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Hurrian weather god and king of the gods
is Teshub”), Kibi-Teshub (“Teshub sent”), Tadip-Teshub (“Teshub loved”), Teshub-adal (“Teshub is strong”), Teshub-ewri (“Teshub is lord”), Teshub-madi
Teshub
Semitic storm god
written with the logogram 𒀭𒅎 dIM - the same symbol used for the Hurrian god Teshub. Hadad was also called Rimon/Rimmon, Pidar, Rapiu, Baal-Zephon, or often
Hadad
Ancient city in Syria
evidently survived the onslaught. King Kuzi-Teshub (Kuzi-Tesup) is attested in power here and was the son of Talmi-Teshub who was a contemporary of the last Hittite
Carchemish
Neo-Hittite king of Carchemish
Kuzi-Teshub (also read as Kunzi-Teshub) was a Neo-Hittite King of Carchemish, reigning in the early to mid-12th century BC, likely in 1180-1150 BC. He
Kuzi-Teshub
Talmi-Teshub was a local king and viceroy at Carchemish in Syria, during the reign of his overlord Great King Suppiluliuma II of Hatti. He belonged to
Talmi-Teshub
Hurrian father of the gods
Multiple Hurrian deities were regarded as Kumarbi's children, including Teshub, whom he conceived after biting off the genitals of Anu. They were regarded
Kumarbi
Muršili III, also known as Urhi-Teshub, was a king of the Hittites who assumed the throne of the Hittite empire (New Kingdom) at Tarhuntassa upon his father's
Muršili_III
Hurrian goddess
Alalakh and Emar. In Hurrian religion she instead came to be linked with Teshub, which in the first millennium BCE led to the development of a tradition
Ḫepat
Hurrian goddess of love and war
translations, Šauška commonly appears either as an ally of her brother Teshub, or as a heroine in her own right. Specific narratives describe her battles
Šauška
Historical ethnic group of Southwest Asia
conquest by Assyria in 673–672 BC. The Shubrians worshipped the Hurrian deity Teshub, and several Shubrian names have Hurrian origins. Hurrians formed part of
Hurrians
Capital city of the Hittite Empire
scene of the supreme couple of the pantheon: the storm-god Teshub and the sun-goddess Hebat. Teshub stands on two mountain gods whilst Hebat stands on a panther
Yazılıkaya
Luwian deity
is closely associated with the Hittite god Tarḫunna and the Hurrian god Teshub. The name of the Proto-Anatolian weather god can be reconstructed as *Tṛḫu-ent-
Tarḫunz
God in Sumerian mythology
conversation takes place between Ea, Kumarbi, Anu and Teshub to determine how he should exit Kumarbi's body. Teshub is finally born from Kumarbi's head while the
Enki
Hittite and Hurrian deity
could function as a mountain god. He was regarded as a son of Ḫepat and Teshub. He was also linked to various moon deities. Additionally, the only mythological
Šarruma
Ancient Greek goddess of love
and give birth to Anu's children, which include Ishtar and her brother Teshub, the Hittite storm god. In the Iliad, Aphrodite is described as the daughter
Aphrodite
Hurrian god
diacritics as Tashmishu) was a Hurrian god. He was regarded as a brother of Teshub, and it is assumed he had a warlike character. Volkert Haas proposed that
Tašmišu
Mythical creature
the second version, after the two gods fight and the Hurrian Storm God Teshub loses, Illuyanka takes the Storm God's eyes and heart. To avenge himself
Illuyanka
Pre-Olympian gods in Greek mythology
a succession of kings in heaven: Anu (Sky), Kumarbi, and the storm-god Teshub, with many striking parallels to Hesiod's account of the Greek succession
Titans
Ancient Anatolian people of Kussara
threat to Hittite trade routes as Egypt ever had. Muwatalli's son, Urhi-Teshub, took the throne and ruled as king for seven years as Mursili III before
Hittites
Northwest Semitic supreme deity
Kulitta Nupatik Pirengir Shalash Šarruma Šauška Šimige Šuwala Takitu Tašmišu Teshub Tilla Levantine (Canaanite and Ugaritic) Adonis Anat Arsay Asherah Ashima
El_(deity)
Giant stone monster in Hurrian mythology
