Unambiguous evidence for the worship of Milku as a distinct deity is present in
Ugaritic texts. He is one of the deities invoked in two incantations against snakebite, in which the sun goddess
Shapash is asked to summon various deities from their cult centers. The location associated with him in these texts is ‘Aṯtartu. This place name is apparently with the name of a deity,
Ashtart. It is assumed that it was located somewhere northwest of the
Sea of Galilee, in the
Transjordan. The Ugaritic texts invoking Milku from this city appear to reflect a
cosmopolitan tradition, as multiple other deities are also invoked from locations outside the kingdom:
Tuttul and
Mari in
Upper Mesopotamia, Larugatu in central
Syria, Bibbita in
Anatolia, and Caphtor, corresponding to
Crete. An echo of this association between Milku and the city of ‘Aṯtartu might be the deity Milkaštart, who is attested in
Phoenician and
Punic sources. A second city associated with Milku in Ugaritic texts is Hidra’yu. It has been suggested that ‘Aṯtartu and Hidrayu correspond to the place names Aštarot and Edrei (modern
Daraa), associated with biblical king
Og of
Bashan. In older literature, Hidra’yu was sometimes incorrectly understood as the name of a deity, but this interpretation is now considered grammatically impossible. An administrative text from Ugarit mentions the preparation of
barley for the horses of Milku and
Resheph. It is possible these two gods appear together in it because of their shared association with the underworld. While it is agreed that Milku appears in some
theophoric names from Ugarit, it is sometimes difficult to tell when
mlk designates the deity rather than the ordinary word "king." Six examples of theophoric name invoking Milku have been identified, while the word meant in further seventeen
mlk names remains uncertain. For example, it has been suggested that the name of the well attested
scribe Ilimilku meant "Milku is my god," but Dennis Pardee and Nicolas Wyatt assume that it is more likely that the ordinary word "king" is meant in this case, and the name should be translated as "
El is king." Milku was also worshiped in the kingdom of
Amurru, where he most likely was one of the main deities. However, very little is known about the religious life of this area due to lack of any texts directly pertaining to it. Milku appears in a treaty of the local king
Duppi-Teššup with the
Hittite empire. He also most likely appears as the theophoric element in the name of queen
Ahatmilku, a member of Amurru's ruling house who married
Niqmepa, a king of Ugarit.
Hurrian and Hittite reception Milku was also incorporated into
Hurrian and
Hittite religious beliefs. A god named Milkunni occurs in a trilingual god list from Ugarit in the Hurrian column. He corresponds to the Ugaritic
Gaṯaru and Mesopotamian
Tishpak in it. His name is a combination of Milku and the
Hurrian suffix -nni. According to , Milku was introduced to a number of settlements in Hittite territories during the reign of
Tudḫaliya IV. However, the dating of the texts attesting this is not certain and it is possible that they do not document a planned introduction of specific deities to Anatolia, making the date from which deities mentioned in them were worshiped there uncertain. Other foreign deities attested in similar contexts include
Šauška of
Nineveh,
Adad of
Assur,
Ishtar of
Babylon and Baluhassa, the
Luwian form of the name of the
Balikh River, which could also function as the name of a deity. Among the Hittite settlements where Milku was worshiped were Pahhanta, Parmashapa, Sappitta, Sallunatassi, Gullanta and Sapagurwanta. Additionally, he is also attested in texts from
Emar, where according to
Gary Beckman he is exclusively present in rituals of Anatolian origin, most likely "irrelevant to the religious life of the indigenous population."
Possible Mesopotamian reception In an offering list from the
Ur III period, a deity named Malkum is attested alongside the goddess
Ḫabūrītum. It has been proposed that this name refers to an underworld deity derived from Syrian Milku. However, Tonia Sharlach argues that it is not impossible that this god was a
Mesopotamian deity in origin and simply belonged to a sparsely attested local pantheon. assumes that the term is plural and refers to deceased ancestors. He points out that it appears in such a context in funerary rites from
Old Babylonian Mari. References to plural
mlkm and dMA.LIKmeš are also known from Ugarit. A related deity, Malik (
dma-lik) is also attested in the
Weidner god list, in a single copy of the
Nippur god list and in a later text describing various deities worshiped in
Assur. ==References==