anshar

  • 61Ki (diosa) — Ki (Sumerio = Tierra), es una de las más importantes diosas de la mitología de Mesopotamia. La mayoría de los eruditos coincide en que esta diosa, es comúnmente conocida por su nombre más popular Ninhursag y sería exactamente la misma figura,… …

    Wikipedia Español

  • 62Lahmu and Lahamu — ▪ Mesopotamian mythology       in Mesopotamian mythology, twin deities, the first gods to be born from the chaos that was created by the merging of Apsu (the watery deep beneath the earth) and Tiamat (the personification of the salt waters); this …

    Universalium

  • 63Ashur — noun a) the head of the Assyrian pantheon, later identified with Anshar b) the city of Assur …

    Wiktionary

  • 64Mesopotamian religion — The god Marduk and his dragon Mušḫuššu, from a Babylonian cylinder seal. Mesopotamian religion refers to the religious beliefs and practices followed by the Sumerian and Akkadian (Assyrian/Babylonian) peoples living in Mesopotamia (around the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 65Religions of the ancient Near East — Myths of the Fertile Crescent series …

    Wikipedia

  • 66Anexo:Dioses — Esta lista de dioses tiene como objetivo ofrecer información sobre deidades actuales y antiguas en las diferentes religiones, culturas y mitologías del mundo. Está ordenada alfabéticamente. Véase también: dios, diosa, deidad. Contenido 1… …

    Wikipedia Español

  • 67Gaga (divinité) — Gaga est une divinité babylonienne mineure apparaissant dans l Enuma Elish. Il est envoyé par Anshar aux forces de Tiamat avec l annonce officielle de préparation au combat de Marduk contre Tiamat. Références The religion of Babylonia and Assyria …

    Wikipédia en Français

  • 68mythical deities — (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Nouns 1. mythical deities, heathen gods and goddesses; god[dess], deity, divinity, demigod; pantheon, mythology, folklore. 2. (Greece) Zeus, [Phoebus] Apollo[n], Ares, Hephaestus, Hermes, Poseidon, Hades,… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 69Anu —    1. Celtic culture heroine and fertility priestess, especially in Munster, where two mountains were known as ‘the Paps of Anu’.    2. In Babylonian myth, sky god, son of Anshar and Kishar; chief of the great triad of gods, the others being… …

    Who’s Who in non-classical mythology

  • 70Asshur — (Assur)    Originally an Assyrian moon and war god of the city of that name. Later became head of pantheon, occupying a similar position to that of Marduk. He may be a later development of Anshar. His symbol, a god in a horned cap, shooting an… …

    Who’s Who in non-classical mythology