7)
Uruk and Eridu in Mythology
Sumerian mythology supports the claim that Uruk replaced Eridu in the poem "Inanna and the God of Wisdom." In this work, the goddess Inanna, whose home is in Uruk, goes to Eridu to visit her father, Enki. Kriwaczek points out that,
The Mesopotamians recognized Enki as the god who brings civilization to humanity. He is the one who gives rulers their intelligence and knowledge; he "opens the doors of understanding." He is not the ruler of the universe, but the wise counselor of the gods and their elder brother. Most importantly, Enki was the custodian of the meh, what the great Assyriologist Samuel Noah Kramer explained as the "fundamental, unalterable, and complete array of powers and duties, norms and standards, rules and regulations, related to civilized life."
Uruk and Eridu in Mythology
Sumerian mythology supports the claim that Uruk replaced Eridu in the poem "Inanna and the God of Wisdom." In this work, the goddess Inanna, whose home is in Uruk, goes to Eridu to visit her father, Enki. Kriwaczek points out that,
The Mesopotamians recognized Enki as the god who brings civilization to humanity. He is the one who gives rulers their intelligence and knowledge; he "opens the doors of understanding." He is not the ruler of the universe, but the wise counselor of the gods and their elder brother. Most importantly, Enki was the custodian of the meh, what the great Assyriologist Samuel Noah Kramer explained as the "fundamental, unalterable, and complete array of powers and duties, norms and standards, rules and regulations, related to civilized life."