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{{short description|Mythological first king of Sumer}} {{short description|Mythological first king of Sumer}}
{{Infobox royalty {{Infobox royalty
|image =Lista Reale Sumerica.jpg | image =Lista Reale Sumerica.jpg
|caption =The ], inscribed with the '']'', a text which mentions '''Alulim'''.{{sfn|Ashmolean Museum|2017}} | caption =The ], inscribed with the ], a text which mentions Alulim.{{sfn|Ashmolean Museum|2017}}
|name ='''Alulim''' | name =Alulim
|title =] | title =]
|titletext =({{lang-sux|]|]}}; ]: {{transl|Xsux|{{smallcaps|].]}}}}) | titletext =({{langx|sux|]|lugal}}; transliterated: {{smallcaps|].]}})
|successor =] | successor =]
|native_lang1 =] | native_lang1 =]
|native_lang1_name1 ={{cuneiform|]]]}} | native_lang1_name1={{cuneiform|𒀉𒇻𒅆}}
|}} |}}
'''Alulim''' ({{lang-sux|]]]|Alulim}}; ]: {{transl|Xsux|{{smallcaps|}}}}) was a mythological ]n ruler, regarded as the first ] to ever rule. He is known from the '']'', ''Ballad of Early Rulers'', and other similar sources which invariably place him in Eridu and assign a reign lasting thousands of years to him. A myth describing his appointment by the gods and incantations treating him as the creator of insects are also known. He is absent from Early Dynastic sources, and he is considered fictional by ]. His name was preserved in later ], ] and ] works. '''Alulim''' ({{langx|sux|]]]|Álulim}}; ]: {{transl|Xsux|{{smallcaps|}}}}) was a mythological ]n ruler, regarded as the first king ever to rule. He is known from the '']'', ''Ballad of Early Rulers'', and other similar sources which invariably place him in ] and assign a reign lasting thousands of years to him. The tablet of Old Babylonian period (c. 1900-1600 BC) from Ur describing the divine appointment of Alulim by the gods notes that he was chosen among "vast and many people," and appointed by gods for the "shepherdship of the entirety of the many people".<ref></ref> Another myth describing his appointment by the gods and incantations treating him as the creator of insects are also known. He is absent from Early Dynastic sources, and he is considered fictional by ]. His name was preserved in later ], ] and ] works.

==Name== ==Name==
Alulim’s name was written in ] as ''A<sub>2</sub>-lu-lim'' or ''A-lu-lim'' and can be translated from ] as either “horn of the ] or “seed of the red deer” depending on the variable first sign.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=38}} Jeremiah Peterson suggests that it might reflect the Mesopotamian belief that at the dawn of history, when Alulim was believed to live, humans behaved in animal-like manner, as attested in texts such as '']'' or ''How Grain Came to Sumer''.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=39}} A further attested spelling, Alulu, written ''A-lu-lu'', might represent an ] form.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=38}} The name Ayalu, known from the ''Uruk List of Kings and Sages'' (Paired with ] ]){{sfn|Lenzi|2008|p=142}} where it is written ''A-a-lu'', appears to be another variant, resulting from reinterpretation reliant on the partially ] word ''ayyalu'', “deer” or “stag”.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=38}} Alulim's name was written in ] as ''A<sub>2</sub>-lu-lim'' or ''A-lu-lim'' and can be translated from ] as either "horn of the ]" or "seed of the red deer" depending on the variable first sign.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=38}} Jeremiah Peterson suggests that it might reflect the Mesopotamian belief that at the dawn of history, when Alulim was believed to live, humans behaved in animal-like manner, as attested in texts such as '']'' or ''How Grain Came to Sumer''.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=39}} A further attested spelling, Alulu, written ''A-lu-lu'', might represent an ] form.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=38}} The name Ayalu, known from the ''Uruk List of Kings and Sages'' (Paired with ] ]){{sfn|Lenzi|2008|p=142}} where it is written ''A-a-lu'', appears to be another variant, resulting from reinterpretation reliant on the partially ] word ''ayyalu'', 'deer' or 'stag'.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=38}}


The name Alulim is not attested in any ] sources and was never used as an ordinary given name.{{sfn|Marchesi|2010|p=237}} The only indirect parallels are the occurrences of individuals named Alulu (with variable spelling) in early texts from ] and other pre-] sites.{{sfn|Steinkeller|2017|pp=61-62}} The name Alulim is not attested in any ] sources and was never used as an ordinary given name.{{sfn|Marchesi|2010|p=237}} The only indirect parallels are the occurrences of individuals named Alulu (with variable spelling) in early texts from ] and other pre-] sites.{{sfn|Steinkeller|2017|pp=61-62}}

