- and it is
possible she
could serve as a
minor healing deity herself.
Ninigizibara's name most
likely means "well
regarded lady" in Sumerian.
Another possibility...
-
deities ****ociated with her in the Isin god list. She is
placed between Ninigizibara, her
deified harp, and Ninḫinuna, a
messenger deity ****ociated with her...
- in many incantations, for
example against scorpion bite.
Ninigizibara Umma, Uruk
Ninigizibara was a
deified harp who
could be
regarded as an
advisor of...
-
Wikimedia Commons has
media related to
Lyres from Ur.
Music of
Mesopotamia Ninigizibara 1929 in
archaeology Kinnor,
ancient Hebrew form of a lyre or kithara...
-
themselves were
regarded as
minor deities and
given proper names, such as
Ninigizibara. Its use in
secular occasions included festivals, warfare, and funerals—among...
-
plaque which shows two
creatures playing in this manner.
Lyres of Ur
Ninigizibara Music of
Mesopotamia de Schauensee,
Maude (2002). Two
lyres from Ur....
-
Ningirida Ningirima Ninhursag (Aruru, Damgalnuna, Damkina, Ninmah, Nintu)
Ninigizibara Ninimma Ninisina Ninkarrak Ninkasi Ninkurra Ninlil Nin-MAR.KI Ninmena...
- of
other female deities,
among them Nintinugga, Ninkarrak,
Nanshe and
Ninigizibara. Joan
Goodnick Westenholz notes that
while syncretism between different...
- Ninarali, a
goddess ****ociated with the underworld,
harpist goddesses Ninigizibara and Ninḫinuna, and
sometimes Ninshubur.
Ninisina also
developed ****ociations...
-
identified with Gula are Nintinugga, Ninmadiriga, Nanshe, Ninkarrak,
Ninigizibara, Bau, Ungal-Nibru,
Ninsun and Ninlil, who were all
originally fully separate...