While the theonym Ninbilulu does not appear in any sources postdating the Early Dynastic period, Bilulu is present in the myth
Inanna and Bilulu. The text is poorly preserved, and has been dated to between the nineteenth and seventeenth century BCE. According to Uri Gabbay, it is difficult to tell if it originally functioned as part of the
scribal school curriculum, or as a liturgical text. The plot revolves around the death of
Dumuzi. It presents a tradition distinct from that known from ''Inanna's Descent'', as
Inanna's actions are meant to avenge this event. The cause is a raid on Dumuzi s dwelling conducted by Bilulu and her son Girgire. According to Richard L. Litke, the latter deity might also be mentioned in the god list
An = Anum (tablet IV, line 264) though the glosses provided there would imply that in this case the name, while written as
dGÍR.GÍR, should be read as Ulul. Inanna is informed about Bilulu's role in the events by a nameless servant of Dumuzi. She recites a
paean in his memory, praising his skills as a shepherd, and decides that she needs to avenge him by killing Bilulu. She finds her in her dwelling, and places a curse upon her: Bilulu subsequently gets turned into a
waterskin, and she and her son are tasked with acting as the
tutelary deities of the desert, who are "no one's child and no one's friend", and are tasked with informing the deceased Dumuzi whenever a
libation is poured out for him. The transformation might be meant to give the myth an
etiological meaning. The rest of the composition is focused on Inanna mourning Dumuzi's death alongside his sister
Geshtinanna and his mother
Duttur. Samuel Noah Kramer's and Thorkild Jacobsen's original translation ends with the formula However, according to Steve Tinney this interpretation might have been partially mistaken, and the passage should be retranslated: ==References==