Age is shown in purple. The Hurrians Cuneiform script cuneiform unicode u ur ri unicode were a people ... . The population of the Hittite Empire in Anatolia to a large part consisted of Hurrians, and there is significant Hurrian influence in Hittite mythology . By the Early Iron Age , the Hurrians had ... The Hurrians spoke an Ergative absolutive language ergative agglutinative language , conventionally ... to the Northeast Caucasian languages . ref Jaimoukha, Amjad. The Chechens A Handbook . ref The Hurrians ... substratum of northern Mesopotamia since earliest times, while Hurrians were merely late arrivals ... Hurrian settlement in the Khabur River valley. Late Bronze Age Yamhad The Hurrians also migrated ... king Hattusilis I around 1600 BCE. Hurrians also settled in the coastal region of Adaniya in the country ... from the demise of Babylonian power in sixteenth century BCE. Hurrians had inhabited the region ... the Hurrians. Hurrian kings such as Ithi Teshup and Ithiya ruled over Arrapha, yet by the mid fifteenth ... people at the end of the Bronze Age. Some scholars have suggested Hurrians lived on in the country ... was greatly influenced by the Hurrians. Tablets from Nuzi, Alalakh , and other cities with Hurrian .... They are a key to the understanding of Hurrian culture and history. Ceramic ware The Hurrians ... use the terms Khabur ware and Nuzi ware for two types of wheel made pottery used by the Hurrians. Khabur ... Nuzi ware has very distinctive forms, and are painted in brown or black. Metallurgy The Hurrians ... ancient sites from the area dominated by the Hurrians. Excavation reports and images are found at the websites ... hsm NFNuziRest.htm The Semitic Museum Nuzi and the Hurrians ref Tell Brak ancient Nagar ref http ... Horites Kassites References Commons category Hurrians Reflist Bibliography Isaac Asimov Asimov, Isaac ... 89003 158 4 Gelb, Ignace J. Hurrians and Subarians , Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization No. 22 ... of Armenia . Los Angeles, 2000. Speiser, E. A. Introduction to Hurrians, Citation needed date ... more details
Hurrian may refer to The Hurrians , an ancient people of the Near East The Hurrian language , an extinct language spoken by those people A fictional god in the Arcanis role playing game disambig ... more details
Room . Plot summary The Hurrians, a small, tail ed, vegetarian primate species have found on their space ... themselves in a Nuclear warfare nuclear war . The Hurrians adopted the policy of helping to rebuild ... human, each race helped in this fashion pays the Hurrians a modest contribution, choosing the product ... a set number of individuals into servitude each year. The Hurrians learned of Earth at the beginning ..., after fifteen years the war has not come. The Hurrians cannot simply leave either their calculations ... space travel and, presumably because of their violence, quickly set chaos among the Hurrians civilization. In desperation, the Hurrians kidnap a human to try to discover why the nuclear war has not happened. The human taunts the Hurrians by calling them vulture s, since the Hurrians never try ... with the human and analyzing his conversation, the Hurrians reach an astounding conclusion. As the inspector ..., the director fearfully asks for clarification, and is told that the Hurrians need to drop an atomic ... space civilizations, is nevertheless completely unacceptable to the Hurrians, a race of absolute ... order someone else to do so. Unable to solve this dilemma, the Hurrians are forced to return ... more details
Hurri is a state along with Mitanni of the more inclusive Hurri lands, ref Urartians and Hurrians, Warren C. Benedict, p.102 ref which many scholars locate in Armenia . ref G. Contenau, La civilisation des hittites et des Hurrites du Mitanni 1934 , pp. 60 61 ref The name Hurri is also spelled Harri, the root word for Aryan . ref The World s Oldest Music Sheet in Hurrian Aryan Armenian By Melkon Armen Khandjian ref References Reflist history stub Category Hurrians ca Khurri simple Hurri ... more details
Khipa also Khebe is a tutelary deity of the Hurrians and Hittites . This may be an archaic name for the goddess Ma goddess Ma . See also Portal Mythology Ancient Near East Hittite mythology Hurrian mythology References Michael Jordon, Encyclopedia of Gods, Kyle Cathie Limited, 2002 Category Hurrian deities Category Hittite deities Category Tutelary MEast myth stub ... more details
