Yakrub-El or Ikrub-El was a Mesopotamian god worshiped in Terqa in the kingdom of Mari in the early Old Babylonian period. Since his name is structured as if it were a Theophoric name personal name, is commonly assumed that he was a deified hero or ancestral figure in origin. He is absent from the sources postdating the destruction of Mari.
Multiple spellings are attested in known cuneiform texts, including dingirIk-ru-ub-El, dIk-ru-ub-Il, dIk-ru-ub-AN, dIk-ru-bé-El, dIk-ru-bé-AN, dYa-ak-ru-ub-El, dYa-ak-ru-ub-Il and dYa-ak-ru-ub-AN. The alternation between El and Il might indicate lack of differentiation between the e and i, a possibility also supported by other examples of Mariote scribal conventions. AN (the dingir cuneiform sign) was a logogram representation of the same word. These writings are all attested in a single type of texts, namely the letters sent by Kibri-Dagan, a governor of Terqa, which makes the high number of variants unusual.
Deities whose names mirror ordinary theophoric names, such as Yakrub-El, Itūr-Mēr, Tašqi-Mama and Tar’am-Mēr are often assumed to represent deified . Lluís Feliu proposes that Yakrub-El was specifically a deified chief of an Amorite clan, while Ichiro Nakata in an earlier publication more cautiously refers to him and similar deities as "originally heroes of one type or another."
Multiple texts from the so-called "archive of Asqudum" (for example MA:T 22, MA:T 23, MA:T 24 ) mention sacrifices of sheep to Yakrub-El made in Terqa alongside the offerings to many other deities, such as Shamash, Nergal and Annunitum. He is attested in as well, with examples including Yakrub-El-andullī ("Yakrub-El is my protection") and Yakrub-El-tillalī ("Yakrub-El is my help"). Despite being a theophoric name itself, the theonym is evidently treated as if it were a single word in these cases. A legal text mentions that Kibri-Dagan and a "judge of the king" ( dayyān šarrim) pronounced a verdict in front of Yakrub-El and Lagamal.
A letter to Zimri-Lim from Šamaš-nasir, an official stationed in Terqa, relays an oracle of Dagan in which Yakrub-El is mentioned. While the main topic is a verdict pronounced by Dagan for Tishpak, Yakrub-El also plays an active role and brings him the words of the goddess Ḫanat from Suhum, presumably endangered by the actions of the Eshnunna god. It has been pointed out that this text is most likely using the gods to describe the political situation at the time of the Mari archives, with Dagan standing for the kingdom of Mari, Yakrub-El for Terqa, Ḫanat for Suhum, and Tishpak for Eshnunna, whose troops were presumably threatening the latter of the aforementioned areas within the orbit of Mari.
As of 2011, no published documents from Terqa from the later part of the Old Babylonian period mentioning Yakrub-El were known. Ichiro Nakata suggests that he might have ceased to be worshiped after Itūr-Mēr was introduced to the city's pantheon, possibly by members of the administration or clergy from Mari who fled there after the destruction of that city during the campaigns of Hammurabi of Babylon.
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