-
Imzuanna, also
known as Ninzuanna, was a
Mesopotamian goddess worshiped in
Marad as the wife of the city's
tutelary god, Lugal-Marada. She is attested...
- god who
served as the
tutelary deity of the city of Marad. His wife was
Imzuanna. He was
seemingly conflated with
another local god, Lulu.
There is also...
-
Ereshkigal Ezina Gatumdag Geshtinanna Gula
Gunura Hegir-Nuna
Hedimeku Hušbišag
Imzuanna Inanna Kanisurra Ki Kusu Lammašaga
Lisin Mamu
Manungal Nammu Nanaya Nanshe...
- Baal not only with each other, but also with the
Mesopotamian goddess Imzuanna. As her
character was dissimilar,
Aaron Tugendhaft has
suggested that this...
-
goddess Imzuanna is ****umed to be an
example of
scribal word play,
rather than
theological speculation. The
first cuneiform sign in
Imzuanna's name, IM...
- Ninurta,
right behind Lugal-Marada (the city god of Marad) and his wife
Imzuanna. The
trilingual Sumero-Hurrian-Ugaritic
edition from
Ugarit equates her...
- the Manungal, the
goddess of prisons. Ili-mīšar Mišaru?
Imzuanna Ili-mīšar, the
sukkal of
Imzuanna, is
known from the god list An = Anum. It has been proposed...
- a
sequence of
deities invoked to
break a curse,
after Lugal-Marada and
Imzuanna, and
before Shuzianna, Šulpae, Sadarnunna, Belet-ili, Sud,
Siris and Ningishzida...
- list An = Anum (tablet V, line 29) as the
sukkal (attendant deity) of
Imzuanna (dNi-zu-an-na)
might be a
variant of Mīšaru.
Daniel Schwemer notes that...
-
Occasionally Ninazu's
spouse Ningirida could be seen as an
aspect of Gula, as did
Imzuanna, the
spouse of Lugal-Marada. A
similar ****ociation
between Gula and Ninsun...