Zapparia or Kar Sipar , was an ancient city in Assyria Assyrian period located in modern Zebari Kurds Zebari ref Studies on the Civilization and Culture of Nuzi and the Hurrians, General studies and excavations at Nuzi 9 1 By Ernest Ren Lacheman, Martha A. Morrison, David I. Owen, 1981, 496 pages, see pages 6 & 54, ISBN 0 931464 08 0 ref region in Iraqi Kurdistan . References references AncientNearEast stub Category Assyria ... more details
Samnuha is a Hurrians Hurrian god worshipped by the Aramaeans of Suhu , alongside the goddess Kubaba of Charchemish in Neo Assyrian Empire Neo assyrian times. ref Dalley, Stephanie 1984 Mari and Karana Two Old Babylonian cities Longman, London, http books.google.com books?id oTh51M5XF4C&pg PA190 pages 190 191 , ISBN 0 582 78363 1 ref References references Category Hurrian deities ... more details
Motikan is a Kurdish clan inhabiting geographical areas that the indigenous tribes of the region consider the Mutki region of Bitlis in Northern Kurdistan or southeast Turkey , as well as the Mutki region of Serhat in Northern Kurdistan . The Motikan are also referred to as the Motti, Mutki or Motiki. Motiki Kurds in the Bitlis region generally speak Zazaki , while those in the Serhat region speak northern Kurmanci . The Motikan name is believed by Kurdish scholars to be a variant of the name, Mitanni , an ancient kingdom in northern Syria or Western Kurdistan . The ancient Mitannis or Hurrians are also believed by some researchers to be one of the several ancient ancestral tribes of the modern Kurds http www.xs4all.nl 7Etank kurdish htdocs his orig.html . Category Kurdish tribes ku Motikan tr Motikan ... more details
Infobox Egyptian deity Name A as God of God of wisdom Parents unknown A as is a god of wisdom in Hurrians Hurrian and Hittite mythology . He is derived from the Mesopotamian mythology Mesopotamian gods Enki Ea Babylonian god Ea and keeps the tablets of fate. See also Portal Mythology Ancient Near East Hittite mythology Hurrian mythology References Michael Jordon, Encyclopedia of Gods, Kyle Cathie Limited, 2002 Category Hurrian deities Category Hittite deities Category Wisdom gods MEast myth stub ar ... more details
and the Hurrians, V. 14 , M. P. Maidman, David I. Owen, Gernot Wilhelm, Mathaf Al Iraqi, University ... by Hurrians, a people well known though poorly documented, and that would be even less if not for the information ... et al. , Studies on the Civilization and Culture of Nuzi and the Hurrians Volume 4 The Eastern ... R. Lacheman, Studies on the Civilization and Culture of Nuzi and the Hurrians Volume 5 General ... Wilhelm, Studies on the Civilization and Culture of Nuzi and the Hurrians Volume 7 Edith Porada ... on the Civilization and Culture of Nuzi and the Hurrians Volume 8 Richard F.S. Starr Memorial ... and Culture of Nuzi and the Hurrians Volume 9 General Studies and Excavations at Nuzi, CDL Press ... of Nuzi and the Hurrians Volume 11 The Pula Hali Family Archives, CDL Press, 2001, ISBN 1 883053 ... more details
Mergeto Khaldi god date August 2009 The Khaldis was a conglomeration of at least 79 different gods known to the Urartu Urartians and Hurrians . ref Piotrovski , Boris Borisovich 1969 . The ancient civilization of Urartu. Cowles Book Co. p. 66. ref The inscription of Argistis near Lake Van states blockquote This is the spoil of the cities which I obtained for the people of the Khaldis its one year... To Khaldis, the giver, to the Khaldises. The supreme givers, the children of Khaldis the mighty ref Sayce, A. H. 1890 . http rbedrosian.com Classic Sayce ArgA.htm The Great Inscription of Argistis on the Rock of Van . Records of the Past, 2nd Series, Vol. IV. ref blockquote From this we can derive that the Pantheon gods Pantheon &mdash the Khaldis &mdash may also refer to a sphere of religion or cultural influence of a particular way of life the people of the area followed. This Pantheon was the traditional religion in the area. Abraham hailed from Ur Ka dim Ur Of The Khaldis . ref Bruno, Joseph 2006 . And Now There Is Light... Lulu.com. p. 232. ref See also Khaldi god References reflist Category Middle Eastern gods MEast myth stub ... more details
