Marduk: Difference between revisions
From All Skies Encyclopaedia
Marduk
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==Dictionary== |
==Dictionary== |
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=== Krebernik (2023) === |
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City god of Babylon, identified with Enki’s son Assalluḫi, became head of the Babylonian pantheon towards the end of the 2nd mill. BCE. <sup>d</sup>AMAR.UTU (EN 33r). |
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===Kurtik with Hilder, Hoffmann, Horowitz, Kim=== |
===Kurtik with Hilder, Hoffmann, Horowitz, Kim=== |
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= <sup>mul d</sup>AMAR.UTU; Marduk is the supreme deity of the city of Babylon, identified with Jupiter or Mercury; for a syllabic entry in lexical texts, see a28[[AMAR.UTU|<sup>d</sup>AMAR.UTU]]. |
= <sup>mul d</sup>AMAR.UTU; Marduk is the supreme deity of the city of Babylon, identified with Jupiter or Mercury; for a syllabic entry in lexical texts, see a28[[AMAR.UTU|<sup>d</sup>AMAR.UTU]]. |
Latest revision as of 12:07, 6 February 2025
dMarduk is an ancient Mesopotamian asterism.
Dictionary
Krebernik (2023)
City god of Babylon, identified with Enki’s son Assalluḫi, became head of the Babylonian pantheon towards the end of the 2nd mill. BCE. dAMAR.UTU (EN 33r).
Kurtik with Hilder, Hoffmann, Horowitz, Kim
= mul dAMAR.UTU; Marduk is the supreme deity of the city of Babylon, identified with Jupiter or Mercury; for a syllabic entry in lexical texts, see a28dAMAR.UTU.
Historical Dictionaries
Kurtik (2022, m11) | Gössmann (1950) |
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= mul dAMAR.UTU; Мардук — верховное божество города Вавилон, отождествляемое с Юпитером или Меркурием; силлабическая запись в лексических текстах см. a28dAMAR.UTU. | Example |