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  1. Aug 20, 2014 · Inana, let Dumuzid marry you. (Inanna wearing her cuba jewels, holding alien advanced technologies) You who wear jewelery, who wear cuba jewels, why are you unwilling? (1 ms. adds 2 lines: His butter is good, his milk is good — all the work of the shepherd’s hands is splendid.) He will eat his good butter with you.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › GeshtinannaGeshtinanna - Wikipedia

    Geshtinanna was a Mesopotamian goddess best known due to her role in myths about the death of Dumuzi, her brother. It is not certain what functions she fulfilled in the Mesopotamian pantheon, though her association with the scribal arts and dream interpretation is well attested. She could serve as a scribe in the underworld, where according to ...

  3. Dumuzid the Shepherd. Not to be confused with Dumuzid, the Fisherman. Dumuzid (sometimes transcribed as Dumuzi ), called "the Shepherd", from Bad-tibira in Sumer, was, according to the Sumerian King List, the fifth predynastic king in the legendary period before the Deluge. The list further states that Dumuzid ruled for 36,000 years.

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  5. Dumuzid, later known by the alternate form Tammuz/Fammuz/Vammuz, is an ancient Mesopotamian god associated with shepherds, who was also the primary consort of the goddess Inanna (later known as Ishtar). In Sumerian mythology, Dumuzid's sister was Geshtinanna, the goddess of agriculture, fertility, and dream interpretation. In the Sumerian King List, Dumuzid is listed as an antediluvian king of ...

  6. His successor as governor Puzer-Mama declared himself ruler of Lagash, possibly on the death of Shar-Kali-Shari, and began the 2nd Dynasty of Lagash. Modern photograph of the ruins of the Ekur temple at Nippur. One of the primary duties of the ruler of Mesopotamia was the maintenance of the Ekur temple of the chief god Enlil.

  7. This Dumuzid is called "the Shepherd",[6] who on the King List resides at Bad-Tibira in contrast to the post-diluvian Dumuzid, the Fisherman, who reigns in Uruk.The "brotherhood text" in cuneiform inscriptions on cones plundered from the site in the 1930s records the friendship pact of Entemena, governor of Lagash, and Lugal-kinishedudu ...

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