==Reign== ==Reign==
], initial paragraph about rule of Alulim and ] in ] for 64.800 years.]] ], initial paragraph about rule of Alulim and ] in ] for 64.800 years.]]
Alulim is regarded as a fictional figure by ].{{sfn|Steinkeller|2017|p=61}} References to him are largely limited to lists of legendary ancient rulers.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=40}} He was traditionally considered the first Mesopotamian king,{{sfn|Kvanvig|2011|p=96}} and his reign was placed before the mythical ].{{sfn|Kvanvig|2011|p=418}} All known sources listing primordial kings consistently state that he lived in ], unless no mention of any cities is made.{{sfn|Kvanvig|2011|p=96}} This tradition reflected the perception of Eridu as a city of particular symbolic importance.{{sfn|Steinkeller|2017|p=64}} His reign was described as supernaturally long.{{sfn|Bachvarova|2012|p=101}} Its duration was regarded as ], as indicated by a letter of the astrologer Ašarēdu to an unspecified Babylonian king, in which he wished him to be blessed by the gods of ] with “years of Alulu”.{{sfn|George|Taniguchi|Geller|2010|p=133}} According to the '']'', Alulim retained his position for 28800 years before he was succeeded by ], who in turn reigned for 36000 years.{{sfn|Katz|2003|p=118}} However, the contents of the ''Sumerian King List'' are assumed to not reflect historical reality, and cannot be used to reconstruct early Mesopotamian chronology.{{sfn|Marchesi|2010|p=238}} There is no evidence that the figure of Alulim was incorporated into it from a preexisting older source.{{sfn|Steinkeller|2017|p=61}} A different tradition about the length of his reign is preserved in the ''Ballad of Early Rulers'', which states that he ruled for 36000 years.{{sfn|Katz|2003|p=118}} According to ], other similar texts give further variant figures, such as 36200 years (tablet BM 40565) or 67200 years (tablet WB 62).{{sfn|Finkel|1980|p=71}} Alulim is regarded as a fictional figure by ].{{sfn|Steinkeller|2017|p=61}} References to him are largely limited to lists of legendary ancient rulers.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=40}} He was traditionally considered the first Mesopotamian king,{{sfn|Kvanvig|2011|p=96}} and his reign was placed before the mythical ].{{sfn|Kvanvig|2011|p=418}} All known sources listing primordial kings consistently state that he lived in ], unless no mention of any cities is made.{{sfn|Kvanvig|2011|p=96}} This tradition reflected the perception of Eridu as a city of particular symbolic importance.{{sfn|Steinkeller|2017|p=64}} His reign was described as supernaturally long.{{sfn|Bachvarova|2012|p=101}} Its duration was regarded as ], as indicated by a letter of the astrologer Ašarēdu to an unspecified Babylonian king, in which he wished him to be blessed by the gods of ] with "years of Alulu".{{sfn|George|Taniguchi|Geller|2010|p=133}} According to the '']'', Alulim retained his position for 28,800 years before he was succeeded by ], who in turn reigned for 36,000 years.{{sfn|Katz|2003|p=118}} However, the contents of the ''Sumerian King List'' are assumed to not reflect historical reality, and cannot be used to reconstruct early Mesopotamian chronology.{{sfn|Marchesi|2010|p=238}} There is no evidence that the figure of Alulim was incorporated into it from a preexisting older source.{{sfn|Steinkeller|2017|p=61}} A different tradition about the length of his reign is preserved in the ''Ballad of Early Rulers'', which states that he ruled for 36,000 years.{{sfn|Katz|2003|p=118}} According to ], other similar texts give further variant figures, such as 36,200 years (tablet BM 40565) or 67,200 years (tablet WB 62).{{sfn|Finkel|1980|p=71}}

==Miscellaneous attestations== ==Miscellaneous attestations==
A tablet of the ] from ] first published in 2018 describes the appointment of Alulim.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|pp=37-38}}<ref>UET 6, 61 + UET 6, 503 + UET 6, 691 (+) UET 6, 701 or </ref>
A manuscript of the ] from ] first published in 2018 describes the appointment of Alulim.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|pp=37-38}} It has been interpreted as an ] of the institution of kingship, with the first ruler being chosen from among mankind to act as the ] of the early, still animalistic humans, thus leading to the development of human civilization.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=39}} The gods responsible for Alulim's appointment in this text are ], ] and ], who are also credited with assigning his name to him.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=44}} Jeremiah Peterson notes that the grammar of the passage might not designate him as a human, which could indicate that in this context Alulim is not a personal name, but merely a description of the entity chosen to act as a ruler.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=47}}
{{Verse translation
|(Obverse)
1 They (the chief deities) created humanity
2 After the were proliferating below/from the earth in unison
3 They made livestock and quadrupeds as fitting things in the steppe(eden-na)
4 In the high steppe ... joyous plants broadly
5 At that time, the canal was not dug ...
6 The dike and ditch
7 The ox ... the plow/farmer/furrow(?) ...
8 The lands ... a single track ...
9 Humanity ... their eyes/faces ...
10 Šakkan/Šumugan in the desert ...
11 Weaving the cap/headcloth(?) ...
12 Humanity ...
13 At that time, the snake was not present,
14 The lion was not present,
15 The dog and wolf were not present ...
16 Humanity
17 Fear and
18 ...
19 The king ...
20 ...

|(Reverse)
1 First ... were giving to Asalluhi,
2 Second ... were giving ,
3 Third ... were giving [Larak[ to Pabilsaĝ,
4 Fourth ... were giving
5 Fifth ... were giving Š to .
6 Those cities .. their settlements ...
7 An, Enlil, and Ninhursaĝ
8 Among(?) those cities, Eridu .. they established at the front/as the leader(?)
9 They led(?) a man who was lying(?) among its vast and many people ...
10 An, Enlil, and Enki, the father(s) of the gods(?)
11 They chose Alulim/the "seed of the red deer" for the shepherdship of the entirety of the many people
12 They named him(!) Alulim/named the "seed of the red deer" ...
13 After they served according to the command to check thusly/forever after(?)
14 humanity, whoever possessed a name, were grasping his feet (in submission)/following his path(?)
15 They put both (capital) offense and sin(?) in his hand
16 was giving ... to him
17 ...
18 ...
}}

It has been interpreted as an ] of the institution of kingship, with the first ruler being chosen from among mankind to act as the ] of the early, still animalistic humans, thus leading to the development of human civilization.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=39}} The gods responsible for Alulim's appointment in this text are ], ] and ], who are also credited with assigning his name to him.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=44}} Jeremiah Peterson notes that the grammar of the passage might not designate him as a human, which could indicate that in this context Alulim is not a personal name, but merely a description of the entity chosen to act as a ruler.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=47}}


In the ''Ballad of Early Rulers'', a composition noted for its large number of allusions to other works of Mesopotamian literature,{{sfn|Alster|2005|pp=296-297}} Alulim is listed among famous ancient figures alongside ], ], ], ], ], ] and ].{{sfn|Frahm|2018|p=278}} The fact that kings associated both with southern cities, such as Alulim, and ones at home in the north, such as Etana, are mentioned side by side might indicate that it was composed during the period of exodus of scribes from south to north in the ].{{sfn|Viano|2016|p=369}} Bendt Alster compares this text to a ] and notes it appears to enumerate renowned legendary figures in seemingly humorous context, in order to explain the need to find joy in the present.{{sfn|Alster|2005|pp=290-291}} In the ''Ballad of Early Rulers'', a composition noted for its large number of allusions to other works of Mesopotamian literature,{{sfn|Alster|2005|pp=296-297}} Alulim is listed among famous ancient figures alongside ], ], ], ], ], ] and ].{{sfn|Frahm|2018|p=278}} The fact that kings associated both with southern cities, such as Alulim, and ones at home in the north, such as Etana, are mentioned side by side might indicate that it was composed during the period of exodus of scribes from south to north in the ].{{sfn|Viano|2016|p=369}} Bendt Alster compares this text to a ] and notes it appears to enumerate renowned legendary figures in seemingly humorous context, in order to explain the need to find joy in the present.{{sfn|Alster|2005|pp=290-291}}


