Ningirima was a major member of the Mesopotamian pantheon in the third millennium BCE. Her elevated position is reflected by her placement in the
Early Dynastic god list from
Fara. She also appears in Ningirima is attested in a variety of other god lists from between the Early Dynastic and
Neo-Assyrian periods, including the lists from Mari,
Nippur and
Sultantepe, the
Weidner god list, the Old Babylonian
An = Anum forerunner and
An = Anum itself. Her cult had a supraregional significance, instead of being tied to the surroundings of a specific city. The existence of clergy of Ningirima is confirmed by formulas in incantations from Fara and
Ebla, and by administrative texts from
Puzrish-Dagan from the
Ur III period which mention
gudu priest of this goddess. The forty-sixth of the seventy Early Dynastic
Zame Hymns from
Abu Salabikh is dedicated to her and situates her in Girim. It is unclear if this term should be interpreted as the name of a cultic installation or as a toponym. In the Early Dynastic period it is also attested as an element of personal names. Examples are known from Fara,
Ur,
Uruk and possibly
Zabalam. It has been suggested that if Girim was a settlement, it was located in the proximity of Uruk-
Kullaba. An identification with Murum, which is first attested as a cult center of Ningirima in the
Sargonic Temple Hymns, has also been proposed. This settlement was most likely located near
Bad-tibira. Manfred Krebernik and Jan Lisman argue that this settlement should be distinguished from the identically named cult centers of
Nikilim and
Ishkur. However,
Andrew R. George considers Ningirim's and Nikilim's cult centers to be identical. Uruk was also considered a major cult center of Ningirima. In an inscription of
Lugalzagesi she is addressed as the "lady of
Uruk". Further evidence connecting her with this city includes her placement near deities associated with her in god lists (
Ninirigal in the god list from Fara,
Nineanna in the later list from
Mari) and a literary text from Fara which mentions her alongside
Inanna and Ninirigal. She was also worshiped in Fara itself. Furthermore, she occurs in a text from
Lagash which refers to her as the "great true-eyed one of heaven" (
igi-zi-gal-an-na). A late syncretic hymn (
KAR 109) possibly addressed to
Bau or
Ishtar associates Ninigirima with
Babylon. However, aside from an inscription of
Esarhaddon containing references to Ninigirima playing a role in
mīs pî and
pīt pî rituals held in the Ekarzagina, the sanctuary of Ea in the
Esagil temple complex, no evidence exists for a close association between her and the pantheon of Babylon. Ninigrima already appears in
theophoric names from the third millennium BCE, one example being Ur-Ningirima. A single female theophoric name invoking Ningirima is known from the
Neo-Babylonian period. She occurs in a single late theophoric name from Ur as well, Ningirima-ilat, "Nigirima is divine", dated to the reign of
Artaxerxes II.
Paul-Alain Beaulieu assumes that Ningirima's presence in the pantheon of this city well into
Achaemenid times was the result of the association between her and Ninazu, whose cult was well established in Ur, and remained influential through the late first millennium BCE. ==Notes==