Georges Contenau April 9, 1877 Laon March 22, 1964 was a French archeologist, orientalist and religious historian who was an expert in the field of culture and religion of the civilizations of the Near and Middle East. ref Dedi Georges Contenau. Bruxelles, 1960 Annuaire de l Institut de philology et d Histoire orientales et slaves Tome XV 1958 1960 ref Life Contenau was professor at the University of Brussels from 1932 to 1947. He was chief curator of Oriental antiquities at the Mus e du Louvre from 1937 to 1946. He led several archaeological expeditions to Susa , Sidon and Nahavand . From 1946 to 1957 he was director general of the French Archaeological Mission in Iran. He wrote about the civilization of the Babylonians and Assyrians 1922 , their daily life 1950 , their Magic 1947 and divination 1940 . He also wrote on the Phoenicians 1926 , Hittite and Hurrians 1948 . He issued a four volume Handbook of Oriental Archaeology 1927 1947 and commenced the publication of the Encyclop die d arch ologie orientale 1914 1957 References reflist 2 translated from the article on German Wikipedia. Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Contenau, Georges ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Assyriologist DATE OF BIRTH April 9, 1877 PLACE OF BIRTH Laon , France DATE OF DEATH March 22, 1964 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Contenau, Georges Category French Assyriologists Category 1877 births Category 1964 deaths Category People from Laon de Georges Contenau ... more details
Kumarbi is the chief god of the Hurrians . He is the son of Anu the sky , and father of the storm god Teshub . He was identified by the Hurrians with Sumerian Enlil , and by the Ugaritians with El god El . Kumarbi is known from a number of mythological Hittite texts , sometimes summarized under the term Kumarbi Cycle . These texts notably include the myth of The Kingship in Heaven also known as the Song of Kumarbi , or the Hittite Theogony , CTH 344 , the Song of Ullikummi CTH 345 , ref first published by H.G. G terbock in 1952. ref the Kingship of the God KAL CTH 343 , the Myth of the dragon Hedammu CTH 348 , the Song of Silver CTH 364 . The Kingship in Heaven The Song of Kumarbi or Kingship in Heaven is the title given to a Hittite language Hittite version of the Hurrian Kumarbi myth, dating to the 14th or 13th century BC. It is preserved in three tablets, but only a small fraction of the text is legible. tablet A. KUB 33.120 KUB 33.119 KUB 36.31 KUB 48.97 tablet B. KUB 36.1 tablet C. KUB 48.97 The song relates that Alalu was overthrown by Anu who was in turn overthrown by Kumarbi. When Anu tried to escape, Kumarbi bit off his genitals and spat out three new gods. In the text Anu tells his son that he is now pregnant with the Teshub , Tigris , and Ta mi u . Upon hearing this Kumarbi spit the semen upon the ground and it became impregnated with two children. Kumarbi is cut open to deliver Te ub. Together, Anu and Teshub depose Kumarbi. ref Leick, Gwendolyn. Dictionary of Ancient Near Eastern Mythology . Routledge 1998. p. 106. ref In another version of the Kingship in Heaven , the three gods, Alalu, Anu, and Kumarbi, rule heaven, each serving the one who precedes him in the nine year reign. It is Kumarbi s son Te ub, the Weather God, who begins to conspire to overthrow his father ref Hopkins, David, ed. Across the Anatolian Plateau Readings in the Archaeology of Ancient Turkey. American Schools of Oriental Research 2001. pg. 112. ref . From the first publication of the Kingship ... more details
For the Hittite god Telipinu god Infobox person name Telipinu predecessor Huzziya I religion Hittite mythology Hittite religion children daughter spouse Queen I tapariya Portal Ancient Near East Telipinu was a king of the Hittites ca. 1460 BC short chronology . At the beginning of his reign, the Hittite Empire had contracted to its core territories, having long since lost all of its conquests, made in the former era under Hattusili I and Mursili I to Arzawa in the West, Mitanni in the East, the Kaskas in the North, and Kizzuwatna in the South. Biography Telipinu was a son in Law of Ammuna and brother in law of Huzziya I as a husband of Ammuna s daughter I tapariya. During Telipinu s reign, Huzziya and his five brothers were killed. He was able to recover a little ground from the Hurrians of Mitanni, by forming an alliance with the Hurrians of Kizzuwatna however, with the end of his reign, the Hittite Empire enters a temporary Dark Ages , the Hittite Middle Kingdom Middle Kingdom , lasting around 70 years, when records become too scanty