Nanshe ( dingir]]NANŠE (AB×ḪA)) was a Mesopotamian goddess in various contexts associated with the sea, marshlands, the animals inhabiting these biomes, namely bird and fish, as well as divination, dream interpretation, justice, social welfare, and certain administrative tasks. She was regarded as a daughter of Enki and sister of Ningirsu, while her husband was Nindara, who is otherwise little known. Other deities who belonged to her circle included her daughter Nin-MAR.KI, as well as Hendursaga, Dumuzi-abzu and Shul-utula. In Ur she was incorporated into the circle of Ningal, while in incantations she appears alongside Ningirima or Nammu.
The oldest attestations of the worship of Nanshe come from the Uruk period. Her cult center was Tell Zurghul, known in antiquity as Nina. Another place associated with her, Sirara, was likely a sacred district in this city. She was also worshiped elsewhere in the state of Lagash. Sanctuaries dedicated to her existed in its eponymous capital, as well as in Girsu, Gu'abba and other settlements. She is also attested in a number of other cities in other parts of Mesopotamia, including Adab, Nippur, Umma, Ur and Uruk, but her importance in their local pantheons was comparatively smaller. Her cult declined after the Ur III period. She was later adopted as a dynastic tutelary deity by the kings of the Sealand, and also came to be worshiped in the Esagila temple complex in Babylon. She was still venerated in the sixth century Common Era.
Multiple literary texts focused on Nanshe are known. Nanshe and the Birds focuses on her relation with her symbolic animal, the u5 bird. Its species is a matter of dispute, with proposed identifications including goose, swan, cormorant, gull and pelican. In the myth Enki and Ninhursag, she appears as one of the deities created by Ninhursag to cure Enki's illness. Other compositions deal with her relation to the sea, fish or dream interpretation.
It is possible that dšar-ra-at-ni-na, "queen of Nina", was an alternate name of Nanshe. However, this name is only attested in a list of deities from the Sealand, and an alternative proposal is that it refers to Ishtar of Nineveh, though this proposal is not universally accepted either.
Andrew R. George notes that in the Canonical Temple List Sirara, a toponym associated with Nanshe, might have been reinterpreted as an alternate name of her.
Nanshe's spouse was the god Nindara. An annual festival celebrated their marriage. Nindara's character is poorly known, and it is presumed that he was primarily worshiped due to his association with Nanshe. Their daughter was the goddess Nin-MAR.KI. Walther Sallaberger notes she had much in common with her mother, for example the location of their respective cult centers (Gu'abba and Tell Zurghul), the use of birds as symbols of them both in art, and the connection to the sea. He also suggests that the deity dNin-MÙŠ -bad, who was worshiped alongside Nin-MAR.KI, might have been initially seen as her brother and Nanshe's son. A further deity closely associated with Nanshe was Hendursaga. He was believed to act as her herald and overseer of her estate. Dumuzi-abzu, who often appears in association with Nin-MAR.KI, as well as Shul-utula, the family god of Ur-Nanshe's dynasty, were further more deities who belonged to Nanshe's circle. Additional members of the pantheon mentioned in association with her in hymns include Nisaba, Haya, Ningublaga, Ningishzida and Ištaran, though in the case of the last two the context in which they appear is unclear.
None of the deities associated with Nanshe in Lagash appear in the texts from the Sealand, with the exception of Ningirsu, who is only present in a single offering list. Their absence might indicate that the earlier tradition of this state had no bearing on the new dynasty who came to worship Nanshe, or that the latter only controlled a small part of the former Lagashite territory. While the god list An = Anum equates Nanshe's spouse Nindara with Sin, she does not appear in relation with the moon god in this corpus, which according to Odette Boivin indicates this tradition was not related to her role in the local pantheon of the Sealand.
In the Gula Hymn of Bulluṭsa-rabi, Nanshe is among the deities equated with the eponymous goddess. Her presence in this text is considered unusual, though information about her usual character is preserved.
