Enūma Eliš Anshar's role in the conventional genealogy of
Anu resulted in his incorporation into the
Enūma Eliš. The text does not explicitly state whether he and
Kishar are the children of
Lahmu and
Lahamu, or instead a second pair of
Apsu's and
Tiamat's children. However, the former option is considered the correct interpretation. Anshar serves for a time as the
king of the gods. His grandson
Ea informs him about Tiamat plotting against the younger deities, which prompts Anshar to blame him and task him with finding a solution. After he fails, Anshar sends Anu to attempt to solve the issue, but he is similarly unsuccessful. Ea eventually convinces him that the only god who can defeat Tiamat is his own son,
Marduk. Anshar then summons his attendant
Kakka to inform Lahmu and Lahamu about his decision to rely on Marduk. After emerging victorious, Marduk replaces Anshar as the new king of the gods. The latter is the first deity to provide him with new names. He states that Marduk will be known as
Asalluhi and subsequently partakes in further name-giving alongside Lahmu and Lahamu. In an
Assyrian recension of the
Enūma Eliš, known only from a number of incomplete late copies from
Assur and
Nineveh tentatively dated to the reign from
Sennacherib, the logogram AN.ŠÁR is used to refer to both Anshar himself and to
Ashur, who replaces Marduk as the protagonist, but is also identified with the aforementioned primordial deity. As noted by
Wilfred G. Lambert, the change is "superficial" and "leaves the plot in chaos by attributing Marduk's part to his great-grandfather, without making any attempt to iron out the resulting confusion". This rewrite might be referenced in a late Assyrian commentary on the
Enūma Eliš, which states that Anshar came into being "when heaven and
underworld had not been created" but "city and house were in existence", which reflects the role of Marduk (and thus Ashur) more accurately than that of Anshar himself. An esoteric commentary linking passages from the
Enūma Eliš with various ritual observances from
Babylon states that Anshar sending Anu to confront Tiamat corresponds to the celebrations during which
Mandanu headed to Ḫursagkalamma (
Kish).
Other compositions Anshar is referenced in passing in the myth
Enlil and Sud and in a hymn to
Haya from the reign of
Rim-Sîn I. Anshar appears in multiple lists of defeated primordial figures alongside
Asag,
Enmesharra,
Lugaldukuga,
Qingu and others. Such enumerations are embedded in a number of expository or ritual texts. In one case, Anshar is equated in this context with the minor underworld god
Alla. A royal hymn from the reign of
Nebuchadnezzar I focused on establishing a connection between him and
Enmeduranki, a mythical king of
Sippar, mentions Anshar in passing and refers to
Shuzianna as his sister. A myth only known from five fragments dated to either
Seleucid or
Parthian period, four of which come from the same copy, refers to Anshar as the father of Anu. While restoration of the text remains uncertain, it is possible that it describes his death at the hands of
Enki and Ninamakalla, which would indicate it preserves a succession narrative in which the actively worshiped members of the
Mesopotamian pantheon depose a generation of primordial deities. A reference to Anshar has been identified in a quotation from
Eudemus of Rhodes preserved by the
Neo-Platonic philosopher
Damascius, according to which in Babylonian cosmology figures named Assōros and Kissarē were the parents of Anos (Anu), Illinos (
Enlil) and Aos (Ea). It is presumed that Eudemus relied on a source related to the tradition represented by the
Enūma Eliš, but not identical with it. ==Notes==