related "songs" about the god Kumarbi, who aimed to replace the weather god Teshub and destroy the city of Kummiya; to this end Kumarbi fathered upon a rock
Ullikummi
Ancient Semitic deity in the Levant
Kulitta Nupatik Pirengir Shalash Šarruma Šauška Šimige Šuwala Takitu Tašmišu Teshub Tilla Levantine (Canaanite and Ugaritic) Adonis Anat Arsay Asherah Ashima
Yahweh
River in Turkey, Iraq, and Syria
brother of Teshub and Tašmišu, one of the three gods spat out of Kumarbi's mouth onto Mount Kanzuras. Later he colluded with Anu and the Teshub to destroy
Tigris
Deadly monster of Greek mythology
which the story of Teshub and Hedammu formed a part, tells of a second monster, this time made of stone, named Ullikummi that Teshub must defeat, in order
Typhon
King of the Hittites c. 1275 – 1245 BCE
III initially supported Urhi-Teshub's kingship as it was the wish of Muwatalli II that Urhi-Teshub should rule. Urhi-Teshub ruled under the name Mursili
Ḫattušili_III
Semitic title often used in reference to deities
Baal-zephon (Lord of Mount Zaphon) Bel Temple of Bel Beluses Belial Set Teshub Theispas Ugaritic: 𐎁𐎓𐎍, romanized: baʿlu; Phoenician: 𐤁𐤏𐤋, romanized: baʿl;
Baal
Hurrian sun god
Luwian Tiwaz. In Hurrian myths, Šimige is portrayed as one of the allies of Teshub. He plays an active role in the Song of Ullikummi, where he is the first
Šimige
Ruler of Amurru
Duppi-Teššup (c. 1310-1300 BCE; Duppi-Tessup) was the ruler of Amurru on the Akkar Plain, during the reign of Mursili II of Hatti. He was the son of DU–Teššup
Duppi-Teššup
god, brother of Teshub (Hurrian) Telipinu – god of farming (Hattic) Tešimi/Tasimmet – "Lady of the Palace," wife of a weather god Teshub – god of the sky
Hittite mythology and religion
Hittite_mythology_and_religion
Mesopotamian goddess
is designated as a concubine of Teshub. She was assimilated with Pithanu, described as a goddess who sits on Teshub's throne. The later name likely meant
Ninegal
Bronze Age god in ancient Syria
between El and Baal in the Baal cycle is similar to that between Kumarbi and Teshub in the Kumarbi cycle, and that in the Hellenized Phoenician tradition recorded
Dagon
Ancient Mesopotamian god of the sky; god of all gods
by Kumarbi, who bit off his genitals and gave birth to the weather god Teshub. It is possible that this narrative was later the inspiration for the castration
Anu
Cretan double-bladed axe
Romania. The double-axe is associated with the Hurrian god of sky and storm Teshub. His Hittite and Luwian name was Tarhun. Both are depicted holding a triple
Labrys
Canaanite god
Kulitta Nupatik Pirengir Shalash Šarruma Šauška Šimige Šuwala Takitu Tašmišu Teshub Tilla Levantine (Canaanite and Ugaritic) Adonis Anat Arsay Asherah Ashima
Mot_(god)
Goddess in Hittite–Hurrian mythology
goddess of the wild animals of the steppe and daughter of the Storm-god Teshub/Tarhunt. She corresponds to the "potnia theron" of Greek mythology, better
Inara_(goddess)
Hurrian river god
group of loosely connected Hurrian myths which describe a conflict between Teshub and Kumarbi. According to Harry Hoffner it can be presumed that he was counted
Aranzaḫ
Eblaite and Hurrian god
cycle of myths centered on the struggle between Teshub and Kumarbi. After the initial defeat of Teshub in combat with the eponymous stone monster, the
Aštabi
(Etruscan mythology) Tarḫunna (Hittite mythology) Tarḫunz (Luwian mythology) Teshub (Hurrian mythology) Vahagn (Armenian mythology) Zibelthiurdos (Thracian
List_of_thunder_deities
Cult center of the Hittite sun goddess
syncretised with the Hurrian goddess Hebat, as the Hittite Storm-God was with Teshub. In the late 14th century BC, King Mursili II was particularly devoted to
Arinna
Festival
is dedicated to the destruction of the dragon Illuyanka by the storm god Teshub. The corresponding Assyrian festival is the Akitu of the Enuma Elish. Also
Puruli
Hurrian sea god
In myths he typically appears as an ally of Kumarbi and thus opponent of Teshub and Shaushka. The name Kiaše is an ordinary Hurrian noun meaning "sea."
