In many regions of the ancient Near East, not least in Upper Mesopotamia, Syria and Anatolia where agriculture relied mainly on rainfall, storm-gods ranked among the most prominent gods in the local panthea or were even regarded as divine kings, ruling over the gods and bestowing kingship on the human ruler. While the Babylonian and Assyrian storm-god never held the highest position among the gods, he too belongs to the group of 'great gods' through most periods of Mesopotamian history. Given the many cultural contacts and the longevity of traditions in the ancient Near East only a study that takes into account all relevant periods, regions and text-groups can further our understanding of the different ancient Near Eastern storm-gods. The s...
Translation of one of the mythological text narrating the myth of storm god with mugawar fragments b...
In this study, Michael Hundley explores the diverse deities of ancient Near Eastern and biblical lit...
Bibliography: p. [703]-738.The land and the people -- General traits of the old Babylonian pantheon ...
In many regions of the ancient Near East, not least in Upper Mesopotamia, Syria and Anatolia where a...
In many regions of the ancient Near East, not least in Upper Mesopotamia, Syria and Anatolia where a...
References to divine weapons are found in several mythological texts from the ancient Near East. The...
The presented paper deals with the flood motive in the literature of ancient Mesopotamia from the 2n...
The Storm-Gods of western Elam examines glyptic evidence for storm gods in Elam during the second mi...
The Sumerians organized their gods, which were deified natural forces as conceived, into a systemati...
Although many scholarly contributions have been made concerning the subject of the Weathergod, the m...
Despite widespread agreement that narratives of divine combat with monstrous antagonists were politi...
Societies of the Ancient Near East developed various complex pantheons that were frequently modified...
The topic of the Anatolian panthea in the Bronze Age deals with Hattian, Hittite, Palaean, Luwian an...
Šamuḫa was an ancient cultic center and regional capital in the Hittite state. Thanks to recently ex...
Translation of one of the mythological text narrating the myth of storm god with mugawar fragments i...
Translation of one of the mythological text narrating the myth of storm god with mugawar fragments b...
In this study, Michael Hundley explores the diverse deities of ancient Near Eastern and biblical lit...
Bibliography: p. [703]-738.The land and the people -- General traits of the old Babylonian pantheon ...
In many regions of the ancient Near East, not least in Upper Mesopotamia, Syria and Anatolia where a...
In many regions of the ancient Near East, not least in Upper Mesopotamia, Syria and Anatolia where a...
References to divine weapons are found in several mythological texts from the ancient Near East. The...
The presented paper deals with the flood motive in the literature of ancient Mesopotamia from the 2n...
The Storm-Gods of western Elam examines glyptic evidence for storm gods in Elam during the second mi...
The Sumerians organized their gods, which were deified natural forces as conceived, into a systemati...
Although many scholarly contributions have been made concerning the subject of the Weathergod, the m...
Despite widespread agreement that narratives of divine combat with monstrous antagonists were politi...
Societies of the Ancient Near East developed various complex pantheons that were frequently modified...
The topic of the Anatolian panthea in the Bronze Age deals with Hattian, Hittite, Palaean, Luwian an...
Šamuḫa was an ancient cultic center and regional capital in the Hittite state. Thanks to recently ex...
Translation of one of the mythological text narrating the myth of storm god with mugawar fragments i...
Translation of one of the mythological text narrating the myth of storm god with mugawar fragments b...
In this study, Michael Hundley explores the diverse deities of ancient Near Eastern and biblical lit...
Bibliography: p. [703]-738.The land and the people -- General traits of the old Babylonian pantheon ...