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Mesopotamian Religion

Mesopotamian Religion

Overview

Mesopotamian religion was the polytheistic belief system of Sumer, Akkad, Babylonia, and Assyria, practiced from ~4000 BCE until supplanted by Christianity and Islam. It profoundly influenced later Near Eastern religions.

Key Facts

  • Period: ~4000 BCE ~100 CE
  • Type: Polytheistic
  • Sacred sites: Ziggurats in every major city
  • Key texts: Enuma Elish (creation epic), Epic of Gilgamesh, Descent of Inanna

Major Deities

  • An/Anu: Sky god, father of the gods
  • Enlil: God of wind and storms, chief deity of Nippur
  • Enki/Ea: God of wisdom and fresh water
  • Inanna/Ishtar: Goddess of love, war, and fertility
  • Marduk: Patron god of Babylon, supreme deity in the Enuma Elish
  • Shamash/Utu: Sun god and god of justice 1

Key Concepts

  • Ziggurats: Temple platforms connecting heaven and earth
  • Divination: Extispicy (reading entrails), astrology, dream interpretation
  • Flood narrative: Utnapishtim in the Epic of Gilgamesh (parallels Noah) 2
  • Afterlife: Gloomy underworld (Kur/Irkalla) for all, regardless of virtue


Review Queue

  • @q[temporal] Line 10: "Period: ~4000 BCE ~100 CE" - when was this true?

  • @q[temporal] Line 11: "Type: Polytheistic" - when was this true?

  • @q[temporal] Line 12: "Sacred sites: Ziggurats in every major city" - when was this true?

  • @q[temporal] Line 13: "Key texts: Enuma Elish (creation epic), Epic of Gilgamesh, *Descent of In..." - when was this true?

  • @q[temporal] Line 16: "An/Anu: Sky god, father of the gods" - when was this true?

  • @q[temporal] Line 17: "Enlil: God of wind and storms, chief deity of Nippur" - when was this true?

  • @q[temporal] Line 18: "Enki/Ea: God of wisdom and fresh water" - when was this true?

  • @q[temporal] Line 19: "Inanna/Ishtar: Goddess of love, war, and fertility" - when was this true?

  • @q[temporal] Line 20: "Marduk: Patron god of Babylon, supreme deity in the Enuma Elish" - when was this true?

  • @q[temporal] Line 21: "Shamash/Utu: Sun god and god of justice 1 " - when was this true?

  • @q[temporal] Line 24: "Ziggurats: Temple platforms connecting heaven and earth" - when was this true?

  • @q[temporal] Line 25: "Divination: Extispicy (reading entrails), astrology, dream interpretation" - when was this true?

  • @q[temporal] Line 26: "Flood narrative: Utnapishtim in the Epic of Gilgamesh (parallels Noah) 2 " - when was this true?

  • @q[temporal] Line 27: "Afterlife: Gloomy underworld (Kur/Irkalla) for all, regardless of virtue" - when was this true?

  • @q[missing] Line 10: "Period: ~4000 BCE ~100 CE" - what is the source?

  • @q[missing] Line 11: "Type: Polytheistic" - what is the source?

  • @q[missing] Line 12: "Sacred sites: Ziggurats in every major city" - what is the source?

  • @q[missing] Line 13: "Key texts: Enuma Elish (creation epic), Epic of Gilgamesh, *Descent of In..." - what is the source?

  • @q[missing] Line 16: "An/Anu: Sky god, father of the gods" - what is the source?

  • @q[missing] Line 17: "Enlil: God of wind and storms, chief deity of Nippur" - what is the source?

  • @q[missing] Line 18: "Enki/Ea: God of wisdom and fresh water" - what is the source?

  • @q[missing] Line 19: "Inanna/Ishtar: Goddess of love, war, and fertility" - what is the source?

  • @q[missing] Line 20: "Marduk: Patron god of Babylon, supreme deity in the Enuma Elish" - what is the source?

  • @q[missing] Line 24: "Ziggurats: Temple platforms connecting heaven and earth" - what is the source?

  • @q[missing] Line 25: "Divination: Extispicy (reading entrails), astrology, dream interpretation" - what is the source?

  • @q[missing] Line 27: "Afterlife: Gloomy underworld (Kur/Irkalla) for all, regardless of virtue" - what is the source?

  • @q[stale] Line 21: "Shamash/Utu: Sun god and god of justice 1 " - Bottéro source from 2001 may be outdated, is this still accurate?

  • @q[stale] Line 26: "Flood narrative: Utnapishtim in the Epic of Gilgamesh (parallels Noah) 2 " - Dalley source from 2000 may be outdated, is this still accurate?


  1. Bottéro, J. Religion in Ancient Mesopotamia (University of Chicago Press, 2001) ↩︎

  2. Dalley, S. Myths from Mesopotamia (Oxford, 2000) ↩︎