Reiner Magia Astral Babilonia 1995
Reiner Magia Astral Babilonia 1995
Reiner Magia Astral Babilonia 1995
.
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TRANSAC'I'IONS
of the
ERICA REINER
Copyright ? 1995 by The American Philosophical Society. All rights reserved. Reproduction
of this monograph in whole or in part in any media is restricted.
Cover: Neo-Babylonian tablet with relief of a sundisk suspended before the sun god.
Courtesy of the British Museum, no. 91000; published by L.W. King, BabylonianBoundaryStones (London, 1912) pl. xcviii.
Reiner, Erica
Astral Magic in Babylonia
Includes references and index.
1. Babylonia 2. Magic
3. Religion 4. History, Ancient
ISBN:
0-87169-854-4
ISBN: 0-87169-854-4
95-76539~~~~~~~~~
95-76539
TABLE OF CONTENTS
List of Illustrations .........................
vi
Foreword ...................................................
vii
A bbreviations .........................................
Introduction ......
........................
15
25
.......................................
43
61
81
97
...........................
119
133
Index .................................................
145
ILLUSTRATIONS
10, 11
vi
45
54
54
60
80
Foreword
I, Muhammad ibn Ishaq, have lastly only to add that the
books on this subject are too numerous and extensive to be
recorded in full, and besides the authors keep on repeating
the statements of their predecessors.
al-Nadim, Fihrist, vol. 1, p. 360
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
FOREWORD
the use of magic in the literary sources, whether they deal with
mythological events or events deemed historical. Classical literature provides the background against which the spells on
lamellae, amulets, or gems can be delimited. The accounts of
the preparation of a magic ritual, its aims, and its effects found
in Homer, Greek drama and novels, in epics such as Lucan's
Pharsalia,or the stories of Lucian, are the envy of the Assyriologist who has to be content with the allusions, or tantalizing
glimpses into the practice of magic, which Mesopotamian
sources allow.
The Near Eastern material for this book was collected over
many years of association with the ChicagoAssyrianDictionary;
for the stimulation provided by discussions at the Institute for
Advanced Study in Princeton (in the second term of 1990-91
and the summer of 1992), and for the opportunity to explore
a variety of avenues there I am indebted especially to the faculty of the Institute's School of Historical Studies. The original
impetus to study astral influences in Babylonia, as well as
many suggestions, came from Otto Neugebauer; I could no
longer seek his advice for the final manuscript in Princeton, but
to his memory I would like to dedicate this work.
ix
ABBREVIATIONS
ABL
ABRT
ACh
AfK
AfO
AGM
AHw.
AMT
R. F Harper, Assyrian and BabylonianLetters.14 vols. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1892-1914
J. A. Craig, Assyrianand BabylonianReligiousTexts(Assyriologische Bibliothek XIII/1-2). Leipzig: Hinrichs, 1895-97
C. Virolleaud, L'Astrologiechaldeenne.Paris: Geuthner, 1905-12
Archiv fir Keilschriftforschung.Berlin, 1923-25
Archiv fiir Orientforschung.Berlin, 1926Archiv fir Geschichteder Medizin. Leipzig, 1908W. von Soden, AkkadischesHandworterbuch.Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz,
1959-81
R. C. Thompson, Assyrian Medical Textsfrom the originals in the British
Museum. London-New York:H. Milford, Oxford University Press, 1923
ABBREVIATIONS
Babylonian Records in the Library of J. Pierpont Morgan, ed. Albert
T. Clay. 4 vols. New York: Private print, 1912-23
TheAssyrian Dictionaryof the OrientalInstituteof the University of Chicago.
CAD
Chicago and Gluckstadt: J. J. Augustin, 1956CCAG
Catalogus CodicumAstrologorumGraecorum,eds. F Cumont, E Boll, et
al. Brussels, 1898Academiedes Inscriptionset BellesLettres.Comptesrendusdes Seances.Paris,
CRAI
1857CT
Cuneiform Texts from Babylonian Tablets in the British Museum.
London, 1896DACG
R. C. Thompson, A Dictionaryof Assyrian Chemistryand Geology.Oxford:
Clarendon, 1936
Dover Fs 'Owls to Athens' Essayson ClassicalSubjectsPresentedto Sir KennethDover,
ed. E. M. Craik. Oxford: Clarendon, 1990
Dream-book A. L. Oppenheim, The Interpretationof Dreams in the Ancient Near
East(Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 46/3), 1956
DSB
Dictionaryof ScientificBiography,C. C. Gillispie, ed. New York:Scribner,
1970EPHE
Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, IVe Section, Annuaire
HAMA
O. Neugebauer, A HistoryofAncientMathematicalAstronomy.3 vols. BerlinHeidelberg-New York: Springer, 1975
Lexical series HAR-gud = imru = ballu, published MSL 5-11
Hg.
Hh.
Lexical series HAR-ra = hubullu, published MSL 5-11
History of Religions Chicago, 1961HKL
R. Borger, Handbuch der Keilschriftliteratur.3 vols. Berlin: de Gruyter,
1967-75.
Hopfner, Offenbarungszauber Th. Hopfner, Griechisch-AgyptischerOffenbarungszauber.vol. I-II Leipzig, 1921 and 1924; new edition of vol. I and vol.
II Part 1 Amsterdam: Hakkert, 1974 and 1983
London, 1934Iraq
Journalof the American Oriental Society. New Haven, 1843JAOS
JCS
Journalof CuneiformStudies. New Haven, 1947Jaarberichtvan heet Vooraziatisch-Egyptisch
JEOL
Genootschap"Ex Oriente Lux."
Leiden, 1933Journalof Near Eastern Studies. Chicago, 1942JNES
Journalof the Warburgand CourtauldInstitutes. London, 1937JWCI
E. F Weidner, Alter und Bedeutung der babylonischenAstronomie und
KAO
Astrallehre, nebst Studien iiber Fixsternhimmelund Kalender (KAO [Im
Kampfe um den alten Orient] 4). Leipzig, 1914
aus Assur religibsenInhalts(WVDOG XXVIII/1-4,
KAR
E. Ebeling, Keilschrifttexte
XXXIV/1-5). Leipzig: Hinrichs, 1915-23
Keilinschriftliche Bibliothek. Berlin: Reuther's, 1889KB
KBo
Keilschrifttexte aus Boghazkoi, eds. H. Figulla, E. F. Weidner, et al.
Leipzig: Hinrichs, 1916-23
KMI
E. Ebeling, KeilschrifttextemedizinischenInhalts(Berliner Beitrage zur Keilschriftforschung, Beiheft 1-2). Berlin, 1922-23
BRM
xi
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
Mission de Ras Shamra. Paris, 1936Materialien zum sumerischen Lexikon (from volume X on: Materials
for the Sumerian Lexicon). Rome: Pontificium Institutum Biblicum, 1937MUL.APIN Hermann Hunger and David Pingree, MUL.APIN. An Astronomical
Compendiumin Cuneiform.AfO Beiheft 24. Horn, Austria: E Berger, 1989.
Nouvelles AssyriologiquesBraves et Utilitaires. Paris, 1987NABU
NH
Pliny, Natural History
OIP
Oriental Institute Publications. Chicago, 1924Or. NS
Orientalia, Nova Series. Rome, 1932PBS
University of Pennsylvania, University Museum, Publications of the
Babylonian Section. Philadelphia, 1911PGM
PapyriGraecaeMagicae.Die griechischenZauberpapyri,ed. K. Preisendanz.
2nd revised edition, 2 vols. Stuttgart: Teubner, 1973, 1974. English version: The Greek Magical Papyri in Translation, ed. H. D. Betz. Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1986
R
H. C. Rawlinson, The Cuneiform Inscriptions of WesternAsia. 5 vols.
London, 1861-84
RA
Revue d'assyriologieet d'archeologieorientale. Paris, 1884Reallexikonfiir Antike und Christentum. Stuttgart, 1941RAC
Revue Belge de Philologie et d'Histoire.Brussels, 1922RBPH
RE
Pauly's Realencyklopidieder classischen Altertumswissenschaft, pub. G.
Wissowa. Stuttgart: Metzler, 1894RLA
Reallexikonder Assyriologie. Berlin & Leipzig: de Gruyter, 1928Rivista degli studi orientali. Rome, 1907RSO
State Archives of Assyria. Helsinki: Helsinki University Press, 1987SAA
SAAB
State Archives of Assyria, Bulletin. Helsinki, 1987xii
ABBREVIATIONS
A. Falkenstein and W. von Soden, Sumerische und akkadischeHymnen
und Gebete.Ziirich-Stuttgart: Artemis, 1953
Sources from the Ancient Near East. Malibu: Undena, 1974SANE
SLB
Studia ad Tabulas Cuneiformes a F. M. Th. de Liagre Bohl Collectas
Pertinentia. Leiden, 1952SMEA
Studi Micenei ed Egeo-anatolici.Rome, 1966SpTU
SpdtbabylonischeTexteaus Uruk (I-III: Ausgrabungen der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft in Uruk-Warka,vols. 9, 10, 12. Berlin: Gebr. Mann,
1976-; IV: Ausgrabungen in Uruk-Warka, Endberichte, vol. 12. Mainz
am Rhein: von Zabern, 1993)
Strack-Billerbeck H. L. Strack, and P. Billerbeck, Kommentarzum Neuen Testament aus Talmudund Midrasch. Munich, 1922-28
Asb.
Maximilian Streck, Assurbanipal (Vorderasiatische Bibliothek, 7).
Streck,
Leipzig: Hinrichs, 1916
STT
O. R. Gurney, J. J. Finkelstein, and P. Hulin, The SultantepeTablets(Occasional Publications of the British Institute for Archaeology at Ankara,
No. 3 and No. 7). London, 1957 and 1964
SA.ZI.GA R. D. Biggs, SA.ZI.GA: AncientMesopotamianPotencyIncantations(Texts
from Cuneiform Sources, 2). Locust Valley, NY: J. J. Augustin, 1967
0. Loretz and W. R. Mayer, Su-ila-Gebete(Alter Orient und Altes TesSu-ila
tament, 34). Kevelaer: Butzon & Bercker, 1978
TAPA
Transactionsof the American PhilologicalAssociation. Hartford, 1871TCL
Musee du Louvre - Departement des Antiquites Orientales. Textes cuneiformes. Paris: Geuthner, 1910TDP
Rene Labat, Traiteakkadiende diagnostics et pronostic medicaux (Leiden:
Brill, 1951)
ThompsonRep. R. C. Thompson, TheReportsofMagiciansandAstrologersofNineveh
and Babylon in the British Museum. London: Luzac & Co., 1900
TLB
Tabulae Cuneiformes a E M. Th. de Liagre Bohl Collectae. Leiden, 1954TSBA
Transactionsof the Society of BiblicalArchaeology.London, 1872-93.
Ur Excavations. Texts. London and Philadelphia: Oxford University
UET
Press-University of Pennsylvania Press, 1928Weidner, Handbuch E. Weidner, Handbuchder babylonischenAstronomie(Assyriologische Bibliothek XXIII). Leipzig: Hinrichs, 1915
Die Welt des Orients. Gottingen, 1947WO
WVDOG Deutsche Orientgesellschaft, Wissenschaftliche Veroffentlichungen.
Leipzig, 1900WZKM WienerZeitschriftfur die Kundedes Morgenlandes.Vienna, 1887Yale Oriental Series, Babylonian Texts. New Haven, 1915YOS
ZA
Zeitschriftfiir Assyriologie und verwandte Gebiete, Leipzig, 1886-
SAHG
xiii
Introduction
The nobles are deep in sleep,l
the bars (of the doors) are lowered, the bolts(?) are in place(also) the (ordinary) people do not utter a sound,
the(ir always) open doors are locked.
The gods and goddesses of the countrySamas, Sin, Adad and Istarhave gone home to heaven to sleep,
they will not give decisions or verdicts (tonight).
And the diviner ends:
May the great gods of the night:
shining Fire-star,
heroic Irra,
Bow-star, Yoke-star,
Orion, Dragon-star,
Wagon, Goat-star,
Bison-star, Serpent-star
stand by and
put a propitious sign
in the lamb I am blessing now
for the haruspicy I will perform (at dawn).2
One of the rare prayers from Mesopotamia that strike a
responsive chord in a modern reader, this prayer, or rather lyric
poem, is known among Assyriologists as 'Prayer to the Gods
of the Night.' The Gods of the Night of the title is but the translation of the Akkadian phrase ill mus?ti that appears in line 14
of this poem and in the incipit of various other versions of
the prayer.
The Gods of the Night, as their enumeration in this poem
1 The first word of the
poem (here translated 'deep in sleep' from bullulu
'to become numb?' with CAD B p. 44a s.v. balalu)has been read pullusu by
Wolframvon Soden, ZA 43 (1936) 306 and AHw. 814a; a reading pullulu, with
the translation 'secured' was proposed by A. Livingstone, NABU 1990/86.
2 The translation is that of Oppenheim, AnalectaBiblica12 (1959) 295f.,
with minor modifications.
1
ASTRAL
IN
MAGIC
BABYLONIA
shows, are the stars and constellations of the night sky. How
prevalent is the appeal to stellar deities, and to what extent and
in what circumstances are the gods and goddesses worshipped
in Mesopotamia considered under their stellar manifestations,
is the subject I wish to treat here.
The situational context for reciting this prayer is divination,
and more specifically the preparation by the haruspexAkkadian baru-of the lamb that will be slaughtered so that the
inspection of its entrails-exta-yield an omen, usually as
answer to the diviner's query. This role of the baru in Mesopotamian divination has not received particular attention in
the many studies that deal with it and with its relationship
to the Etruscan disciplina.3
Other areas of Mesopotamian life that rely on, appeal to, or
use the power of the stars are magic machinations, meant to
cause harm as well as to protect from harm; the confection of
amulets and charms; the establishing of favorable or unfavorable moments in time; and the complex domain of medicine,
from procuring the herb or other medicinal substance, through
the preparation and administration of the medication.