Alulim is also attested in ] incantations against field ], acknowledge him as a “king from before the deluge”,{{sfn|George|Taniguchi|Geller|2010|p=133}} though in this context he is also addressed as the creator of insects.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=40}} He is described as capable of expelling them with a ], and as responsible for the ] of fields belonging to ].{{sfn|George|Taniguchi|Geller|2010|pp=136-137}} Elsewhere the explusion of insects is the domain of the deities ] and ], and it is not known how Alulim came to function as a similar figure.{{sfn|George|Taniguchi|Geller|2010|p=137}} The same texts also state that he was believed to enjoy milk, ] and beer, but could not stand “queen ], here a ] for grain.{{sfn|George|Taniguchi|Geller|2010|p=136}} Alulim is also attested in ] incantations against field ], acknowledge him as a "king from before the deluge",{{sfn|George|Taniguchi|Geller|2010|p=133}} though in this context he is also addressed as the creator of insects.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=40}} He is described as capable of expelling them with a ], and as responsible for the ] of fields belonging to ].{{sfn|George|Taniguchi|Geller|2010|pp=136-137}} Elsewhere the expulsion of insects is the domain of the deities ] and ], and it is not known how Alulim came to function as a similar figure.{{sfn|George|Taniguchi|Geller|2010|p=137}} The same texts also state that he was believed to enjoy milk, ] and beer, but could not stand "queen ]", here a ] for grain.{{sfn|George|Taniguchi|Geller|2010|p=136}}

Although earlier tradition, Me-Turan/Tell-Haddad tablet, describes ] as postdiluvian ruler of Eridu,<ref>Cavigneaux, Antoine. “Une version Sumérienne de la légende d’Adapa (Textes de Tell Haddad X) : Zeitschrift Für Assyriologie104 (2014): 1–41.</ref> in late tradition, ] came to be viewed as Alulim's vizier.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=40}} It was believed that he provided the king with wisdom on behalf of the god ].{{sfn|George|Taniguchi|Geller|2010|p=136}} Piotr Steinkeller based on the connection between them suggests Alulim could himself be viewed as a sagacious Adapa-like figure, though he admits no sources provide information about the perception of his character in Mesopotamian tradition.{{sfn|Steinkeller|2017|p=64}} The association between Alulim and Adapa is attested in lists of rulers and corresponding sages known from the ], and additionally in an earlier damaged text from ] labeled as a letter from Adapa to Alulim, following a convention of so-called "scribal letters".{{sfn|Foster|1974|pp=346-347}} However, a distinct tradition instead placed Adapa in the times of another mythical king, ].{{sfn|Foster|1974|p=347}}


In late tradition, ] came to be viewed as Alulim’s vizier.{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=40}} It was believed that he provided the king with wisdom on behalf of the god ].{{sfn|George|Taniguchi|Geller|2010|p=136}} Piotr Steinkeller based on the connection between them suggests Alulim could himself be viewed as a sagacious Adapa-like figure, though he admits no sources provide information about the perception of his character in Mesopotamian tradition.{{sfn|Steinkeller|2017|p=64}} The association between Alulim and Adapa is attested in lists of rulers and corresponding sages known from the ], and additionally in an earlier damaged text from ] labeled as a letter from Adapa to Alulim, following a convention of so-called “scribal letters”.{{sfn|Foster|1974|pp=346-347}} However, a distinct tradition instead placed Adapa in the times of another mythical king, ].{{sfn|Foster|1974|p=347}}
==Proposed influence on other mythical figures== ==Proposed influence on other mythical figures==
Eckhart Frahm has tentatively suggested that it is possible that the vowel pattern in the alternate form of Alulim’s name, Alulu, influenced the formation of the name ].{{sfn|Frahm|2018|p=277}} A reference to Alulu occurs in a broken context in a heavily damaged ] (or later) text from ] which might link him to Pazuzu, if the restoration of the latter name is correct, though due to the state of preservation the contents are presently impossible to interpret.{{sfn|Frahm|2018|pp=282=283}} Eckhart Frahm has tentatively suggested that it is possible that the vowel pattern in the alternate form of Alulim's name, Alulu, influenced the formation of the name ].{{sfn|Frahm|2018|p=277}} A reference to Alulu occurs in a broken context in a heavily damaged ] (or later) text from ] which might link him to Pazuzu, if the restoration of the latter name is correct, though due to the state of preservation the contents are presently impossible to interpret.{{sfn|Frahm|2018|pp=282=283}}

Mary R. Bachvarova notes that in the ] ''Song of Birth'', the primordial deity ] who appears as the original "king in heaven" (]) bears a name similar to Alulim's.{{sfn|Bachvarova|2012|p=112}} She suggests that this text might have been influenced by the ''Sumerian King List'', with the reigns of the early rulers of the gods being patterned on the traditions pertaining to early Mesopotamian legendary kings.{{sfn|Bachvarova|2012|pp=112-113}}


Mary R. Bachvarova notes that in the ] ''Song of Birth'', the primordial deity ] who appears as the original “king in heaven” (]) bears a name similar to Alulim’s.{{sfn|Bachvarova|2012|p=112}} She suggests that this text might have been influenced by the ''Sumerian King List'', with the reigns of the early rulers of the gods being patterned on the traditions pertaining to early Mesopotamian legendary kings.{{sfn|Bachvarova|2012|pp=112-113}}
==Later relevance== ==Later relevance==
A Greek version of Alulim’s name, Aloros ({{lang-grc-gre|Ἄλωρος}}), is known from citations from ] ''Babyloniaca''{{sfn|George|Taniguchi|Geller|2010|p=136}} preserved in the works of authors such as ] and ].{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=38}} Berossus’ account of early kings depended on the tradition known from ''Sumerian King List''.{{sfn|Kvanvig|2011|p=83}} He states that Aloros reigned for 36000 years and was succeeded by Alaparos ({{lang-grc-gre|αλαπαρος}}), presumed to be an adaptation of ].{{sfn|Finkel|1980|p=71}} His writings were later partially ] by ], who combined his account with traditions pertaining to ] and with ].{{sfn|van Bladel|2009|p=145}} His work was in turn an influence on on the writings of the astrologer ] and on ]’s ''Qānūn'', cited as sources in ]’s ] (written in 1259-1260), where a derivative of Aloros, Aylūrūs ({{lang-ar|الوروس}}), is presented as the first king of the people standing in opposition to ].{{sfn|van Bladel|2009|pp=145-146}} Juzjani in his account equates him with ].{{sfn|van Bladel|2009|p=155}} A Greek version of Alulim's name, Aloros ({{langx|grc|Ἄλωρος}}), is known from citations from ]' '']''{{sfn|George|Taniguchi|Geller|2010|p=136}} preserved in the works of authors such as ] and ].{{sfn|Peterson|2018|p=38}} Berossus' account of early kings depended on the tradition known from ''Sumerian King List''.{{sfn|Kvanvig|2011|p=83}} He states that Aloros reigned for 36000 years and was succeeded by Alaparos ({{langx|grc|αλαπαρος}}), presumed to be an adaptation of ].{{sfn|Finkel|1980|p=71}} His writings were later partially ] by ], who combined his account with traditions pertaining to ] and with ].{{sfn|van Bladel|2009|p=145}} His work was in turn an influence on the writings of the astrologer ] and on ]'s ''Qānūn'', cited as sources in ]'s ] (written in 1259-1260), where a derivative of Aloros, Aylūrūs ({{langx|ar|الوروس}}), is presented as the first king of the people standing in opposition to ].{{sfn|van Bladel|2009|pp=145-146}} Juzjani in his account equates him with ].{{sfn|van Bladel|2009|p=155}}

