In a trilingual edition of the Weidner god list known from Ugarit, Imzuanna is treated as an equivalent of the Hurrianweather godTeshub and his Ugaritic counterpart Baal, but due to the dissimilarity between their roles in the respective pantheons this is assumed to be a result of ancient scribes misinterpreting the first sign of the common writing of her name as the logogramdIM, which could designate weather deities.
According to Richard L. Litke, it should be assumed that the cuneiform sign IM was read as ni in the name of this goddess, and the form Imzuanna is incorrect,[4] but Antoine Cavigneaux and Manfred Krebernik disagree with this conclusion, as one of the ancient commentaries on the Weidner god list affirms that the name could be pronounced as Imzuanna.[2] They suggest that this might reflect a form in which the initial consonant in the form "Ninzuanna" was not pronounced.[2] This proposal is accepted by Daisuke Shibata.[5] As of 2022, the spelling Imzuanna remains accepted in Assyriological literature.[6]
Associations with other deities
Imzuanna was regarded as the wife of Lugal-Marada (also spelled Lugalmarda[7]), the tutelary god of Marad.[3] They are frequently attested alongside each other in known sources.[2] According to an Old Babylonian god list, they were two of the three main deities of Marad, the third being Lulu, initially distinct but later conflated with Lugal-Marada.[3]
According to Richard L. Litke[8] and Wilfred G. Lambert, the god list An = Anum indicates that Imzuanna had her own sukkal (divine vizier), Ili-mīšar.[9] Marten Stol, relying on the same source, instead argues this deity was one of the two sukkals of Lugal-Marada, the other being Lugal-mea.[3] Litke proposes identifying Ili-mīšar with Mīšaru, a minor god regarded as a son of Adad.[8]
An association between Imzuanna and the medicine goddess Gula is also attested[7] in a Neo-Assyrian version of the Weidner god list.[5] According to Daisuke Shibata, the commentary provided outright equates the two goddesses, as well as their respective spouses Lugal-Marada and Ninurta.[5]
Textual sources
An offering list from the Ur III period mentions Imzuanna alongside Lugal-Marada.[2]
Imzuanna (under the name Ninzuanna) appears in the composition Lament for Sumer and Ur.[11] The circumstances described in this work make her and her Lugal-Marada leave their city, prompting her to lament her fate and the destruction of her dwelling.[11] The section dedicated to them is placed between these focused on Numushda and his wife Namrat from Kazallu and Ninisina from Isin.[12]
Outside Mesopotamia
In the trilingualSumero-Hurro-Ugaritic version of the Weidner god list from Ugarit, Imzuanna (im-zu-an-na) corresponds to HurrianTeshub (te-eš-ša-ab) and local Baal (ba-a-lu), who were both weather deities.[7] It has been suggested that the equation with Teshub might have been already present in the earlier bilingual Sumero-Hurrian edition known from a copy from Emar.[13] Daniel Schwemer notes that no known Mesopotamian sources associate Imzuanna with the Mesopotamian weather god, Ishkur/Adad, and therefore concludes that Jean Nougayrol's assumption that the equivalence between the three deities was a result of scribal confusion caused by the common usage of dIM as a logogram representing the names of weather deities is most likely correct.[7] This view is also accepted by other researchers.[2][1] Aaron Tugendhaft agrees that the list is not an accurate representation of the theological position of Baal and Teshub, but argues it is possible that the equation is not a result of confusion, but conscious scribal word play.[13]
It is generally assumed that the character of Imzuanna was not similar to that of Baal and Teshub,[13] though unlike other authors Irene Sibbing-Plantholt in a recent publication describes her as a storm deity.[6]
Sibbing-Plantholt, Irene (2022). The Image of Mesopotamian Divine Healers. Healing Goddesses and the Legitimization of Professional Asûs in the Mesopotamian Medical Marketplace. Boston: Brill. ISBN978-90-04-51241-2. OCLC1312171937.