfn

A Neo-Assyrian list of shrines located in the Ešarra, the temple of Ashur in Assur,Template:Sfn indicates that one of them was dedicated to Zababa.Template:Sfn In the same period Zababa was also a major member of the local pantheon of Arbela.Template:Sfn A temple dedicated to him and Bau existed in this city.Template:Sfn At one point, the office of the šangû priest of Zababa and Bau in this city, as well as in Huzirina and Harran, was held by Qurdi-Nergal.Template:Sfn Eleanor Robson notes that in texts from an archive belonging to him and his family and students discovered in Huzirina these two deities occupy a central position.Template:Sfn

Both Neo-Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian sources record that one of the gates of Babylon was named after Zababa.Template:Sfn Presumably it was located on the road to his cult center, Kish.Template:Sfn It is presumed that it is identical with the "Kissian Gate" mentioned by Herodotus in his description of the city.Template:Sfn The street running through it was known as Zababa-muḫalliq-gārîšu,Template:Sfn "Zababa is the Destroyer of his Foes".Template:Sfn

Zababa was worshiped in Uruk in the Neo-Babylonian period, though he is not attested in any earlier sources from this city.Template:Sfn He was only a minor figure in the local pantheon,Template:Sfn but he nonetheless possessed his own independent sanctuary (ekurrātu).Template:Sfn Administrative texts mention a single priest in his service, a certain Ani-ili-taklak.Template:Sfn Paul-Alain Beaulieu states that there is no evidence that Zababa continued to be worshiped in Uruk in later periods,Template:Sfn but in a more recent publication Julia Krul points out that he is also attested there in the Seleucid period.Template:Sfn He is mentioned alongside gods such as Alammuš, Amurru, Girra, Šulpae, Lugal-irra and Meslamta-ea in the instructions for the akitu festival of Anu.Template:Sfn He is also mentioned in an inscription of a priest referring to himself as "Anu-uballiṭ, whose second name is Kephalon" in which he, Shamash, Adad and Sadarnunna are inquired about the preparation of a new statue of Ishtar.Template:Sfn However, he is not attested in theophoric names or in legal texts.Template:Sfn

A document from either the Neo-Babylonian period or later (BM 77433) mentions a temple of Zababa located in Tibira.Template:Sfn Despite the similarity of the names, it is now agreed that this city is not identical with Bad-tibira, well attested as a cult center of Dumuzi, and was instead located in the immediate proximity of Babylon.Template:Sfn

The last known reference to Zababa's Edubba in Kish is known from inscriptions of Nebuchadnezzar II, who rebuilt it jointly for him and Bau.Template:Sfn A fragmentary text dated to the reign of Artaxerxes I mentions an "akitu temple" (bīt a-ki-tu4) seemingly dedicated jointly to Zababa and Ninlil, which does not occur in any earlier sources.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn It is also known that Zababa continued to be worshiped in Kish during the reign of Alexander the Great.Template:Sfn He continued to be commonly invoked in the theophoric names of local inhabitants, much like in earlier periods.Template:Sfn

In the Seleucid period, Zababa's cult was transferred from Kish to Babylon, and he appears alongside Ninlil in texts from between 255 BCE and 94 BCE which indicate a temple dedicated to them was established in this city.Template:Sfn

Christa Müller-Kessler and Karlheinz Kessler argue that the fact Zababa is absent from early Mandaic texts, in contrast with deities such as Nanaya or Nergal, might indicate that he ceased to be worshiped by the end of the first millennium BCE, before the time of their composition.Template:Sfn

Mythology

Walther Sallaberger states that no myths focused on Zababa are known.Template:Sfn However, he is attested in literary texts as early as in the Early Dynastic period.Template:Sfn For example, one of the UD.GAL.NUN compositions has the form of dialogue between Zababa and Enlil.Template:Sfn However, it does not mention Kish, and describes the construction of the temple of Enlil in Nippur.Template:Sfn

Possibly due to the early importance of Kish as a political center, Zababa is referenced in a number of legends about the rulers of the Akkadian Empire.Template:Sfn A fictional letter attributed to Sargon which belonged to the curriculum of scribal schools mentions Zababa alongside Shamash, Ilaba and Annunitum as one of the deities who oblige the king's allies to assist him in a campaign against Purushanda in Anatolia.Template:Sfn Furthermore, Sargon's adversary known from a variety of literary texts, the legendary king of Kish Ur-Zababa, bore a theophoric name invoking this god which can be translated as "man of Zababa".Template:SfnTemplate:Efn In an epic dealing with Naram-Sin's siege of Apishal, Zababa is said to be one of the deities accompanying this king during his campaigns.Template:Sfn

In the myth Urash and MardukTemplate:Efn Zababa is mentioned in a damaged section alongside his cult center Kish.Template:Sfn This composition is only known from a single Late Babylonian copy from Ur,Template:Sfn but according to Wilfred G. Lambert it might have been originally composed in Dilbat in the Old Babylonian or Kassite period.Template:Sfn

A reference to Zababa taking residence in Kish is present in a sequence listing tutelary gods of different cities in the myth Enmesharra's Defeat.Template:Sfn It is known only from a single copy, which has been dated to the Seleucid or Parthian period, and most likely originated in Babylon.Template:Sfn

Notes

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References

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External links