nusku การใช้
- Mutakkil-Nusku himself died in the same year ( 1133 BC ).
- Nusku is the symbol of the heavenly as well as of the terrestrial fire.
- May Nusku, the august vizier, hear my prayer and intercede for me.
- His victory was short-lived as " muppiau Mutakkil-Nusku kuss?ukta'il"
- The Assyrian King List relates that " Mutakkil-Nusku, his brother, fought with him ( and ) carried him off to Karduniaa.
- Nusku warns him that he is frightening the gods, the Ananna, and, if he can tone it down a little, Enlil will reward him.
- Mutakkil-Nusku held the throne for'his tablet'( and then ) passed away . " A fairly recently recovered source provides additional insight into these events.
- He appears on the " Khorsabad Kinglist " which relates that Mutakkil-Nusku, his ( Ninurta-tukult + -Aaaur s ) brother, fought against him.
- From it we learn Ninurta-tukult + -Aaaur seems to have kept the loyalty of provincial regions, while the heartland of Assyria sided with Mutakkil-Nusku, fueling a civil war.
- It concludes with a lengthy prayer to the god Nusku, who is entreated to " expel the Demon, overcome Evil, and ` ulak, the nightly wanderer, whose touch is death ."
- Two sons of Aaaur-dn were to contest the throne after his death, Ninurta-tukulti-Ashur ruling for less than a year before being overthrown and forced to flee by his brother Mutakkil-Nusku.
- I led Sin, Ningal, Nusku, and Sadarnunna-my lords-in procession from Babylon, my royal city, and in joy and gladness I caused them to dwell in its midst, a dwelling of enjoyment.
- Apart from a brief economic text concerning 100 sheep of Mutakkil-Nusku, without a royal title, and his appearance in the genealogies of his descendants such as one of his son, Aaaur-raa-iai I, there are no other extant inscriptions.
- Kassite gods are often only known as part of personal names but Shuqamuna was equated with the Mesopotamian gods Nergal ( god of the underworld ) and Nusku ( god of fire ) and his symbol appears on kuddurus ( boundary stones ) as a bird-standard.
- Another very brief period of internal upheaval followed the death of Ashur-Dan I when his son and successor Ninurta-tukulti-Ashur ( 1133 BC ) was deposed in his first year of rule by his own brother Mutakkil-Nusku and forced to flee to Babylonia.
- In later literary texts, Adad, Enki / Ea, Enlil, Girra, Nanna / Sin, Nergal and ` ara also appear as his sons, while goddesses referred to as his daughters include Inana / Iatar, Nanaya, Nidaba, Ninisinna, Ninkarrak, Ninmug, Ninnibru, Ninsumun, Nungal and Nusku.
- The conceptions connected with Nusku are of distinctly popular origin, as is shown by his prominence in incantations, which represent the popular element in the cult, and it is significant that in the astro-theological system of the Assyrian and Babylonian priests Nusku-Girru is not assigned to any particular place in the heavens.
- The conceptions connected with Nusku are of distinctly popular origin, as is shown by his prominence in incantations, which represent the popular element in the cult, and it is significant that in the astro-theological system of the Assyrian and Babylonian priests Nusku-Girru is not assigned to any particular place in the heavens.
- An invocation of the god Nusku, the protective night light, was recited at dawn then a greeting to the savior, the sun-god and finally a moment of self recognition in a bowl of pure water : " You are my reflection . . . You are mine, and I am yours.
- Gods which have sometimes been identified with the Kassites but which have other origins include Nusku, represented by a sauce-bowl lamp, a god of war, or more probably an Assyrian god of fire, synonymous with d N阹gal, Gibil, a fire god, of Sumerian origin, Addu, a form of the name of the god Adad and Eanunna represented by the snake-dragon.
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