Ekur

E212307

Ekur was the principal temple complex in the ancient Sumerian city of Nippur, dedicated primarily to the chief god Enlil and serving as a major religious center in Mesopotamia.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Ekur canonical 3

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf religious building
temple complex
archaeologicalSite Nippur ruins
associatedConcept cosmic order
divine kingship legitimation
associatedDeity Ninlil
Ninurta
Nuska
country Iraq
culture Akkadian
Sumerian
dedicatedTo Enlil
dedicationType state-supported temple
etymology Sumerian for "House, Mountain" or "Mountain House"
excavatedBy American archaeological expeditions at Nippur
function administrative center for temple economy
cult center
pilgrimage center
hasComponent administrative offices
courtyards
ziggurat of Enlil
surface form: sanctuary of Enlil

storage rooms
languageOfName Sumerian
locatedIn Mesopotamia
Nippur
Sumer
surface form: ancient Sumer
mentionedIn Enlil hymns
Mesopotamian literary texts
Sumerian temple hymns
partOf Mesopotamian religion
surface form: Enlil cult

religious landscape of Nippur
periodOfUse 1st millennium BCE
2nd millennium BCE
3rd millennium BCE
primaryDeity Enlil
region southern Mesopotamia
religiousRole center of Enlil’s priesthood
location of major festivals for Enlil
religiousTradition Mesopotamian religion
Sumerian religion
sacredStatus bond between heaven and earth
cosmic mountain
significance major religious center in Mesopotamia
principal temple complex of Nippur
statusInNippur principal sanctuary
widerContext network of Mesopotamian temple complexes
worshipCenterOf Enlil

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Nippur hadTemple Ekur
Enlil temple Ekur
Niffer hasTemple Ekur