==References== ==References==
===Citations===
{{reflist}} {{reflist}}
===Sources=== ===Bibliography===
{{refbegin}} {{refbegin|40em}}
*{{cite web|author=Ashmolean|url=https://collections.ashmolean.org/object/462921|title=Sumerian king list|date=2017|website=Ashmolean Museum|access-date=2021-08-02 |ref={{harvid|Ashmolean Museum|2017}}}}
====Bibliography====
*{{cite book|last=Alster|first=Bendt|title=Wisdom of ancient Sumer|publisher=CDL Press|location=Bethesda, MD|date=2005|isbn=1-883053-92-7|oclc=58431609}}
{{refbegin}}
*{{cite book|last1=Al-Bīrūnī|first1=Abū Rayḥān Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad|author-link=Al-Biruni|last2=Juzjani|first2=Minhaj al-Siraj|author-link2=Minhaj-i Siraj Juzjani|translator-last=Raverty|translator-first=Henry George|translator-link=Henry George Raverty|editor-last=Colavito|editor-first=Jason|editor-link=Jason Colavito|date=1260a|orig-year=c. 1259–1260 CE|publication-date=|access-date=2021-08-01|title=طبقات ناصری|trans-title=Tabaqat-i Nasiri|chapter=Qānūn-al-mas‘ūdī|url=https://www.jasoncolavito.com/book-of-thousands.html|series=]|language=fa|volume=1}}
*{{cite book|last=Alster|first=Bendt|title=Wisdom of ancient Sumer|publisher=CDL Press|publication-place=Bethesda, MD|date=2005|isbn=1-883053-92-7|oclc=58431609}}
*{{cite book|last=Frahm|first=Eckhart|title=Mesopotamian Medicine and Magic. Studies in Honor of Markham J. Geller|chapter=A Tale of Two Lands and Two Thousand Years: The Origins of Pazuzu|chapter-url=https://www.academia.edu/39730790|pages=272–291|series=Ancient Magic and Divination|volume=14|publisher=Brill|year=2018|isbn=9789004368088|doi=10.1163/9789004368088_015|s2cid=201576309 }}
*{{cite book|last=Katz|first=Dina|title=The Image of the Netherworld in the Sumerian Sources|publisher=CDL Press|publication-place=Bethesda, MD|year=2003|isbn=1-883053-77-3|oclc=51770219}}
*{{cite book|last=Kvanvig|first=Helge S.|title=Primeval history: Babylonian, biblical, and Enochic: an intertextual reading|series=Supplements to the Journal for the Study of Judaism|volume=149|publisher=Brill|publication-place=Leiden|year=2011|isbn=978-90-04-19612-4|oclc=727944800}}
*{{cite book|last=Marchesi|first=Gianni|title=Ana turri gimilli: studi dedicati al padre Werner R. Mayer, S.J., da amici e allievi|chapter=The Sumerian King List and the Early History of Mesopotamia|chapter-url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/341987822|publisher=Università di Roma La Sapienza|series=Quaderni di Vicino Oriente|year=2010|access-date=2023-01-15}}
*{{cite book|last=Steinkeller|first=Piotr|title=History, Texts and Art in Early Babylonia|chapter=Writing, Kingship and Political Discourse in Early Babylonia: Reflections on the Nature and Function of Third Millennium Historical Sources|publisher=De Gruyter|year=2017|pages=7–81 |doi=10.1515/9781501504778-002|isbn=9781501504778 }}
*{{cite book|last=van Bladel|first=Kevin|title=The Arabic Hermes: From Pagan Sage to Prophet of Science|publisher=Oxford University Press|series=Oxford Studies in Late Antiquity|year=2009|isbn=978-0-19-988850-4|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eVoCkKZWZ0MC&pg=PT234|access-date=2023-01-16}}
*{{cite book|last=Viano|first=Maurizio|title=The reception of Sumerian literature in the western periphery|url=https://edizionicafoscari.unive.it/it/edizioni/libri/978-88-7543-417-5/|publication-place=Venezia|date=2016|isbn=978-88-6969-077-8|oclc=965932920}}
=====Journals=====
*{{cite journal|last=Bachvarova|first=Mary R.|title=From "Kingship in Heaven" to King Lists: Syro-Anatolian Courts and the History of the World|url=https://www.academia.edu/1204042|journal=Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions|publisher=Brill|volume=12|issue=1|year=2012|issn=1569-2116|doi=10.1163/156921212x629482|pages=97–118}} *{{cite journal|last=Bachvarova|first=Mary R.|title=From "Kingship in Heaven" to King Lists: Syro-Anatolian Courts and the History of the World|url=https://www.academia.edu/1204042|journal=Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions|publisher=Brill|volume=12|issue=1|year=2012|issn=1569-2116|doi=10.1163/156921212x629482|pages=97–118}}
*{{cite journal|last=Finkel|first=Irving L.|title=Bilingual Chronicle Fragments|journal=Journal of Cuneiform Studies|publisher=American Schools of Oriental Research|volume=32|issue=2|year=1980|issn=0022-0256|jstor=1359669|pages=65–80 |doi=10.2307/1359669 |s2cid=163499364 | url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/1359669|access-date=2023-01-16}} *{{cite journal|last=Finkel|first=Irving L.|title=Bilingual Chronicle Fragments|journal=Journal of Cuneiform Studies|publisher=American Schools of Oriental Research|volume=32|issue=2|year=1980|issn=0022-0256|jstor=1359669|pages=65–80 |doi=10.2307/1359669 |s2cid=163499364 | url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/1359669|access-date=2023-01-16}}
*{{cite journal|last=Foster|first=Benjamin R.|title=Wisdom and the Gods in Ancient Mesopotamia|journal=Orientalia|publisher=GBPress - Gregorian Biblical Press|volume=43|year=1974|issn=0030-5367|jstor=43074611|pages=344–354|url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/43074611|access-date=2023-01-16}} *{{cite journal|last=Foster|first=Benjamin R.|title=Wisdom and the Gods in Ancient Mesopotamia|journal=Orientalia|publisher=GBPress - Gregorian Biblical Press|volume=43|year=1974|issn=0030-5367|jstor=43074611|pages=344–354|url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/43074611|access-date=2023-01-16}}
*{{cite book|last=Frahm|first=Eckhart|title=Mesopotamian Medicine and Magic. Studies in Honor of Markham J. Geller|chapter=A Tale of Two Lands and Two Thousand Years: The Origins of Pazuzu|chapter-url=https://www.academia.edu/39730790|pages=272–291|series=Ancient Magic and Divination|volume=14|publisher=Brill|year=2018|isbn=9789004368088|doi=10.1163/9789004368088_015|s2cid=201576309 }}
*{{cite journal|last1=George|first1=Andrew R.|last2=Taniguchi|first2=Junko|last3=Geller|first3=M. J.|title=The Dogs of Ninkilim, part two: Babylonian rituals to counter field pests|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/303824379|journal=Iraq|publisher=Cambridge University Press|volume=72|year=2010|issn=0021-0889|doi=10.1017/s0021088900000607|pages=79–148|s2cid=190713244 }} *{{cite journal|last1=George|first1=Andrew R.|last2=Taniguchi|first2=Junko|last3=Geller|first3=M. J.|title=The Dogs of Ninkilim, part two: Babylonian rituals to counter field pests|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/303824379|journal=Iraq|publisher=Cambridge University Press|volume=72|year=2010|issn=0021-0889|doi=10.1017/s0021088900000607|pages=79–148|s2cid=190713244 }}
*{{cite book|last=Katz|first=Dina|title=The Image of the Netherworld in the Sumerian Sources|publisher=CDL Press|location=Bethesda, MD|year=2003|isbn=1-883053-77-3|oclc=51770219}}
*{{cite book|last=Kvanvig|first=Helge S.|title=Primeval history: Babylonian, biblical, and Enochic: an intertextual reading|series=Supplements to the Journal for the Study of Judaism|volume=149|publisher=Brill|location=Leiden|year=2011|isbn=978-90-04-19612-4|oclc=727944800}}
