-
Ḫabūrītum (dḫa-bu-ri-tum) was a
goddess of the
river Khabur worshiped in
ancient Syria. She was
incorporated into the
Mesopotamian pantheon in the Ur...
-
remarks that
Lambert mistakenly ****umed
Ishara is one and the same as
Haburitum,
goddess of the
river Habur, who also
appears in
Mesopotamian texts in...
-
connection between Humban and
Humbaba is now
regarded as implausible.
Ḫabūrītum Sikani Ḫabūrītum was a
goddess understood as
either "she of Ḫabur" (either the...
- this
goddess as "Inanna
Ḫabūrītum,"
though this
might be an
instance of syncretism.
Wilfred G.
Lambert ****umed that
Ḫabūrītum and Išḫara were one and...
- same as
Ḫabūrītum, a
goddess who
represented the
river Khabur who is also
attested in ****ociation with
Dagan in Mesopotamia. He
notes that
Ḫabūrītum and Išḫara...
-
Other examples include Belet Dalatim, Belet-Šuḫnir, Belet-Terraban,
Ḫabūrītum, Šauška, Dagan, Išḫara and Shuwala. Nigagia, "mistress of the cloister"...
-
alongside the dyad of
Kubaba and
Adamma in
texts from Kizzuwatna.
Ḫabūrītum Sikani Syrian Ḫabūrītum was a
goddess representing the
river Khabur.
Based on the...
- Ur III period, a
deity named Malkum is
attested alongside the
goddess Ḫabūrītum. It has been
proposed that this name
refers to an
underworld deity derived...
- example, Irḫan
represented the
western branch of the
Euphrates while Ḫabūrītum,
worshiped in the
court of the
Third Dynasty of Ur (though
likely originally...
-
possible Nabarbi was
identified both with the “lady of Nagar” and with
Ḫabūrītum, a
goddess ****ociated with the
river Khabur similarly known from Mesopotamian...