The Asag is generally identified as a hideous demon or "chaos-monster". In the
Lugal-e, he is described as the offspring of the sky god
An and the earth goddess
Ki. The demon is associated with the mountains; he mated with the
kur (mountains) to produce a brood of "stone" offspring which formed an army of allies. He was vanquished by the heroic deity
Ninurta (or
Ningirsu), using
Sharur, his enchanted talking
mace, after seeking the counsel of his father, the god
Enlil. In another version of the myth, the Asag is defeated by
Adad (Iškur). Scholars interpret the defeat of the Asag and his stone allies by Ninurta as a mythological expression of the anxiety felt by the inhabitants of the Mesopotamian plain regarding the inhabitants of the
Zagros Mountains.
Artistic representation The battle between the god and the monster may be depicted on the large stone reliefs erected by
Ashurnasirpal II (9th century BC) in the temple of Ninurta at
Kalhu (
Nimrud). These reliefs show a god wielding thunderbolts attacking a lion-dragon beast. A similar scene appears on
Neo-Assyrian seals. == Asakku ==