to draw many conclusions. Telepinu is perhaps most famous for drawing up the Edict of Telepinu which dictated the laws of succession for the Hittite throne. It was designed to stop all the royal murders which had taken place in the previous decades, which had destabilised the empire and reduced the empire to only its heartland. cquote Let a prince a son of the first rank only be installed as king If a prince of the first rank does not exist, then let he who is a son of second rank become king. But if there is no prince, no male issue, then let them take an antiyant husband for she who is a first rank daughter, and let him become king. Alluwamna was a son in law of Telipinu. External links http www.hittites.info history.aspx?text history 2fMiddle Empire.htm Reign of Telipinu s start s bef before Huzziya I s ttl title Hittite king years ca. 1460 BC s aft after Alluwamna end Hittite kings Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NA ... more details
For other uses of the term Barzani disambiguation The Barzani tribe lang ku Hoz Barzan is one of the most prominent Kurdish people Kurdish tribes in Kurdistan . The origin of the word Barzani is connected by scholars to the ancient Hurrian god Barzani . ref Michael C. Astour, Semites and Hurrians in Northern Transtigris , in Studies on the civilization and culture of Nuzi and the Hurrians Volume 2, General studies and excavations at Nuzi 9 1, by D.I. Owen and M.A. Morrison eds. , Winona Lake Indiana, Eisenbrauns, pp 1 66., 1987. ref The sheikhs of Barzan are descendants of Imadia princes. Their grandfather, Massoud, moved to the village of Nafneka, near Barzan, where he settled and married. His son Sa id stayed on. His grandson, Taj al Din, a talented religious scholar, attracted a great number of followers, eventually founded is own tekkeyeh of Barzan. His son, Sheikh Abdul Rahman, inherited the sheikhdom, and passed it on to his son Sheikh Abdullah, who was known for his asceticism and piety. Sheikh Abdullah sent his son Sheikh Abdul Salam to the Nahriya Seminary to be taught by the eminent Sheikh Taha Nahri. After the death of his father, Sheikh Abdul Salam ran the Barzan Tekkeyeh and the number of his followers grew immensely. He founded a seminary in Barzan, which became famous throughout the region. After him, his son Mohammad administered the Barzan Tekkeyeh. The Tekkeyeh became an asylum for the oppressed and the aggrieved of the tribes adjacent to Barzan. He died in 1903. He was survived by five sons Shiekh Abdul Salam, Sheikh Ahmed Khudan , Mohammed Siddique and Mustafa Barzani . Sheikh Ahmed Barzani is considered By whom date December 2009 to be the architect of contemporary Barzan he further expanded Barzan region by bringing together many different Kurdish People Kurdish tribes under his command. His teachings of love, patriotism, tolerance, respect, equality, sharing of wealth, acquiring knowledge, social reform and environmental protection were unpr ... more details
of whom three were of Kassites Kassite origin and one, Ammenna, the officer, a Hurrians Hurrian . ref cite book title on the civilization and culture of Nuzi and the Hurrians, Volume 10 chapter Hurrians ... more details
Refimprove date August 2009 infobox artefact name clay tablet Legal cuneiform tablet image File Cuneiform legal tablet in case from Aleppo.jpg 200px image caption Legal case from Niqmepuh, King of Yamhad concerning the legacy of two houses material Clay created 1720BC circa place Tell Atchana, Level VII Palace location Room 57, British Museum id British Museum db 131449 id 1343693 Yamhad also written Yamkhad or Jamhad was an ancient Amorite kingdom centered at alab or alba, modern day Aleppo . ref cite book url http books.google.com books?id 5MYFOWRZ8Z4C&pg PA26&dq Yamhad amorite v onepage&q Yamhad 20amorite&f false title The pre Islamic Middle East author Martin Sicker edition Hardcover publisher Praeger year 2000 isbn 0 275 96890 1 page 26 ref A substantial Hurrian population also settled in the kingdom, and the Hurrian culture influenced the area. The kingdom was powerful during the Middle Bronze Age , ca. 1800 1600 BC. Its biggest rival was Qatna further south. Yamhad was finally destroyed by the Hittites in the sixteenth century BC. See also Portal Ancient Near East Alalakh History of the Hittites Hurrians Mitanni References reflist Category History of Syria AncientNearEast stub Syria hist stub ar ca Yamkhad de Jamchad fr Yamkhad gl Iamkhad ko it Yamkhad lt Jamchadas hu Jamhad ja no Yamkhad pl Jamhad ru sh Yamkhad ... more details