There is a vast corpus of Babylonian literature, hardly exploited by Assyriologists even, and of which a small part only
is available to the non-specialist in translation or in excerpt, that
can be mined for references or allusions to astral magic, that
is, efforts to use the influence of the heavenly bodies upon the
sublunar world, for purposes beneficent to man as well as for
evil machinations. Such astral magic, as the art of harnessing
the power of the stars may be called, was practiced on the one
hand by scholars, such as the professional diviners and exorcists, to foretell the future and to avert evil portents, and on the
other by sorcerers and sorceresses who harnessed the same
3 See
especially Jean Nougayrol, "Trente ans de recherches sur la divination babylonienne (1935-1965)," in La Divination en Mesopotamie ancienne et
dans les regions voisines, XIVe Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale
(Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1966) 5-19; idem, "La divination
babylonienne," in La Divination, A. Caquot and M. Leibovici, eds. (Paris:
Presses Universitaires de France, 1968), vol. 1, pp. 25-81; see also Jean
Bottero, "Sympt6mes, Signes, Ecritures," in Divination et Rationalite, J.-P. Vernant, ed. (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1974), 70-197.
INTRODUCTION
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
edge of the Babylonians. Of the other planets Mars was, obviously, the Red planet, also known as the Enemy;8 Jupiter was
Heroic.9 Sun and Moon were included in the number of the
seven planets. The Sun, surveying the entire earth, omnipresent and omniscient, was as in other cultures the god of justice,
as expressed in the great hymn to Samas, discussed below, and
the Scales (the constellation Libra, Akkadian Zibanitu)have as
epithet "Samas's star of justice," an association comparable to
that of personified Justice holding the scales in her hand on
medieval representations.10
The stars and planets may be addressed under their astral
8 Makru 'red' and Nakru
'enemy.
INTRODUCTION
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
pictogram which evolved into the cuneiform sign AN, which also
stands for dingir 'god,' is the image of an eight-pointed star.
13For this identification, see David
Pingree, BPO 2 p. 17f. The three
in
occur
celestial
omens.
"paths" frequently
14
Usually the opposite is held, in conformity with Ptolemy's assignment
1.6 and 7. The Babylonian evidence is
of genders to planets in Tetrabiblos
based on an explanatory text dealing with Venus, published in 3R 53 (K.5990,
republished in AChIstar 8) from which the lines "Venus is female at sunset"
and "Venus is male at sunrise" were communicated by Sayce, in TSBA3
(1874)196; the text is also cited by Parpola, LAS 2 p. 77 and n. 157. In fact,
K.5990 is the only source holding that Venus is female at sunset, while others
(BM 134543, K.10566, 81-2-4,239, etc., see Reiner and Pingree, BPO 3) hold
that Venus ina dUTU. (KUR-ma)sinnigat 'is female (rising) in the east.' For
Venus being female in the west see also Wolfgang Heimpel, "The Sun at
Night and the Doors of Heaven in Babylonian Texts,"JCS 38 (1986) 127-51.
15
ziqnazaqnatin Tablet 61 of the celestial omen series EniimaAnu Enlil,
and in its parallel sections in the series iqqurtpus for which see Chapter V.
She is also often represented with a beard on Mesopotamian cylinder seals,
see fig. 2.
16 Listed as No. 3057 in the Amtlicher Katalog of the 1910 Munchen
exhibit, cited by F Saxl, DerIslam3 (1912)174n. 4: "Venus(wohl miBverstandlich) bartig"
17 Akkadian zikarsinnis (NITASAL)'male (and) female,' K.2346 r. 29, com1.6 and 7.
pare Ptolemy Tetrabiblos
18 AfO 18 (1957-58) 385ff. CBS 733 + 1757:11 (prayer to Marduk as Mercury, edited by W. G. Lambert).
6
INTRODUCTION
equated with Nergal, god of pestilence. His rising-first visibilityis a bad omen, portending death of the herds: "Mars will rise
and destroy the herd,"'19
the only prediction of an astronomical
event, apart from omens predicting an eclipse, appearing in
other than celestial omens. His Akkadian name, Salbatanu,has
no known meaning or etymology.20Learned Babylonian commentaries have explained this name as 'He who keeps plague
constant' by breaking up the name into its syllabic components
and interpreting these syllables in Sumerian, thus arriving at
the assumed Akkadian reading Mustabarrumutanu.21
The names of most planets have no identifiable meaning in
either Sumerian or Akkadian, neither the just mentioned
name of Mars, Salbatanu, nor Jupiter's most common name
SAG.ME.GAR
(see note 9); nor the name of Venus, written Dilbat(preferablyto be read Dele-batfollowing the Greek transcription Delephat).No clear etymology or explanation exists for the
Akkadian or Sumerian word for 'planet' itself. In Greek, planetes
are the 'errantones' because they roam the sky amidst the fixed
stars; the Akkadian word for planet, bibbu,'wild sheep,' may
also refer to their irregular movement.22
19References to this prediction from lunar omens have been collected by
Francesca Rochberg-Halton, in A ScientificHumanist. Studies in Memory of
AbrahamSachs,Erie Leichty, M. deJ. Ellis, P. Gerardi, eds. (Philadelphia: The
University Museum, 1988) 323-28. The omen also appears as apodosis of a
liver omen, RA 65 (1971) 73:62, cited CAD N p. 266, as also noted by M. Stol,
BibliothecaOrientalis47 (1990) 375, and in a celestial omen on solar eclipses,
with the name of Mars replaced by MUL.UDU.BAD
'planet,' ACh Samas 8:62.
20 Even the correct reading of the polyvalent signs NI = sal and BE = bat
with which the name is customarily written has only recently been confirmed with the help of a spelling sa-al-ba-ta-nu, in the liver omen cited in
the preceding note, see Jean Nougayrol, RA 65 (1971) 82 ad line 62.
21 In the list 5R 46 no. 1:42, based on the equations ZAL = sutabru (infinitive) 'to last long,' participle mustabarru;BAD = mutu, with phonetic complement -a-nu = mutanu'plague' or 'great death.'
22 The Sumerian word which is equated with bibbu,UDU.BAD,also contains the word 'sheep' (UDU), but the second element, the polyvalent sign
BAD,once thought to have the reading idim 'wild,' has recently been found
glossed til, in the gloss to line 34 of Tablet XI of HAR-ra = hubullu, which
lists hides, among them [KUS.U]DU.BAD
(gloss: [u]-du-ti-il) = masakbi-ib-bi;
see MSL 7 124:34, and for the gloss, MSL 9 197. Since in Sumerian til means
'finished' or 'complete,' the once assumed meaning 'wild sheep' for the
Sumerian word is no longer tenable.
7
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
But of all the planets it was the Moon that was of the greatest
importance to the Babylonians. It was the Moon, from its first
sighting to its last, that regulated the calendar, which was based
on lunar months. The Moon is a "Fruit, lord of the month,"23
constantlyrenewing himself, as his epithet eddesu'ever-renewing'
stresses. The Moon's waxing and waning does not determine
a stronger or weaker influence on, say, the growing of crops as
it does in Hellenistic astrology, but its phases signal the timing
of various ritual acts. The Moon god, Sin, the father of both Samas (the Sun) and Istar,is a male deity, not the Selene or Luna
of the Greeks and Romans, but he still has an affinity with
women magicians, sorceresses who are able to "drawdown the
Moon" (see Chapter VI). The eclipse of the Moon, in particular,
remained a terrifying event, whose dire predictions had to be
averted by penitential rites,24 including, under the Sargonid
kings in the eighth and seventh centuries B.C., the installation
of a substitute king. This substitute king reigned for one hundred days and was then put to death, thus taking upon himself
the misfortune and death portended for the king.25
Sun, Moon, and Venus, represented by their emblems the
sundisk, the lunar crescent, and the eight-pointed star,are commonly depicted on monuments-steles,
boundary stones-as
Inbu bel arhi; this metaphor is also the name of a Babylonian royal hemerology, for which see pp. 113f.
24 The text
(BRM 4 6) is treated by Erich Ebeling, Tod und Leben nach den
der
Vorstellungen
Babylonier (Berlin and Leipzig: de Gruyter & Co., 1931) no.
24, pp. 91-96.
25 For this ritual see
Parpola, LAS 2 pp. xxii-xxxii.
INTRODUCTION
Astral magic and the role of astral deities have been amply
studied in connection with Hellenistic Egypt and the corpus of
Hermetic texts and magical papyri originating in Egypt.26The
cuneiform evidence from Mesopotamia has been largely
neglected by Assyriologists, and has been at the most utilized
at second hand by other scholars who had to rely on often inexactly edited Babylonian sources. But even if comparison with
neighboring civilizations had not so suggested, the power
attributed to the heavenly bodies and their significance and
impact according to the Babylonians' conception in their cosmology should have been evident from such Mesopotamian
images as the poetic phrase "writing of heaven" (sitir same or
sitir burume) applied to the starry sky,27 and from King
Esarhaddon's remark that he depicted on steles "lumasu-stars
which represent the writing of my name."28Uncertain is the
reference, unfortunately still opaque, to the "reading" or
"meaning" of Assurbanipal's name that was revealed in a
dream to Gyges, king of Lydia.29
Poetic texts are also the first to adumbrate how the moon and
the stars give signs and warnings to men, even before the art
of celestial divination had assumed the status of a scholarly discipline. The so-called "King of Battle"(sartamhari),an Old Babylonian poem dealing with the exploits of King Sargon of Akkad
26 Garth
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
FIGURE 3
FIGURE 4
10
INTRODUCTION
FIGURE5
FIGURES3, 4, 5. Representations of constellations incised on a Late Babylonian tablet. Fig. 3, courtesy of the Louvre, no. AO 6448; fig. 4 courtesy of
Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, no. VAT 7847; fig. 5 courtesy of Staatliche
Museen zu Berlin, no. VAT 7851.
(c. 2400 B.C.),30 relates how 'the sun became obscured, the
stars came forth for the enemy,31 a celestial portent that must
refer to a solar eclipse during which the stars became visible,
an event that was evidently to be interpreted as the stars portending victory for Sargon against his enemy.
Allusions to celestial portents given to Sargon appear in liver
omens, the earliest recorded mode of divination, which is attested long before celestial omens were collected and codified.
A particular configuration of the sheep's liver is said to refer to
King Sargon of Akkad as one who "traversed darkness and
light came out for him."32This description must record an
eclipse occurring under Sargon, in spite of its peculiar phraseology; indeed, omens from lunar eclipses were the first to be
committed to writing, possibly as early as 1800 B.C.33 More
30
Joan G. Westenholz,
Legends of the
Akkad . . .
(forthcoming).
31id'im samsum kakkabu u-su-ui ana Kings of RA 45
nakrim,
(1951) 174:63-64; for
a different interpretation see J.-J.Glassner, RA 79 (1985) 123.
32For omens
referringto Sargon of Akkad see H. Hirsch, AfO 20 (1963) 7ff.
33F Rochberg-Halton, Aspectsof BabylonianCelestialDivination:The Lunar
11
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
INTRODUCTION
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
39 Published
by Hermann Hunger, Astrological Reports to Assyrian Kings,
SAA 8 (1992).
14
The
CHAPTER
Role
Stars
of
ASTRAL
IN
MAGIC
BABYLONIA
Of the several copies some preserve only the partial invocation "[ . .] Pleiades, stand at my left, [I? send] you to the god
and goddess [who ate my food offering,] drank my water [libation], [. . .] intercede for me!"44 Rare as such explicit state-
LKA 29d ii 1ff. The lines speaking of "the watches of the night" also occur
in LKA 29e right col. 1 and its parallel STT 52:2ff., see W. G. Lambert, RA
53 (1959) 127. The "three watches of the night" are also addressed in KAR
58 rev. 7, along with Nusku. Of course there remains the problem of the
meaning of "send" and "take" in the cited prayers.
43 KAR 38:12f., see E.
Ebeling, Aus dem Tagewerkeines assyrischen Zauberpriesters, MAOG 5/3 (Leipzig: Harrassowitz, 1931) 45ff.; also edited by
Ebeling, RA 49 (1955) 184, and, with duplicates, by R. I. Caplice, Or. NS 39
(1970) 124ff. A poetic German translation appears in SAHG no. 69.
44 [.. .] MUL.MUL ina GUB.MU i-zi-za
[.. . -ku]-nu-si ana DINGIR u dIstar
[.. .] is-tu-u me-e-a [.. .] abuti sabta, RA 18 (1921) 28:5ff. The ritual seeks to
16
THE
ROLE
OF STARS
ments are, they shed light on other appeals that leave the mode
of the stars' intercession unspecified.
Just as the Sun sees all of the earth by day, so do the stars
by night. They are also often addressed with the same words:
"Youwho see the entire world."45Rarely do we find, however,
prayers of such elaborateness as those whose title designates
them as "lifting-of-the-hand,"46a name referring to the appropriate prayergesture accompanying them. Such prayers are prescribed in the elaborate rituals,47often extending over several
days, intended to purify the temple or the king. Our knowledge of the existence of some of the prayers to stars comes
solely from the listing of their incipits in these ritual texts.
Lifting-of-the-hand prayers to the constellations Wagon
(Ursa Maior), True Shepherd of Anu48 (Orion), the Pleiades,49
the Scorpion50 (Scorpius), and to the Arrow Star51 (Sirius) are
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
THE
ROLE
OF STARS
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
ASTRAL
IN
MAGIC
BABYLONIA
trivial cases only. Thus, for example, the prayer to Mars in his
manifestation as the god Nergal (the god of the plague) was to
be recited by the Babylonian king Samas-sumu-ukin, the son
of Esarhaddon, mentioned above, during a plague epidemic.76
Rarely is reference made to phenomena most characteristic of
the celestial body, such as the eclipse of the moon.77 Only in
the Hymn to the Sun78 is there an allusion, clad in poetic
terms, to the sun's daily course and yearly cycle, reflecting the
Babylonians' characteristic preoccupation with calendric matters, a preoccupation that also surfaces in the description of the
creation of the cosmos in TabletVI of the Poem of the Creation,
also known, from its incipit, as Enumaelis.
Some prayers'are written, it appears, in the Sumerian language, but in fact are simple transpositions of Akkadian phraseology into Sumerian words and phrases. They may have been
recited-as
in various rituals-by
(Berlin, 1953),
Ebeling, Die akkadischeGebetsserie"Handerhebung,"
8ff. and von Soden, SAHG 300f.; it is listed as Nergal 1 by Werner Mayer,
Untersuchungen(note 46 above) 402.
