Kitītum

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Kitītum
Tutelary goddess of Kiti
Major cult centerTell Ishchali (Kiti, later Nērebtum)

Kitītum was a Mesopotamian goddess closely associated with Tell Ishchali. Her name was derived from the oldest known name of this site, Kiti. It is assumed she originated as a local form of Inanna, as indicated by the designation "Inanna of Kiti" known from texts from Eshnunna, though it has also been argued that her character was influenced by the Hurrian deity Šauška. A temple dedicated to her has been discovered during the excavations of Tell Ishchali. It is one of the largest Old Babylonian temples known, but remained in use for only 150 years. It was most likely destroyed in 1762 BCE, during the war between Ibal-pi-el II of Eshnunna and Hammurabi of Babylon.

The theonym Kitītum was spelled as dki-ti-tum in cuneiform.[1] It was derived from the toponym Kiti.[2] While texts from Tell Ishchali refer to the goddess as Kitītum, these discovered in Tell Asmar (Eshnunna) instead call her "Inanna of Kiti",[3] dINANNA ki-ti.[2] However, the temple administrators (šangû) associated with her were always addressed as servants of Kitītum, not Inanna of Kiti.[4]

Similarly as in the cases of deities such as Arbilītum, Kišītum, Ḫišamītum, Ulmašītum and others, it is presumed that Kitītum was a local form of Inanna (Ishtar) who nonetheless functioned as a distinct deity.[5] However, Beate Pongratz-Leisten suggests that her character might have been patterned on Hurrian Šauška of Nineveh, as she was regarded as capable of issuing oracles, which in the second millennium BCE was a role more commonly attributed to Syro-Anatolian rather than Lower Mesopotamian deities.[6][a]

Worship

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