I had reached and passed the allotted time of life; tion, ban. The like of this had never been seen; Whithersoever I turned, trouble was in pursuit. As though I had not always set aside the portion for the god, was not constant, I taught my country to guard the name of the god, Despite his devotion, he is smitten with disease and indulges in gloomy thoughts, despairs of pleasing the gods, recounts his sufferings, and tells how the demons have laid him low: An evil demon has come out of his (lair); I took to my bed, unable to leave the couch. The disease of my joints baffled the chief exorciser, Another tablet continues the plaint and passes on to an account of a dream sent to the sufferer in which Ur-Bau, as a “strong hero decked with a crown," appears, bring ” ing a message from Marduk that the patient will be released from his sufferings. а He sent a mighty storm to the foundation of heaven, My ears which had been closed and bolted as those of a deaf person, He removed their deafness and opened their hearing. My nose which through the force of the fever was choked up, He healed the hurt so that I could breathe again. My lips which had been closed through exhausted strength, The patient then closes with the advice never to de- a bit. Marduk has seized the snare (?) of my pursuer, has encompassed his lair. 61 PART II: THE HEALING DEITIES DURING the many centuries of the existence of these great Empires of Mesopotamia, many changes occurred in the status, rank, and influence of their various divinities, and there appears to have been a strong tendency toward centralization and the concentration of religious control in the hands of a few great gods, particularly in respect to political affairs. The functions of deity as they pertained to personal relations with the people, at least so far as they may now be determined, were of a general, rather than of a specialized, character; the particular traits and powers that characterize the healer are recognized in but few, and the success of such divinities in the exercise of their curative aspects caused them to be known as 'great physicians.' Others exercised their therapeutic powers as a minor function, and still others are mentioned in the incantation-texts in a manner that suggests the lower and dependent rank of attendants and 61 Jastrow, Civilization, pp. 477-483. aids to the greater gods. For the present, the list of therapeutic divinities must remain indefinite and imperfect, and the few here named are mentioned in the texts in connection with healing, although not all of them may be classed as strictly healing gods. Those who appear most prominently are: ALLATU ('Goddess'), or Ereshkigal ('Queen of the Lower World'), the chief goddess of the Underworld and the consort of Nergal, was also a healing deity in a limited sense, being especially mentioned in connection with the cure of fevers. In the nether-world she was reputed to have a spring ('the water of life'), the waters of which did away with pain and brought the dead to life."2 EA EA ('House of Water'), the third member of the first triad of cosmic gods and one of the chief deities of the Babylonian pantheon, was associated with all the myths of the Babylonian cosmogony; and in the division of the Universe with the divinities Anu and Enlil, he became the 'King of the Watery Deep,' the god of the Persian Gulf, of the ocean, rivers, and springs, and of all waters. Ea appears as a syncretism resulting from his identification with one of the oldest and most respected Sumerian deities, Enki, 'lord of the land,' who, as a 'mountain 62 Jastrow, op. cit., p. 280; Zimmern, in ERE ii, 316; Neuberger und Pagel, Handbuch der Geschichte der Medicin, i, 71. |