Washukanni or Wa ukanni was the capital of the Hurrians Hurrian kingdom of Mitanni , from c. 1500 BC to the 13th century BC . Its precise location is unknown, but it is widely thought Who October 2010 date October 2010 to have existed on one of the tributaries of the Khabur River . Some scholars believe it is identical with the later, Classical Antiquity ancient city of Sikan . Citation needed date June 2008 Washukanni may be located under the so far unexcavated mound of Tell el Fakhariya , near Gozan in Syria , to the east of the Euphrates river. Citation needed date June 2008 Washukanni wa uk kani in Kurdish language kurdish xwe ik kan means beautiful source springhead . ref http www.peyamaazadi.org modules.php?name News&file print&sid 1860 Mittani krall n n ba kenti merkezi b lgedeki yerinin ad Wa uk xwe ik. Xwe i tan do an bu g nk ad olan Wa ukani g zelp nar bi imini alm t r . ref ref http www.cizrelim.net Yazilar.asp?goster dos&id 884 BA KENT WA UKAN ref The kurdish town Sikan which scholars believe, its Wassukani is named as Ser kan or Ser kaniy in Kurdish language kurdish and it means Headwater . The city is known to have been sacked by the Hittites under Suppiluliumas I reigned c.1344 1322 BC in the first years of his reign, whose treaty inscription ref Suppiluliuma Shattiwaza treaty excerpts. GeoCities , archived at http www.webcitation.org query?url http www.geocities.com farfarer2001 hittite letters suppiluliuma shattiwaza treaty.htm&date 2009 10 25 22 04 07 webcitation.org and http web.archive.org web 20091019170511 http geocities.com farfarer2001 hittite letters suppiluliuma shattiwaza treaty.htm archive.org ref relates that he installed a Hurrian vassal king, Shattiwaza . The city was sacked again by the Assyria n king Adad nirari I around 1290 BC, but very little else is known of its history. Notes Portal Ancient Near East Reflist coord missing Turkey Category Hurrian cities Category Bronze Age sites in Syria AncientNearEast stub ca Washukanni ... more details
Infobox person name Hebat spouse Teshub children Sarruma Hebat , also transcribed Kheba or Khepat , was the mother goddess of the Hurrians , known as the mother of all living . Family Hebat is the consort of Teshub and the mother of Sarruma . Originally, as Kheba or Kubaba Kubau it is thought she may have had a Southern Mesopotamian origin, being the Divinization deified founder of the Third Dynasty of Kish Sumer Kish . The name can be transliterated in different versions Khebat with the feminine ending t is primarily the Syrian and Ugaritic version. As it is written cuneiform script allows the name to be pronounced with either b or p , although in the Hurrian language Hepa is the most likely pronunciation. The sound h in cuneiform is in the modern literature sometimes transliterated as kh . Later assimilated with Hebat was the Hittite mythology Hittite sun goddess Arinna . A prayer of queen Puduhepa makes this explicit To the Sun goddess of Arinna, my lady, the mistress of the Hittite empire Hatti lands, the queen of heaven and earth. Sun goddess of Arinna, thou art queen of all countries In the Hatti country thou bearest the name of the Sun goddess of Arinna but in the land which thou madest the cedar land thou bearest the name Hebat. ref Bach, Alice Women in the Hebrew Bible Routledge 1 edition 3 Nov 1998 ISBN 978 0 415 91561 8 p.171 ref Cult Hebat was venerated all over the ancient Near East . Her name appears in many Theophory theophoric personal names . A king of Jerusalem mentioned in the Amarna letters was named Abdi Kheba or Abd Hebat, possibly meaning Servant of Hebat . The mother goddess is likely to have had a later counterpart in the Phrygia n goddess Cybele . See also Portal Mythology Ancient Near East Eve Hurrian mythology References Reflist External links http home.comcast.net chris.s hittite ref.html Hittite Hurrian Mythology Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Hebat ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DA ... more details
