Nindub

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Nindub
Divine exorcist
Major cult centerLagash, Girsu, NINA

Nindub or Ninduba[1] was a Mesopotamian god associated with exorcisms. He is attested chiefly in sources from the state of Lagash, including Early Dynastic offering lists and the cylinders of Gudea. He continued to be worshiped in this area in the Ur III period. However, in the Old Babylonian period he appears only in a small number of god lists presumed to reflect archaic tradition.

Nindub's name was written in cuneiform as dnin-dub or less commonly as dnin-dub-ba.[2] It is conventionally translated as "lord (of the) clay tablet".[3] However, Gebhard J. Selz [de] argues that based on the pairing of this god with the deity dnin-ùr in offering lists from Lagash suggests that his name initially might have been depended on another meaning of the sign dub, "to smooth", which was an antonym of ùr, "to pile up".[4]

Based on Nindub's role in the literary text inscribed on the cylinders of Gudea it is presumed that he functioned as a divine exorcist.[1]

The proposal that Nindub was identical with Nindara is regarded as baseless.[4]

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