Ningishzida

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The "libation vase of Gudea" with the dragon Mushussu, dedicated to Ningishzida (21st century BC short chronology). The caduceus is interpreted as depicting the god himself.

Ningishzida (sum: dnin-g̃iš-zid-da) is a Mesopotamian deity of the underworld. His name in Sumerian is translated as "lord of the good tree"[1] by Thorkild Jacobsen.

In Sumerian mythology, he appears in Adapa's myth as one of the two guardians of Anu's celestial palace, alongside Dumuzi. He was sometimes depicted as a serpent with a human head.

Lagash had a temple dedicated to Ningishzida, and Gudea, patesi of Lagash in the 21st century BC (short chronology), was one of his devotees. In the Louvre, there is a famous green steatite vase carved for king Gudea of Lagash, dedicated by its inscription: "To the god Ningiszida, his god Gudea, Ensi[citation needed] (governor) of Lagash, for the prolongation of his life, has dedicated this".

Ningishzida is sometimes the son of Ninazu and Ningiridda, even though the myth Ningishzidda's journey to the netherworld suggests he is the son of Ereshkigal.[2] Following an inscription found at Lagash, he was the son of Anu, the heavens.[3]

His wife is Azimua[4] and his sister is Amashilama. He was one of the ancestors of Gilgamesh.

Ningishzida is the earliest known symbol of snakes twining (some say copulation) around an axial rod. It predates the Caduceus of Hermes, the Rod of Asclepius and the staff of Moses by more than a millennium.[5] One Greek myth of origin of the caduceus is part of the story of Tiresias, who found two snakes copulating and killed the female with his staff. Although Wadjet 'the Green One', the serpent Goddess of Lower Egypt from the Pre-dynastic period demonstrates the earliest known representation of a single serpent entwined around a pole – in this case a papyrus reed (refer to first glyph): Wadjet Hieroglyph

The Adapa myth mentions Ningizzida and Tammuz (or Dumuzi) and refers to the serpent god as male.

In popular culture

The god appears in the Simon Necronomicon under the spelling Ninnghizhidda.

In Marilyn Manson's 1998 autobiography The Long Hard Road Out Of Hell, Manson encounters a suburban Occultist who pays tribute to Ningishzida.

See also

References

  1. Sumerian.org Q&A#20 (Ningishzida)
  2. Ningishzidda's journey to the netherworld on ETCSL
  3. Ira Maurice Price, Notes on the Pantheon of the Gudean Cylinders, The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures, Vol. 17, No. 1 (Oct., 1900), pp. 47-53 http://www.jstor.org/stable/528092
  4. Sumerian Mythology: Chapter II. Myths of Origins
  5. Turner, Frederick. Natural Religion. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 0-7658-0332-1. 

Further reading

  • Michael Jordan, Encyclopedia of Gods, Kyle Cathie Limited, 2002

External links

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