77 The well-known rituals to avert the evil portent of the eclipse, such as
BRM4 6, and the notorious "substitute king ritual"that such a portent necessitated under the Sargonids are treated by S. Parpola in LAS2 pp. xxii-xxxii.
78 Known to Assyriologists as the Samas hymn, a 200-line learned composition, for which see my book YourThwartsin Pieces,YourMooringRopeCut.
Poetryfrom Babyloniaand Assyria, Michigan Studies in the Humanities, 5
(Ann Arbor, 1985), Chapter IV.
79'Learned in both
languages,' see Tadeusz Kotula, "Utraque lingua
eruditi. Une page relative a l'histoire de l'education dans lAfrique romaine,"
Hommagesa MarcelRenard,vol. 2, Coll. Latomus 102 (Brussels, 1969) 386-92.
80 Akkadian mimmalemnu,
possibly with a specialized meaning.
81
[.. .] dNin.mah an.na gub.ba nin.kur.kur.ra.[ke4]LKA142:6ff.
82 For the
"right"and "left" Yoke star (KAR38 r. 24) see above p. 15.
83 lam Samasittapha,line 3.
22
tappuha panu atta, KAR 374:1. The pronoun atta 'you' and the
adjective panu 'first' are masculines. See also the "unnamed star" quoted
Chapter III.
86 nannarat same, see Biggs, SA.ZI.GA 28:25, and see CAD N/1
p.
p. 261a.
87 Istar-kakkabi,see next note.
88ana IGI 15.MUL.MES(variant: [I]s-tar MUL.MES)patira tukan niqe
tanaqqi (variant: teppus) Biggs, SA.ZI.GA p. 27ff. (KAR236:18ff. and duplicates) lines 19f.; another ritual is probably also performed before Istaribid. p. 65 K.9036:6', also [ana IGI d15?].
kakkabi: ana IGI d15.[MUL.MES?]
MUL GAR-an ibid. 12'. The readings given in SA.ZI.GA p. 65 have been
slightly emended in lines 10' (after AHw. s. v. urbatu)and 12'.
89 ina IZI ana IGI 15.MUL.MES
tasarrap, see Biggs, SA.ZI.GA p. 28:24.
90SALsa DAM-saUGU-sa sab-su STT 257 r. 10 (subscript). I am indebted
to my colleague Christopher A. Faraone for drawing my attention to the use
of the KeoT6Oto diminish anger between a woman and her husband, see
his "Aphrodite's KEETOE and Apples for Atalanta: Aphrodisiacs in Early
Greek Myth and Ritual," Phoenix44 (1990) 222.
91 STT257 rev. 2-9, listed as Istar 28 in Werner Mayer, Untersuchungenzur
Studia Pohl: Series
Formenspracheder babylonischen"Gebetsbeschworungen,"
Maior, 5 (Rome: Biblical Institute Press, 1976) 392.
92 aassiki Istar .. . ina
qereb samami STT257 rev. 5f. Since astronomically
such a position for Venus is excluded "midst" must be taken figuratively.The
topos is also known from Sumerian, expressed as an.sa.ta, in e.g., the IddinDagan hymn line 161 edited by Daniel David Reisman, "Two Neo-Sumerian
Royal Hymns" (Ph.D. diss., University of Pennsylvania, 1969).
23
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
charm is one of the few love charms spoken by women to reconquer their lovers, best known from Theocritus' Second Idyll
and Virgil's Eighth Eclogue, while in the Greek magical papyri
it is men who desire to secure the love of women. The reference
to Venus is indubitable, even though the first few words in the
pertinent ritual are broken,93 since the prayer addresses the
star?(the word is broken) of the morning.94
To Venus also, as Istar-of-the-Stars, turns the exorcist before
administering the potion to the love-stricken patient.95 Most
often, however, it is the multitude of stars, the entire starry sky,
and not a particular planet or constellation that is invoked. A
ritual designed to have the king triumph over his enemies96 is
performed "before all? stars,"97it is accompanied by the recitation of a prayer addressed to the stars of the night.98The next
ritual99prescribes the fashioning of two figurines holding the
lance and the scepter (the royal insignia) but clothed in
everyday garments, the making of offerings to Ursa Maior, and
the burying of the figurines in enemy territory. A possibly
related ritual for diverting the enemy from the homeland is a
fragmentary text in which the names of the gods to whom the
prayer is addressed are not preserved, only the epithets
'Brightly shining gods, (you who are?) judges.'00 How the
stars responded to such appeals, and how they exerted their
influence upon earthly matters, will be the subject of the following chapters dealing with such areas affecting man as medicine, herbalistry, and both apotropaic and noxious magic.
rMUL?1[Dil-bat?].
x] rx] se-re-e-ti rxl [x] rx -tu (or: [d]i?-par)sa mu-se-r[i? ...]
93Possibly
94 E[N
r. 17.
95Thus in the Sazigatexts, as in AMT 88,3:6, see Biggs, SA.ZI.GA p. 52.
96 [eli nakiri]su [uzuzzima?] lita [sakani] STT 72:23.
97 IGI MUL.MES gim-r[i ...]
line 24.
98MULmu-si- ri?] -[ti?]STT 72:1-22, with the ritual beginning in line 24,
CHAPTER
The
Art
of
the
II
Herbalist
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
26
words for terms of the second column that had become obsolete, without thereby changing the sequence or purpose of
these lists. In certain cases the third column contains not just
another equivalent or synonym, but an attempt at scholia; for
example "Egyptian squash" to a variety of squash listed in
Tablet XXIII105
or "mourning garment" to explain the poetic
word karruin Tablet XIX.106
Among the chapters107of HAR-ra = hubullu, the XVIIth,
incompletely preserved, deals with plants. In it, the acrographic principle applies in the first section, where each plant
name begins with the Sumerian word u, 'herb' In the second
section, the names are not preceded by t, but followed by sar,
'plant/ the postposed class mark for such garden plants as vegetables, and other cultivated plants. Note that Greek too makes
a distinction between poTadvrl'simple' (medicinal plant) and
)acavov 'vegetable.108
Within a section no classificatory principle is discernible,
except that varieties of the same species, whether botanically
accurately classified or not, are by orthographic necessity
enumerated together, as for example the alliaceae, whose
names in Sumerian are composed with the element sum 'garlic'
and a descriptive element, such as sum.sag.dili 'one-headed
garlic'109while the Akkadian name is turu or the cucurbitaceae, whose names are composed with uku 'squash' and a
descriptive element, e.g., ukus.sir.gudwith Akkadian equivalent
iski alpi 'ox-testicle (squash)'110 These lists continued to serve
as pedagogical tools for learning Sumerian.
105
Hg. D 249.
106
E 76 and
Hg.
duplicates; this explanation is also given in a late synVI
list
(Malku 61), which gives synonyms for rare or obsolete words.
onym
107
Usually called "tablets"in Assyriological parlance, see note 35.
108 Cited Margaret H. Thomson, TextesGrecs inedits relatifs aux plantes
(Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 1955) 91, ad "Second traite alphabetique sur les
plantes, tire d'Aetius."
109
Literally (Sumerian:) "garlic-head-single"
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
Sumerian or Akkadian, of the plant; the second, the indication, that is, the symptoms or name of the disease it is supposed to counteract; and the third, the mode of application:
how it is to be prepared (e.g., ground, diluted in beer) and how
it is to be administered (e.g., as a potion, a salve, a lotion). The
arrangement follows the middle column so that the herbs are
grouped according to the disease they are good for; this layout
is convenient for finding the remedies for a particular ailment
by simply going down the middle column of the list.
For example: Yellow saffron : for constricted bladder : to
chop, to administer as a potion in fine beer; Kanis-acorn : for
the same : to chop, to administer as a potion in fine beer; Garlic
: for the same: to chop, to administer as a potion in oil or fine
beer;113Pistachio-herb : herb for the lungs : to chop, to administer as a potion without eating;114Dog's tongue : herb for
cough : to press out its juice and administer as a potion.115
This "vade mecum" has a counterpart that deals with stones,
also simply called DUB.NA4.MES'tablet about/on stones';116
nevertheless, these compilations are only partially comparable
to those of the late herbals and lapidaries.
The type of text that seems truly the precursor of the
medieval handbooks is the one that I will call the sikinsu type,
from the opening words. Three such handbooks are known,
one (abnu sikinsu) dealing with stones and minerals, another
one (sammu sikinsu) with herbs, and a third (seru sikinsu), of
which only a small fragment survives, with snakes. These
three books thus represent the three categories lapidaries,
herbals, and bestiaries, of which latter the snake book is possibly the sole surviving chapter.
All three handbooks evince a common structure. Each entry
begins the description with the word sikinsu, a word not easy
to translate if we consider its literal meaning alone: the word
siknu may mean "appearance, looks, character,"and the like;
113
BAM 1 i 26-28.
14 BAM 1 ii
24; see note 197.
115
au ser-
vice de la piete'" Semitica3 (1950) 5-18, prescribes the use of herbs and other
ingredients in order to secure divine favor as well as to avert evil and illness.
116Cf.
Ebeling, KAR 44 rev. 3, see Leichty apud Kocher, BAM IV p. vii.
29
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
example, "La natura del pavon es aital ... ," "La natura de la furmicz es aital . . " Der waldensische Physiologus, ed. Alfons Mayer, Romanische Forschungen5 (1890) 390-418, nos. 4 (Pavon) and 42 (De la furmicz).
118Illustrations
appear late also in Byzantine, Arabic, and other later
herbals.
119See
Nougayrol, RA 68 (1974)61f.
120
Angus G. Clarke, "Metoposcopy: An Art to Find the Mind's Construction in the Forehead,"in Astrology,Scienceand Society:HistoricalEssays,
Patrick Curry, ed. (Woodbridge, Suffolk: The Boydell Press, 1987) 171-95.
121See Reiner, "Magic Figurines, Amulets and Talismans,"in Monsters
and Demons in the Ancient and Medieval Worlds.Papers Presentedin Honor
of Edith Porada, Ann E. Farkas et al., eds. (Mainz on Rhine: Philipp von
30
THE
ART OF THE
HERBALIST
Or: "The herb's nature is: its thorn is like the thorn of cress,
its leaves are as large as cress leaves, that herb is called namhara,
whoever drinks it will die."124
127
128
E.g., "hic autem folia habet similia porro, sed oblonga et tenueiora,"
Dioscorides Longobardus Book I 5c, De quiperu indicu, ed. Konrad
Hofmann-T. M. Auracher,RomanischeForschungen1 (1883) 58. Or also "Poligonon masculus aut carcinetron aut . . . vocant. Erba est virgas habens
teneras molles et multas, nodosas, spansa super terra, sicut agrostis. Folia
habet ruta similia, sed oblonga et mollia. Semen habet foliis singulis, unde
et masculus dictus est, flore albu aut fenicinu habens. Virtus est illi stiptica
et frigida, unde sucus eius bibitus emptoicis medicatur . . . De poligono
femina. Poligonon femina frutex est .i. Virga habens, molle et cannosa, . . .
omnia suprascripta facere potest, sed minus virtute habet," Dioscorides
Longobardus Book IV llc d,' De poligonon, ed. Hermann Stadler, Romanische Forschungen11 (1901) llf. (= Dioscorides IV 4). For Dioscorides see
now John M. Riddle, Dioscorideson PharmacyandMedicine(Austin: University
of Texas Press, 1985).
129For
example, PGM IV 798-810.
31
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
301-93, and especially the fancy names of remedies ridiculed by Artemidorus, Onirocriticon4, 22 (Pack, Teubner 1963; French translation: Artemidore. La Clefdes Songes, transl. A. J. Festugiere [Paris, Vrin 1975]).
133 Papyrus
134
text and the implications of this scribal practice see A. Leo Oppenheim, Glass
and Glassmakingin AncientMesopotamia(Corning, NY: The Corning Museum
of Glass, 1970) 59ff.
136See Handbuchdes deutschen
Aberglaubenss.v.
137
Reinhold
Stromberg, GriechischePflanzennamen,GoteSuggested by
1940:1 (Goteborg, 1940) 100: "Man hat
Arsskrift
46,
borgs Hogskolas
Cheiron
dass
diese
Heilpflanzen zuerst verwendet hatte"; he is folgeglaubt
lowed by the Greek etymological dictionaries of Frisk and Chantraine. The
connection of the plant with Chiron comes from Theophrastus, HistoriaPlantarum3.3.6 and Pliny, NH 25.66.
33
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
In ancient natural histories it is often added to the description of the plant that the species comes in two sexes: male and
female, as the above cited poligonon(see note 128). These designations have nothing to do with the plant's sex essential for
propagation, but refer to its potency. This is evident from the
fact that stones too-that is, beads of semi-precious stonescome in both masculine and feminine varieties; this was
known in Greek literature since Theophrastus (end of the 4th c.
B.C.) but, like many small and perhaps insignificant details of
the transmission of beliefs and knowledge, harks back to Babylonian sources. Not only Classical authors138noted this division but modern jewelers as well.139The division of materia
medicainto masculine and feminine is well known from Greek
and Latin authors; according to commentators, among them
Pliny the Elder, masculine herbs are stronger and more
effective than the feminine ones. Note mascula tura "male
incense" in Virgil,140explained by the commentator as mascula
In Babylonian
tura, id estfortia"male incense, hence stronger."141
138
est plus
legere .. .' See also J. C. Plumpe, "Vivum saxum, vivi lapides. The concept
of 'living stones' in Classical and Christian Antiquity,"Traditio1 (1943), 1-14;
R. Halleux, "Fecondite des mines et sexualite des pierres dans l'antiquite
greco-romaine," RBPH 48 (1970) 16-25, both cited in Robert Halleux and
Jacques Schamp, Les Lapidairesgrecs (Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 1985) 326.
139"Les pierres precieuses masculines sont celles qui possedent une
couleur plus vive, les feminines celles qui ont une couleur plus pale." G.
Boson, Les metaux et les pierres dans les inscriptions assyro-babyloniennes.
Inaugural-Dissertation
. . . (Munich: Akademische
Buchdruckerei von F.
