(Untitled)

Jan 21, 2010 09:40

Some surprising revelations about Mesopotamian celestial deities. *loooong whistle*

ETA much later: Here's the source of the trouble: the author has confused Sin's daughter Nana/Nanaia with Sin's own Sumerian name, Nanna. (And the male Sumerian sun-god Utu with the goddess of spinning, Uttu.) Her thesis about "Sin-Nana" is heavily drawn from this Read more... )

goddess: nanaia, culture: mesopotamian, goddess: inanna/ishtar, cobblers!

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drhoz January 22 2010, 12:17:47 UTC
?

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seeingred January 22 2010, 23:04:26 UTC
A vanity-pressed collection of bizarre claims. The Sumerian moon god Nanna was equated to the Akkadian moon god Sin, and was the father of Inanna. The author thinks Nanna is Sin's daughter, and was combined with him into a hermaphroditic deity, and that this has something to do with sun worshipping patriarchy taking over from moon worshipping matriarchy. I suppose if that's your thesis you've got to insist that the moon god was actually a moon goddess. I haven't looked through to see if she's also reversed the genders of other male moon gods such as Thoth and Khonsu or female sun gods such as Arinnitti. What's frustrating is that there is real evidence of a gradual loss of women's and goddess' importance and power in Mesopotamia, including some possible gender-switches of gods, but it doesn't fit neatly into a lunar vs solar theory. Bah. That's what I get for randomly Googling stuff.

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drhoz January 23 2010, 09:37:11 UTC
Ah, thought that was it

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