Kiaše
Epithet of the storm god Ba'al
Kulitta Nupatik Pirengir Shalash Šarruma Šauška Šimige Šuwala Takitu Tašmišu Teshub Tilla Levantine (Canaanite and Ugaritic) Adonis Anat Arsay Asherah Ashima
Baal-zephon
Roman mystery cult of the god Jupiter
attributed to an interpretatio romana derivation from a semitic Hadad-Baal-Teshub cult, which had its cult center on a hill near Doliche, 30 Roman Miles west
Jupiter_Dolichenus
Topics referred to by the same term
represent names of weather gods, including Mesopotamian Ishkur/Adad, Hurrian Teshub and Hittite Tarhunna Im (Korean surname) Yan (surname) (Cantonese romanization:
IM
Norse mythical character
so quickly that he reached the heavens. He was slain by the thunder-god Teshub who is equivalent also to the Luwian Tarḫunz and Hittite Tarḫunna. The Old
Hrungnir
Hurrian goddess of the underworld
also attested in the text corpus from Tigunani from the reign of Tunip-Teshub (Old Babylonian period, c. 1630 BCE). She occurs in an omen apodosis. Theophoric
Allani
Mesopotamian grain and weather goddess
also incorporated into Hurrian religion as the wife of his counterpart Teshub. She is absent from later Aramaic sources from the same areas, where the
Shala
Urartian god of weather and storms
is associated with the Assyrian god Adad, the Vedic god Indra, and with Teshub, a god of the Hittites and Hurrians. Teshup Urartu Teispes Mythology portal
Theispas
Hurrian god
romanized as Tēnu) was a Hurrian god regarded as a divine attendant (sukkal) of Teshub. He might have originated in a local tradition typical for Aleppo. He appears
Tenu_(god)
Mythological combat motif
Zmey Gorynych Hittite mythology Tarhunt vs. Illuyanka Hurrian mythology Teshub vs. Ullikummi Greek mythology Zeus vs. Typhon Heracles vs. the Lernaean
Chaoskampf
Type of wedge tool
up from her head.[citation needed] The Hurrian and Hittite weather god Teshub is depicted on a bas-relief at Ivriz wielding a thunderbolt and an axe.[citation
Axe
Cattle in religion
Jupiter, as Jupiter Dolichenus; the Indo-European Nasite Hittite storm-god Teshub; the Egyptian god Amun. When Enki distributed the destinies, he made Iškur
Sacred_bull
Mountain god from Kizzuwatna
god Teshub as well, and as such was referred to as Teshub Manuzi. Manuzi was a mountain god, but he could also be identified as a form of Teshub, and
Manuzi
with whom he formed the lead triad of the gods. A variation of Hurrian Teshub. Shivini or Artinis – Sun god, a son of Ḫaldi, with whom he formed the lead
Armenian_mythology
Region in the ancient Near East
Canaanite mythology by the struggle between the storm god, variously called Teshub (Hurrian) or Ba'al Hadad (Semitic Amorite/Aramean) and Ya'a, Yaw, or Yam
Canaan
Leading or primary god of a polytheistic pantheon
Canaanite pantheon, Baal (Hadad) displaces El. In the Hurrian/Hittite pantheon, Teshub or Tarḫunz or Arinna displaces Kumarbi. In the Armenian Ar, later – Aramazd
King_of_the_gods
Mountain on the Syria–Turkey border
considered it the home of their storm god Teshub. The Hittites continued his worship, celebrating Teshub's victory over the sea in the Song of Kumarbi
Jebel_Aqra
Ancient city in Iraq or Turkey
transregional significance due to its association with the Hurrian weather god, Teshub. Its religious role is first mentioned in texts from Mari, and later recurs
Kumme
God of the Moabites, mentioned in Bible
Kulitta Nupatik Pirengir Shalash Šarruma Šauška Šimige Šuwala Takitu Tašmišu Teshub Tilla Levantine (Canaanite and Ugaritic) Adonis Anat Arsay Asherah Ashima
Chemosh
Group of Hurrian deities
believed to inhabit the underworld, where they were seemingly confined by Teshub. Individual texts contain a variety of different listings of primeval deities
Hurrian_primeval_deities
Ancient Assyrian national deity
Ashur. Another treaty concluded between Mutija, king of Apum, and Hazip-Teshub king of Razama also invoked Ashur, which Eidem suggests is due to the geographical
Ashur_(god)
Hurrian goddess
as a daughter of Ḫepat and Teshub. Gary Beckman tentatively suggests that similarly to how under Hurrian influence Teshub could take place of the Hittite
Allanzu
Ruler of the Titans in Greek mythology