Straub, 1914) 73 n. 4 (possibly quoting "Dies ist ein terminus technicus der
Edelsteinhandler ... Mannliche Steine sind die sattgefarbten, weibliche die
blassen Steine," Oefele, "Gynakologische Steine," ZA 14 [1899] 356ff.) In
Akkadian too the subu stone comes in a male and a female variety (BAM
112:10), and so do the su stone (see the dictionaries), the arzallustone, black
frit, and others. See also Chapter VII, notes 591-92.
140 Ecl.
141
8, 65.
Philargyrius 2.3, cf. Pliny, NH 12.61; note also tritu cum ture masculo
34
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
These instructions specify the time for picking the plant, and
the precautions to be observed in regard to both the plant
and the herbalist. The scene is night (between sunset and sunrise); the plant is isolated by a magic circle and covered; and
the herbalist protects himself by covering his head.
Nighttime may be specified in other ways: sometimes it is
sufficient to say that the sun must not "see" the herb: for
example, a root "which the sun did not see when you pulled
preparing and administering the medicine at a propitious moment see
Chapter III.
147Armand Delatte, Herbarius.Recherchessur le ceremonialusite chez les
ancienspourla cueillettedessimpleset desplantesmagiques,Bulletins de lAcademie
Royale de Belgique, Classe des Lettres, t. 22 (1936);re-edited Paris:Droz 1938.
148u.ukius.ti.gil.la an.edin.na AS.a mu.a dUtu.e.a.na ku4.ra.na tug sag.zu
u.me.ni.dul ui.ukusi.ti.gil.la
u.me.ni.dul zid u.me.ni.hur ai.gu.zi.ga.tadUtu
37
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
Iubet sepulcriscaprificoserutas,
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
172 Theocritus
CHAPTER
III
Medicine
For when those who first wrote on the subject gave their
attention almost solely to meditation about the stars, and
believed natural philosophy and the healing art to be intimately connected with these heavenly bodies, they disseminated seeds of magic, from which that science grew
to such a degree that it over-spread the whole world with
its pollution.
BibliothecaCuriosa. Magic Plants; being a translation of
a curious tract entitled De VegetalibusMagicis, written by
M. J. H. Heucher (1700) edited by Edmund Goldsmid,
F.R.H.S.F.S.A (Scot.) Privately printed, Edinburgh. 1886,
pp. 13-14.
43
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
MEDICINE
described. The conceptual advance represented by the structural approach of Dietlinde Goltz178has remained largely
without following, as have the more philosophically oriented
studies of Lloyd; even though we no longer give credence to
Herodotus' report on the lack of physicians179or make fun of
Herodotus' report that the
the Babylonians' "Dreckapotheke."
Babylonians bring their sick to the market in order to inquire
of passers-by what remedies they would suggest has served as
argument in the market-economy dispute more importantly
than in the history of medicine, and we realize that the Dreckapothekewas a well-known pharmaceutical handbook of the
seventeenth century.180
Understanding Babylonian medicine is especially seriously
hampered by the character of the prescriptions, as they
nowhere explain the reasons for the treatment indicated nor
the property of the ingredient that recommends its use.
In this respect the medicine of the Babylonians is not
different from the rest of their scientific literature which knows
only two forms: the list-from sign lists and Sumerian and
Akkadian bilingual word lists and grammatical paradigms to
mathematical and astronomical tables-and the procedural
178 Dietlinde
Frz. Paullini.
45
by Christian
ASTRAL
IN BABYLONIA
MAGIC
MEDICINE
187
E.g., Hermann Hunger, SpTU, vol. 1 nos. 44, 46, and 48.
47
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
ina kakkabi tusbat, literally, 'you have (it) spend the night in the star,'
the singular form (M)UL being more frequent than the plural (M)UL.MES.
189 Sub vv. batu and kakkabu.
190Dietlinde Goltz, Studien zur altorientalischen und
griechischen Heilkunde,
Sudhoffs Archiv, Beiheft 16 (Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner, 1974) 51 with n. 300:
"Das Ziel des Stehenlassens ist eine Mazeration."
48
MEDICINE
Another prescription:
you [steep] (the materia medica) together in water, you let it spend
the night under the stars, in the morning you [. . .] that water.193
Several other texts, many of them fragmentary, contain similar instructions, for example: "you let that water (mixed with the
blood of a bat?)spend the night under the stars";194
note especially "you let it spend the night [ . .], in the morning [. . .]."195
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
less literal translation of the phrase "you let it spend the night
under the stars."The phrase is comparable to Greek astronomefn,that is, to
expose to stellar irradiation, for which see Delatte, Herbarius(note 147 above)
192, with reference to CCAG12 pp. 127,16;(rpCt;VUKTza va a&oTpovoioir;)
128,8;cf. 129,15; (zrpc; VUKTza;Eco v zoti aTrpot;) 131,12 De septem herbis
planetarum, ex codice 3 (= Cod. Mus. Paleogr. Acad. Scient. Petropolitanae). The German verb 'besternen' was used by H. Ritter in his translation
of the Arabic Picatrix as a single-word equivalent to "dem astralischen
Einfluss aussetzen."
197The injunction could refer not only to the patient's fasting, as it has
usually been taken and as it also seems to mean here, either because it was
recognized that ingesting medicine on an empty stomach makes it more
effective or because fasting is essential for cultic purity, but it could refer,as in
other cultures, to swallowing medicine and the like without chewing or, as
Pliny puts it, without the teeth touching it (quoniam dentibus tactis nihil prosint 'because if the teeth are touched [the medication] is useless' Pliny, NH
30.35). Probably for similar reasons is the use of a reed tube (Akkadian takkussu, cf. Pliny's perharundinem)for administering medicine recommended.
198 ina UL tusbat ina Csrimbalu
patan teqqi, BAM 482 iii 2.
199 A
Akkadian
name
whose
plant
corresponds to cynoglossum, but
whose botanical identity is not known, see p. 32 and note 131.
200 For this
precaution see Chapter II.
201 ina UL tus-bat balum
patan [isattima ina'es], BAM 396 iii 7-9.
202ina UL tus-bat isattima i'arru, BAM 578 iii 1 and 2.
203saman surmeni.
204kala zumrisu
MEDICINE
ilar recipe directs: "you set out a holy water vessel, put tamarisk, mastakal-plant,sweet reed, and cedar oil into it, expose it
to the stars overnight, draw [a magic circle around it],205 and
in the morning, facing the sun, you massage [. . .]"206
and beer, you erect around it three cuts of cedar, you surround
it with a circle of flour, you upend over it an unfired . . . -pot,
by day let the sun see the . . . -pot, at night let the stars see
it, on the third day at midday? 22? . . you place a censer with
205
51
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
MEDICINE
aspect of the goddess also explains the fact that votive dogs
have been found in great numbers in the Gula temples,
including the recently excavated temple in Nippur. We should
also note that the goat is the animal of Hecate - and of her manifestation as Selene-too.216
As most specific instructions mention the constellation of
Gula, the Goat, or rather She-goat,217it should be evident that
the aim of the procedure is irradiationby the star of the goddess
of healing. The star of Gula, especially the 0.1 magnitude Vega
in the constellation Lyra, the fourth brightest of all the stars, is
particularly prominent in the summer sky, but can be seen at
varying times any night of the year.218Other prescriptions state:
"These 24 herbs and aromatics you arrangebefore the Goat star,
you moisten them with beer, in the morning you boil it";219
"at night you let it stand overnight before the Goat star, in [the
morning] you boil itf'220and so on.221
Any doubts about this identification should be dispelled by
the explicit instruction: "at night you let it stand overnight
before the Goat star, (you draw a magic circle around it with
flour, you cense it) and you invoke the names of Gula and of
Belet-ili."222The Goat star of one prescription is further
identified as the "cattle-pen" of Gula.223Instead of Goat star,
some texts simply say "before the goddess Gula."224
216 Wilhelm
ina MI ana IGI MUL.UZ tu[s-b]at ina [serti] tusabsal, BAM 579 iv 5f.
221 ina
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
FIGURE 7. Seal representing Gula with her dog. Courtesy of the British
Museum, BM 89846, published by Dominique Collon, "Neo-assyrian Gula
in the British Museum," in Beschreiben und Deuten in der Archaologie des
Alten Orients (Altertumskunde des Vorderen Orients, 4), Miinster: UgaritVerlag, 1994, pp. 43ff.
54
MEDICINE
A further proof for the identity of the Goat star and the goddess of healing is the recipe: "You take equal amounts of various herbs, chop them, sprinkle them with pure juniper juice,
and place the mixture before Gula" while a duplicate to this text
Even the veterinarian
says "place it before the Goat star."225
the
tonic
for
horses
to the Goat star: "take
he
exposed
prepared
one-third liter each from the 23 plants enumerated above, .
leave them overnight exposed to the Goat star, in the morning
boil them, . . . this is a tonic for horses."226
The same sources from Anatolia that provided the earliest references to the practice of nocturnal exposition are also those
that give the reasons for it. They are, however, written in the
Hittite language, and thus were less accessible to Assyriologists. One text, from about the thirteenth century, directs the
exorcist: "Takeit (the substance to be used) up to the roof, and
recite as follows: 'From on high in the sky may the thousand
stars incantit, and may the Moon god incantit.' And it remains
under the stars."227
The Hittite verb used for the celestial irradiation, hukkisk-,
can be more easily translated into German, with the verb
'besprechen,' as the editor of the text, Kronasser, had done. For
lack of a similarly appropriate term in English, I have applied
the verb 'to incant,' reminiscent of "incantation,"to express
influence through irradiation. The Hittite text emphasizes the
power the stars exercise and the way in which this power is
manifested, while the Akkadian texts highlight the practitioner's act of the exposition.The result expected in both cultures, however, is not in doubt: the stars will make the potion
or salve potent and efficacious.
It was not always Vega, the Goat, that was invoked to irradiate the medication, possibly because its position in the sky
was not favorable or the day not propitious for praying to the
225malmalis tusamsa UR.BItakassim me burasi elluti tasallah ina
pan
55
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
56
MEDICINE
7Ii,KX(IotIV KiaXouoTIV,
"APKTOV0', ijV KCai 'Ai(aIaV
T'
Kai
T'
calTOO
'Qpicova 8OK?U?I,
ri
oTpcPE(Tal
oir 86'diWopo6 ?OTI XosTpCOV'QKfaVvoio.
Il. XVIII 487-89 and Od. V 273-75, translation from Homer, The Iliad. Translated by Robert Fagles (New York: Viking Penguin, 1990). The passage is
cited, among others, by Festugiere, La Revelation d'Hermes Trismegiste2(1950)
vol. 1 pp. 182f. and Eric P. Hamp, "The Principal Indo-European Constellations," Proceedings of the Eleventh International Congress of Linguists, Luigi Heilmann, ed. (Bologna: il Mulino, 1974) 1239. Most recently, the fact that the
Greek name amaxa, 'chariot,' was borrowed from Babylonia has been pointed
out by Duchesne-Guillemin,
CRAI 1986 p. 237.
237 STT 73:61-64 and 71-75, see JNES 19 (1960) 33; a duplicate to this text,
UET 7 118:8-10 and 17-20, writes the name of the constellation as
MUL.MAR.GID.DA.AN.NA, which elsewhere designates Ursa Minor, see the
references collected by Wayne Horowitz, "The Akkadian Name for Ursa
Minor," ZA 79 (1989) 242. Another prayer to Ursa Maior, addressing her as
MUL.MAR.GID.DA.AN.NA GIS.MAR.GID.DA Samami, is published in Egbert
von Weiher, SpTU, vol. 4 no. 129 v 21ff., and an unpublished text, BM 33841
+ 48068, signaled by W. G. Lambert to von Weiher, is mentioned on p. 39
ad loc.
238BPO 2 Text III 28c: kal satti izzaz.
57
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
MEDICINE
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
FIGURE 9. Clay models of sheep livers inscribed with liver omens. Courtesy of the Louvre, nos. AO 19829 and AO 19834.
MUL.BIR= dSalbatanu (Civil, JNES 33 [1974] 336f., Text 3); see E. Reiner,
NABU 1993/26. The unfortunately fragmentary commentary to a medical text
comments on the ingredient "blood from a bull's kidney,"with the equation
MUL.BIR// ka-li-ti 'Kidney-star : kidney' Hermann Hunger, SpTU,vol. 1 no.
54:11'.
252CCAG7 p. 216.5. CCAG6 p. 83:9-13 (De septemstellarumherbis)attributes to Mars the shoulders (metaphrena)and kidneys, to Jupiter (o0lo Kat
0cOpat,cf. Demophilus ap. Porphyry, p. 198. Tycho-Brahe, in a lecture from
1574 (De disciplinismathematicisoper.omn., J. L. E. Dreyer, ed., vol. 1 [1913]
157) adduced by Boll-Bezold-Gundel p. 55, assigns the heart-the source of
heat-to the Sun, the brain to the Moon, the spleen to Saturn, the liver to
Jupiter, the gallbladder to Mars, the kidneys to Venus, the lungs to Mercury.
For planetary melothesia see Alessandro Olivieri, MelotesiaplanetariaGreca
(Napoli: Accademia di Archeologia Lettere e B. Arti, 1934).
