NIN.SAR: Difference between revisions
From All Skies Encyclopaedia
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===Kurtik with Hilder, Hoffmann, Horowitz, Kim=== | ===Kurtik with Hilder, Hoffmann, Horowitz, Kim=== | ||
Var. reading: | The reading of the sign SAR in the name is not certain. Var. reading: | ||
* <sup>d</sup>Nin. | * <sup>d</sup>Nin.sar, | ||
* <sup>d</sup>Nin.šar, | |||
* <sup>d</sup>nin.mu<sub>2</sub>; | |||
For the alternate readings see Lambert (2013) Creation 506. | |||
In astronomical texts usually recorded in pair with Erragal; identified with the star in the constellation Lyrae (ε Lyrae) [Litke 1998, 60; MA, 126; Tallqvist 1938, 402; G. 326], see (Kurtik e21) [[Erragal|<sup>d</sup>Erragal]]. | |||
==Historical Dictionaries== | ==Historical Dictionaries== | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
Revision as of 18:56, 21 April 2025
mul / dNIN.SAR is an ancient Mesopotamian deity, also depicted as an asterism.
Dictionary
Krebernik (2023)
Goddess (but in late texts also a male deity), “butcher” of Enlil’s palace Ekur, wife of Erragal. The name should be be read dNin-nisig, see RlA s.v. dNin-SAR (EN 25–26r).
Kurtik with Hilder, Hoffmann, Horowitz, Kim
The reading of the sign SAR in the name is not certain. Var. reading:
- dNin.sar,
- dNin.šar,
- dnin.mu2;
For the alternate readings see Lambert (2013) Creation 506.
In astronomical texts usually recorded in pair with Erragal; identified with the star in the constellation Lyrae (ε Lyrae) [Litke 1998, 60; MA, 126; Tallqvist 1938, 402; G. 326], see (Kurtik e21) dErragal.
Historical Dictionaries
| Kurtik (2022, n40) | Gössmann (1950) |
|---|---|
| вар. чтения: dNin.SAR, dnin.mu2; божество (богиня?), в астрономических текстах записывается обычно в паре с Эррагаль; отождествляется со звездой в созвездии Лира (ε Lyrae) [Litke 1998, 60; MA, 126; Tallqvist 1938, 402; G. 326], см. e21dErragal | Example |





