The theonym Ninkurra (
dnin-kur-ra) or Ninkur (
dnin-kur) is sparsely attested in sources from southern
Mesopotamia. It is assumed that more than one deity bearing this name existed. According to Dina Katz all of them were female, though in a more recent publication Josephine Fechner and Michel Tanret point out a reference to a male Ninkurra in the god list
An = Anum. The character of the deities designated by this name shows a high degree of fluidity, which is likely to reflect the geographic scope of the individual attestations.
Craftsman deity Ninkurra (alternatively: Ninkur) appears
Weidner god list,
An = Anum and ritual texts as a
craftsman deity, associated with other similar figures, such as
Kulla,
Ninmug or
Ninagala. Sometimes the collective term
ilī mārē ummâni (
Akkadian: "gods of the craftsmen") was used to describe a group of such deities. An
incantation states that various artisan deities, including Ninkurra, were created by
Ea from
clay. Ninkurra was regarded as a
sculptor, but the material she was believed to work with varies between sources: a
Mîs-pî incantation connects her with
precious and semi-precious stones, while an inscription of
Sennacherib instead mentions
limestone.
Daughter of Enki In the myth
Enki and Ninhursag a goddess named Ninkurra is a daughter of the eponymous god born from an incestuous encounter between him and
Ninnisig. Subsequently, she also becomes his victim, and depending on the version, she is either the mother of
Ninimma and thus grandmother of
Uttu, or the mother of the latter goddess, with Ninimma skipped. According to Dina Katz it remains uncertain why any of the goddesses who appear in this section of the myth were selected by its compilers for their respective roles. Lluís Feliu interprets this version of Ninkurra as a goddess of the mountains based on the literal meaning of her name, and argues she was the same as the craftsman deity, whose role as a divine sculptor according to this theory would point at the origin of the material divine statues were made of. However, Antoine Cavigneaux and Manfred Krebernik consider them to be two separate deities.
Husband of Uttu In a late tradition documented in the god list
An = Anum Ninkurra, in this case male, appears as the husband of Uttu. According to Cavigneaux and Krebernik this version corresponds to the divine craftsman. Josephine Fechner and Michel Tanret suggest that this Ninkurra might be the same as the deity Nin-NAM.RI, possibly to be read as Ninbirre, explained in
An = Anum as a divine
seal cutter (dBUR.GUL).
Primordial deity Another goddess with the same name, Ninkur, occurs alongside a male deity named Enkur in lists of the so-called "
Enki-Ninki deities," the ancestors of
Enlil. The pair Enkur-Ninkur is attested in the
Old Babylonian An = Anum forerunner, in
An = Anum itself, and in a god list known from a copy from
Mari, but their exact position among the generations of primordial deities varies.
Underworld deity It has been argued that a further deity named Ninkur or Ninkurra was associated with the
underworld. In this context, the name would designate her as the "lady of the underworld", as the sign KUR could serve as a designation of the land of the dead. The name might appear in this context in the so-called
First Elegy of the Pushkin Museum, in which a man named Ludingira invokes Ninkurra alongside various underworld deities, after
Nergal and before
Ningishzida,
Gilgamesh,
Bitu and
Etana, to ask them to care for his father in the land of the dead. An identical enumeration of deities is attested independently in three more sources. Dina Katz notes that while this version of Ninkurra would plausibly have a similar character to
Ereshkigal, she is unlikely to be identical with her, as she never appears alongside
Namtar; additionally an
Old Babylonian god list from
Uruk which places her after
Ninti and before
Lisin seems to treat she was a separate figure from Ereshkigal. She tentatively proposes that she might have been a goddess of similar character originally worshiped further to the north than Ereshkigal, and closely linked to Nergal, possibly as his spouse, though ultimately lack of evidence makes determining the nature of the relations between these three deities impossible. Support for this interpretation has been voiced by Grégoire Nicolet as well. ==dNIN.KUR in Mari and Emar==