60
CHAPTER
IV
Divination253
They gaze at the stars (and) slaughterlambs
letter)
(Neo-Assyrian
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
62
DIVINATION
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
moon and the date of the opposition of sun and moon as well
as special reports on various predictable and predicted celestial
and meteorological phenomena, such as conjunctions, occultations, and rain and thunder.262More than a thousand years
earlier, in Mari, the correspondents reported on such extraordinary events as torrential rains and thunder.263
Of the diviner we know from as early as the Old Babylonian
period that he accompanied the king on his campaigns;264
most diviners were attached to the court, though at least some
villages had a resident bfiru,as is shown by the complaint of an
Old Babylonian correspondent that there are not enough lambs
in the village even to provide the baru.265Nevertheless, some
diviners had to live by their wits. This is shown by the apotropaic ritual aiming at "achieving renown for the diviner."266
Such renown, based on correct predictions, would attract the
customers that the haruspex needed for his livelihood since he
belonged to the professionals-the diviner and the physicianwho made their living from private clients, as did also the innkeeper and baker with whom the diviner and the physician are
joined in another ritual to ensure brisk business.267
262 These
DIVINATION
395. Note that the Latin Picatrix speaks of Ymago ad faciendum ut phisicus
lucretur. . . . et videbis [laminam ymaginem habentem] mirabiliter trahere
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
Nirum
Sitaddarum
Mushussum
DIVINATION
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
."280
The setting of another Old Babylonian prayer of the haruspex281is also night. It appeals to the planet Venus alone, as the
stellar deity Ninsianna, addressing it as a male deity, that is,
in the planet's male manifestation;282 the diviner invokes the
celestial power to ask that his examination find favorable signs:
O my lord Ninsianna,
accept this offering,
be present in my offering, and place in it a portent of well-being
and life
for your servant Ur-Utu.283
278 A.
1909) 33, see Weidner, KAO 4 (Leipzig, 1914) 17f. and Handbuch60, with
Addendum p. 144. The ritual in its entirety has been recently reedited by
K. van der Toorn, Sin and Sanctionin Israeland Mesopotamia.A Comparative
Study (Assen/Maastricht: Van Gorcum & Comp., 1985), 125ff. For notes and
corrections see the review by Wolframvon Soden, AfO 34 (1987) 71. Van der
Toorn'stext is a kind of lamentation (sigu), only the last ten lines (rev. 39-48),
not translated anew by him, represent the "gods of the night" prayer, for
which see the bibliography in Werner Mayer, Untersuchungen(note 270
above) 428 no. 2a.
279 For this star list see BPO 2
p. 2.
280
Oppenheim, AnalectaBiblica12 (1959) 296.
281 Leon de
Meyer, "Deux prieres ikribu du temps dAmmisaduqa,"
in
282 See
p. 6 and note 14.
283DINGIR be-li dNin-si4-an-na
SIZKUR anniam mu-hu-[ur]
ina SIZKUR-ia izizma
UZU te-er-ti sulmi balati
ana Ur-dUtu IR-ka suknamma.
ZIKIR SUMIM, p. 274 lines 1-5. I have rendered the word written with the
Sumerogram SIZKUR as 'offering' and tertu as 'portent' rather than as
68
DIVINATION
69
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
DIVINATION
71
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
72
DIVINATION
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
DIVINATION
309
Thureau-Dangin,
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
the continuing
predominance
of
76
DIVINATION
Elsewhere317I commented on the imagery and poetic language of Nabonidus' inscription. What is of interest here is that
the sign given by the Moon god, a total eclipse in the month
of Ululu in the last watch of the night, a portent that is listed
in the compendium of celestial omens Enfma Anu Enlil with
the apodosis "Sin requests a high priestess," was not sufficient
for the king to act on it. The portent derived from a celestial
phenomenon had to be checked by the most ancient, most reliable divinatory method, namely extispicy.
The celestial omen observed under Nabonidus was a total
eclipse of the moon, an astronomical event not as rare as a solar
eclipse, and one that could be predicted with reasonable accuracy shortly before the eclipse was to take place as early as the
seventh century B.C. Nabonidus does not specify how the haruspex arrived at his verdict, what the features of the liver were
that gave him the answer to Nabonidus' query. The wording
of the king's questions indicates that the answer he expected
was in terms of yes or no, and indeed he reports that the gods
answered his queries with "yes" or "no." Nabonidus, whose
efforts to revive and relive the past are well known,318 no
doubt consciously imitated the Sumerian practice of binary consultation in regard to the choosing of a high priestess,319even
though, as already mentioned, the practice was also prevalent
in the late Assyrian period.
While as late as the reign of Nabonidus the two divination
techniques went hand-in-hand or complemented one another,
there must have begun even then or shortly thereafter the process that culminated in the prevalence of astrology. The establishment of correlations between the features of the liver and
stars or constellations, and their assignment to gods and to the
twelve months of the year, must have been one of the steps in
this development, a step for which we have some evidence
from a late Uruk text.
317E. Reiner, YourThwarts in Pieces, Your
Mooring Rope Cut. Poetryfrom
319As
suggested by Oppenheim, Ancient Mesopotamia(note 179 above)
213.
77
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
Egbert von Weiher, SpTU,vol. 4 no. 159; the text (W 22666/0) had been
very generously made available to me before publication by Professor von
Weiher, the epigrapher of the excavation.
321 Aries can be restored from the commentary that follows, in which the
name of Dumuzi is preserved, because the two, Aries and Dumuzi, are
paired in the astronomical text MUL.APINTablet I column i line 43, in the
edition of Hermann Hunger and David Pingree, MUL.APIN.
322See MUL.APIN 139f.
p.
323
MUL.APINI ii 45 and iii 4; the traces at the end of the entry in line 17
may represent the zodiacal sign Scorpius.
324 Similar are the
correspondences between months and constellations
in the "Calendar texts" discussed on pp. 114f.
78
DIVINATION
The novelty of this unique text is its establishing correspondences between the liver examined by the haruspex and the heliacal risings of constellations. As another unique text to be discussed in Chapter V states, correspondences between terrestrial
and celestial phenomena can and indeed must be established.
The parts of the liver and the marks on it are enumerated in
the sequence they are normally examined in the course of the
hepatoscopy. Their associations with the deities listed can be
explained in some cases only: in the case of the "bubble"associated with Adad, we can point to the Raven star called the star
of Adad;325other associations, such as that of the mark called
"path"with Samas, and of the gall bladder with Anu, have not
yet been found in our sources. The sequence of the parts enumerated makes it certain that the starting point of the learned
treatise was the manual of the haruspex and that the zodiacal
signs were only secondarily associated with them.
The items of the text are accompanied by and thus were obviously deemed worthy of scholia; unfortunately, most of the
explanations offered are rather opaque.326
Unique as this text is in Babylonian scholarly literature, it
testifies to an elaboration of the concept of the stellar influence
on the configurations that the liver could exhibit, and thereby
to the continued vitality of the Mesopotamian divinatory tradition, while its association between stars and planets and
of Hephaistio
parts of the exta, paralleled in the Apotelesmatika
from Hellenistic Egypt,327 points to wide-ranging crosscurrents in the Hellenistic Near East.
325 MUL.APIN I ii 9.
326
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
80
CHAPTER
Apotropaia
Doch Abraxasbring ich selten!
Divan
GoetheWest-bstlicher
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
APOTROPAIA
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
84
APOTROPAIA
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
353IZI.SUB.BA:
"you expose the preparation to the stars of the night" (ana
MULmu-si-timtus-bat)Or. NS 36 (1967) 287:9', 295:25.
354MAS.GALbur-ru-qd;the qualifying adjective is obscure.
355Caplice, Or. NS 40 (1971) 143 r. 5f.: MAS.GALbur-ru-qa ina IGI MUL.
MULKUD-is-mamuhra d7.BIDUG4.GA-ma. . . Other references to the Pleiades conceived as the Seven gods par excellence are RA 18 (1921) 28 and
its parallels KAR 38 r. 18ff. and K.8863. Offerings are made to the Pleiades
in a Hittite text (Bo3298 + KUB 25 32 + . . . ii lff. ?12), see Gregory Mac-
APOTROPAIA
65?-67 of the omen series summa alu, which deal with the
appearance
the celestial
power is addressed
because
[1930]) 149ff., and S. Moren, The Omen Series SummaAlu (Ph.D. diss., University of Pennsylvania, 1978), pp. 104ff. and 211ff.
359 [EN MUL.MES gasrit]i sa ina same manzaza sarhu
ilf r[abuftu?ib]nukunfsi ersu Nu[dimmud . . -kunusi]
in an apotropaic ritual to avert the evil of a dove: Bu. 91-5-9,155 rev. 810, edited by R. I. Caplice, Or. NS 36 (1967) 282f.
360dEnlil dEa
d[Sulpae?] lu MUL.MES[. . .]-Bu. 91-5-9,155 rev. 10-11.
361 See Introduction
p. 6 and note 13.
362 Rm. 510 lines
8-10, edited by R. I. Caplice, Or. NS 36 (1967) 284f.
363 BURU5.HABRUD.DA.The identification with "bat" is
suggested by the
MUSENNITAina MI sa DU-ku-ma(= probdescription BURU5.HABRUD.DA
ably ittanallakuand not simply illaku) NIM (= lamsata?)ibarru'(blood of) a
male bat that goes about at night catching flies,' BAM 476:10'
364 8. [EN attunu MU]L.MESgasrfitu sa Anu u Enlil i[bnfikunufii]
9. [Enlil?] dE-a dSul-pa-e-a [...]
10. [. . . MU]L.MES gasrfitu sa ina same manzaza [. . .]
Since line 8 of Rm. 510 corresponds to line rev. 8 of Bu. 91-5-9,155, and
line 10 to line rev. 7, we conjecture that the mention of Jupiter (Sulpaea) in
line 9 was present in the broken part of rev. 9.
87
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
APOTROPAIA
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
Jupiter and Mercury are attested, see Rene Labat, Un Calendrierbabylonien des travaux,des saisons, et des mois (Paris: Champion, 1965) 170f. n. 6,
and so is Mars in the list for month IV in BM 26185 communicated to me
by Douglas Kennedy.
377See Miguel Civil, MSL 12 p. 90.
378CT 41 20f. reverse 31-37 contains celestial omens.
90
APOTROPAIA
or a] cloud?
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
summa alu text384and another, taken from meteorological phenomena, in an Assur text.385A parallel to these is included in
a royal ritual in which the king lists in column ii "either an
eclipse of the Moon [or of the Sun?] or of Jupiter or an eclipse
of ..., [or .. .] the roar of Adad that came down from the sky,
[or . . .] or a flaring? star or a scintillating? star or [. ..] which
came close to the stars of the (three) paths"386 and continues
with "any evil that is in my land and my palace."387 Of the
sequel (column iii?) only the first few signs of some lines are
preserved, and they are, after an introductory "ditto" (KI.MIN)
in each line, "the evil of [. . .], the evil of [. . .] signs which
[occurred?] in the land, the evil of an eclipse [of .. .], the evil
of a fireball? [. . .], the evil of [. . .] star,"388and two more lines
with only HUL preserved.
The ritual for averting the evil portended by an earthquake
is also mentioned in the letters of exorcists to the Assyrian
king.389 Other evil portents given by celestial phenomena are
384 CT 41 23 i
3-16, edited by Ebeling, RA 48 (1954) 10ff., see Parpola, LAS
2 p. 73.
385LKA48a, edited
by Ebeling, RA 48 (1954) 82 no. 3.
.] lu-u
10628, known to me from Geers' copies, parallel BMS 62, see Ebeling, RA
48 (1954) 8. A similar enumeration is found in the text published by W. G.
Lambert, "A Part of the Ritual for the Substitute King', AfO 18 (1957-58)
109ff., column A lines 11ff.: AN.MI Sin AN.MIdSamas AN.MIdul-pa-e-a
[. .. AN].MIdDil-batAN.MIdUDU.BAD.MES
'eclipses of the Moon, the Sun,
the
Venus,
(or of)
(other) planets' see Parpola, LAS 2 p. xxii. No
Jupiter,
of
or
Mars
is
mentioned in the celestial omens, but eclipses
eclipse
Jupiter
of Venus are. Apotropaic rituals to avert the evil portended by a lunar eclipse
are published by Ebeling, RA 48 (1954) 82 as no. 2 and by Caplice, Or. NS
40 (1971) 166f. no. 65; the cuneiform text was subsequently published in autograph copy as CT 51 190.
16 (ABL34, = SAA 10 no. 10), and nos. 147 and 148 (ABL357
and 1118+, = SAA 10 nos. 202 and 203), see also Parpola, LAS2 pp. 123ff.;
the ritual itself was described in the text KAR7 but only the prayer to Samas
mentioning HUL ri-i-b[i .. .], 'the evil of the earthquake,' is preserved in it.
A ritual performed by the temple singer kaluto avert such evil is attested in
Thureau-Dangin, Rituels accadiens (Paris, Leroux: 1921) 34ff. obverse
16-reverse 1.
92
APOTROPAIA
i[nnamiruni], K.818 = LASno. 334 (CT 53 8, = SAA 10 no. 381), and see Parpola, LAS 2 pp. 350f.
391ACh
Supp. 2 62 = LAS no. 289 = SAA 10 no. 362.
392ABL 647 = LAS no. 67 = SAA 10 no. 67.
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
of] the star that fell into your house" and reciting a spell in
Sumerian399and a prayer to Samas in Akkadian. How a
shooting star could land in a man's house is difficult to imagine,
but portents from shooting stars are not only known from standard omen collections400but are requested as answers to the
petitioner's question in the popular media of divination more
akin to "fortune-telling,"as I have had the occasion to show.401
The compendium iqqurtpuScombined the activities and phenomena of everyday life listed in ??1-66 with the portents
announced by celestial bodies in ??67ff. The compilers of iqqur
lpuS simply juxtaposed omens reflecting the two domains of
heaven and earth and, correspondingly, public and private forecasts. Rare is a true conflation of the two, of which we saw a
late example (p. 78) establishing a relationship between parts
of the liver examined by the haruspex and zodiacal and other
constellations. An effort to establish a relation between omens
portended by various media was begun, however, even earlier.
Speculations to this effect are set out in a text already known
under Assurbanipal, from whose library its exemplars come.
It was edited by Leo Oppenheim under the programmatic title
"A Babylonian Diviner's Manual."402The text is a rarity not
only in regard to its subject matter but especially in its attempt
to give a rationale for the correspondences between signs
observed in the sky and signs on earth, in contrast to the
Mesopotamian approach which, as we have seen, does not normally give reasons or explanations.
The interconnections between celestial and terrestrialomens
are stressed several times but they are eventually expressed in
the simple terms: the portents on earth and those in the sky
correspond. The task of the diviner, as we can infer from the
399The Sumerian spell begins with mul E.NUN.ta e.a 'star which has
come out of the E.NUN'; E.NUN, Akkadian agrunnu (for which see Caplice,
"E.NUN in Mesopotamian Literature," Or. NS 42 [1973] 299-305) elsewhere
is both the underground abyss and the temple that corresponds to it on
earth, see ibid. 304f.
400See
p. 72.
401 In
"Fortune-Telling in Mesopotamia," JNES 19 (1960) 28f., and see
above p. 72 and note 299.
