Barama does not appear in any known
theophoric names. The name-giving customs at Ebla are assumed to largely reflect an older tradition that the pantheon of the city, and the most common theophoric elements are not personified deities, but the words
damu and
lim, representing the deified concepts of, respectively, kinship ties and clan organization. A priestess,
pa4-šeš(
-mí), was jointly responsible for the cult of Barama and Kura. The holder of this office attested in documents bore the name Enna-Utu. Furthermore, functionaries belonging to the cult of Barama are alluded to in the text ARET 7.13, dealing with purchases of clothing for individuals involved in the worship of both her and Adamma. It is possible that two
damâtum (a type of
betyl-like boundary stone to which religious importance was assigned in Ebla), were dedicated jointly to Kura and Barama.
The rite of royal ascension Following the royal wedding of a new
Eblaite king, a four day pilgrimage involving both Barama and Kura had to be undertaken. During preparations for it, the queen had to make an offering to a number of deities, including Barama, in the temple of Kura. The target of the journey was the nearby village Binaš (less commonly read as Nenaš), which was the location of a royal mausoleum. The statue of Barama traveled in its own cart, similar to that of Kura. During a ritual which took place in
é ma-dim, "house of the dead" (the mausoleum in mention) both of the deities were believed to undergo ritual renewal. The process is described in a ritual text: {{c_quote According to Alfonso Archi, Nintu/dTU should not be understood as the Mesopotamian goddess in this context, but rather as a stand in for an unknown Eblaite goddess of similar character. He points out that similar use of this logogram is known from
Mari. Other renewal rites seemingly did not involve goddesses, as none are attested for Išḫara,
Ishtar or the spouses of
Hadda (
Halabatu) and Resheph (Adamma). The ceremony was a royal ascension ritual, though despite direct statements confirming this in Eblaite texts, it appears that both
Ishar-Damu and
Irkab-Damu had already been rulers for multiple years when they undertook it during their respective reigns. It has been proposed that the royal couple was understood as the earthly manifestation of Kura and Barama in its context. ==References==