*{{cite journal|last=Lenzi|first=Alan|title=The Uruk List of Kings and Sages and Late Mesopotamian Scholarship|url=https://www.academia.edu/1109196|journal=Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions|publisher=Brill|volume=8|issue=2|year=2008|issn=1569-2116|doi=10.1163/156921208786611764|pages=137–169}} *{{cite journal|last=Lenzi|first=Alan|title=The Uruk List of Kings and Sages and Late Mesopotamian Scholarship|url=https://www.academia.edu/1109196|journal=Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions|publisher=Brill|volume=8|issue=2|year=2008|issn=1569-2116|doi=10.1163/156921208786611764|pages=137–169}}
*{{cite book|last=Marchesi|first=Gianni|title=Ana turri gimilli: studi dedicati al padre Werner R. Mayer, S.J., da amici e allievi|chapter=The Sumerian King List and the Early History of Mesopotamia|chapter-url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/341987822|publisher=Università di Roma La Sapienza|series=Quaderni di Vicino Oriente|year=2010|access-date=2023-01-15}}
*{{cite journal|last=Peterson|first=Jeremiah|title=The Divine Appointment of the First Antediluvian King: Newly Recovered Content from the Ur Version of the Sumerian Flood Story|url=https://www.academia.edu/37013183|journal=Journal of Cuneiform Studies|publisher=University of Chicago Press|volume=70|issue=1|year=2018|issn=0022-0256|doi=10.5615/jcunestud.70.2018.0037|pages=37–51|s2cid=165830377 }} *{{cite journal|last=Peterson|first=Jeremiah|title=The Divine Appointment of the First Antediluvian King: Newly Recovered Content from the Ur Version of the Sumerian Flood Story|url=https://www.academia.edu/37013183|journal=Journal of Cuneiform Studies|publisher=University of Chicago Press|volume=70|issue=1|year=2018|issn=0022-0256|doi=10.5615/jcunestud.70.2018.0037|pages=37–51|s2cid=165830377 }}
*{{cite book|last=Steinkeller|first=Piotr|title=History, Texts and Art in Early Babylonia|chapter=Writing, Kingship and Political Discourse in Early Babylonia: Reflections on the Nature and Function of Third Millennium Historical Sources|publisher=De Gruyter|year=2017|pages=7–81 |doi=10.1515/9781501504778-002|isbn=9781501504778 }}
====External links====
*{{cite book|last=van Bladel|first=Kevin|title=The Arabic Hermes: From Pagan Sage to Prophet of Science|publisher=Oxford University Press|series=Oxford Studies in Late Antiquity|year=2009|isbn=978-0-19-988850-4|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eVoCkKZWZ0MC&pg=PT234|access-date=2023-01-16}}
*{{cite web|author=Ashmolean|url=https://collections.ashmolean.org/object/462921|title=Sumerian king list|date=2017|website=Ashmolean Museum|access-date=2021-08-02 |ref={{harvid|Ashmolean Museum|2017}}}}
*{{cite book|last=Viano|first=Maurizio|title=The reception of Sumerian literature in the western periphery|url=https://edizionicafoscari.unive.it/it/edizioni/libri/978-88-7543-417-5/|location=Venezia |publisher=Edizioni Ca'Foscari |date=2016|isbn=978-88-6969-077-8|oclc=965932920}}
*{{cite web|url=http://ar.lib.eshia.ir/10516/1/132|title=Nasiri classes (History of Iran and Islam)|last1=Al-Bīrūnī|first1=Abū Rayḥān Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad|author-link=Al-Biruni|last2=Juzjani|first2=Minhaj al-Siraj|author-link2=Minhaj-i Siraj Juzjani|date=1260b|orig-year=c. 1259–1260 CE|publication-date=|access-date=2021-08-01|website=The Library of the School of Jurisprudence|language=fa}}
*{{cite web|last1=Black|first1=Jeremy Allen|author-link=Jeremy Black (assyriologist)|last2=Baines|first2=John Robert|author-link2=John Baines (Egyptologist)|last3=Dahl|first3=Jacob L.|last4=Van De Mieroop|first4=Marc|author-link4=Marc Van De Mieroop|translator-last=Jacobsen|translator-first=Thorkild Peter Rudolph|translator-link=Thorkild Jacobsen|translator-last2=Glassner|translator-first2=Jean-Jacques|translator-link2=Jean-Jacques Glassner|translator-last3=Römer|translator-first3=Willem H. Ph.|translator-last4=Zólyomi|translator-first4=Gábor|editor-last=Cunningham|editor-first=Graham|editor-last2=Ebeling|editor-first2=Jarle|editor-last3=Flückiger-Hawker|editor-first3=Esther|editor-last4=Robson|editor-first4=Eleanor|editor-link4=Eleanor Robson|editor-last5=Taylor|editor-first5=Jon|editor-last6=Zólyomi|editor-first6=Gábor|date=2006-12-19|year=2006|publication-date=1997–2006|orig-year=c. 1900–1600 BC|access-date=2021-07-31|department=]|website=] (ETCSL)|publisher=]|location=]|title=The Sumerian king list|url=https://etcsl.orinst.ox.ac.uk/cgi-bin/etcsl.cgi?text=t.2.1.1&charenc=j#|edition=revised|language=sux}}
=====Further reading=====
======Geography======
*{{cite web|last=Kessler|first=Peter|date=2008-04-16|year=2008b|orig-year=2008|publication-date=1982–2021|title=Ancient Mesopotamia|url=https://www.historyfiles.co.uk/MainFeaturesMesopotamia.htm|website=The History Files|publisher=Kessler Associates|access-date=2021-07-30}}
======Language======
*{{cite web|last=Black|first=Jeremy Allen|author-link=Jeremy Black (assyriologist)|last2=Baines|first2=John Robert|author-link2=John Baines (Egyptologist)|last3=Dahl|first3=Jacob L.|last4=Van De Mieroop|first4=Marc|author-link4=Marc Van De Mieroop|editor-last=Cunningham|editor-first=Graham|editor-last2=Ebeling|editor-first2=Jarle|editor-last3=Flückiger-Hawker|editor-first3=Esther|editor-last4=Robson|editor-first4=Eleanor|editor-link4=Eleanor Robson|editor-last5=Taylor|editor-first5=Jon|editor-last6=Zólyomi|editor-first6=Gábor|location=]|department=]|title=ETCSL: The Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature|url=https://etcsl.orinst.ox.ac.uk/|edition=revised|access-date=2022-09-23|quote=The ] (ETCSL), a project of the ], comprises a selection of nearly 400 literary compositions recorded on sources which come from ancient Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) and date to the late third and early second millennia BCE.}}
*{{cite web|url=https://cdli.ucla.edu/|title=CDLI: Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative|date=2022|orig-year=1998|publication-date=1998–2022|access-date=2022-09-23|last=Renn|first=Jürgen|author-link=Jürgen Renn|last2=Dahl|first2=Jacob L.|last3=Lafont|first3=Bertrand|last4=Pagé-Perron|first4=Émilie|quote=Images presented online by the research project ] (CDLI) are for the non-commercial use of students, scholars, and the public. Support for the project has been generously provided by the ], the ] (NSF), the ] (NEH), the ] (ILMS), and by the ] (MPS), Oxford and ] (UCLA); network services are from UCLA’s Center for Digital Humanities.}}
*{{cite web|url=http://psd.museum.upenn.edu/|title=PSD: The Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary|date=2022|orig-year=2003|publication-date=2003–2022|access-date=2022-09-23|last=Sjöberg|first=Åke Waldemar|author-link=Åke W. Sjöberg|last2=Leichty|first2=Erle|last3=Tinney|first3=Steve|quote=The ] (PSD) is carried out in the Babylonian Section of the ]. It is funded by the NEH and private contributions. work with several other projects in the development of tools and corpora. of these have useful websites: the CDLI and the ETCSL.}}
{{refend}} {{refend}}