402 A. Leo
Oppenheim, "A Babylonian Diviner's Manual', JNES 33 (1974)
197-220.
94
APOTROPAIA
406200:38-40.
407200:41-42.
408200:43-46.
409 200:53-56.
95
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
Even though far from "everysign" can be found in the twentyfive tablets whose incipits follow,410we should note the significant statement that there exists "a method to dispel them."
This method, for which precisely the term for apotropaion,
namburbu,is used,411is not a simple catalogue of apotropaic rituals similar to the ones quoted on pp. 83f., but rather instructions for establishing, by astronomical calculations, the exact
date of the event and for finding in a hemerological table
appended to the Manual the month and day when such rituals
can be effective.412
The already mentioned Uruk text with its correspondences
of parts of the liver with times (possibly indicating zodiacal
signs) and celestial bodies, the correspondences drawn between
the signs of the zodiac and the performance of apotropaic rites
(see Chapter VI) and the Diviner's Manual all indicate various
tentatives to refine the techniques or, to use Peter Brown'sterm,
"the technology of sorcery in the ancient world,"413into more
sophisticated methods that culminate in Hellenistic astrology,
and thus testify, as I have had occasion to stress earlier, to the
continued vitality of the Mesopotamian divinatory tradition.
410 For a
CHAPTER
Sorcerers
and
VI
Sorceresses
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
they bring down the moon. To this feat there is only a cryptic
allusion in a Neo-Assyrian letter. Nevertheless, it is this allusion that establishes yet another link between the Mesopotamian and Classical cultures, and at the same time makes us
aware of the constraints imposed on our understanding by the
paucity and the accident of preservation of the data.
The allusion is found in a Neo-Assyrian letter written to King
Esarhaddon in the seventh century B.C.which contains the following passage:
As for the messengerswhom the king, my lord, sent to Guzana,
who would listento the disparagingremarksof Tarasiand his wife?
His wife, Zaza, and Tara5ihimself are not to be spared. ...
Theirwomen would bring the moon down from heaven!417
We might easily have dismissed the last sentence as a simple
hyperbole would it not remind us of the often-celebrated feat
of "the Thessalian witches who draw down the moon from
heaven"418mentioned by Plato, the feat of drawing down the
moon that had become in Latin literature the hallmark of sorceresses, expressed by the Latin phrase detraherelunam,or deducere lunam.419
The power to draw down the moon was attributed especially
to the sorceresses of Thessaly, a land of magic compellingly
described by Lucan in The Civil War:
". .. I want the Snake that lies up there to come down here like a gigantic
torrent. I want the two Bears-the big one, useful to Greek ships, and the
small one, useful to Phoenician ships-to feel the Snake's enormous coils
...
SORCERERS
AND
SORCERESSES
..
o...
..
..
...
420
The verse translation is that of Nicholas Rowe from the early 18th
century.
421 ...
illic et sidera primum
praecipiti deducta polo Phoebeque serena
non aliter diris verborum obsessa venenis
palluit et nigris terrenisque ignibus arsit,
quam si fraterna prohiberet imagine tellus
insereretque suas flammis caelestibus umbras,
et patitur tantos cantu depressa labores,
donec suppositas propior despumet in herbas.
Pharsalia(also known as De bellocivili) 6.499-506.
422Robert Graves, Lucan, Pharsalia
(Penguin Books, 1957) 141. A more
recent verse translation is that of P. F Widdows, Lucan'sCivil War (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988).
99
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
SORCERERS
AND
SORCERESSES
from the sky"428of Virgil's Eighth Eclogue-there is no reference, to my knowledge, to this feat either in the poetry of the
Babylonians, or in their astral magic. It is true that the male
Moon god of the Sumerians and the Semites has less affinity
with the 'wise women' of Mesopotamia than the goddess Selene,
Cynthia, or Luna of the Greeks and Romans. Perhaps it is for
this reason that it was the power of the stars that Babylonian
sorceresses and other magicians were using to carry out their
machinations.
The means of affecting the intended victim involve, as in
other cultures, the use of figurines made of him429or, more
directly, imbuing with sorceries, in Akkadian kispu, the food he
eats, the water he drinks, and the oil he uses as body ointment.
An elaborate ritual extending throughout a whole night, called
Maqlu 'Burning' is designed to counteract these evil machinations by burning figurines of the person suspected of having
wrought sorcery.430The ritual begins, appropriately, with a
prayer to the "gods of the night": "I invoke you, Gods of the
night, with you I invoke the night, the veiled bride, I invoke
(the three watches of the night) the evening watch, the midnight watch, the dawn watch."431It is from such rituals, and
from the proscription of black magic found in the law books
(the Code of Hammurapi and the Middle Assyrian Laws) that
the machinations of sorcerers and sorceresses can be documented, since instructions for practicing such noxious magic
have, for good reason, not come down to us.432
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
102
SORCERERS
AND SORCERESSES
ate "lifting of the hand." The instructions say: "facing Sirius you
sweep the roof, you sprinkle pure water, you strew juniper on a
censer (aglow) with acacia-embers, you libate fine beer, you
prostrate yourself, you draw the curtains, you set out heaps of
flour, you purify that man with censer, torch, and holy-water
basin, you have him stand inside the curtains on garden herbs?,
he lifts his hand, recites this 'recitation'three times, each time
he recites it he prostrates himself and tells everything that is
on his mind, and then the wrath of (his) god and goddess will
be loosed, the sorcery and machinations will be loosed."442
example,
ceremony performed in) the curtained cubicle on the 13th day,"etc., see CAD
S/2 s.v. siddu B.
441In one of the exemplars the prayer is dubbed a "lifting-of-the-hand"
prayer (for which see p. 17) and was published, along with the extant part
of the pertinent ritual, by Werner Mayer, Untersuchungenzur Formensprache
Studia Pohl: Series Maior, 5 (Rome:
der babylonischen"Gebetsbeschworungen,"
The
540f.
BiblicalInstitute Press, 1976)
subscript is preserved in BAM461 and
in its fragmentary duplicate BAM 462 which gives a more complete version
of the ritual but preserves only part of the prayer.
442 ina pan MUL.KAK.SI.SA
ura tasabbit me elluti tasallah nignak burasi
ina penti asagi tasarraq sikara resta tanaqqi tusken siddi tasaddad zidubdubbe tattanaddi amela suatu nignakka gizilla agubba tullalma ina birit siddi
ina muhhi sammi kiri tuszassuma qassu inassi minitu annitu 3-su imannu
ema imtanu usken u mimma mala libbasu sabtu idabbubma kimilti ili u istari
patratsu kispu ipsu ipattaru, BAM 461 iii 5'-13'.
443According to the subscripts in lines 102 and 215, these are the 23rd?
and [24th?]tablets of the composition (DUB 23?.KAM.MAana GIG ina TEka, STT 89:102, [DUB.n.KAM.MA ana GIG] ina TE-ka, STT 89:215). In the
catalogue to the diagnostic omen series published by I. L. Finkel in A Sci-
454
'seventeen
scription for KA.DIB.BIDAsee 17 sammu latkatu sa KA.DIB.BI.DA
tested herbs for seizing of the mouth' E. Leichty, "Guaranteed to Cure,"in
A ScientificHumanist. Studies in Memoryof AbrahamSachs, Erle Leichty, M.
deJ. Ellis, P. Gerardi, eds. (Philadelphia: The University Museum, 1988) 262
CBS 14161:5. Recently, Stefan Maul, in his review of Thomsen's book on
Magic, Weltdes Orients19 (1988) 165ff., has suggested that the affliction refers
to stopping up the mouth of the effigy representing the victim.
456 "No, it seems to me that it suffered the same misfortune that once
befell Thucydides when he was on trial: he suddenly became paralyzed in
his jaw."
OUK,&aX'?KEIVO6
?
8OK n7ovo0vat,
OIK?t
06j7p
qj
a7c67oXlTKTOq
4aipvT
ey?vsToT;tq yvaOou;.
adduced by Christopher A. Faraone, "An Accusation of Magic in
Classical Athens (Ar. Wasps946-48)," TAPA119 (1989), citing from scholiato
Ar. Wasps946-48, also Ar. Acharnians703-18, cited p. 151; Libanius, cited
p. 153.
457 All
105
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
marily concerned with the cognitive and verbal faculties which are essential
to success in the law courts . . ." (Faraone, "An Accusation of Magic," 156f.).
459 ana IGI
dSul-pa-e ina UD.21.KAM ina UD.22.KAM rik-su rra-kis]-su,
STT 89 line 31.
460 ana NA BI ITI.ZIZ UD.4?.KAMIGI MUL.EN.TE.NA.BAR.HUMip-su [epui-ts], line 50.
461 ana NA BI ina ITI.SE ina rUD.x.KAM] [IGI] MUL.GiR.TABip-su ep-siisu, line 54f.
462ana NA BI ana IGI
[MU]L [...], line 36.
463 ana NA BI ina ITI.SU
[. ..], line 74.
106
SORCERERS
AND
SORCERESSES
paragraph may already refer to 'hatred, which follows as diagnosis in lines 85, 89, and 93. Even such a usually beneficent
power as the Wagon (Ursa Maior) could be used for nefarious
purposes, as an unfortunately fragmentary prescription, from
which little survives beyond the phrase "[witchcraft was practestifies.
ticed?] against that man before the Wagon,"464
What a star has wrought, a star will undo. To counteract the
evil magic, one turns again to the stars: materials to be used in
the ritual, just as medications (see pp. 48ff.), are to be exposed
to stars, as in the instruction: "you expose it to all? stars";465
two now broken lines must have held similar instructions.466
An effluvium from a celestial body may manifest itself not
only as "seizure" or "hand";467 another image used is "covering" or "clapping down," an image taken from the impact of
a net.468For example, a diagnosis states: "the name (of the illness) is 'male fly of . .,' a wind has swept over him, it is 'covering by Sagittarius' you may make a prognostication,"469and
another: "its name is 'female fly of . ..' a wind has swept over
him, it is 'covering by the Twins' you may make a prognostication."470The term also occurs in the fragmentary prescriptions "for 'covering by Istar.'471Unidentified is the disease or
symptom called "staff of the Moon."472
The stars are appealed to as individual divine beings whose
influence is sought in order to avert the sorcerers' machinations, and it is in the same guise that they are invoked to save
from other afflictions, or to achieve a desired goal. Their
464ana LU BI ana pan MUL.MAR.GiD.[DA
.. .], AMT 44,4:2.
465ana IGI MULDU?tus-bat, line 17.
466 .. tus]-bat, line 22, ana IGI MUL [. . .], line 60.
[.
467An illness is called "hand of Venus" in the Neo-Assyrian letter to the
'if (something) like the "staff of Sin" affects the man' BAM 471 ii 21, dupl.
TDP 192:35.
107
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
influence is not yet connected, as it will be in Hellenistic astrology, with their positions, their "houses/' and aspects.
Still, there exist a few texts from Babylonia that seem to
be precursors of Greek astrology. Two late, largely parallel,
lists from Hellenistic Uruk473enumerate the "regions" or
"areas"474
of the zodiacal constellations associated with a certain activity which, in order to succeed, has to be carried out
in that region. Occasionally an explicit instruction is added: teppusma isallim "if you carry it out, it will succeed."
It is again the Greek astrological tradition that provides the
clue for interpreting the Babylonian references to the signs of
the zodiac. What the texts mean when they refer to these signs
is the region of the sky where the Moon stands in that particular moment. The Moon's position is considered auspicious or
inauspicious for engaging in a specific activity, and these
moments have been collected in so-called Lunaria (when
written in Latin), preserved from the second century A.D.
onward,475to which the Babylonian texts represent often very
close parallels.
The lunarianot only indicate the auspicious moments (with
such phrases as bonumest, utile est) but also the times to be
avoided (with such phrases as malum est or caveat vos) when
engaging in a specific activity. The Babylonian "Lunarium"
includes, e.g., "to bring back a fugitive: region of Regulus, or
Libra,"476
comparable to finding a fugitive, indicated for several
473BRM 4 19 and 20, edited by A. Ungnad, "Besprechungskunst und
Astrologie in Babylonien"/ AfO 14 (1941-44) 251-84. More recently, these
texts have been studied by Jean Bottero, EPHE, Annuaire 1974/75 130ff.,
reprinted in Jean Bottero, Mythes et ritesde Babylone(Geneva-Paris: SlatkineChampion, 1985) 100ff.
474The term used is the Sumerogram KIwith the reading qaqqaru'ground,
area, region,' written syllabically in LBAT1626 rev 6'. It is possible that a
better translation would be 'place' (locus).
475The earliest preserved text is the elspiKaTapcVx6of Maximus, edited
by A. Ludwich, Leipzig, 1877; see Paola Radici Colace, Le parafrasibizantine
del nEPI KATAPXQN di Massimo, Letteratura e Civilta Bizantina, 4 (Messina:
Dr. Antonino Sfameni, 1988). For Greek Selenodromia see the catalogue in
Delatte, CCAG10 p. 121; for Latin Lunaria see Emanuel Svenberg, Lunaria
et ZodiologiaLatina,Studia Graeca et Latina Gothoburgensia, 16 (Goteborg:
Elanders Boktryckeri, 1963).
476BRM 4 20:20, see
AfO 14 (1941-44) 259 and 265.
108
SORCERERS
AND SORCERESSES
all well known and often listed among the evil machinations
of sorcerers.487The acts of black magic by means of which the
sorcerer and sorceress sought to achieve their goals include, for
example, "to seize a ghost and tie him to a man"488and "to
483igdThsabt surs', BRM 4 20:25 = BRM 4 19:14; see above note 267.
484IGI.NIGIN.NA(= stdanu), BRM 4 20:10.
485KA.DIB.BI.DA (= sibit pi), BRM 4 20:43 = BRM 4 19:38.
tary (ibid. 73) as e-tem-mu sa-ba-tu it-ti ameli a-na ra-k[a-si], see AfO 14
(1941-44) 259f.
109
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
ibid. 71.
rLA]
[. . .).
