-
Ilabrat was a
Mesopotamian god who in some
cases was
regarded as the
sukkal (attendant deity) of the sky god Anu.
Evidence from the Old ****yrian period...
- male,
possibly due to
syncretism with
other divine messengers, such as
Ilabrat. No
certain information about her
genealogy is
present in any
known sources...
- who
could be
placed in the same role was
Ilabrat. In
texts from the
second millennium BCE,
Ninshubur and
Ilabrat coexisted and in at
least some
cases Ninshubur's...
- (attendant) is the
goddess Ninshubur,
later conflated with the male
deities Ilabrat and Papsukkal.
Inanna was
worshipped in
Sumer at
least as
early as the...
-
millennium BCE, and due to
conflation with
Ninshubur (and by
extension Ilabrat).
Frans Wiggermann notes that it
would be
plausible for
Papsukkal to be...
-
closely ****ociated with the
kings of the
Akkadian Empire.
Ilabrat ****ur, a town near Nuzi
Ilabrat was the sukkal, or
personal attendant, of Anu. He appears...
- Iddin-Sin
sends the
following message: May the gods Shamash,
Marduk and
Ilabrat keep you
forever in good
health for my sake. From year to year, the clothes...
-
advisor (tamlaku) of Apsu. He
could be
sometimes equated with
Papsukkal or
Ilabrat, who are well
known as
servant deities. However, it is not
certain if a...
- his
brothers (27 texts). The
archives of Ea-dāpin (10 texts) and Ibbi-
Ilabrat (15 texts) can be
dated to the
later part of the
reign of Sumu-la-El of...
- one of the two
sukkals of the latter, the
other being Lugal-mea.
Ilabrat Anu
Ilabrat was a god who
either came to be ****ociated with
masculine Ninshubur...