When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Marduk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marduk

    God lists from the Old Babylonian period sometimes place him within the circle of Enki. [30] TCL 15 10 lists Asalluhi and Marduk as separate gods, but close together in the list. Lambert suggests that this may be an intrusion by another scribe, and that the editor scribe did so under the belief that Marduk and Asalluhi were the same god. [ 30 ]

  3. List of Mesopotamian deities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Mesopotamian_deities

    The major deities of the Mesopotamian pantheon were believed to participate in the "assembly of the gods", [6] through which the gods made all of their decisions. [6] This assembly was seen as a divine counterpart to the semi-democratic legislative system that existed during the Third Dynasty of Ur ( c. 2112 BC – c. 2004 BC).

  4. Family tree of the Babylonian gods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Family_tree_of_the...

    The following is a family tree of gods and goddesses from Babylonian mythology. Apsu [1] Tiamat: Mummu [2] Lahmu: Lahamu: ... An Anthology of Texts and Pictures ...

  5. Ishtar Gate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ishtar_Gate

    The front of the gate has a low-relief design with a repeated pattern of images of two of the major gods of the Babylonian pantheon. Marduk, the national deity and chief god, with his servant dragon Mušḫuššu, is depicted as a dragon with a snake-like head and tail, a scaled body of a lion, and powerful talons for back feet. Marduk was seen ...

  6. Babylonian religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babylonian_religion

    Many Babylonian deities, myths, and religious writings are singular to that culture; for example, the uniquely Babylonian deity, Marduk, replaced Enlil as the head of the mythological pantheon. The Enûma Eliš , a creation myth epic was an original Babylonian work.

  7. Bel (mythology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bel_(mythology)

    A god named Bel was the chief-god of Palmyra, Syria in pre-Hellenistic times, being worshipped alongside the gods Aglibol and Yarhibol. [3] Originally, he was known as Bol, [4] after the Northwestern Semitic word Ba'al [5] (usually used to refer to the god Hadad), until the cult of Bel-Marduk spread to Palmyra and by 213 BC, Bol was renamed to Bel. [4]

  8. Burney Relief - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burney_Relief

    A static, frontal image is typical of religious images intended for worship. Symmetric compositions are common in Mesopotamian art when the context is not narrative. [nb 13] Many examples have been found on cylinder seals. Three-part arrangements of a god and two other figures are common, but five-part arrangements exist as well.

  9. Statue of Marduk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statue_of_Marduk

    Going by the Enûma Eliš, the Babylonian creation myth, Marduk was the son of Enki, the Mesopotamian god of wisdom, and rose to prominence during a great battle between the gods. The myth tells how the universe originated as a chaotic realm of water in which there originally were two primordial deities, Tiamat (salt water, female) and Abzu ...