110
SORCERERS
AND
SORCERESSES
precede this date. The same catarchic magic that was listed in
the late texts is here stated in terms of propitious dates rather
than signs of the zodiac.501
The most significant difference between the two is the
absence in the earlier text of the astronomical data of BRM 4
19.502The Sultantepe text goes through the months of the
year, singling out the days of the months that are propitious for
carrying out the described enterprise.503Its recommendations
are expressed by the already mentioned formula teppusma
isallim"if you carry it out, it will succeed" which ends each section. It also includes activities that are now missing or were
never included in the late texts, such as, for the first month in
its entirety ("from the 1st to the 30th") "desire,"504also "for
(curing?) migraine and calming desire."505
497 [ma?-gar?](copy: x GAR, with the GAR sign written as the numeral
"4")LUGALKI x, LBAT1626 rev.?2; cf. BRM 4 20:46, constellation broken.
498 [. ..] MUL SUM?(possibly mistake for MAS 'Capricorn') dtn(DI) bel
dababi KI?(or bel dababisu) x [. . .], LBAT 1626 rev.? 5'.
499See Introduction (p. 13) and above note 475. See also A. Bouchegrecque(Paris,1899,reprinted Aalen: Scientia, 1979)458ff.
Leclercq,L'Astrologie
500 Dated
by the name of the eponym Bel-aha-usur in the colophon.
501 STT 300,
published in 1964 in cuneiform copy by O. R. Gurney, who
identified it as a duplicate to BRM 4 19 and noted the differences between
them. See also Jean Bottero, EPHE, Annuaire 1974-75, pp. 130ff., reprinted
in Jean Bottero, Mythes et rites (note 473 above) 100ff.
502See above
pp. 108ff. and note 491.
503 STT 300:7 has a
parallel in Egbert von Weiher, SpTU, vol. 2 no. 23:1,
a ritual concerning the activity su.dus.a, which is also listed in BRM4 20, see
Ungnad, AfO 14 (1941-44) 272 and von Weiher, op. cit. 124.
504
SA.ZI.GA, line 1.
505 SAG.KI.DIB
TUK-eiunu-uh-hi SA.ZI.GAx x, line 2.
111
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
SORCERERS
AND
SORCERESSES
year from Sumerian times onward, and for the local calendars
of the second millennium, it is only recently that efforts have
been underway512to enlarge and update Benno Landsberger's
early work of 1915,513since he himself never returned to the
subject in a second volume as he had promised.
The cuneiform hemerologies list the days that are favorablein their entirety or in part-in general or for conducting a particular kind of business or activity, either private, such as
building a house, taking a wife, or religious, such as addressing
prayers and offerings to a god or goddess. The sequence is
calendrical by months and days; some texts are laid out in a grid
pattern, indicating "favorable"(SE) or "unfavorable"(NU SE) in
the appropriate column of a table.514
Some lists give only a selection of the days of the month. The
selection always includes the days that are most dangerous,
namely the "evil" days 7, 14, 19, 21, 28. Cultically significant
days on which prayers and offerings to gods are prescribed are
found especially in hemerologies prepared for use by the king,
and perhaps exclusively in those. Astral gods to whom prayers
and offerings are to be made are conceived in their astral manifestations: stars, constellations, and planets; offerings to the
Moon are prescribed for the 15th day, the day of the full moon
in the standardized thirty-day month. A hemerological text
from Assur which is the most explicit of all515prescribes
offerings on the 18th of Nisannu (the first month in the calendar) to the Pleiades (ii 45); on the 19th and on X 10 to Orion
(Sipazianna, ii 15 and r. ii 48); on III 16 to Marduk, Gula, and
Venus (v 44f.); on III 12 and XI 14 to Venus (v 32 and r. ii 53);
on IV 18 to the Scorpion (MUL.GIR.TAB,vi 47); and VI 16 and
VII 14 to Jupiter (Sulpae, r. v 50 and r. iv 80).
512 Mark
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
SORCERERS
AND
SORCERESSES
Egbert von Weiher, SpTU,vol. 3 nos. 104 (month IV) and 105 (month
VIII).
used in astronomical texts. Both texts (nos. 104 and 105) use the month
names BAR(month I) instead of LU or HUN for Aries (I), and SU (month IV)
instead of ALLAfor Cancer (IV). Moreover, the sign GUD'Taurus'is replaced
by MUL.MUL'Pleiades' (II), MAS.MAS'Gemini' by SIPA'Orion'(III),and 1 IKU
'Field' (= Square of Pegasus) (XII?)stands for ZIB(Pisces, XII);both texts also
use the abbreviated names GiR (= GIR.TAB)
for Scorpius, SIPA(= SIPA.ZI.
for Sagittarius,
AN.NA) for Orion (standing for Gemini), PA (= PA.BIL.SAG)
SUHUR(= SUHUR.MAS)for Capricorn. However, according to the catch line
of no. 104, the next tablet of the set, dealing with month V, again designates
Taurus, as usual, by GUD 'Bull.'
523 Published in cuneiform copy by F Thureau-Dangin, TCL 6 12, and
edited along with another fragment, now in Berlin, of the same tablet (see
figs. 3-5) by E. Weidner in Gestirn-Darstellungen
auf babylonischenTontafeln
(note 520 above). Included in Weidner's publication is a tablet now in the
British Museum, which is catalogued among the Kuyunjik collection, but
most likely also comes from late Babylonian Uruk. Landsberger drew attention to it as early as 1915 in Der kultischeKalenderder Babylonierund Assyrer
(note 513 above) 145ff.
115
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
116
SORCERERS
AND SORCERESSES
head, feather, and blood of an eagle; for month XII, corresponding to the zodiacal sign Pisces, here designated by 'Field,
the name for the Square of Pegasus, the head and blood (variant: heart) of a dove, the head and blood of a swallow.
The late origin of the text is also evident from the fact that
the punning relationship between the prescription and the
corresponding sign of the zodiac can be understood only with
reference to the classical zodiac. For example, the recipe prescribed for the first month is prepared from a sheep although
the expected zodiacal sign, Aries 'ram' is not mentioned nor
is the Akkadian name of the sign, Agru 'hired man' associated
with "sheep"; MUL.LU,MOL.LU,or simply LU with the meaning "Aries"is well attested in Seleucid texts.530Note also that
the prescription for the second month requires the blood, fat,
or hair of a bull, but the month is identified by the constellation
MUL.MUL'Stars,'i.e., the Pleiades, used in late texts instead of
the name GUD 'Bull' of the zodiacal sign.
I am not able to solve the problem posed by the unintelligible
KI.KAL-timprescribed for months VII and VIII, the signs Libra
and Scorpius. However, although less transparent, the connection between the birds that provide materials for the ointments
and the month or sign for which these are prescribed, can be
astronomically justified;531thus month III, Gemini, designated by Orion, is connected with the Rooster, a part of Canis
Minor; month VI appropriately with the Raven (Corvus);
month XI, Aquarius, with the Eagle (Aquila), and month XII,
Pisces, with the Swallow, a name for the western Fish of Pisces.
Since the identification of the anzu-birdis not certain, its connection with month IX, Sagittarius, cannot be argued.
Heads and feathers of various birds indeed appear as ingredients in various Mesopotamian recipes, both magic and medical, just as they do in medieval magic texts. Among twelve
recipes against a disease532-its name is broken on the tablet530See A. Sachs, JCS 6 (1952) 71f. ad TCL 6 14:6-20. Among various the-
ories for the origin of the writing LU, the association of LU (a cuneiform sign
that may also be read UDU 'sheep') with the zodiacal sign Aries 'ram' was
also discussed by Ungnad, AfO 14 (1941-44) 256 n. 37.
531
Following a suggestion of David Pingree.
53212 bultusa
[.. .], BAM473 i 26; in line 27, an enumeration of medicines
for SU.GIDIM.MA
'hand-of-the-ghost' begins.
117
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
only in the last five are the names of the ingredients preserved,
and in the first of these five, the eighth recipe, only the word
for "head." The ninth recipe requires the head of a raven,533
the tenth the head of a goose,534the eleventh the head of an
uruballu bird,535and the twelfth the head of an eagle.536A
salve for headache in another recipe also uses the head of an
eagle;537a phylactery to assure victory over an adversary must
include an eagle's head, eagle feathers, and hair from a lion.538
The heads of a water-fowl and of a male bat539are used in a
salve for headache; the head of a bat and feathers and blood
from various birds in phylacteries against epilepsy540 and
other afflictions.541
535qaqqad(written SAG.DU)u-ru-bal-liMUSEN.
536 SAG A.MUSEN; the text is BAM 473 i 1-25.
118
VII
CHAPTER
The
Nature
of
Stones
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
120
THE NATURE
OF STONES
Descriptions that appear only in the Assyrian kings' narratives probably are citations from this work, as that of the girimhilibu stone, which protects one from plague553or of the elallu
stone, which serves to obtain obedience,554while that of the
SE.TIR-stone"which ensures obedience and averts destruction"555may be compared with "the stone for averting destruction," attested in a list of amulet stones.556The 'nature' of
the SE.TIR-stoneitself does not happen to be preserved in the
Stone-book, and many of the Stone-book's descriptions leave
the modern reader perplexed and, as so often, with his curiosity unsatisfied. Take the entry: "the stone whose nature is
like fish eye is called 'fish-eye'"; no more informative though
more picturesque is the description of, for example, the stone
arzalluas "the stone whose nature is like a stork's wing" or the
stone abasmucalled "stone of sunset";557another stone or possibly the same-the name is not preserved-is called "stone
551 Two
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
559Pliny, NH 37.169,quoted in the motto to this chapter, see Robert Halleux and Jacques Schamp, LesLapidairesgrecs (Paris:Les Belles Lettres, 1985)
xxiv and 320.
560 J. J. van Dijk, LUGALUD ME-LAM-biNIR-GAL.Le recit
epiqueet didactiquedes Travauxde Ninurta, du Delugeet de la NouvelleCreation(Leiden: Brill,
1983).
561 From Akkadian sadu 'mountain.' See A. A. Barb,
"Lapis Adamas. Der
Blutstein," in Hommages a Marcel Renard, vol. 1, Coll. Latomus 101 (Brussels, 1969) 69 n. 6 for the suggestion that the word recurs in Greek as oreites,
and that Greek Eg:uXov 6peiTrlq reflects Akkadian sadanubaltu.
562
563
564
122
143).
minative i 'herb' or GIS 'tree'; they are usually separated by a ruling (in
Kocher, Pflanzenkunde12 ii 39/40 and Kocher, Pflanzenkunde14 + CT 14 10 iii
18/19). One source, K.4419,in CT 14 43, ends with the plant section, and has a
subscript [.. .] NA4.MES,which Kocher suggests to restore [arkisu]NA4.MES
'[there follow] the stones.'
569Malku VIII 176.
570For
concatenating various series see Chapter V (p. 90).
571
E.g., BAM 255, or UET 4 nos. 148-53, mentioned in his review of the
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
585
586
BAM 237.
587 BAM 237 i end.
588
E.g., Pliny, NH 36.39, 37.119;see R. Halleux, "Fecondite des mines et
sexualite des pierres dans l'antiquite greco-romaine,"RBPH48 (1970) 16-25
and Lapidaires(note 559 above) 326.
589 Orphei lithica kerygmata 8.6: OUToS(scil.ToTrdatoc)
?oTIV6 aponIv, 6
6 O6rnXUK6oS
cited Halleux, Lapidaires(note 559 above) 151.
XaDppO6Tpo;,
590 E.g., 7 NA4su-u NITA,BAM 473 iii 22.
591 NA4li-li-i NITAand NA4li-li-i SALin the abnu sikinsu text K.4751:5-6,
see ZA 82 (1992) 117f.
126
THE NATURE
OF STONES
shells
are often
127
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
Youstring
twelve(sic!)stones (to use) if a man has an "ill-wisher."
598
Egbertvon Weiher,SpTU,vol. 2 no. 22. An excerpttabletthat duplicateslines 16-25is publishedby M. J. Geller,AfO35 (1988)21f. Note [x] BE
NA4.MESDIS HUL.GIGUD.4.KAMsa ITI.NEDU-su '[. . .] stones if "hatred"
601i 39'-46'.
602A
THE NATURE
OF STONES
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
in the Baby-
of amulets ADD 1043 (= SAA 7 no. 82) also lists 14 GU AM-Sin in reverse
line 6.
608For recent literature see David Bain, "'Treading Birds.'An Unnoticed
use of raTrco(Cyranides 1.10.27,I.19.9),"in Dover Fs 295-304.
609Dover Fs 296.
610ki 0 NA4 u GIS u LU..MAS.MAS-ui-tu a-na GIG
te!-pu-su
it-ti si-ti-su
in ... stone, plant, and tree [... .]1611 Trees, plants, and stones
were associated with zodiacal signs in late Babylonian texts
as they were in Hellenistic Egypt, and to these entities were
sometimes added animals, cities, and excerpts or incipits of
mantic material, lists of gods and temples, and others.612No
explicit reference is made, however, to amulets with such pictorial representations.
In a late commentary613the mention of plant, stone, and
tree is possibly connected with medicine, if my reading614"to
heal him [. . .] plant, stone, and tree of/which [. . .]" is correct;
the next line of the text already makes the association of a zodiacal sign with magic operations615for which the main sources
are the two Neo-Babylonian texts BRM4 20 and 19, and the similar texts LBAT1597 and LBAT1626, discussed in Chapter VI.
The just cited text which associates the three entities plant,
stone, and tree with exorcism or magic (Akkadian masmasutuor
asipitu 'art of the exorcist') enjoins the practitioner to have
recourse to its situ or, as the signs can also be read, setu. The
latter reading, setu, designates a commentary arranged like a
glossary in two columns, and such a commentary would have
given in the second column the synonym or explanation of the
word in the first.616What the commentary to U NA4u GIS may
have contained we do not know; possibly it gave equivalences,
1986) 73, and translated by him as "When you perform plant stone and wood
and the art of the exorcist for a sick man-one performs (it) with its comment?." For the texts see Ernst Weidner, Gestirn-Darstellungen
auf babylonischen Tontafeln(note 520 above) 17ff.
611 MUL.LU.MAS ana IGI-kaina E SU"1(=
pit-qad?)sa NA4 U u is-si [. ..],
JCS 6 (1952) 66:6 (= TCL 6 12), see Sachs, ibid. 71ff.