where Anu (the heavens) is castrated by Kumarbi. In the Song of Ullikummi, Teshub uses the "sickle with which heaven and earth had once been separated" to
Cronus
Comparison of myths from different cultures
Zmey Gorynych Hittite mythology Tarhunt vs. Illuyanka Hurrian mythology Teshub vs. Ullikummi Greek mythology Zeus vs. Typhon Heracles vs. the Lernaean
Comparative_mythology
Kulitta Nupatik Pirengir Shalash Šarruma Šauška Šimige Šuwala Takitu Tašmišu Teshub Tilla Levantine (Canaanite and Ugaritic) Adonis Anat Arsay Asherah Ashima
Ancient_Semitic_religion
15th-century BC King of Alalakh
of the inscription on lines 29–34 revealed that following the storm-god Teshub's advice in a dream, Idrimi, "made ships and had auxiliary troops board them
Idrimi
Semitic kingdom in Syria
deity Teshub, but in Abba-El I's tablet, she is associated with Hadad). Later, the Hurrians started to identify Teshub with Hadad, who became Teshub the
Yamhad
Ancient region, today in Turkey
Gordyene were known to have worshiped the Hurrian chief deity and weather god Teshub. The origin of the Carduchii is uncertain, though it seems they were of
Gordyene
Personification of the sky in Greek mythology
Kumarbis bit off his genitals and spat out three deities, one of whom, Teshub, later deposed Kumarbis. It is possible that Uranus was originally an Indo-European
Uranus_(mythology)
Purported ancient tribal confederation of the Late Bronze Age
actually survived the Sea People's onslaught; King Kuzi-Teshub I, who was the son of Talmi-Teshub—a direct contemporary of the last ruling Hittite king
Sea_Peoples
Hittite god
identified with Tašmišu, the brother and servant of the Hurrian weather god, Teshub. The name of the former was effectively used to designate the latter. However
Šuwaliyat
Greek mythical figure
believed to be related to the name of the West Hittite God Tarku (East Hittite Teshub)—the Indo-European Storm God—a role which explains his relationship to Belus
Teucer
Ancient Mesopotamian goddess
with the relationship mirroring that between Shaushka and her brother Teshub in Hurrian mythology. The most common tradition regarded Nanna and his wife
Inanna
Hurrian and Ugaritic goddess
reign of Tudḫaliya IV she received offerings as a deity from the kaluti of Teshub instead. A distinct kaluti centered on her is also known. In the Kizzuwatnean
Nikkal
Feminine or female deity
Mother goddess of the Hittite pantheon and wife of the leader sky god, Teshub. She was the origin of the Hurrian cult. Leto: A mother goddess figure in
Goddess
Ancient Semitic goddess
Kulitta Nupatik Pirengir Shalash Šarruma Šauška Šimige Šuwala Takitu Tašmišu Teshub Tilla Levantine (Canaanite and Ugaritic) Adonis Anat Arsay Asherah Ashima
Ashima
Iron-Age kingdom of the ancient Near East
until the reign of Ishpuini. Theispas was a version of the Hurrian god, Teshub. According to Diakonoff and Vyacheslav Ivanov, Shivini (likely pronounced
Urartu
Fictional profession
Menestratus Michael Mwindo Ninurta Perseus Perun Ra Rostam Saint George Tarḫunz Teshub Saint Theodore Uttanka Vahagn Yahweh Yu the Great Zeus Bahram Gur Bayajidda
Dragonslayer
Hittite goddess
Muwatalli II and Alaksandu of Wilusa, and between Ḫattušili III and Ulmi-Teshub of Tarḫuntašša. There is also evidence that a goddess or goddesses referred
Ammamma
Ancient city in modern Turkey
Mesopotamia. It was also a religious center. The sanctuary of the Hittite god Teshub was just to the north of the village. In the literary sources, the existence
Doliche_(Commagene)
Canaanite solar deity
Kulitta Nupatik Pirengir Shalash Šarruma Šauška Šimige Šuwala Takitu Tašmišu Teshub Tilla Levantine (Canaanite and Ugaritic) Adonis Anat Arsay Asherah Ashima
Shapshu
Former country
side. Later, under Urhi-Teshub, Benteshina was restored to the throne of Amurru presumably with the support of Urhi-Teshub’s uncle, Hattusili III, as
Amurru_kingdom
Ancient Hurrian-speaking state in northern Syria and southeast Anatolia
Sun, Shubbiluliuma, the great valiant, the king of Hatti, the beloved of Teshub, Artatama king of Harri, made a treaty and thereafter, Tushratta, king of
Mitanni
Titles of the Greek god Zeus
a double-edged axe (labrys), a Hellenization of the Hurrian weather god Teshub Laphystius (Λαφύστιος; "of Laphystium"), Laphystium was a mountain in Boeotia
