π’€­π’ˆ—π’‰†π’‚— π’•π’…—π’ˆ  π’Š“π’…†π’‹—
π’‚Šπ’‰‘π’ˆ  π’€€π’ˆΎπ’†ͺ π’ˆ—π’‹« π’…†π’…‡
π’ˆ—π’‹« π’…†π’…‡ π’€€π’ˆΎ π’‚Šπ’‰‘ 𒁕𒅗
π’Š“π’…†π’‹— π’€­π’ˆ— 𒉆𒂗 𒁕𒅗
π’€­ π’ˆ— 𒉆 π’‚— 𒁕 π’…—
π’…† π’…‡ π’€€ π’ˆΎ π’‚Š 𒉑
π’€­Tablets of Sumer
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The Anunnaki

A working pantheon

The Sumerians did not picture their gods as remote abstractions. They held offices. Below: five whose names recur most often in the tablets.

Sumerian deity bust with horned crown and inlaid eyes.

Sky, supreme authority

An/ Anu

The father of the gods, distant and almost silent.

Statue of a horned, bearded Sumerian god against a stormy sky.

Wind, storm, kingship

Enlil

The executive of the cosmos β€” terrifying, decisive.

Carved relief of Enki with streams of water flowing from his shoulders.

Fresh water, wisdom, craft

Enki/ Ea

The clever god who keeps quietly saving humanity.

Cylinder seal impression of Inanna with lion and eight-pointed star.

Love, war, sovereignty

Inanna/ Ishtar

The goddess who walks into the underworld and walks back out.

Underworld goddess seated on a dark throne in a cavernous hall.

The underworld

Ereshkigal

Queen of the Great Below, whose verdict is final.

π’€­Tablets of Sumer

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Translations cited to their scholarly editions. Artwork is original, generated to evoke Mesopotamian motifs β€” not to depict specific museum artifacts.