-
Ninegal (also
spelled Ninegalla) or
Belat Ekalli (Belet-
ekalli) was a
Mesopotamian goddess ****ociated with palaces. Both her
Sumerian and
Akkadian name...
-
interpreting omens. The
magnates included the
offices masennu (treasurer), nāgir
ekalli (palace herald), rab šāqê (chief cupbearer), rab ša-rēši (chief officer/eunuch)...
-
prince of the
Adaside dynasty and
palace official with the
title ša pān
ekalli. He is
explicitly identified in a
letter as the "son of Shalmaneser", a...
- Addu (Hadad) and
Belet Ekalli (Ninegal). In a
letter Zimri-Lim's wife Šibtu
enumerated Dagan, Shamash, Itūr-Mēr,
Belet Ekalli and Addu as "the allies...
- on the throne". The
queens of the Neo-****yrian
Empire were
titled issi
ekalli,
which could be
abbreviated to sēgallu, both
terms meaning "Woman of the...
- The
queen (****yrian: issi
ekalli or sēgallu, lit. 'Woman of the Palace') of the Neo-****yrian
Empire was the
consort of the Neo-****yrian king.
Though the...
- she
appears near the end of the list of
divine witnesses,
between Belet-
ekalli and Išḫara. She is
among the
deities depicted in the Yazılıkaya sanctuary...
-
finds parallel in
formulas aimed at
other goddesses, for
example Belet-
ekalli, in
connection with
their respective husbands. Bull of
Heaven The Bull of...
- muršānu ܘܪܫܢܐ noun "wood dove, pigeon" amuriqānu ܡܪܝܩܢܐ noun "jaundice" arad
ekalli ܐܪܕܟܠܐ noun "architect, builder" arru ܐܪܐ noun "decoy bird" asītu ܐܫܝܬܐ...
-
MUNUS É.GAL (woman of the palace). In ****yrian, this term was
rendered issi
ekalli,
later abbreviated to sēgallu. The text
reads "stele of Shammuramat, queen...