Epithets_of_Zeus
Mesopotamian goddess
Ugarit, Imzuanna is treated as an equivalent of the Hurrian weather god Teshub and his Ugaritic counterpart Baal, but due to the dissimilarity between
Imzuanna
Arabic word for God
Kulitta Nupatik Pirengir Shalash Šarruma Šauška Šimige Šuwala Takitu Tašmišu Teshub Tilla Levantine (Canaanite and Ugaritic) Adonis Anat Arsay Asherah Ashima
Allah
Symbolic representation of lightning
Hittite (and Hurrian) mythology, a triple thunderbolt was one symbol of Teshub (Tarhunt). In Vedic religion (and later Hindu mythology) the god Indra is
Thunderbolt
Elamite sun god
Kulitta Nupatik Pirengir Shalash Šarruma Šauška Šimige Šuwala Takitu Tašmišu Teshub Tilla Levantine (Canaanite and Ugaritic) Adonis Anat Arsay Asherah Ashima
Nahhunte
Babylonian creation myth
belong to the Kumarbi Cycle, likely narrates the story of the storm god Teshub fighting the sea god, although the text is damaged and fragmentary. The
Enūma_Eliš
Deity associated with thunder, rains and storms
for their storm gods, such as Luwian below. Tarḫunz, Luwian storm god. Teshub, Hurrian storm god. Theispas or Teisheba, the Urartian storm and war god
Weather_god
Greek god of beauty and desire
Kulitta Nupatik Pirengir Shalash Šarruma Šauška Šimige Šuwala Takitu Tašmišu Teshub Tilla Levantine (Canaanite and Ugaritic) Adonis Anat Arsay Asherah Ashima
Adonis
of Kumarbi, to let him grow away from sight of allies of Kumarbi's enemy Teshub, such as the sun god Šimige. Later the god Ea seeks him out in order to
Upelluri
Act of killing one's father
mythology of the neighboring Mesopotamian Hurrian people the storm god Teshub kills his father Kumarbi, sometimes jointly with his grandfather Anu in
Patricide
Character of ancient Armenian mythology
have acquired his attribute of dragon-slayer from the Hurro-Urartian deity Teshub. Vahagn was identified with Heracles during the Hellenistic period. In the
Vahagn
Character in Gilgamesh myths
the stone giant Ullikummi taunting his adversary, the Hurrian weather god Teshub, in one of the myths belonging to the Kumarbi Cycle. A description of a
Humbaba
Deity associated with the sky
Kaptan, a sky god Bathala, the creator of the sky Hepit, goddess of the sky Teshub, god of the sky and storms Apaknga (Lunar mansions) Chingcharoibi (G Geminorum)
Sky_deity
Hattian weather god
large number of weather gods (Anatolian Taru, Tarḫunna and Tarḫunz, Hurrian Teshub, as well as Syro-Mesopotamian Adad/Hadad) in Hittite texts resulted in interchange
Taru_(god)
Hurrian god
who pull Teshub's chariot, the other one being Šerišu. During preparations for battle with the eponymous being, the stone giant Ullikummi, Teshub says Tilla's
Tilla_(deity)
in neo-Assyrian times. In god lists foreign weather gods such as Hurrian Teshub ("Adad of Subartu"), Kassite Buriyaš or Ugaritic Baal were regarded as his
List_of_Mesopotamian_deities
Ugaritic, Egyptian and Phoenician craftsman god
Kulitta Nupatik Pirengir Shalash Šarruma Šauška Šimige Šuwala Takitu Tašmišu Teshub Tilla Levantine (Canaanite and Ugaritic) Adonis Anat Arsay Asherah Ashima
Kothar-wa-Khasis
TESHUB
TESHUB
TESHUB
TESHUB
Boy/Male
Indian
Cool
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Essington in Staffordshire, named in Old English as the farmstead (tūn) of the people (-inga-) of a man called Esne.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
God of Gods; Omnipresent; All Pervading God
Girl/Female
Indian
Grace, Is of czech & slovak
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Sanskrit, Telugu
Fragrance
Girl/Female
American, British, English
From Devonshire
Girl/Female
Australian, Hawaiian, Hebrew
Spring; Fountain
Surname or Lastname
German and Swiss German (Römer)
German and Swiss German (Römer) : see Roemer.English, Dutch, and German : regional or ethnic name for a Roman or more generally for an Italian.English and Dutch : nickname for a pilgrim, someone who has traveled to Rome (see Romero).German : from the Germanic personal name Hrotmar, composed of hrÅd ‘renown’ + mÄri ‘fame’.
Male
Hindi/Indian
(दिलीप) Short form of Hindi Dilipa, DILIP means "protector of Delhi."
Girl/Female
Hebrew
Joyous melody.
TESHUB
TESHUB
TESHUB
TESHUB
TESHUB