L
Lokabrenna
Guest
Regarding the OP, as a student of Near Eastern Studies, I’m baffled by it. To start with, Enki was never really the head of the pantheon, that honor belongs to Enlil, although Enki was highly regarded as a “friend of humanity” and the cities that claimed him as patron did ascribe to him a certain level of prominence over the other gods (but that was a common practice).
Serpents aren’t always benevolent, either. In Norse cosmology, for instance (although Norse warriors did decorate their helmets with images of serpents).
This just looks like an attempt to shoehorn Sumerian deities into something almost Zoroastrian in nature. Is this from those “Lost Books of Enki” by any chance? It’s about as far removed from Sumerian mythology as Christianity is from Islam.
If anyone’s interested in actual research regarding ancient Mesopotamia, I recommend Benjamin R. Foster’s book From Distant Days: Myths, Tales, and Poetry from Ancient Mesopotamia and Ancient Near Eastern History And Culture by William H. Stiebing, Jr. which are the two textbooks that were used in the Near Eastern Studies classes I took.
Now I’m going to go cry in a corner…
Serpents aren’t always benevolent, either. In Norse cosmology, for instance (although Norse warriors did decorate their helmets with images of serpents).
This just looks like an attempt to shoehorn Sumerian deities into something almost Zoroastrian in nature. Is this from those “Lost Books of Enki” by any chance? It’s about as far removed from Sumerian mythology as Christianity is from Islam.
If anyone’s interested in actual research regarding ancient Mesopotamia, I recommend Benjamin R. Foster’s book From Distant Days: Myths, Tales, and Poetry from Ancient Mesopotamia and Ancient Near Eastern History And Culture by William H. Stiebing, Jr. which are the two textbooks that were used in the Near Eastern Studies classes I took.
Now I’m going to go cry in a corner…