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11 Facts About Kusibanda

1.

Kusibanda, known under the disputed older reading of the name, Guskinbanda, was a Mesopotamian god regarded as the tutelary deity of goldsmiths and silversmiths.

2.

Kusibanda was commonly grouped with other deities of similar character, such as Ninagal.

3.

Kusibanda was regarded as the husband of Ninimma, and was worshiped in her temple in Nippur.

4.

Kusibanda is attested in texts describing the preparation of statues, as well as in a variety of documents from Uruk from the Seleucid period.

5.

Kusibanda served as the tutelary deity of both of these professions.

6.

Kusibanda was one of the members of a group of Mesopotamian artisan deities, the so-called "gods of the craftsmen", which included Ninagal, Ninkurra, Ninildu and other similar figures.

7.

Kusibanda appears particularly often alongside the first of these deities, who was a divine blacksmith.

8.

Kusibanda often appears in texts describing the preparation of statues.

9.

Kusibanda appears in texts from Uruk from the Seleucid period pertaining to the akitu festival as one of the deities possibly worshiped in the Bit Res complex.

10.

Kusibanda received offerings on the morning of its seventh day alongside Papsukkal.

11.

Kusibanda is invoked in a ritual connected to temple renovation.