Enheduana
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The acádia Enheduana lived approximately in 2,300 A.C. (generally specified as the period between 2,280 and 2,200 A.C.), being the first princess in history to take the rank of High Priestess, serving to the god of the moon Nana[citation needed], in the city would Suméria of Ur. It was also the first author of universal literature, had to the fact of, although to have other authors (as, for example, the scribes), to be Enheduana the first one to sign its workmanships. It frequently is identified as son of king Sargão of the Acádia, but such attribution does not mean that it was, in fact, its descendant. It is treated, more probably, of a heading honorífco regarding which the historians still speculate. It is known as the author of 42 relative hymns the acádios temples in different cities and three hymns (in majority narrative poems) the Inana, of which she has fragmentos (Ninmeshara, Inninshagurra and Nimehussa), besides containing the workmanship "the Ascension of Inana" (or "the Wakening of Inana"). Enheduana generally is considered as carrying of enormous erudição. The first archaeological test of its existence consists of an alabaster record (today located in the Museum of the University of Pensilvânia, in the United States), discovered for Sir Leonard Woolley in 1925.