BURRUM AN.NA: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Milky Way Galaxy and a meteor.jpg|thumb|Brightest Clouds of the Milky Way (CC BY Brocken Inaglory)]] | [[File:Milky Way Galaxy and a meteor.jpg|thumb|Brightest Clouds of the Milky Way (CC BY Brocken Inaglory)]] | ||
<sup>mul</sup>BUR.RU.UM AN.NA (𒀯𒁓𒊒𒌝𒀭𒈾), "the Sparkling Night-Sky of Heaven". A pseudo-Sumerian term that occurs just the one time in The Great Star List as a feature of [[PA.BIL.SAG]] in [[Sagittarius]]. As written this must be taken as a Sumerian rendering of an Akkadian ''burrumū šamê''; ''burrumū'' being a poetic name for the night sky (see MCG<ref>''Horowitz W''. Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography. Winona Lake, 1998 (Mesopotamian Civilisation, 8).</ref> 226-227). The original intent of the Sumerian may be understood as something like, ‘the sparkling night sky of heaven,’ perhaps originally referring to the background gleam of the night-sky in general or in the case of the Great Star List to the brightest clouds of the Milky Way in Sagittarius. This could also explain the near homonym previous entry <sup>mul</sup>''Ur-um'' AN.NA which too is a name for the bright feature in | <sup>mul</sup>BUR.RU.UM AN.NA (𒀯𒁓𒊒𒌝𒀭𒈾), "the Sparkling Night-Sky of Heaven". A pseudo-Sumerian term that occurs just the one time in The Great Star List as a feature of [[PA.BIL.SAG]] in [[Sagittarius]]. As written this must be taken as a Sumerian rendering of an Akkadian ''burrumū šamê''; ''burrumū'' being a poetic name for the night sky (see MCG<ref>''Horowitz W''. Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography. Winona Lake, 1998 (Mesopotamian Civilisation, 8).</ref> 226-227). The original intent of the Sumerian may be understood as something like, ‘the sparkling night sky of heaven,’ perhaps originally referring to the background gleam of the night-sky in general or in the case of the Great Star List to the brightest clouds of the Milky Way in Sagittarius. This could also explain the near homonym previous entry <sup>mul</sup>''Ur-um'' AN.NA which too is a name for the bright feature in Sagitarius. | ||
==Concordance, Etymology, History<ref>[[Mesopotamian (All Terms)|Planetarium Babylonicum 2.0]], All Skies Encyclopaedia.</ref>== | ==Concordance, Etymology, History<ref>[[Mesopotamian (All Terms)|Planetarium Babylonicum 2.0]], All Skies Encyclopaedia.</ref>== | ||
Revision as of 14:07, 19 March 2026
Authors: Gennady Kurtik, Gennady E. Kurtik, Euin Choung Kim, David Hilder, Susanne M Hoffmann, Wayne Horowitz, Hermann Hunger, Euin Choung Kim

mulBUR.RU.UM AN.NA (𒀯𒁓𒊒𒌝𒀭𒈾), "the Sparkling Night-Sky of Heaven". A pseudo-Sumerian term that occurs just the one time in The Great Star List as a feature of PA.BIL.SAG in Sagittarius. As written this must be taken as a Sumerian rendering of an Akkadian burrumū šamê; burrumū being a poetic name for the night sky (see MCG[1] 226-227). The original intent of the Sumerian may be understood as something like, ‘the sparkling night sky of heaven,’ perhaps originally referring to the background gleam of the night-sky in general or in the case of the Great Star List to the brightest clouds of the Milky Way in Sagittarius. This could also explain the near homonym previous entry mulUr-um AN.NA which too is a name for the bright feature in Sagitarius.
Concordance, Etymology, History[2]
Variants
- mulBurrum AN.NA
- mulUr-um AN.NA (𒀯𒌨𒌝𒀭𒈾)
- = min
- (= me-šiḫ dpa.bil.sag), see also the previous entry in the Great Star List
- "Celestial light"(?)
- urrum = see CAD U/W 245
- = "Sparkling sky"(?), lit. "The variegated (multicoloured) sky"; part of the constellation PA.BIL.SAG(?).
Sources and Identifications
BURRUM AN.NA |
Identifications |
|---|---|
| "The Great Star List."
mulbur-ru-um an.na = min(= me-šiḫ dpa.bil.sag) "Sparkle of the sky = Sparkle of Pabilsag" [Mesop.Astrol.[3], App. B:144; Weidner 1959-60[4], 107].||Example | |
Ur-um AN.NA | |
| "Great Star List and Miscellenia". |
See (Kurtik p03) PA.BIL.SAG.
Historical Dictionaries
| Kurtik (2022, b13) | Gössmann (1950) |
|---|---|
BURRUM AN.NA |
|
| = «Сверкание неба»(?), букв. «Пестрое (разноцветное) небо»; часть созвездия PA.BIL.SAG(?). Только в «Большом списке звезд»: mulbur-ru-um an.na = min(= me-šiḫ dpa.bil.sag) «Сверкание неба = Блеск Пабилсага» [Mesop.Astrol., App. B:144; Weidner 1959–60, 107]. | Example |
| Kurtik (2022, u26) | Gössmann (1950) |
Ur-um AN.NA |
|
| «Небесный свет»(?); по-видимому, часть созвездия mulPA.BIL.SAG (p03).
I. Источники. «Большой список звезд». mulur-um an.na = min(= me-šiḫ dpa.bil.sag) «Небесный свет = Блеск Пабилсага»(?) [Mesop.Astrol., App. B:143; Weidner 1959–60, 107]. |
Example |
References
- ↑ Horowitz W. Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography. Winona Lake, 1998 (Mesopotamian Civilisation, 8).
- ↑ Planetarium Babylonicum 2.0, All Skies Encyclopaedia.
- ↑ Koch-Westenholz U. Mesopotamian Astrology. Copenhagen, Museum Tusculanum Press. 1995.
- ↑ Weidner E. Ein astrologischer Sammeltext aus der Sargonidenzeit // AfO. 1959-1960. Bd. 19. S. 105-113.
- ↑ Koch-Westenholz U. Mesopotamian Astrology. Copenhagen, Museum Tusculanum Press. 1995.
- ↑ Weidner E. Ein astrologischer Sammeltext aus der Sargonidenzeit // AfO. 1959-1960. Bd. 19. S. 105-113.





