Buššānītu: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
| (One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
| Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
Kurtik (2007) and Gössmann (1950) previously read this star name as ''Puššānītu'' (Kurtik p07, Gössmann 359). | Kurtik (2007) and Gössmann (1950) previously read this star name as ''Puššānītu'' (Kurtik p07, Gössmann 359). | ||
'''Miscellanous''' | |||
''' | '''Calendar Text:''' Reynolds 2019: 206-207: 3-12 (see ''[[Gizzānītu]]''). See previously (Kurtik g24) for BM 55466+, and (Kurtik k01) [[KA]]. Note Reynolds 2019: 206-207: 11 for <sup>mu[[LKIR4|l]]</sup>[[KIR4|KIR<sub>4</sub>]] = ''būşu'', 'Hyena-star' in this passage. | ||
<sup> | |||
==Historical Dictionaries== | ==Historical Dictionaries== | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
Latest revision as of 06:11, 2 July 2026
Authors: Gennady E. Kurtik, Euin Choung Kim, David Hilder, Wayne Horowitz, Susanne M Hoffmann, Youla Azkarrula, Hermann Hunger

(mul)Buššānītu (𒀯𒁍𒍑𒃻𒉌𒌈) is a name for the Hyena-star mul būṣu that is associated with the Corpse-star (mulADDA = pagru). It occurs in a calendrical mystical-mythological work in connection with the 'Marduk battle against Tiamat' tradition of Enuma Eliš. For the latest edition see Reynolds 2019: 206-207: 3-12 with commentary on ibid. 31, 362, 366-367. See also mulmulKIR4, būšu = būṣu.
Concordance, Etymology, History[1]
Var. reading:
- buššānītu, See above and Gizzānītu.
- Puššānītu (old reading)
Kurtik (2007) and Gössmann (1950) previously read this star name as Puššānītu (Kurtik p07, Gössmann 359).
Miscellanous
Calendar Text: Reynolds 2019: 206-207: 3-12 (see Gizzānītu). See previously (Kurtik g24) for BM 55466+, and (Kurtik k01) KA. Note Reynolds 2019: 206-207: 11 for mulmulKIR4, būšu = būşu, 'Hyena-star' in this passage.
Historical Dictionaries
| Kurtik (2022, p07) | Gössmann (1950) |
|---|---|
| вар.: buššānītu, букв. «Другой рот», эпитет, связанный с созвездием KA «Рот»; только в BM 55466+, см. g24Gizzānītu, k01KA. | (359) puššanîtum (239)
s. mulKA. |
References
- ↑ Planetarium Babylonicum 2.0, All Skies Encyclopaedia.







