Fertile Crescent myth series | |
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Mesopotamian | |
Levantine | |
Arabian | |
Mesopotamia | |
Primordial beings | |
The great gods | |
Demigods & heroes | |
Spirits & monsters | |
Tales from Babylon | |
7 Gods who Decree | |
4 primary: |
3 sky: |
The Dynasty of Dunnum, sometimes called the Theogony of Dunnum or Dunnu or the Harab Myth, [1] is an ancient Mesopotamian mythical tale of successive generations of gods who take power through parricide and live incestuously with their mothers and/or sisters, until, according to a reconstruction of the broken text, more acceptable behavior prevailed with the last generation of gods, [2] Enlil and his twin sons Nušku and Ninurta, who share rule amicably. [3] It is extant in a sole-surviving late Babylonian copy [4] excavated from the site of the ancient city of Sippar by Hormuzd Rassam in the 19th century. [5]
It chronicles the conflict of generations of the gods who represent aspects of fertility, agriculture and the seasonal cycle: [6] heaven, earth, sea, river, plough, wild and domesticated animals, herdsman, pasture, fruit-tree and vine. [4]
It begins, according to a restoration:
In the beginning, [Harab married earth.] Family and lord[ship he founded. Saying: “A]rable land we will carve out (of) the ploughed land of the country. [With the p]loughing of their harbu-ploughs they cause the creation of the sea. [The lands ploughed with the mayaru-pl]ow by themselves gave birth to Sumuqan. His str[onghold,] Dunnu, the eternal city, they created, both of them. [7]
— Translated by William W. Hallo, The world's oldest literature: studies in Sumerian belles-lettres
Then Sumuqan kills his father Harab (plough), marries his mother Ki (earth) and his sister and the cycle of carnage begins. The city of Dunnum was a synonymous toponym, with many places so named, such as one in the vicinity of Isin [7] and another lying of the right bank of the Euphrates in what is now northern Syria. [8] A dunnu is a fortified settlement, but the word can also be translated as strength or violence. [9]
The tale spread across to Phoenicia and over the Aegean Sea, where its influence can be felt in the Ugarit myth Ba’al and Yam from the Ba’al cycle (ca. 1600-1200 BC), [2] the Hittite myth Song of Kumarbi (14th or 13th century BC) [1] and the Greek poet Hesiod’s Theogony (ca. 800-700 BC). [10]