NIN.AN.NA: Difference between revisions
From All Skies Encyclopaedia
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
| (6 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
<sup>d</sup>NIN.AN.NA (𒀭𒊩𒌆𒀭𒈾), 'Lady of Heaven,' is a name for the goddess Inanna/Ištar as Venus. An exact Akkadian equivalent would be ''bēlet šamê'' (see RlA 9 328). |
|||
<sup>d</sup>NIN.AN.NA is an ancient Mesopotamian asterism. |
|||
==Concordance, Etymology, History<ref>[[Mesopotamian (All Terms)|Planetarium Babylonicum 2.0]], All Skies Encyclopaedia.</ref>== |
|||
==Dictionary== |
|||
= "Lady of Heaven," an epithet of Ishtar as the goddess Venus [Gössmann<ref>''Gössmann P.F''. Planetarium Babylonicum, Rom, 1950 (A. Deimel. Šumerisches Lexikon 4/2).</ref> 315]. |
|||
=== Kurtik with Hilder, Hoffmann, Horowitz, Kim === |
|||
= "Lady of Heaven," an epithet of Ishtar as the goddess Venus [G. 315]. In the list of gods AN:<sup>d</sup>Anum (IV 187): <sup>d</sup>NIN.AN.NA = MIN(= <sup>d</sup>Iš<sub>8</sub>-tar<sub>2</sub> MUL.<MEŠ>) "Lady of the heavens = Goddess of the stars" [CT 25, 31, K.21109+:16; Litke 1998, 161:187]. See also [Gelb 1960; Selz 2000]. |
|||
In the list of gods AN:<sup>d</sup>''Anum'' (IV 187): |
|||
* <sup>d</sup>NIN.AN.NA = MIN(= <sup>d</sup>''Iš''<sub>8</sub>-''tar''<sub>2</sub> MUL.<MEŠ>) |
|||
* "Lady of the heavens = Goddess of the stars" [CT<ref>''Cuneiform Texts from Babylonian Tablets in the British Museum.''</ref> 25, 31, K.21109+:16; Litke 1998<ref>''Litke R.L''. A Reconstruction of the Assyro-Babylonian God-Lists, AN:<sup>d</sup>A-nu-um and AN:Anu ša<sub>2</sub> amēli. New Haven, 1998 (Texts from the Babylonian Collection, Vol. 3).</ref>, 161:187]. See also [Gelb 1960; Selz 2000<ref>''Selz G.J.'' Five Divine Ladies: Thoughts on Inana(k), Ištar, In(n)in(a), Annunītum, and Anat, and the Origin of the Title "Queen of Heaven" // Journal of Gender Studies in Antiquity. 2000. V. 1. P. 29-62.</ref>]. |
|||
== Historical Dictionaries == |
== Historical Dictionaries == |
||
{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
| Line 9: | Line 13: | ||
! scope="col" style="width: 40%;" | Gössmann (1950) |
! scope="col" style="width: 40%;" | Gössmann (1950) |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| = «Госпожа небес», эпитет Иштар как богини Венеры [ |
| = «Госпожа небес», эпитет Иштар как богини Венеры [Gössmann 1950, 315]. В списке богов AN:<sup>d</sup>Anum (IV 187): <sup>d</sup>NIN.AN.NA = MIN(= <sup>d</sup>Iš<sub>8</sub>-tar<sub>2</sub> MUL.<MEŠ>) «Госпожа небес = Богиня звезд» [CT 25, 31, K.21109+:16; Litke 1998, 161:187]. См. также [Gelb 1960; Selz 2000]. |
||
| Example |
| Example |
||
|} |
|} |
||
Latest revision as of 16:38, 29 December 2025
dNIN.AN.NA (𒀭𒊩𒌆𒀭𒈾), 'Lady of Heaven,' is a name for the goddess Inanna/Ištar as Venus. An exact Akkadian equivalent would be bēlet šamê (see RlA 9 328).
Concordance, Etymology, History[1]
= "Lady of Heaven," an epithet of Ishtar as the goddess Venus [Gössmann[2] 315].
In the list of gods AN:dAnum (IV 187):
- dNIN.AN.NA = MIN(= dIš8-tar2 MUL.<MEŠ>)
- "Lady of the heavens = Goddess of the stars" [CT[3] 25, 31, K.21109+:16; Litke 1998[4], 161:187]. See also [Gelb 1960; Selz 2000[5]].
Historical Dictionaries
| Kurtik (2022, n26) | Gössmann (1950) |
|---|---|
| = «Госпожа небес», эпитет Иштар как богини Венеры [Gössmann 1950, 315]. В списке богов AN:dAnum (IV 187): dNIN.AN.NA = MIN(= dIš8-tar2 MUL.<MEŠ>) «Госпожа небес = Богиня звезд» [CT 25, 31, K.21109+:16; Litke 1998, 161:187]. См. также [Gelb 1960; Selz 2000]. | Example |
References
- ↑ Planetarium Babylonicum 2.0, All Skies Encyclopaedia.
- ↑ Gössmann P.F. Planetarium Babylonicum, Rom, 1950 (A. Deimel. Šumerisches Lexikon 4/2).
- ↑ Cuneiform Texts from Babylonian Tablets in the British Museum.
- ↑ Litke R.L. A Reconstruction of the Assyro-Babylonian God-Lists, AN:dA-nu-um and AN:Anu ša2 amēli. New Haven, 1998 (Texts from the Babylonian Collection, Vol. 3).
- ↑ Selz G.J. Five Divine Ladies: Thoughts on Inana(k), Ištar, In(n)in(a), Annunītum, and Anat, and the Origin of the Title "Queen of Heaven" // Journal of Gender Studies in Antiquity. 2000. V. 1. P. 29-62.




