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Lament for Nippur

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Remains of the Ekur (mountain temple) in Nippur: the Lament reads, The brickwork of E-kur gave you only tears and lamentation -- it sings a bitter song of the proper cleansing-rites that are forgotten! It weeps bitter tears over the splendid rites and most precious plans which are desecrated -- its most sacred food rations neglected and ...... into funeral offerings, it cries "Alas!". The temple despairs of its divine powers, utterly cleansed, pure, hallowed, which are now defiled![1]

The Lament for Nippur, or the Lament for Nibru, is a Sumerian lament, also known by its incipit tur3 me nun-e ("After the cattle pen...").[2] It is dated to the Old Babylonian Empire (c. 1900–1600 BCE).[3] It is preserved in Penn Museum on tablet CBS13856.[4]

It is one of five known Mesopotamian "city laments"dirges for ruined cities in the voice of the city's tutelary goddess.[5]

Statuette of the storm god Enlil from Nippur, c. 1800–1600 BCE.
Map of Mesopotamia around the time of the writing of the Lament for Nippur

Text

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The Lament is composed of 9 kirugu (sections, songs) and 8 gišgigal (antiphons) followed by 3 more kirugu.

Numbered by kirugu, the lament is structured as follows:

  1. storm of Enlil; Enlil destroys Nippur
  2. weeping goddess; Nippur addresses Enlil
  3. storm of Enlil; Enlil destroys Nippur
  4. weeping goddess; the poet addresses Nippur
  5. storm of Enlil; Ishme-Dagan recreates Nippur
  6. weeping goddess; the poet addresses Nippur
  7. storm of Enlil; Ishme-Dagan recreates Nippur
  8. storm of Enlil; Enlil recreates Nippur
  9. storm of Enlil; Ishme-Dagan recreates Nippur
  10. storm of Enlil; Enlil recreates Nippur
  11. storm of Enlil; Ishme-Dagan recreates Nippur
  12. storm of Enlil; Enlil recreates Nippur[6]

It includes passages in the emesal, a sociolect used by high-status women, showing the importance of women's voices in city laments; emesal is also found in the Lament for Ur.[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Lamentation for Nippur". www.gatewaystobabylon.com.
  2. ^ Jacobs, John (January 1, 2016). "The city lament genre in the ancient Near East (in The fall of cities in the Mediterranean: Commemoration in literature, folk-song, and liturgy, ed. Mary Bachvarova, Dorota Dutsch, and Ann Suter, Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2016, pp. 13–35)" – via www.academia.edu. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ "CDLI-Archival View". cdli.ucla.edu.
  4. ^ "Tablet - CBS13856 | Collections - Penn Museum". www.penn.museum.
  5. ^ Hirsch, Edward (April 4, 2017). The Essential Poet's Glossary. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 9780544932098 – via Google Books.
  6. ^ Jacobs, John (September 20, 2016). Suter, Ann; Dutsch, Dorota; Bachvarova, Mary R. (eds.). The Fall of Cities in the Mediterranean: Commemoration in Literature, Folk-Song, and Liturgy. Cambridge University Press. pp. 13–35.
  7. ^ Boyadjian, Tamar M. (December 15, 2018). The City Lament: Jerusalem across the Medieval Mediterranean. Cornell University Press. ISBN 9781501730863 – via Google Books.
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