- Sippar-
Amnanum (also Sippar-Annunitum, Sippar-rabum, Sippar-durum, and Sippar-Anunit ),
modern Tell ed-Der (also Teil ed-Der) in
Baghdad Governorate,...
- city's
ancient name, Sippar,
could also
refer to its
sister city, Sippar-
Amnanum (located at the
modern site of Tell ed-Der); a more
specific designation...
- deity. She was the
tutelary goddess of the
cities of
Akkad and Sippar-
Amnanum,
though she was also
worshiped elsewhere in Mesopotamia. As
attested in...
- certainly,
identified with the twin
cities of
Sippar Yahrurum and
Sippar Amnanum on the
banks of the Euphrates,
north of Babylon. The name
Adrammelech probably...
- from King Sîn-kāšid of Uruk (1801–1771 BC), who
called himself “King of
Amnanum” and was a
member of the
Amorite tribal group the “Binu-Jamina” (single...
- (Awal?)
Tutub (Khafajah) Der (Tell Aqar)
Sippar (Tell Abu Habbah) Sippar-
Amnanum (Tell ed-Der) Tell
Uqair (Urum?)
Kutha (Tell Ibrahim)
Jemdet Nasr (NI.RU)...
- from the
Yaminite tribe of
Amnanum. Sîn-kāšid, the
founder of the 6th
Dynasty of Uruk, took as a
title "King of the
Amnanum (Tribe)" (lugal am-na-nu-um)...
- Al Yusufiyah,
Mulla Fayyaz, Sippar-
Amnanum and Al Mahmoudiyah...
- the
mother of Aphrodite, was a
calque for Antu. Anunītu
Agade and Sippar-
Amnanum Annunitum ("the
martial one") was
initially an
epithet of Ishtar, but later...
- same
royal lineage of the
Amnānum tribe, an oft
repeated claim in his
inscriptions with his
title of "king of the
Amnānum," and
married a
daughter of...