Lahmu

E766884

Lahmu is a protective Mesopotamian deity or mythological figure, often depicted as a bearded man with a red sash and associated with primordial waters and temple guardianship.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Lahmu canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (44)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Mesopotamian deity
mythological figure
appearsIn Enuma Elish NERFINISHED
associatedWith Apsu NERFINISHED
Tiamat NERFINISHED
primordial waters
category Mesopotamian gods
protective spirits
water deities
cosmicRole offspring of Apsu and Tiamat
primordial being
culture Akkadian mythology NERFINISHED
Assyrian mythology NERFINISHED
Babylonian mythology
Mesopotamian mythology
depiction bearded man
often with six curls of hair
sometimes holding a staff or weapon
wearing a red sash
domain protection
water
function apotropaic figure
guardian of doorways
guardian of temples
gender male
iconographicContext boundary stones
palace reliefs
temple reliefs
iconographicType protective genie
languageForm Akkadian
nameMeaning “the hairy one” or “the muddy one” (interpretations vary) NERFINISHED
relative Anshar NERFINISHED
Kishar NERFINISHED
Lahamu NERFINISHED
relativeType twin or paired deity with Lahamu
role protective deity
temple guardian
symbolicMeaning order emerging from primordial waters
protection against chaos
worshipRegion Akkad NERFINISHED
Assyria NERFINISHED
Babylonia NERFINISHED
Sumer NERFINISHED
ancient Mesopotamia NERFINISHED

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

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

Tiamat offspring Lahmu