Du-Ku
Encyclopedia

Translations

According to Wasilewska et al, du-ku translates as "holy hill", "holy mound" [...E-dul-kug... (House which is the holy mound) ], or "great mountain"

Divine

The location is otherwise alluded to in sacred texts as a specifically identified place of godly judgement.

The hill was the location for ritual offerings to Sumerian god(s).
Nungal and the Anunna dwell upon the holy hillin a text written from Gilgamesh.

See also

Akkadian

Hymn to the E-kur
Hymn to Enlil
The Hymn to Enlil, Enlil and the Ekur , Hymn to the Ekur, Hymn and incantation to Enlil, Hymn to Enlil the all beneficent or Excerpt from an exorcism is a Sumerian myth, written on clay tablets in the late third millennium BC.-Compilation:Fragments of the text were discovered in the University of...



libation
Libation
A libation is a ritual pouring of a liquid as an offering to a god or spirit or in memory of those who have died. It was common in many religions of antiquity and continues to be offered in various cultures today....



Shamash
Shamash
Shamash was a native Mesopotamian deity and the sun god in the Akkadian, Assyrian and Babylonian pantheons. Shamash was the god of justice in Babylonia and Assyria, corresponding to Sumerian Utu...



Sumerian religion
Sumerian religion
Sumerian religion refers to the mythology, pantheon, rites and cosmology of the Sumerian civilization. The Sumerian religion influenced Mesopotamian mythology as a whole, surviving in the mythologies and religions of the Hurrians, Akkadians, Babylonians, Assyrians, and other culture...

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