Unreferenced auto yes date December 2009 Parshatatar , or Par atar, the name of a Hurrian king of Mitanni in the fifteenth century BC. He may be the same individual as king Barattarna. Barattarna , also spelled Parattarna, was a king of the Hurrian kingdom of Mitanni in the fifteenth century BC. None of his own records have yet been found, but his name is mentioned in a record from Nuzi dated to when king Barattarna died and was cremated . More information is included in the biography of Idrimi of Alalakh . Barattarna ruled over the Hurrians and made Idrimi his vassal. Mitanni in his time probably extended as far as Arrapha in the east. Barattarna may have been the Mitannian king the Egyptian Pharaoh Thutmose III encountered by the river Euphrates in his campaign of year 1447 BC. This can however only be deduced by comparing the chronology of ancient Egypt and Mitanni at a later date and working back the figures. See also Portal Ancient Near East Mitanni S start S bef before Shuttarna I S ttl title Mitanni Mitanni king years 15th century BC S aft after Shaushtatar end Mitanni kings Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Parshatatar ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH Category Hurrian kings Category 15th century BC people Category Article Feedback 5 ANE bio stub ko hu Parsatatar nl Parshatatar pl Parshatatar ru uk I ... more details
unreferenced date February 2009 Eriba Adad was king of Assyria from 1392 BC to 1366 BC. He was probably a vassal of Mitanni . However, this kingdom got tangled up in a dynastic battle between Tushratta and his brother Artatama II and after this his son Shuttarna II , who called himself king of the Hurrians Hurri , while seeking support from their Assyrian vassals. A pro Hurri Assur faction appeared at the royal Mitanni court, which his son and successor Ashur uballit I would take advantage of. s start succession box title King of Assyria before Ashur nadin ahhe II after Ashur uballit I years 1392&ndash 1366 BCE s end Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Eriba Adad I ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1366BC PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Eriba Adad 01 Category Assyrian kings Category 1366 BC deaths MEast royal stub Assyrian stub ca Eriba Adad I cs Er ba Adad I. de Eriba Adad I. es Eriba Adad I eu Eriba Adad I.a ko hr Eriba Adad I. nl Eriba Adad I ja 1 ru I sh Eriba Adad I fi Eribaadad I uk I ... more details
saved book title Mythologies subtitle A polytheistic view of the world cover image cover color Mythologies A polytheistic view of the world North Africa Ancient Egyptian religion Berber mythology Rest of Africa Odinani Yoruba religion Arctic Inuit mythology Southwestern Asia Mesopotamian mythology Ancient Semitic religion Babylonian religion Canaanite religion Hurrians Armenian mythology South Asia Ayyavazhi mythology Hindu mythology East Asia Chinese mythology Japanese mythology Korean mythology B n Southeast Asia Philippine mythology Central and Northern Asia Finnic mythology Australia and Oceania Australian Aboriginal mythology M ori mythology Europe Proto Indo European religion Europe Classical Antiquity Greek mythology Roman mythology Etruscan mythology Celtic mythology Northern Europe Norse mythology Sami shamanism Finnish mythology British Isles Anglo Saxon paganism Irish mythology Scottish mythology Welsh mythology Western Europe Pre Christian Alpine traditions Basque mythology Frankish mythology Eastern Europe Hungarian mythology Slavic mythology Folklore of Romania Mythology of the Turkic and Mongolian peoples Southern Europe Turkish folklore North America Abenaki mythology Anishinaabe traditional beliefs Blackfoot religion Pawnee mythology Iroquois mythology Choctaw mythology Creek mythology Ho Chunk mythology Haida mythology Kwakwaka wakw mythology Hopi mythology Miwok mythology Ohlone mythology Navajo mythology Pomo religion Zuni mythology Mesoamerica Aztec mythology Maya mythology Olmec religion African diasporic Haitian Vodou Louisiana Voodoo West African Vodun Umbanda Category Wikipedia books on religion Category Wikipedia books on mythology ... more details
Sevin Page 159 of 159 164 ref Populations By some opinions, the Nairi tribes may have been a Hurrians ... and Hurrians. Journal of the American Oriental Society 80 2, 1960, 100 104. Ralf Bernhard Wartke ... more details
the counterpart Ishtar during the Old Babylonian Period. Hurrians and Hittites Main Hurrians The Hurrians adopted the Akkadian god Anu into their pantheon sometime no later than 1200 BCE . Other ..., the Hurrian counterpart to Ishtar and the goddess Ninlil , ref name Hurrians cite web url http ... more details