Mesopotamian religion
Appearance
| Mesopotamian religion | |
|---|---|
| Family | Ancient / Near Eastern |
| Origin region | Mesopotamia, especially Sumer, Akkad, Babylonia, and Assyria |
| Founding period | 3rd millennium BCE through late antiquity |
| Estimated adherents | No continuous public tradition today; studied historically and revived symbolically by some modern groups. |
Mesopotamian religion is mesopotamian religion refers to the religious systems of ancient Sumerian, Akkadian, Babylonian, and Assyrian civilizations, centered on city gods, temples, divination, kingship, and cosmic order.
Overview
Mesopotamian religion developed in the cities and empires of the Tigris-Euphrates region. It was highly temple-centered, with major gods associated with cities, heavenly bodies, natural powers, and political order. Priests, diviners, scribes, kings, and households all participated in religious life.
Key beliefs
- A large pantheon including An, Enlil, Enki/Ea, Inanna/Ishtar, Marduk, Ashur, Nanna/Sin, and Shamash
- City gods as protectors of urban and political communities
- Divine signs, omens, fate, and ritual appeasement
- Kingship as religiously legitimated stewardship
- The underworld and limited forms of postmortem existence
Practices
- Temple offerings and maintenance of divine statues
- Divination, omen interpretation, and astrology
- Royal rituals and public festivals
- Household rites and protective incantations
- Laments, hymns, and ritual purification
Places of worship
- Ziggurat temple complex
- City temple
- Household shrine
Sacred texts
- Enuma Elish
- Epic of Gilgamesh
- Hymns to Inanna and other gods
- Omen series and ritual texts
Holidays and observances
- Akitu New Year festival
- City god festivals
- Royal and temple observances
Branches and related traditions
- Sumerian religion - The earlier southern Mesopotamian religious tradition.
- Babylonian religion - A later Mesopotamian tradition centered especially on Babylon and Marduk.
- Assyrian religion - A northern Mesopotamian tradition associated with Assur/Ashur and Assyrian kingship.