Amat-Mamu

Amat-Mamu (c. 1764 BC – c. 1711 BC) was a Babylonian nadītu priestess. She lived in a closed nadītu community in Sippar, where she worked as a scribe.

Amat-Mamu was born c. 1764 BC,[1] and she was consecrated as a Babylonian nadītu, a priestess of the god Shamash. Her name translates to "woman servant of Mamu", Mamu being the daughter of Shamash.[2] As a nadītu, Amat-Mamu lived in a walled quarter in Sippar, the gagûm, which was separated from the rest of the city. She was allowed to own land, but not to marry or have children.[2]

Amat-Mamu worked as a scribe in the gagûm.[2] Though scribes were traditionally men in Sippar, the nadītu rarely interacted with men. Because of this, Amat-Mamu was one of several women in the community who was taught to read and write so she could work as a scribe when no men were present. Archeologists know of her role as a scribe because they were expected to sign their names to tablets that they produced.[3] Three known documents that Amat-Mamu produced were under three different kings—Hammurabi, Samsu-iluna, and Abi-Eshuh—indicating that she worked as a scribe for at least 40 years.[4] She died c. 1711 BC.[1] Though works to female scribes were common under the reigns of Hammurabi and Samsu-iluna, Amat-Mamu is the only female scribe to have a surviving work by the time of Abi-Eshuh.[5]

Amat-Mamu was one of the women whose names were written on the Heritage Floor of the installation artwork The Dinner Party.[6]

  1. ^ a b Leick 2002, p. 12.
  2. ^ a b c Lion 2011, p. 99.
  3. ^ Lion 2011, p. 100.
  4. ^ Harris 1962, pp. 1–2.
  5. ^ Lion & Robson 2005, p. 49.
  6. ^ Brooklyn Museum.