Lammašaga

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Lammašaga
Major cult centerGirsu, Lagash

Lammašaga was a Mesopotamian goddess who functioned as the sukkal (divine attendant) of Bau. She belonged to a class of protective deities known as Lamma. She was originally worshiped in Lagash and Girsu, though attestations are also available from other cities. A hymn focused on her was copied in scribal schools in the Old Babylonian period.

Figure of a Lamma deity from the Isin-Larsa period. Oriental Institute Museum, Chicago.

The name Lammašaga can be translated as "the good protective spirit"[1] or "the good Lamma," with the element Lamma referring to a type of female protective deity.[2] The name Lamma itself sometimes could be used to refer to the specific goddess too.[3] Irene Sibbing-Plantholt notes that the addition of the element šaga to a theonym also finds a parallel in Memešaga, a variant form of the name of the goddess Meme.[4]

Lammašaga functioned as the divine attendant (sukkal) of Bau.[5][6][7] She was believed to intercede between her and worshipers.[8] Her role might be reflected by the personal name Lamma-sukkal.[5] The association between her and Bau is well attested, and dates to the early periods of recorded Mesopotamian history.[9] Other deities could also be believed to possess Lamma of their own, for example a hymn to Nanshe mentions that hers was named dDUMU.TUR-šugi.[10] The name Lammašaga was also applied to the personal Lamma of the deified king Lugalbanda, who according to Åke W. Sjöberg should be considered distinct from the goddess under discussion.[3] Bau's Lamma could also be referred to as the "Lamma of the Tarsirsir," a temple of the former deity located in Girsu, as attested for example in an inscription of a bowl from the reign of king Ur-Bau.[9] A reference to the "Lamma of the Tarsirsir" also occurs in an inscription of Nammahani.[11] Attempts were made to prove that the theonym Lammašaga might have referred to a manifestation of Bau rather than an independent deity, though Christopher Metcalf in a recent publication notes that while the evidence "may sometimes seem ambiguous, and practices may have varied in different periods," there is nonetheless sufficient proof in the belief in Lammašaga as a distinct deity.[9]

An astronomical text states that mulLam-mu,[12] the star Lamma,[13] corresponded to the sukkal of Bau, to be identified with Lammašaga.[5] The same astral body was associated with Urmašum, the sukkal of Gula, as well.[12] The star is most likely to be identified as Vega.[13]

Worship

The oldest attestations of Lammašaga come from Early Dynastic texts from Lagash (Al-Hiba) and Girsu (Tello).[14] Uru'inimgina built a temple dedicated to her which also housed shrines for the deities Zazaru, Nipae and Urnunta-ea.[15][16] She is also mentioned in an early riddle, which states that she was the city goddess of a place whose name is not preserved, in which a canal named Lamma-igi-bar was located.[14] This text, dated to the twenty fourth century BCE, is the oldest known reference to the concept of Lamma in the entire known corpus of cuneiform texts from Mesopotamia, and it might indicate that it originated in the territory of Lagash, and only spread from there to other regions.[2]

Ur-Ningirsu I's wife dedicated a human-headed bull figure to the "Lamma-goddess of Bau" in the Ebabbar temple in Larsa.[9] Ur-Ningirsu I himself built a temple dedicated to Lammašaga in Girsu, though his inscriptions state that the deity meant was Ninsun.[15] However, there is no indication that Lammašaga, treated as an independent deity, was the same goddess as Ninsun.[3] According to Claus Wilcke, when designating Ninsun, Lammašaga functioned only as an epithet.[17]

An inscription of Samsu-iluna mentions that he returned Lammašaga to the temple Ebabbar in Sippar, dedicated to Shamash and Aya.[18] A reference to Lammašaga as a goddess belonging to the pantheon of Nippur is known too, and in one document she occurs between the local deities Erragal and Ninimma.[3]

Literature

References

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