It is presumed that the worship of primeval deities was a part of the traditions of Hurrians living in
Syria and
Kizzuwatna, but it is not attested in
Mitanni sources. Alfonso Archi on this basis concluded they cannot be considered pan-Hurrian deities. Ritual texts do not associate them with a specific cult center. Communication with the primeval deities required the preparation of special pits, typically located outdoors. One example of such a structure has been identified during excavations of
Urkesh. It dates to 2300 BCE, measures five meters in diameter and might be seven meters deep, though between 1999 and 2004 the excavators only reached six meters deep into the ground. Its purpose was initially uncertain, with an early proposal being to identify it as an elaborate
cist burial, but it has eventually been established based on the presence of numerous faunal remains and other objects identified as offerings. However, while later sources indicate that underworld deities received birds as offerings, the Urkesh pit instead contains the remains of piglets, puppies, sheep, goats and donkeys. The first two of these animals were not typical sacrifices, and based on evidence from later rituals it is assumed they were used as agents of
purification.
Hittite reception Hurrian primeval deities were incorporated into
Hittite religion. Most likely they were received in the fourteenth century BCE from northern Syria or Kizzuwatna. Hittites were aware of the tradition of making offerings to them in pits, and possible examples of such structures have been identified during excavations in
Hattusa. Multiple terms were used to refer to the offering pits in Hittite texts, including
ḫateššar,
pateššar,
wappu,
āpi and the
Sumerogram ARÀḪ (“storage pit”). As a group, the primeval deities received offerings in rituals such as
CTH 446, 447 and 449. However, they had no established cult, and ceremonies related to them were only carried out in reaction to specific events. One example is a ritual meant to help purify a house from blood, which had to last two days and involved the preparation of statues of the primeval deities from clay from a riverbank sprinkled with oil and honey and the offering of birds to them. The text KBo 23.7 describes an invocation of the group performed by a SANGA priest on Mount Irrāna, during which a “Song of the Invocation of the Primeval Deities” was sung. The primeval deities also appear as divine witnesses in treaties. The oldest example, which does not yet use their individual names, is CTH 139, dated to the reign of
Arnuwanda I, where they are listed separately from “the gods of the heaven and the gods of the earth”, a grouping which according to earlier
Hattian-Hittite tradition already included underworld deities of local origin. The received Hurrian idea of underworld deities differed from the earlier Anatolian one, which did not present them as an earlier generation. When their individual names are listed in Hittite treaties, twelve of them are enumerated, with the exception of the treaty with
Alaksandu, which lists only nine, namely Nara, Napšara, Amunki, Tuḫuši, Ammezzadu,
Alalu,
Kumarbi,
Enlil and
Ninlil. It is assumed that a group of twelve gods from the
Yazılıkaya sanctuary reliefs dressed in pointy caps and armed with curved swords can be interpreted as a depiction of the Hurrian primeval deities. ==Mythology==