Antu (goddess)

Antu
Sky goddess, feminine counterpart of Anu
Major cult centerUruk
TempleBīt Rēš
Genealogy
SpouseAnu
ChildrenLamashtu

Antu (𒀭𒌈) or Antum[1] was a Mesopotamian goddess regarded as the feminine counterpart and spouse of the sky god, Anu. She was sometimes identified with the earth rather than the sky, though such references are not common. While already attested in the third millennium BCE, she was only a minor goddess, and only came to be worshiped commonly in Uruk in the Achaemenid and Seleucid periods due to religious reforms which elevated her and Anu to the position of tutelary deities of the city. At some point Antu was also incorporated into Hurrian religion, in which she was understood as a primeval deity. In the so-called "Standard Babylonian" edition of the Epic of Gilgamesh Antu is addressed as the mother of Ishtar, but this tradition was not commonly adhered to.

  1. ^ Krul 2018, p. 60.