TI.MU2.A
From All Skies Encyclopaedia
TI.MU2.A
dTI.MU2.A (𒀭𒋾𒊬𒀀) is an ancient Mesopotamian asterism.
Concordance, Etymology, History
Kurtik with Hilder, Hoffmann, Horowitz, Kim
Var. reading: dTI.SAR.A; = "Sparkling"(?); epithet of the goddess Ishtar as the planet Venus [Gössmann[1] 406; Tallqvist 1938[2], 472].
I. Sources
In the list of gods AN:
- dAnum (IV 176): dTi.mu2.a = min(dIš8-tar2 mul.<meš> = dIštar kakkabī) "Timua = Goddess of the stars" [CT[3] 25, 31:11; Litke 1998[4], 161:180].
See also [Cooley 2013[5], 135, note 159].
Historical Dictionaries
Kurtik (2022) | Gössmann (1950) |
---|---|
вар. чтения: dTI.SAR.A; = «Сверкающая»(?); эпитет богини Иштар как планеты Венера [G. 406; Tallqvist 1938, 472].
I. Источники. В списке богов AN:dAnum (IV 176): dTi.mu2.a = min(dIš8-tar2 mul.<meš> = dIštar kakkabī) «Тимуа = Богиня звезд» [CT 25, 31:11; Litke 1998, 161:180]. См. также [Cooley 2013, 135, note 159]. |
Example |
References
- ↑ Gössmann P.F. Planetarium Babylonicum, Rom, 1950 (A. Deimel. Šumerisches Lexikon 4/2).
- ↑ Tallqvist K. Akkadische Götterepitheta. Helsingforsiae, 1938.
- ↑ 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).
- ↑ Cooley, J. (2013). Poetic Astronomy in the Ancient Near East: The Reflexes of Celestial Science in Ancient Mesopotamian, Ugaritic, and Israelite Narrative.