Simut (god)

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SpouseManzat, Raqadu
MesopotamianNergal
Simut
Herald of the gods
PlanetMars
Genealogy
SpouseManzat, Raqadu
Equivalents
MesopotamianNergal

Simut or Šimut (Shimut) was an Elamite god. He was regarded as the herald of the gods, and was associated with the planet Mars. He was closely associated with Manzat, a goddess representing the rainbow. He appears in inscriptions of various Elamite kings which mention a number of temples dedicated to him. However, it is not known which city served as his main cult center. He was also worshiped in Mesopotamia, where he was compared with the war god Nergal.

Various spellings of Simut's name are attested in Elamite sources, including phonetic dSi-mu-ut, dŠi-mu-ut-ta, dŠi-mu-ut and dŠi-mut, as well as logographic dMAN/dPAP.[1] The last spelling might be related to one of the Mesopotamian names of theplanet Mars, mulMAN-ma, "the strange star".[2] It is also possible that in at least one location another logographic spelling of his name was NIN.DAR.(A).[3]

The romanization "Simut" reflects the standard spelling of this theonym in Mesopotamian sources from the Middle Babylonian period, though in earlier, Old Babylonian ones, Šimut (Shimut) appears to be the correct orthography.[4] In neo-Assyrian sources, the name is spelled as "Šumudu" (Shumudu).[5]

Character

Simut was known as "god of Elam", "herald of the gods" (Elamiteberir napirra) and "mighty one, herald of the gods" (silhak perir nappipir).[2] It is possible that he was a warrior god, and that the word tentatively translated as "herald" refers to a specific administrative or military position.[6] Like Humban,[7] Simut was associated with the concept of kittin, which can be understood as "(area of) divine protection."[6] He appears in judicial and economic documents from Susa, in at least one case sharing the role of a divine witness and guardian of contracts with Inshushinak and the Mesopotamian sun Shamash.[6]

Simut was frequently associated with the planet Mars in Babylonian astrological texts, and the planet was often called "the star Simut", mulSi-mu-ut.[2]

While Wilfred G. Lambert describes Simut as an "infernal" god in the Reallexikon der Assyriologie und Vorderasiatischen Archäologie,[8] Daniel T. Potts, following the more recent research of Wouter Henekelman, concludes that he had no funerary or underworld associations.[9]

Associations with other deities

Worship

References

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