==External links==
*{{cite book|last1=Al-Bīrūnī|first1=Abū Rayḥān Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad|author-link=Al-Biruni|last2=Juzjani|first2=Minhaj al-Siraj|author-link2=Minhaj-i Siraj Juzjani|translator-last=Raverty|translator-first=Henry George|translator-link=Henry George Raverty|editor-last=Colavito|editor-first=Jason|editor-link=Jason Colavito|date=1260a|orig-year=c. 1259–1260 CE|access-date=2021-08-01|title=طبقات ناصری|trans-title=Tabaqat-i Nasiri|chapter=Qānūn-al-mas‘ūdī|url=https://www.jasoncolavito.com/book-of-thousands.html|series=]|language=fa|volume=1}}
*{{cite web|url=http://ar.lib.eshia.ir/10516/1/132|title=Nasiri classes (History of Iran and Islam)|last1=Al-Bīrūnī|first1=Abū Rayḥān Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad|author-link=Al-Biruni|last2=Juzjani|first2=Minhaj al-Siraj|author-link2=Minhaj-i Siraj Juzjani|date=1260b|orig-year=c. 1259–1260 CE|access-date=2021-08-01|website=The Library of the School of Jurisprudence|language=fa}}
*{{cite web|last1=Black|first1=Jeremy Allen|author-link=Jeremy Black (assyriologist)|last2=Baines|first2=John Robert|author-link2=John Baines (Egyptologist)|last3=Dahl|first3=Jacob L.|last4=Van De Mieroop|first4=Marc|author-link4=Marc Van De Mieroop|translator-last=Jacobsen|translator-first=Thorkild Peter Rudolph|translator-link=Thorkild Jacobsen|translator-last2=Glassner|translator-first2=Jean-Jacques|translator-link2=Jean-Jacques Glassner|translator-last3=Römer|translator-first3=Willem H. Ph.|translator-last4=Zólyomi|translator-first4=Gábor|editor-last=Cunningham|editor-first=Graham|editor-last2=Ebeling|editor-first2=Jarle|editor-last3=Flückiger-Hawker|editor-first3=Esther|editor-last4=Robson|editor-first4=Eleanor|editor-link4=Eleanor Robson|editor-last5=Taylor|editor-first5=Jon|editor-last6=Zólyomi|editor-first6=Gábor|date=2006-12-19|access-date=2021-07-31|department=]|website=] (ETCSL)|publisher=]|location=]|title=The Sumerian king list|url=https://etcsl.orinst.ox.ac.uk/cgi-bin/etcsl.cgi?text=t.2.1.1&charenc=j#|edition=revised}}

