Ušumgallu
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Ušumgallu or Ushumgallu[1] (Sumerian: ušum.gal, "Great Dragon")[3] was one of the three horned snakes in Akkadian mythology, along with the Bashmu and Mushmahhu. Usually described as a lion-dragon demon, it has been somewhat speculatively identified with the four-legged, winged dragon of the late 3rd millennium BC.
Mythology
Tiamat is said to have “clothed the raging lion-dragons with fearsomeness” in the Epic of Creation, Enuma Elish. The god Nabû was described as “he who tramples the lion-dragon” in the hymn to Nabû.[6] The late neo-Assyrian text “Myth of the Seven Sages" recalls: “The fourth (of the seven apkallu’s, “sages,” is) Lu-Nanna, (only) two-thirds Apkallu, who drove the ušumgallu-dragon from É-ninkarnunna, the temple of Ištar of Šulgi.”[7]
Aššur-nāṣir-apli II placed golden icons of ušumgallu at the pedestal of Ninurta.[8] Its name became a royal and divine epithet, for example: ušumgal kališ parakkī, “unrivaled ruler of all the sanctuaries.”[9] Marduk is called “the ušumgallu-dragon of the great heavens.”
See also
- Dragon, killed by Ninurta
- Seven-headed serpent, killed by Ninurta
- Anzû, a massive bird whose death was sometimes credited to Ninurta
References
- ↑ Syllablized as Ú-šum-gal-lu.[2]
- ↑ ušumgallu, CAD U/W, pp. 330–331.
- ↑ Wiggermann instead proposes "prime venomous snake”.[4] Winter translated it as "predator".[5]
- ↑ F. A. M. Wiggermann (1992). Mesopotamian Protective Spirits: The Ritual Texts. Styx Publications. p. 167.
- ↑ Irene Winter (2009). On Art in the Ancient Near East: Of the First Millennium B.C.E, Volume 1. Brill. pp. 28–29.
- ↑ KAR 104, 29.
- ↑ E. Reiner (1961). "The Etiological Myth of the "Seven Sages"". Orientalia (30): 1–11.
- ↑ A. Leo Oppenheim (2011). "Assyrian and Babylonian Historical Texts: The Banquet of Ashurnasirpal II". In James Bennett Pritchard. The Ancient Near East: An Anthology of Texts and Pictures. Princeton University Press. p. 253.
- ↑ Kyle Greenwood (2011). "A Shuilla: Marduk 2". In Alan Lenzi. Reading Akkadian prayers and hymns : an introduction. SBL. pp. 317, 323.