In incantations, Nanshe could be linked with Ningirima. Invoking them together might have been a result of their shared association with water. Another deity she could be paired with was Nammu. According to Wolfgang Heimpel, they appear together commonly in sources postdating the Ur III period. The incantation Gattung II groups Nanshe with both Nammu and Ningirima and, if the restoration of the text is correct, refers to her as the "prime daughter of Enki" ( dumu-munus sag den-ki-ga-ke4) while similar text, Gattung III, places her in the court of this god, between Nammu and Ara, a well attested servant deity. A late expository text equates Nammu and Nanshe with Apsu and another figure whose name is not preserved, possibly Tiamat. Wilfred G. Lambert concluded this singular source might be an example of the influence of Enūma Eliš on other theological works, and as such does necessarily represent an independent tradition. He also notes Nammu was apparently understood as a male deity and perhaps Nanshe's husband by the author, despite usually being female.
and Jan Lisman suggest that the goddess Kiki (also known as Ninkiki), who occurs in the ''[[Zame Hymns]]'' as the tutelary deity of the unidentified location AB×AŠ2 (hymn 28) and in the contemporary god lists from [[Fara|Shuruppak]] and [[Abu Salabikh]] was at some point syncretised with Nanshe, as she shared her association with water birds and appears only in Early Dynastic sources.
It has been proposed that a goddess known as Ninšagepada ("the appointed mistress") or Šagepada ("the appointed"), who was worshiped in Ur in the temple of Gula and appears in inscriptions of Ur-Nammu, was a Nanshe-like figure ("Nanshe-Gestalt") due to the similarity of her name and that of the temple Ešapada in Lagash, dedicated to the latter. A deity bearing the name Šagepada was also worshiped in Uruk in the Seleucid Empire, and might be the same goddess. Her character is poorly known.
Gebhard J. Selz states that it is possible that Ur-Nanshe, who was the founder of the first dynasty of Lagash, the first attested local user of the title lugal, and a devotee of Nanshe, came from a family which originally lived in the proximity of Nina.
Entemena built a temple dedicated to Nanshe which bore the ceremonial name Ešapada, "house chosen in the heart". It was one of the three primary houses of worship in the city of Lagash, next to the temples of Inanna and Ningirsu. A shrine dedicated to her, Eagasulim, possibly "house, hall of radiance", is also known, and was located either in Lagash or in Girsu. In the latter city she was also worshiped in the Šešgarra (or Ešešegarra, "house established by the brother"), which was built by Ur-Nanshe. She also had a shrine in the Eninnu, in which she was worshiped alongside Shul-utula. It bore the ceremonial name Emaḫ, which can be translated as "exalted house", and is also attested as the designation of various other houses of worship in Mesopotamia, for example the temple of Ninhursag in Adab. The location of a further shrine of Nanshe, Eĝidru, "house of the scepter", is uncertain: it might have been a part of the Eninnu complex in Girsu, though it also has been proposed that it was located in Lagash or Nina. In Gu'abba she was worshiped in the Igigal, literally "wisdom", implicitly "(house of) wisdom". She also had sanctuaries in Kisala, which was either located close to Girsu, or outright was a part of it, and in Sulum, whose location is unknown. Various festivals were held in Nanshe's honor. Some of the sacrifices made during them took place on the banks of canals.
Multiple of Gudea's inscriptions commemorate the rebuilding of Nanshe's temple in Sirara. Furthermore, three clay cones from his reign mention the construction of a temple dedicated to her, the E-angur ("house of deep waters"), in Sulum. The twelfth of his year names refers to the fashioning of a new throne for Nanshe. In the text inscribed on his Gudea cylinders he designated her as his divine mother, though Ninsun appears in this role in relation to him too. A hymn to Nanshe describes Gudea as her protegee.
Nanshe's clergy included a head priest referred to as en or enmezianna. While the office might have already existed in the Early Dynastic period, the first certain attestations come from the Ur III period. Another title associated with the worship of Nanshe was abgal, "wise person", which is not attested in connection with the cult of any other deities. It has been proposed that the abgal also functioned as the en in early times, but this is uncertain. Other members of the temple personnel included gala clergy, harpists and mourners. Various workmen are also attested in association with them, for example smiths and herdsmen.
invoking Nanshe were common in the state of Lagash. In addition to Ur-Nanshe, "servant of Nanshe," some of the other examples include names such as Geme-Nanshe ("maid of Nanshe"), Lu-Nanshe ("man of Nanshe") or Nanshe-urmu ("Nanshe is my heroine").
The worship of Nanshe continued in Nina, Lagash, Girsu and a number of other nearby settlements through the Ur III period. An en priest dedicated to her first attested in documents from the reign of Shulgi and still active after assumption of the throne by Ibbi-Sin, Ur-Ningirsu (not to be confused with the ensi Ur-Ningirsu II, possibly also a contemporary of Shulgi) might have ruled over Lagash as an independent polity in the final years of the Ur state.