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Latest revision as of 20:57, 4 January 2025

Mythological first king of Sumer
Alulim
King (Sumerian: 𒈗, romanized: lugal; transliterated: lu.gal)
The Weld-Blundell Prism, inscribed with the Sumerian King List, a text which mentions Alulim.
SuccessorAlalgar
Sumerian𒀉𒇻𒅆

Alulim (Sumerian: 𒀉𒇻𒅆, romanized: Álulim; transliterated: a₂.lu.lim) was a mythological Mesopotamian ruler, regarded as the first king ever to rule. He is known from the Sumerian King List, Ballad of Early Rulers, and other similar sources which invariably place him in Eridu and assign a reign lasting thousands of years to him. The tablet of Old Babylonian period (c. 1900-1600 BC) from Ur describing the divine appointment of Alulim by the gods notes that he was chosen among "vast and many people," and appointed by gods for the "shepherdship of the entirety of the many people". Another myth describing his appointment by the gods and incantations treating him as the creator of insects are also known. He is absent from Early Dynastic sources, and he is considered fictional by Assyriologists. His name was preserved in later Greek, Arabic and Persian works.

Name

Alulim's name was written in cuneiform as A2-lu-lim or A-lu-lim and can be translated from Sumerian as either "horn of the red deer" or "seed of the red deer" depending on the variable first sign. Jeremiah Peterson suggests that it might reflect the Mesopotamian belief that at the dawn of history, when Alulim was believed to live, humans behaved in animal-like manner, as attested in texts such as Sheep and Grain or How Grain Came to Sumer. A further attested spelling, Alulu, written A-lu-lu, might represent an Akkadianized form. The name Ayalu, known from the Uruk List of Kings and Sages (Paired with Apkallu Adapa) where it is written A-a-lu, appears to be another variant, resulting from reinterpretation reliant on the partially homophonous word ayyalu, 'deer' or 'stag'.

The name Alulim is not attested in any Early Dynastic sources and was never used as an ordinary given name. The only indirect parallels are the occurrences of individuals named Alulu (with variable spelling) in early texts from Fara and other pre-Sargonic sites.

Reign

Weld-Blundell Prism, initial paragraph about rule of Alulim and Alalngar in Eridu for 64.800 years.

Alulim is regarded as a fictional figure by Assyriologists. References to him are largely limited to lists of legendary ancient rulers. He was traditionally considered the first Mesopotamian king, and his reign was placed before the mythical great flood. All known sources listing primordial kings consistently state that he lived in Eridu, unless no mention of any cities is made. This tradition reflected the perception of Eridu as a city of particular symbolic importance. His reign was described as supernaturally long. Its duration was regarded as proverbial, as indicated by a letter of the astrologer Ašarēdu to an unspecified Babylonian king, in which he wished him to be blessed by the gods of Babylon with "years of Alulu". According to the Sumerian King List, Alulim retained his position for 28,800 years before he was succeeded by Alalngar, who in turn reigned for 36,000 years. However, the contents of the Sumerian King List are assumed to not reflect historical reality, and cannot be used to reconstruct early Mesopotamian chronology. There is no evidence that the figure of Alulim was incorporated into it from a preexisting older source. A different tradition about the length of his reign is preserved in the Ballad of Early Rulers, which states that he ruled for 36,000 years. According to Irving Finkel, other similar texts give further variant figures, such as 36,200 years (tablet BM 40565) or 67,200 years (tablet WB 62).

Miscellaneous attestations

A tablet of the Eridu Genesis from Ur first published in 2018 describes the appointment of Alulim.

(Obverse)
1 They (the chief deities) created humanity
2 After the were proliferating below/from the earth in unison
3 They made livestock and quadrupeds as fitting things in the steppe(eden-na)
4 In the high steppe ... joyous plants broadly
5 At that time, the canal was not dug ...
6 The dike and ditch
7 The ox ... the plow/farmer/furrow(?) ...
8 The lands ... a single track ...
9 Humanity ... their eyes/faces ...
10 Šakkan/Šumugan in the desert ...
11 Weaving the cap/headcloth(?) ...
12 Humanity ...
13 At that time, the snake was not present,
14 The lion was not present,
15 The dog and wolf were not present ...
16 Humanity
17 Fear and
18 ...
19 The king ...
20 ...

(Reverse)
1 First ... were giving to Asalluhi,
2 Second ... were giving ,
3 Third ... were giving [Larak[ to Pabilsaĝ,
4 Fourth ... were giving
5 Fifth ... were giving Š to .
6 Those cities .. their settlements ...
7 An, Enlil, and Ninhursaĝ
8 Among(?) those cities, Eridu .. they established at the front/as the leader(?)
9 They led(?) a man who was lying(?) among its vast and many people ...
10 An, Enlil, and Enki, the father(s) of the gods(?)
11 They chose Alulim/the "seed of the red deer" for the shepherdship of the entirety of the many people
12 They named him(!) Alulim/named the "seed of the red deer" ...
13 After they served according to the command to check thusly/forever after(?)
14 humanity, whoever possessed a name, were grasping his feet (in submission)/following his path(?)
15 They put both (capital) offense and sin(?) in his hand
16 was giving ... to him
17 ...
18 ...

It has been interpreted as an etiology of the institution of kingship, with the first ruler being chosen from among mankind to act as the shepherd of the early, still animalistic humans, thus leading to the development of human civilization. The gods responsible for Alulim's appointment in this text are An, Enlil and Enki, who are also credited with assigning his name to him. Jeremiah Peterson notes that the grammar of the passage might not designate him as a human, which could indicate that in this context Alulim is not a personal name, but merely a description of the entity chosen to act as a ruler.

In the Ballad of Early Rulers, a composition noted for its large number of allusions to other works of Mesopotamian literature, Alulim is listed among famous ancient figures alongside Etana, Gilgamesh, Ziusudra, Humbaba, Enkidu, Bazi and Zizi. The fact that kings associated both with southern cities, such as Alulim, and ones at home in the north, such as Etana, are mentioned side by side might indicate that it was composed during the period of exodus of scribes from south to north in the Old Babylonian period. Bendt Alster compares this text to a drinking song and notes it appears to enumerate renowned legendary figures in seemingly humorous context, in order to explain the need to find joy in the present.

