The oldest certain attestation of Ninkarrak occurs in the treaty between
Naram-Sin of Akkad and an
Elamite ruler. According to Daniel T. Potts, she is one of the four deities from the Sumero-Akkadian pantheon mentioned in it, the other four being
Ninurta,
Ilaba,
Išḫara, and
Manzat, while the remaining twenty six are Elamite and include, among others,
Inshushinak,
Humban,
Hutran,
Pinikir, and
Simut. Her inclusion might indicate that she belonged to the state pantheon of the
Akkadian Empire, although it is also possible her inclusion depended instead, on the presence of her cult in areas bordering with Elam. A number of further possible early references are uncertain, as it is not clear when the writing
dnin-kar refers to Ninkarrak and when to the goddess of daylight, Ninkar, who was regarded as analogous to
Aya.
Joan Goodnick Westenholz argued that the latter is known only from
Girsu, while Irene Sibbing-Plantholt maintains a more cautious approach, and concludes that it remains uncertain which goddess is meant in early sources such as the
Abu Salabikh deity list. Other certain early attestations have been identified in incantations, inscriptions, theophoric names, and toponyms from the
Old Akkadian and
Ur III periods, although in deity lists, Ninkarrak's name is not attested before the
Old Babylonian period.
Sippar The worship of Ninkarrak is well attested in sources from
Sippar, although it is not certain whether she was present in the local pantheon before the Old Babylonian period or, whether she only was introduced there during the reign of Immerum, perhaps from the
Diyala area. A temple dedicated to her already existed there in the Old Babylonian period. It bore the ceremonial name Eulla, "house of rejoicing". The temple might have owned property in the city, as indicated by a reference to a field of Ninkarrak. A year name of Buntaḫtun-ila, a local ruler of Sippar contemporary with
Sumulael, states that he brought a
lilissu drum to her temple. A gate and a district of the city also were named after her. She also occurs in theophoric names, such as Puzur-Ninkarrak and Ṣilli-Ninkarrak. One bearer of the latter name was a scribe during the reign of
Hammurabi of
Babylon. In sources from
Middle Babylonian Sippar, her name occurs only on a single
kudurru (boundary stone) inscription, which states that if anyone will transgress the listed regulations, Ninkarrak will "take away his seed". Attestations from the
Kassite and Middle Babylonian periods are infrequent overall: her name is only mentioned on three
kudurru, never in clear association with a specific figure depicted, and on a single
seal.
Neo-Babylonian king
Nebuchadnezzar II, who reigned from 605 to 562 BCE, apparently was devoted to Ninkarrak and rebuilt the Eulla. Eight copies of an inscription commemorating this event are presently known. The king states that he was tasked by
Marduk with repairing it, and describes its previous state in the following terms: "the temple had not been kept in good repair, so that its ground plan had become obliterated and its outlines unrecognizable, covered with dust, (which) was no longer named together with the sanctuaries of the gods, (whose) regular offerings were cut off, they ceased to be mentioned, the cereal offerings were discontinued". He also built temples dedicated to Ninkarrak in
Borsippa and
Babylon. The latter, Ehursagsikilla, "house, pure mountain", survived as late as the
Parthian period. A number of sources refer to it as a temple of
Gula instead.
Andrew R. George refers to it as belonging to "Gula-Ninkarrak" and tentatively proposes that it was the same house of worship as the Egalmah. Joan Goodnick Westenholz describes the temple in Borsippa in similar terms.
