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Manuzi was not the only mountain god from southern
Anatolia and northern Syria who could be labeled as a weather deity – Hittite documents refer to a weather god labeled as "Lord of Amaruk," apparently a derivative of the mountain god
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Manuzi was a mountain god, but he could also be identified as a form of Teshub, and as such could be referred to as "Teshub Manuzi." He was associated with a mountain and a settlement which both shared his name. According to
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text describing the appearance of various deities mentions that the cult statue of the mountain god
Kuwarri was accompanied by an iron eagle, while an eagle made out of ivory was an attribute of Iškiša.
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origin. A separate ritual involved washing a golden statue of him. Eagles were also a symbol of other mountain gods in ancient
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30:. He shared his name with the mountain he represented and with a village. He is best attested from sources pertaining to the
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Hittite documents attest the existence of a ritual dedicated to Manuzi which took place in the main temple of the
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notes the association of deified mountains with eagles is already attested in the case of the
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festival, known from a set of tablets with instructions pertaining to it prepared for queen
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known from texts from Ebla. The corresponding landmark was located somewhere in the land of
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402:. Handbook of Oriental Studies. Section 1: The Near and Middle East (in German). Brill.
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festival mentions an eagle who sat on the shoulder of Manuzi, Eribuški, whose name has
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148:. A temple dedicated to him existed in that city. He was worshiped during nine day
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Adarwan in the third millennium BCE. An
Eblaite incantation (ARET 5.16) refers to
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festival, which indicate he was the husband of the goddess
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156:. Other deities mentioned alongside him include Lelluri,
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as well, and as such was referred to as Teshub Manuzi.
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399:Geschichte der hethitischen Religion
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26:) was a mountain god worshiped in
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113:, "Adarwan, lord of the eagles."
66:Documentation pertaining to the
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16:Mountain god from Kizzuwatna
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164:, two manifestations of
140:Manuzi was worshiped in
423:Taracha, Piotr (2009).
369:Archi, Alfonso (2015).
396:Haas, Volkert (2015).
379:10.1515/9781614517887
371:Ebla and Its Archives
467:Sky and weather gods
61:Gulf of Alexandretta
331:, pp. 119–120.
292:, pp. 496–497.
181:storm god of Hatti
409:978-90-04-29394-6
388:978-1-61451-716-0
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363:Bibliography
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329:Taracha 2009
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57:Volkert Haas
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42:weather god
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97:A-dar-wa-an
446:Categories
415:2022-04-04
302:Archi 2015
187:References
146:Kizzuwatna
28:Kizzuwatna
353:Haas 2015
341:Haas 2015
317:Haas 2015
290:Haas 2015
278:Haas 2015
266:Haas 2015
251:Haas 2015
203:Haas 2015
50:Character
172:goddess
168:and the
154:Puduḫepa
142:Kummanni
80:Anatolia
166:Nupatik
136:Worship
130:Lelluri
119:Ammarik
93:Eblaite
84:Hittite
72:Hurrian
40:Hurrian
36:Lelluri
24:Manuzzi
431:
406:
385:
174:Maliya
170:Luwian
162:Išḫara
158:Allani
150:hišuwa
123:Mukish
68:hišuwa
44:Teshub
32:hišuwa
20:Manuzi
76:Syria
429:ISBN
404:ISBN
383:ISBN
78:and
375:doi
144:in
125:.
99:BE
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108:ti
101:ti
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