In the beginning of the second millennium BCE, the influence of the area of Lagash declined, which also resulted in the loss of importance of local deities, including Nanshe. An analogous phenomenon is attested for many other southern Mesopotamian deities, such as Shara, the tutelary god of Umma. Evidence for the worship of Nanshe in the Old Babylonian period is rare, for example she only sporadically appears in personal letters. It is known that the city of Nina still existed, though references to it are not frequent and nothing is known about its religious life. Nanshe continued to be worshiped in Ur, and appears in a handful of religious texts from Nippur as well. In the former of these two cities, she received offerings alongside Ningal in the Isin-Larsa period. It is also possible that while sparsely attested in official documents, she was a popular object of personal devotion there.
The text known as Topography of Babylon or Tintir = Babylon, most likely compiled in the twelfth century, indicates that Nanshe was worshiped in the Esagila temple complex in Babylon, where she had a cultic seat named Ešbanda, "little chamber". Andrew R. George assumes that her presence there was tied to her connection to the god Ea (Enki). A late reference to the cult of Nanshe in the Sealand occurs on a kudurru (inscribed boundary stone) of Enlil-nadin-apli of the Second Dynasty of Isin (eleventh century BCE), which mentions that a parcel of land which was the subject of described dispute had originally been donated by "Gulkišar, king of the Sealand, to Nanše, his lady", though it is not certain if it refers to a historical document. The name is written with the traditional logogram in this case, rather than syllabically as dNa-zi like in the earlier Sealand texts. Enlil-nādin-apli also mentioned her in a blessing formula alongside Nammu. According to Julia M. Asher-Greve, further attestations of the worship of Nanshe from Babylonia are available from as late as the sixth century BCE.
The text begins with the encounter between Nanshe and the aforementioned bird. According to Wolfgang Heimpel, after hearing the calls of this animal and noticing its beauty, Nanshe adopted it. Subsequently she descends to the earth, where she erects a temple dedicated to herself, and places the bird from the earlier section at her feet as her symbol. This passage apparently indicates she was believed to be capable of bird-like flight herself. While the rest of the composition is not fully preserved, the surviving passages indicate Nanshe gathers various birds in a single place, and the Anzû bird and the Anunnaki, in this context the great gods of the pantheon, declare fates for them. The next section is a compilation of short statements about various birds. They provide information about the beliefs pertaining to the individual animals, as well as their behavior, diet and calls. Some of their names are provided with folk etymologies. A number of them are not attested in any other known texts. The text ends with a praise formula addressed to Nanshe.
As of 2004, Nanshe and the Birds was only known from six fragmentary tablets. Five of them come from Nippur, while the sixth is provenance. However, the figures around whom the plot revolves belong to the tradition of Lagash. It is presumed that the composition belonged to the curriculum of Old Babylonian scribal schools.
In the myth Enki and Ninhursag, Nanshe is one of the eight deities created by Ninhursag to cure Enki's illness which developed after he consumed a number of plants. Her responsibility in this text is curing the throat of this god. The remaining seven are Abu, Ninsikila (Meskilak), Ningiritud (Ningirida), Ninkasi, Azimua, Ninti and Ensag (Inzak). After Enki recovers from the issues ailing him, new roles are assigned to all of them, with Nanshe's destiny being to marry Nindara. According to Dina Katz, the deities present in this section of the narrative were not chosen based on any theological factors, but due to potential for reinterpreting their names through word play, which in Nanshe's case relies on the fact that zi, the second sign alternate writing of her name, dNa-zi, could be used to write the word "throat".
Nanshe also appears in Enki and the World Order, where the u5 bird standing next to her is apparently an object of Inanna's jealousy. She is mentioned in the latter goddess's complaint about not being assigned a specific position, unlike her divine peers. The domain assigned to Nanshe is the open sea, and the text also states that she was capable of saving people from drowning.
Nanshe appears in the composition preserved on the Gudea cylinders. It is a hymn commemorating the reconstruction of Eninnu, the temple complex of Ningirsu in Girsu. Gudea asks her to reveal the meaning of a dream to him. After he offers bread to her, she reveals to him that his dream was an indication Ningirsu wants him to rebuild the Eninnu, and that he will be supported in this endeavor by his personal god Ningishzida, as well as Nisaba and Nindub.
In the Song of the Plowing Oxen, Nanshe acts as a dream interpreter, and advises the anonymous king who serves as the narrative's protagonist.
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