Terqa Ninkarrak was also present in the pantheon of the middle
Euphrates area. In
Mari, she appears in a list of deities and offerings to them from the reign of
Zimri-Lim and in therapeutic incantations. She was particularly strongly associated with nearby
Terqa. A temple excavated in that city has been identified as one dedicated to Ninkarrak. The identification was based on finds that include a tablet with a list of offerings that starts with her name (most likely used as a point of reference by priests maintaining it), as well as seals mentioning her, and other epigraphic evidence. Among the items excavated were 6637 beads made out of a variety of materials (
agate,
carnelian,
gypsum,
hematite,
lapis lazuli, and
rock crystal), including some shaped as animals (a frog, a cow, and a duck) as well as nine
Egyptian-style
scarabs, all of which likely were intended as an offering to Ninkarrak or a were a temple deposit. Archaeologists found a number of small bronze figurines of dogs inside the temple as well. Further excavations additionally uncovered a ceremonial axe and a scimitar with a devotional inscription mentioning Ninkarrak, both made out of
bronze. Early occupation of the structure has been dated to roughly the same period as the reigns of three kings of Terqa: • Yadikh-abu, a contemporary of
Samsuiluna of
Babylon, defeated by the latter in 1721 BCE • Kashtiliash, initially estimated as ruling c. 1690 BCE a date later than 1650 BCE has been proposed as well, based on closer analysis of artifacts. The beads, likely serving as a temple deposit, were specifically dated to his reign. His name has
Kassite origin. • Shunuhru-ammu, ruling c. 1650 BCE according to the initial estimates. However, the temple remained in use later as well. and archaeologists speculate that the temple was remodeled multiple times. The scarabs from the temple of Ninkarrak are considered a find of particular achaeoloigcal importance, as they represent the easternmost known location where such objects have been found in a sealed deposit dated to the
Old Babylonian period. The excavation made it possible to date the artifacts with relative accuracy as certain features evident in them are not attested before 1650-1640 BCE (the reign of the
Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt). The
hieroglyphs inscribed on them are regarded as "poorly executed and sometimes misunderstood", indicating Levantine, rather than Egyptian, origin, with similar ones being known from
Byblos,
Sidon, and
Ugarit.
Other Mesopotamian attestations In documents from the
Old Assyrian period Ninkarrak is the only healing goddess attested, and a reference to the property of a
temple dedicated to her is known. Later Assyrian sources mentioning her include the
Tākultu text, listing deities greeted by the king during a long ritual and a number of hymns from
Assur, although she was not a major goddess in this area in the first millennium BCE. In the kingdom of
Apum, also located in the north of Mesopotamia in the upper
Khabur valley, she was one of the deities invoked in oath formulas in treaties, and a statue of her might have been present during related ceremonies. However, Klaas R. Veenhof argues that it cannot be said for sure whether Ninkarrak appears in documents from this kingdom as a local deity or whether she belonged instead to the pantheon of the other signatory of the treaty. A temple of Ninkarrak was located somewhere in the proximity of the
Diyala River, although its ceremonial name and precise location are unknown. It is known that she was worshiped in
Shaduppum, where a festival involving offerings of sesame oil was held in her honor, in Išḫali, where she is attested in incantations, and in
Nuzi, where she appears in the
theophoric names (Ninkarrak-ummī and Ninkarrak-ṣillī). Ninkarrak also was worshiped in locations more closely related to the cults of other healing goddesses: she had a small chapel in
Nippur (where the main healing goddess was
Nintinugga) and she is also present in a small number of personal names from Nippur. It also is possible that she was worshiped at a site in
Isin. A year name of one of the kings from the
dynasty of Isin,
Suen-magir, mentions the digging of a canal named after her. While she is overall sparsely attested in sources from the Mesopotamian heartland before the end of the Old Babylonian period, sporadic references to her are also known from the southernmost cities, notably
Larsa and
Uruk. However, in the latter case the only evidence is a letter with the formula "just as I do not turn my back on Ninkarrak, I do not turn my back on you", which might only reflect the personal devotion of the author or the professional community he belonged to, and as such, does not necessarily confirm that she belonged to the local pantheon.
Outside Mesopotamia A goddess known from texts from Ebla who might correspond to Ninkarrak, Ninkar, appears in one of the offering lists, following
Resheph of Hadani and his spouse
Adamma. An offering of a mace to her is also attested, although Alfonso Archi considers it to be unusual. Attestations of Ninkarrak are known from sources from both
Emar and
Ugarit in modern Syria and according to Joan Goodnick Westenholz, might support the theory that she originated in the northwest of Mesopotamia. In Emar, she had no temple and does not appear in theophoric names. A curse formula invokes her alongside
Išḫara and implores both of them to react if anyone damages the rest of the text by destroying "his seed and his name". In Ugarit, she is mentioned in a medical formula against eye disease written in
Akkadian. It is presumed to have
Babylonian origin. In addition to Ninkarrak, the formula also invokes
Damu. Both of them are mentioned in an incantation against the demon
Lamashtu from the same city as well, in this case following the pair
Ea and
Asalluḫi. A copy of the
Adapa myth from
Amarna, presumably a part of a scribal school curriculum, mentions Ninkarrak. == References ==