612See Reiner,
JAOS105 (1985) 592f.
613LBAT1621.
614
[anal bullutisu ([...] TI-sui)U NA4u GIS sa T[U . . .].
615
'love of man for woman:
[K]I.AG.GANITAana SAL MUL.[KUN.MES]
constellation: [Pisces]/ LBAT1621:8',restored from BRM4 20:6, see Ungnad,
AfO 14 (1941-44) 258.
616For botanical glossaries cf., e.g., the glossaries in A. Delatte, Anecdota
atheniensia, Bibliotheque de la Faculte de philosophie et lettres de
l'Universite de Liege, fasc. 88, vol. 2 pp. 273ff.; the Byzantine Greek Lexikon
kata alfabetonen ho hermeneuontaitina ton botan6n(= Delatte, op. cit. 378ff.)
was also edited subsequently by M. H. Thomson (note 108 above) as no. 9,
"Lexique de synonymes grecs," 133ff.
131
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
617 See
Hopfner, Offenbarungszauber,vol. 1 p. 124f. ?493 and "Mageia" in
RE 27 (1928) 319.
132
CHAPTER
VIII
Rituals
Nocturnal
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
bubbuli ana pan [Samas siti], BAM 208:7, restored from AMT 85,1 ii 12.
134
NOCTURNAL
RITUALS
am dSin ina same'ittablu, BAM 580 v 5' (= AMT 44,1 iv 5'); compare a
ritual against evil dreams prescribed enama Sin ittablu'when the Moon has
disappeared,' KAR 262 rev.(!) 14.
627BAM 580 v 7'-8'.
628 KA.INIM.MAsa IGI.DU8.AdSin HUL SIG5.GA.KAM. This
apotropaion
has survived in three exemplars. One, which has the ritual on the reverse
(BMS 24 + 25 + K.14704, new copy in Su-ila no. 59, subscripts in rev. 4', 15',
edited by Werner Mayer Untersuchungenzur Formensprache
der babylonischen
Studia Pohl: Series Maior, 5 [Rome: Biblical Institute
"Gebetsbeschwbrungen,"
Press, 1976] 529f.) has on the obverse a prayer to the Moon god Sin "with
lifting of the hand"; its tenor resembles that of the prayers for calming the
angry god (dingir.sa.dib.ba
gur.ru.da). The second (BAM 316) is a large tablet
with three columns on each side; it enumerates a number of afflictions, seemingly psychological; the ritual appears toward the end, and is followed by
the words "the evil of dreams and (other) evil signs," a phrase that may represent the final rubric. The purpose of the third ritual (LKA25 ii) and the
prayer to the Moon preceding it, is, according to its rubric, "to calm the angry
god." The prayer to the Moon was edited, along with its several more complete duplicates, by W. G. Lambert, JNES 33 (1974) 294ff.
629 NU = salmu.
630See Benno Landsberger, WZKM56 (1960) 117ff.
631 ZA.NA NITA
(BAM 316 and LKA25).
632 ZA.NA SAL (Su-ila no. 59 obv. 15', in Werner
Mayer, Untersuchungen
(note 628 above) 530.
633[ku-tal-l]a-nik-ka ana iD SUB-ma HUL BUR, Werner Mayer, Untersuchungen (note 628 above) 531 rev. 19'.
135
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
The full moon also has a role in nocturnal rituals. The day
of the opposition of Sun and Moon may vary from the 13th to
the 16th, but in the schematic month of 30 days it is set for the
15th. To cure the affliction named ZI.KU5.RU.DA,
literally "cutthe
breath,"637
the patient addresses a prayer to the Moon
ting
an
Sin,
god
presents
offering and recounts his affliction to Sin
on the night of the 15th of the month.638 Offerings to the
Moon on the 15th day are also recommended in the hemerologies.639A remedy for the ears is to be prepared on the 15th
of the sixth month640while the next recipes prescribe that the
treatment be performed on the 1st of the third month and
the 11th of the eighth month respectively.641
For some rituals it is essential that both planetary deities,
the Sun and the Moon, be equally present. That time is when
the full moon sets and the sun rises, at dawn of the day of the
opposition of Sun and Moon, in the middle of the month (usually expressed as the 15th day); this is the time for carrying out
a ritual against the spirits of the dead that haunt a man.642The
aim of the ritual is to gain deliverance from afflictions caused
634
NOCTURNAL
RITUALS
.].648
643
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
The situation is quite clear, even though the ritual does not
specify the time when it is to be performed. Since the moon
is in the west, that is, setting, and the sun rising in the east,
we have here a dawn ceremony.
Appeals to stars and planets as the deities' astral manifestations are known from two late rituals, the New Year'sritual in
Babylon and a ritual performed in the temple of Anu in Uruk.
Among the deities addressed in the New Year's ritual in
Babylon649 are the goddess Sarpanitu (the consort of Marduk,
658MUL.KAK.SI.SA,
line 309.
659MUL.SU.PA, line 310.
line 312.
662MULGABAGIR.TAB
'Breast of the Scorpion' line 313.
138
NOCTURNAL
RITUALS
ASTRAL MAGIC
IN BABYLONIA
140
NOCTURNAL
RITUALS
673
AB.SINtarakkas KI.MIN
35. 4 rikse a-na MUL.KU6 MUL.GU.LA MUL.NUN.KI MUL.GIR.TAB
tarakkas KI.MIN
36. 3 rikse a-na su-ut dA-nim su-ut-E[n-lil
MIN].
141
ASTRAL
MAGIC
IN
BABYLONIA
Bibliothek7/2 (Leipzig: Hinrichs, 1916)268 iii 20 (= Th. Bauer, Das InschriftenwerkAssurbanipals,vol. 2 [Leipzig, 1933] 84), Borger, Esarh.91 ?60 i 13, and
parallels ?57 r. 21, etc.
677 GI.DU8 =
patiru, line 14.
678atta Sul-pa-e-a, line 18.
679
s[urbu sadu] Igigi, line 21.
680Gerhard Meier, "Die Ritualtafel der Serie
'Mundwaschung," AfO 12
(1937-39) 40-45; the rituals and prayers to the stars appear on K.9729+ obv.
14-21. A new edition of the "mouth-washing" ritual is being prepared by
C. B. F. Walker.
142
NOCTURNAL
RITUALS
681 S.
143
Index
abnu sikinsu (composition), 122-125
acacia, 38
acrographic, 26, 62
Adad (god), 65, 66, 68, 79, 91
aitites, 123
Akkadian, 26, 28, 44, 45, 48
"all evil," 83
amulet, amulets, 15, 110, 120, 125,
127
amulet stones, 41, 121, 124, 128,
129
Antares, 138
Antu (goddess), 139
Anu (god), 5, 6, 12, 20, 71, 79, 87,
89, 139, 141
aphasia, 105
aphrodisiac, 35
apodosis, 61
apotropaia, 109, 119
apotropaic ritual, 39, 46, 47, 66, 82,
83, 84, 96
apotropaion, 83, 96. See also
namburbu
Aquarius, 78, 109, 116, 117, 144
Aquila, 117
Arcturus, 138, 144
Aries, 78, 93, 109, 117
Aristophanes, Wasps,105
Arrow star, 3, 17, 19
Asalluhi (god), 86
Assur, 50, 71
Assur (god), 75
Assurbanipal (king of Assyria), 18,
50, 67, 142
astral deities, 9, 141, 113
astral irradiation, 49, 51, 52, 55
astrologer, 76
astrology, 76, 77; catarchic 13, 111;
horoscopic 13
astronomer, 65
astronomical observations, 14, 65
astronomy, 14
INDEX
concatenation, 90
conjunction, solar-lunar, 134
conjurer, 47
constellations, 3, 79, 94
Corvus, 78, 117
cuneiform, 25
"cutting the breath," 104, 105, 109,
136
Cygnus, 3
Cyranides,116, 130
dawn, 23
Delebat, 7. See also Venus
Delphi, 72
Demon with the Gaping Mouth
(constellation), 3
destruction, 121
determinative, 5, 25, 26
dew, 59, 104
diagnosis, 47
diagnostic omina. See omens
divination, 2, 11, 14, 72
diviner, 1, 2, 15, 64, 65, 67, 69,
73-74, 94, 95
110
dodekatemorion,
52
dog,
Draco, 139
Dragon (constellation), 66
Dream-book, 71
dreams, 74
"Dreckapotheke,"45
garlic, 27
Gemini, 78, 104, 109, 117. See also
Twins
genethlialogy, 13
ghost, 137
Glass texts, 127
goat, 86
Goat (star), 3, 52, 55, 56, 58, 66, 78,
86, 128-129, 139, 140, 141, 144
gods of the night, 1, 16, 18, 19, 66,
68, 69, 73, 86
grave, 39, 40
Gula (goddess), 5, 52, 53, 55, 56,
86, 113, 128, 129
haematite, 122
halo (of the moon), 90
Hammurapi (king of Babylon), 41,
129
146
INDEX
HAR-gud(composition), 26
HAR-ra = hubullu (composition),
26, 27, 90, 122, 130
haruspex, 2, 63, 64, 65, 66, 68, 69,
70, 72, 74, 75, 77, 79, 94. See also
diviner
Hattusa, 49
Hecate, 53
hemerologies, 21, 59, 96, 112-114,
136
hepatoscopy, 63, 65, 74, 76, 79. See
also extispicy
Hephaistio, Apotelesmatika,79
herb, 27, 28, 35, 36, 38, 39, 40, 103,
115, 128
herbalist, 36, 38, 39
herbals, 25, 28-29, 33
Hermetic, 9
Herodotus, 45
Hesiod, 89, 112
Hippolytus, 100
Hittite, 48, 55-56, 67
Hittites, 18
Hydra, 3, 66
hypsoma,75
lecanomancy, 62, 84
leeks, 114
Leo, 78
Libanius, 105-106
libanomancy, 62, 84
Libra, 4, 78, 108, 109, 117, 138, 140,
141, 144
libraries, 50, 67, 142
lifting-of-the-hand, 17
lightning, 89
lists, 26, 46, 62, 130
litany, 19
liver, 77, 78-79, 94, 96
liver models, 30
loosing, 81
love charms, 24
lu = sa (composition),
iatromathematics, 46
ikribu,73
illustrations, 30
incantations, 47
intercession (of stars), 17
iqqurfpus (composition), 88, 91, 94
iron, 38
irradiation, 15, 48, 52, 55, 59, 128, 141
Irragal (god), 20
Ishara (goddess), 35
Isin, 43, 44
Istar (goddess), 5, 6, 8, 18, 19, 23,
35, 57, 68, 91
Istar-of-the-Stars (goddess), 23, 24
Jupiter (planet), 4, 7, 17, 18, 19, 20,
59, 60, 61, 74, 75, 87, 93, 104, 105,
106, 114, 138, 139, 141, 144
justice (Star of), 4
Kidney star, 16, 60, 88
lapidaries, 25, 29
90
147
INDEX
meteorological phenomena, 92
metoposcopy, 30
micro-zodiac, 116
Moon, 4, 8, 9, 12, 18, 88, 91, 93,
98-101, 104, 108-111, 133, 134,
139. See also full moon; new
moon
Moon god, 18, 74, 77, 101, 107, 113,
136, 140
Morning star, 3, 6, 23
Mudrukesda (constellation), 138, 139
MUL.APIN(composition), 20, 78, 90
NabateanAgriculture,42
Nabonidus (king of Babylonia), 76,
77
namburbu,81, 82, 96
Naram-Sin (king of Akkad), 42, 129
nature, 30, 120
NE.NE.GAR(star), 138
Nergal (god), 7, 18, 22, 60, 61
nether world, 19
new moon, 63f., 134, 135
New Year'sritual, 138
Nineveh, 50, 67
Ninmah (goddess), 22
Ninsiannai (goddess), 67, 68, 73
Ninurta (god), 5, 19, 35, 71, 122
Nippur, 21, 43
Nisannu (month), 113
nocturnal exposition, 52, 56, 59
Numusda (god), 1, 40
obedience, 121
omen, 61-63
omen collections, 13, 82-84
omen literature, 13
omens: 11, 82, 90, 94, 95; celestial,
11, 12, 63; diagnostic, 84, 105;
liver, 7, 11, 30; meteorological,
63, 72, 92; physiognomic, 30, 84
"opening of the mouth," 140
opposition, 134, 136
Orion, 3, 5, 17, 19, 56, 66, 67, 78,
113, 116, 117, 136. See also
Sipazianna
patch test, 40
path: of Anu, 5, 87, 144; of Ea, 5,
148
INDEX
Saturn (planet), 3, 18, 138, 139, 141
Scales, 4. See also Libra
scholia, 27, 60, 79, 105, 130
Scorpion, 17, 56, 114, 139. See also
Scorpius
Scorpius, 17, 106, 116, 117, 144
(cylinder) seals, 127, 128
secret names, 33, 132
secret place, 75, 116
"seizing of the mouth," 105-106, 109
Selene, 53
semen: of stars, 104, 105
Sennacherib (king of Assyria), 75,
120
Seven Gods, 86
seven sages, 118
shells, 126, 127
shooting stars, 72, 94
signs, 9
Sin, 8, 18, 68, 74, 77, 91, 104, 105,
136, 137. See also Moon god
Sipazianna, 56, 113. See also Orion
Sirius, 3, 17, 18, 19, 66, 70, 105, 138,
140, 141, 142
Snake (constellation), 3
sorcerer, 2, 8, 14, 97, 109
sorceress, 2, 8, 97, 109, 133
sorceries, 101
Spica, 3
squash, 27
Star of Abundance, 139
Star of Anunitu, 142
Star of Dignity, 139
Star of Eridu, 142
Star of Justice, 138
stars, 12, 13, 17, 18, 19, 57, 86, 87,
91, 93, 97, 133, 140; first, 58; of
the night, 24; of the sky, 142
statue (divine), 140
stone, stones, 115, 120, 121, 131;
masculine, 131; feminine, 126
Stone-book, 121
storm god, 66
string of beads, 125, 126, 128
substitute king, 9
Sultantepe, 111
Sumerian, 22, 26, 28, 44, 45; lists,
26; writing system, 25
Sumerogram, 104, 110
149
INDEX
150