Angim (Ninurta’s Return to Nippur)

E819803

Angim (Ninurta’s Return to Nippur) is a Sumerian mythological poem recounting the warrior god Ninurta’s triumphant return to the city of Nippur after defeating chaotic forces.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Sumerian literary text
Sumerian mythological poem
myth of Ninurta
associatedCity Nippur NERFINISHED
associatedConcept divine patronage of Nippur
warrior god
associatedDeity Enlil NERFINISHED
associatedTemple Ekur NERFINISHED
cosmologicalRole affirmation of restored order after chaos
culture Ancient Mesopotamian
depictsEvent presentation of spoils or trophies of victory
procession of Ninurta back to Nippur NERFINISHED
featuresDeity Ninurta NERFINISHED
functionInTradition didactic model of ideal warrior deity
legitimization of Ninurta’s authority
genre mythological hymn
praise poem
language Sumerian
laterMedium written text
literaryDevice catalogue of victories
divine praise
literaryForm poetry
mainCharacter Ninurta NERFINISHED
mythologicalCycle Ninurta cycle NERFINISHED
narrativeFocus Ninurta’s triumphant return to Nippur
originalMedium oral composition
preservation clay tablets
regionOfOrigin Southern Mesopotamia NERFINISHED
relatedWork Lugal-e (Ninurta’s Exploits) NERFINISHED
religiousContext Sumerian temple cult of Ninurta
religiousFunction affirmation of Ninurta’s heroic status
celebration of divine victory
praise of Ninurta
religiousGenre cultic hymn
script cuneiform
setting Nippur NERFINISHED
studiedInDiscipline Ancient Near Eastern studies
Assyriology NERFINISHED
subject Ninurta’s return after defeating chaotic enemies NERFINISHED
theme cosmic order versus chaos
divine kingship
triumph over chaotic forces
warrior god’s victory
timePeriod Early second millennium BCE (approximate)
titleVariant Angim NERFINISHED
Ninurta’s Return to Nippur NERFINISHED

Referenced by (1)

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

Ninurta myth Angim (Ninurta’s Return to Nippur)