-
Kusarikku ("Bull-Man") was an
ancient Mesopotamian mythological demon shown in
artistic representation from the
earliest (late Uruk period)
times with...
- was hung on the beam of Ninurta's
chariot (lines 55–63). Bull of
Heaven Kusarikku Lam****u
Ninlil Sumerian religion Anzû "The
Electronic Text
Corpus of Sumerian...
- ('Scorpion-Man'), Umū dabrūtu ('Violent Storms'), Kulullû ('Fish-Man'), and
Kusarikku ('Bull-Man').
Tiamat was in
possession of the
Tablet of Destinies, and...
-
replacing that of a human. He
appears in
later iconography paired with
Kusarikku, "Bull-Man", a
similar anthropomorphic character, as
attendants to the...
-
other monsters, for
example mušḫuššu, bašmu (a type of
mythical snake),
kusarikku (bison-men ****ociated with Shamash) or Ugallu. In god lists, a singular...
-
statues (one male and one female)
guarded the
temple of Nabu.
Kusarikku Utu/Shamash
Kusarikku ("bison man") was a
creature depicted as a human-faced bison...
-
horns of a goat, the body of a man, and
animalistic facial features.
Kusarikku – A
demon with the head, arms, and
torso of a
human and the ears, horns...
- is
pictured twice, once by a
kusarikku holding a spade, and once with a
marru or t****eled
spade in
front of the
kusarikku. Ea may be
represented both by...
- Ishmekarab, who
could also be ****ociated with
Inshushinak and Lagamal.
Kusarikku (bull-men, or, as
argued by
Frans Wiggermann, bison-men) were frequently...
- S p. 80). “Venomous Snake” (Bašmu), “hairy one” (Laḫmu), “Bull-Man” (
Kusarikku), “Big-Weather Beast” (Ugallu), “Mad Lion” (Uridimmu), “Fish-Man” (Kulullû)...