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  2. Babylonian religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babylonian_religion

    Babylonian religion is the religious practice of Babylonia. Babylonia's mythology was largely influenced by its Sumerian counterparts and was written on clay tablets inscribed with the cuneiform script derived from Sumerian cuneiform. The myths were usually either written in Sumerian or Akkadian. Some Babylonian texts were translations into ...

  3. Babylonian Religion and Mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babylonian_religion_and...

    In 1898, another scholar Morris Jastrow Jr. published The Religion of Babylonia and Assyria. The book explores the gods, myths, and rituals at the heart of Babylonian and Assyrian culture, highlighting major deities such as Marduk, Ishtar, and Enlil. [7] It also discusses religious practices, including temple worship, sacrifices, and divination.

  4. Ancient Mesopotamian religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Mesopotamian_religion

    The god Marduk and his dragon Mušḫuššu. Ancient Mesopotamian religion encompasses the religious beliefs (concerning the gods, creation and the cosmos, the origin of man, and so forth) and practices of the civilizations of ancient Mesopotamia, particularly Sumer, Akkad, Assyria and Babylonia between circa 6000 BC [1] and 400 AD.

  5. Religions of the ancient Near East - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religions_of_the_ancient...

    The astral theology of the Babylonian-Assyrian religion, while thus bearing the ear-marks of a system devised by the priests, succeeded in assimilating the beliefs which represented the earlier attempts to systematize the more popular aspects of the religion, and in this way a unification of diverse elements was secured that led to interpreting ...

  6. Worship of heavenly bodies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worship_of_heavenly_bodies

    This group still held on to a pagan belief related to Babylonian religion, in which Mesopotamian gods had already been venerated in the form of planets and stars since antiquity. [28] According to Ibn al-Nadim , our only source for these star-worshipping 'Sabians of the Marshes', they "follow the doctrines of the ancient Aramaeans [ ʿalā ...

  7. Babylonia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babylonia

    It retained the Sumerian language for religious use (as did Assyria which also shared the same Mesopotamian religion as Babylonia), but already by the time Babylon was founded, this was no longer a spoken language, having been wholly subsumed by Akkadian. The earlier Akkadian and Sumerian traditions played a major role in the descendant ...

  8. Sumerian religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumerian_religion

    Sumerian religion was the religion practiced by the people of Sumer, the first literate civilization found in recorded history and based in ancient Mesopotamia, and what is modern day Iraq. The Sumerians widely regarded their divinities as responsible for all matters pertaining to the natural and social orders of their society.

  9. Nabu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nabu

    Nabu (Akkadian: cuneiform: 𒀭𒀝 Nabû, [1] Jewish Babylonian Aramaic: נְבוֹ‏, romanized: Nəḇo [2]) is the Babylonian patron god of literacy, the rational arts, scribes, and wisdom. He is associated with the classical planet Mercury in Babylonian astronomy. [3]