The
etymology of Gunura's name is unknown, and early attempts at explaining it relied on the incorrect reading
dGu-šir5-ra rather than
dGu-nu-ra. She was considered to be a daughter of the medicine goddess
Ninisina and her husband
Pabilsag, and sister of
Damu and Šumaḫ. Alternatively, she could be associated with other similar goddesses, such as
Gula or
Nintinugga. Three texts from
Nippur from the
Ur III period attest an association between her and latter deity. She also appears alongside her in an
Old Babylonian incantation against the
evil eye. Furthermore, a liturgical text from the same period lists her after both Ninisina and Nintinugga, and before
Kusu. In the so-called Great Star List, she is one of the "seven Gulas", next to
Bau, Ninšudda, Dukurgal,
Ama-arḫuš, Ninasag and Nin-umma-siga. However, as pointed out by
Joan Goodnick Westenholz, Gunura does not appear in connection with another closely related goddess,
Ninkarrak, in any known sources, with the exception of a single bilingual text. It is a variant of ''Ninisina's Journey to Nippur'' in which Ninkarrak appears in the Akkadian version as a translation of the eponymous goddess. In the past, it has been argued that Gunura's individual character cannot be established, as in known texts she always appears alongside other members of her family. According to Irene Sibbing-Plantholt today it is assumed that she was a deity associated with healing. She suggests Gunura might have originally arisen as an independent healing deity, and was only incorporated into the circles of medicine goddesses for that reason. When associated with Ninisina, Gunura also functioned as one of the deities of
Isin, though this role is not attested for her in contexts where she appears with Gula instead. An example can be found in the document SAT 3 127, which lists her, Damu, Šumaḫ and their mother Ninisina as the deities of Isin. The epithet
dumu-é-a, translated as "child of the house" or "daughter of the house", could be applied to Gunura. It is also attested as a title of the weather goddess
Shala and the love goddess
Nanaya. According to
Dietz Otto Edzard, it might reflect the fact that she was worshiped in the
temple of her mother Ninisina, and did not have one of her own. However, according to
Andrew R. George a temple of Gunura might have been mentioned in a lost section of the
Canonical Temple List, a
lexical list compiling the ceremonial names of sanctuaries located in
Babylonia, presumed to come from the second half of the
Kassite period. ==Worship==