Mammītu

deity single tradition · 1

The goddess Mammītu is responsible for the declaration of destiny alongside "Anunnaku, the great gods" in this composition (tablet X, lines 319–322). She is commonly identified as Mami rather than Mammitum by modern translators. Longer forms of the name, such as Mammītu, with the exception of a single passage from the Epic of Gilgamesh were never used to refer to Mami or any analogous deity.

When

First attested
3000 BCE
Attested period
-3000 – 0
Historical notes
Attested in Mesopotamian cuneiform tablets.

Relationships

allied with
Anunnaku
co occurs with
Mami, Mamitu

Expand to full subgraph →

Sources

wikipedia (1)

Source passages

“Longer forms of the name, such as Mammītu, with the exception of a single passage from the Epic of Gilgamesh were never used to refer to Mami or any analogous deity. The goddess Mammītu who is responsible for the declaration of destiny alongside "Anunnaku, the great gods" in this composition (tablet X, lines 319–322) is commonly identified as Mami rather than Mammitum by modern translators.”

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