Latarak

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Major cult centerpossibly Bāb-Lātarāk[1]
Weaponswhip
Animalslion
Latarak
Protective god, guardian of doorways
Major cult centerpossibly Bāb-Lātarāk[1]
Weaponswhip
Animalslion

Latarak (Lātarāk[2]) was a Mesopotamian god. He was most likely depicted as a figure clad in a lion's skin, or perhaps as a lion-like monster. He was regarded as a protective deity, invoked to defend doorways and ward off diseases. He was closely associated with Lulal, though the relationship between them varies between available primary sources, with some equating them and other treating them as a pair of similar, but not identical deities. He was worshiped in Mesopotamian cities such as Uruk, Nippur and Assur. It is also possible that a city named after him, Bāb-Lātarāk, existed, but the reading of this toponym is not certain. Outside Mesopotamia, he is attested in religious texts from Emar and in a trilingual god list from Ugarit.

According to Wilfred G. Lambert, Latarak's name should be interpreted as a negated infinitive form of an unidentified Akkadian word, analogously to Lagamal's.[3] A single unpublished commentary on the Weidner god list explains it as a combination of , "not", and tarāku, "to switch a whip", additionally glossed as naṭû, "to beat", but according to Frans Wiggermann this ancient attempt at etymologizing it is grammatically incorrect.[4] While the suffix -ak could be a genitive ending in Sumerian, according to Joan Goodnick Westenholz Latarak's name is considered to be one of the cases where such an interpretation is implausible, similarly to theonyms such as Tishpak, Inzak and Meskilak.[2] Lexical lists explain Latarak's name as urgulû, "lion", and it has been suggested that he possessed leonine features.[5] It is assumed that he can be identified with a figure clad in lion garb known from Mesopotamian art.[6] The lion skin is most likely meant to designate him as a deity responsible for subduing evil.[4] Depictions of the figure in lion garb show him holding a whip.[7] An alternative proposal is that Latarak was depicted as a lion-like monster, rather than as a man in a lion's skin.[8]

It is assumed that Latarak was associated with the steppe,[4] though this interpretation is not universally accepted.[9] An Akkadian hymn to Shamash known from two copies, one from Assur and another from Hattusa, refers to him as the "master of the open country" (šar ṣe-ri-im).[10] A fragmentary Akkadian hymn to Latarak highlights his association with domestic animals.[3] He is also attested as a divine protector of doorways and as a god capable of warding off diseases.[8] While attempts have been made to classify him as one of the deities representing deified ancestors, similar to Yakrub-El or Itūr-Mēr, according to Jack M. Sasson this view is incorrect.[11]

Associations with other deities

Worship

References

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