Hurrian religion was the polytheistic religion of the Hurrians, a Bronze Age people of the Near East who chiefly inhabited the north of the Fertile Crescent.
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Hurrian religion was the polytheistic religion of the Hurrians, a Bronze Age people of the Near East who chiefly inhabited the north of the Fertile Crescent.
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Hurrian religion was one of the best attested influences of Hittite religion.
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The Hurrian religion pantheon is depicted in the rock reliefs from the Hittite sanctuary at Yazilikaya, which dates to the thirteenth century BCE.
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Term "Hurrian religion" as used today refers to the cultural and linguistic unity of various groups, and does not designate a single state.
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The Hurrian religion language was spoken over a wide area in the Middle and Late Bronze Age, but started to decline in the twelfth century BCE, with only small pockets surviving north of Assyria for some five hundred years after it ceased to be spoken elsewhere.
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The vocabulary of Hurrian religion is poorly understood, there are no clear rules about the transcription of Hurrian religion words and spelling might vary in scholarly literature due to individual authors making different decisions regarding the presence of voiced consonants.
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The evidence from eastern Hurrian religion centers is comparatively rare, and pantheons of cities such as Nuzi and Arrapha have to be reconstructed only based on administrative texts.
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Additionally, logograms of Mesopotamian origin were commonly used to represent the names of Hurrian religion deities, coexisting in writing with syllabic spellings of their names.
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Hurrian religion's could be depicted in both male and female form, and a ritual text mentions her "female attributes" and "male attributes" side by side.
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Two lists of Hurrian religion deities following Mesopotamian models are known, one from Ugarit and the other with Emar.
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Hurrian religion had multiple temples in the territories of the Mitanni empire, for example in Kahat, Wassukkanni, Uhusmani and Irride.
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Only the names of a few of the etymologically non-Hurrian religion months are preserved: Hiaru, Hinzuru, Tamuzu, Ululu, Sabutu, Kinunu, Hegalla, Qarrati and Hamannu .
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Hurrian religion incantations are well known, though they are often difficult to interpret, and many known examples are unprovenanced.
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Hurrian religion term referring to the concept of a divine Earth and Heaven was ese hawurni.
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Hurrian religion's resided in a palace located at the gates of the land of the dead.
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Hurrian religion myths are known mostly from Hittite translations and from poorly preserved fragments in their native language.
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Hurrian religion's allies include his father, the primordial god Alalu, the sea god Kiase, his daughter Sertapsuruhi, the sea monster Hedammu, and the stone giant Ullikummi.
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Hurrian religion tries to flee to heaven, but Kumarbi manages to attack him and bites off his genitals.
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Hurrian religion informs LAMMA that since he does not fulfill his duty and never summons the god for an assembly, his reign needs to end, and additionally tells one of the Former Gods, Nara, to gather various animals for an unknown purpose.
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Hurrian religion's seduces the monster with the help of a love potion, and apparently manages to bring him to the dry land.
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Hurrian religion eventually grows to such an enormous size that his head reaches the sky.
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Hurrian religion's prepares a banquet for him, and makes him sit next to the Former Gods, typically portrayed as his opponents.
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Hurrian religion influenced Hittite religion, especially in the imperial period of the Hittite state's history.
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Hurrian religion deities enter the dynastic pantheon of the Hittite kings as well.
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However, such equations were not necessarily widely recognized, for example Piotr Taracha doubts that the notion that the Sun goddess of Arinna was the same as Hurrian religion Hepat, known from a prayer of queen Puduhepa, was a part of the beliefs of the general populace of the empire.
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Many Hurrian religion myths are known from their Hittite translations, including the cycle of Kumarbi.
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Hurrian religion is considered to be a major influence on Ugaritic religion, whose core component was most likely Amorite.
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Ugaritic and Hurrian religion languages coexisted, and it was possible for members of the same family to have names originating in either of them.
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The Hurrian religion deities attested in theophoric names known from documents this city include Tessub, Sarruma Simige, Kusuh, Irsappa, Kubaba, Nupatik, Ishara and possibly Sauska .
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Hurrian religion's proposes that Egyptians relied on a text written in a Western Semitic language, not necessarily identical with the Ugaritic Baal Cycle, which describes a similar conflict.
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