Alulim is also attested in Neo-Babylonian incantations against field pests, acknowledge him as a "king from before the deluge", though in this context he is also addressed as the creator of insects. He is described as capable of expelling them with a wand, and as responsible for the weeding of fields belonging to Nergal. Elsewhere the expulsion of insects is the domain of the deities Ninkilim and Ennugi, and it is not known how Alulim came to function as a similar figure. The same texts also state that he was believed to enjoy milk, ghee and beer, but could not stand "queen Nisaba", here a metonym for grain.

Although earlier tradition, Me-Turan/Tell-Haddad tablet, describes Adapa as postdiluvian ruler of Eridu, in late tradition, Adapa came to be viewed as Alulim's vizier. It was believed that he provided the king with wisdom on behalf of the god Ea. Piotr Steinkeller based on the connection between them suggests Alulim could himself be viewed as a sagacious Adapa-like figure, though he admits no sources provide information about the perception of his character in Mesopotamian tradition. The association between Alulim and Adapa is attested in lists of rulers and corresponding sages known from the Hellenistic period, and additionally in an earlier damaged text from Sultantepe labeled as a letter from Adapa to Alulim, following a convention of so-called "scribal letters". However, a distinct tradition instead placed Adapa in the times of another mythical king, Enmerkar.

Proposed influence on other mythical figures

Eckhart Frahm has tentatively suggested that it is possible that the vowel pattern in the alternate form of Alulim's name, Alulu, influenced the formation of the name Pazuzu. A reference to Alulu occurs in a broken context in a heavily damaged Middle Assyrian (or later) text from Assur which might link him to Pazuzu, if the restoration of the latter name is correct, though due to the state of preservation the contents are presently impossible to interpret.

Mary R. Bachvarova notes that in the Hurrian Song of Birth, the primordial deity Alalu who appears as the original "king in heaven" (king of the gods) bears a name similar to Alulim's. She suggests that this text might have been influenced by the Sumerian King List, with the reigns of the early rulers of the gods being patterned on the traditions pertaining to early Mesopotamian legendary kings.

Later relevance

A Greek version of Alulim's name, Aloros (Ancient Greek: Ἄλωρος), is known from citations from Berossus' Babyloniaca preserved in the works of authors such as Eusebius and Syncellus. Berossus' account of early kings depended on the tradition known from Sumerian King List. He states that Aloros reigned for 36000 years and was succeeded by Alaparos (Ancient Greek: αλαπαρος), presumed to be an adaptation of Alalgar. His writings were later partially euhemerized by Annianus, who combined his account with traditions pertaining to Enoch and with Genesis 6. His work was in turn an influence on the writings of the astrologer Abu Ma'shar al-Balkhi and on Al-Biruni's Qānūn, cited as sources in Minhaj-i Siraj Juzjani's Tabaqat-i Nasiri (written in 1259-1260), where a derivative of Aloros, Aylūrūs (Arabic: الوروس), is presented as the first king of the people standing in opposition to giants. Juzjani in his account equates him with Gayūmart.

References

  1. Ashmolean Museum 2017.
  2. CDLI Literary 000357, ex. 003 (P346146)
  3. ^ Peterson 2018, p. 38.
  4. ^ Peterson 2018, p. 39.
  5. Lenzi 2008, p. 142.
  6. Marchesi 2010, p. 237.
  7. Steinkeller 2017, pp. 61–62.
  8. ^ Steinkeller 2017, p. 61.
  9. ^ Peterson 2018, p. 40.
  10. ^ Kvanvig 2011, p. 96.
  11. Kvanvig 2011, p. 418.
  12. ^ Steinkeller 2017, p. 64.
  13. Bachvarova 2012, p. 101.
  14. ^ George, Taniguchi & Geller 2010, p. 133.
  15. ^ Katz 2003, p. 118.
  16. Marchesi 2010, p. 238.
  17. ^ Finkel 1980, p. 71.
  18. Peterson 2018, pp. 37–38.
  19. UET 6, 61 + UET 6, 503 + UET 6, 691 (+) UET 6, 701 or CDLI Literary 000357, ex. 003 (P346146)
  20. Peterson 2018, p. 44.
  21. Peterson 2018, p. 47.
  22. Alster 2005, pp. 296–297.
  23. Frahm 2018, p. 278.
  24. Viano 2016, p. 369.
  25. Alster 2005, pp. 290–291.
  26. George, Taniguchi & Geller 2010, pp. 136–137.
  27. George, Taniguchi & Geller 2010, p. 137.
  28. ^ George, Taniguchi & Geller 2010, p. 136.
  29. Cavigneaux, Antoine. “Une version Sumérienne de la légende d’Adapa (Textes de Tell Haddad X) : Zeitschrift Für Assyriologie104 (2014): 1–41.
  30. Foster 1974, pp. 346–347.
  31. Foster 1974, p. 347.
  32. Frahm 2018, p. 277.
  33. Frahm 2018, pp. 282=283.
  34. Bachvarova 2012, p. 112.
  35. Bachvarova 2012, pp. 112–113.
  36. Kvanvig 2011, p. 83.
  37. van Bladel 2009, p. 145.
  38. van Bladel 2009, pp. 145–146.
  39. van Bladel 2009, p. 155.

Bibliography

External links

Regnal titles
Preceded byNone King of Sumer
(legendary)
Succeeded byAlalngar
King of Eridu
(legendary)
Rulers in the Sumerian King List
   
Eridu
Bad-tibira
Larak
Sippar
Shuruppak
First dynasty of Kish
Eanna
First dynasty of Uruk
First dynasty of Ur
Awan dynasty
Second dynasty of Kish
Hamazi
Second dynasty of Uruk
Second dynasty of Ur
  • Nanni
  • Mesh-ki-ang-Nanna II
Adab
Dynasty of Mari
  • Anbu
  • Anba
  • Bazi
  • Zizi
  • Limer
  • Sharrum-iter
Third dynasty of Kish
Dynasty of Akshak
  • Unzi
  • Undalulu
  • Urur
  • Puzur-Nirah
  • Ushi-Il
  • Shu-Suen of Akshak
Fourth dynasty of Kish
Third dynasty of Uruk
Dynasty of Akkad
Fourth dynasty of Uruk
Gutian dynasty
Fifth dynasty of Uruk
Third Dynasty of Ur
Dynasty of Isin
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