Ninlil was chiefly worshiped in the cult centers of her husband Enlil.
Nippur was therefore also associated with her, as already attested in sources from the
Early Dynastic Period. One of the oldest texts mentioning the worship of Ninlil might be an inscription of a certain Ennail, possibly a ruler (
lugal) of
Kish, who states that he collected first fruit offerings for Enlil and Ninlil. The text is only known from copies from the
Ur III period, but a fragment of a statue from Nippur indicates that a ruler named Ennail reigned at some point before the
Sargonic period. In the
Ekur temple complex, Ninlil was worshiped in the Kiur (Sumerian: "leveled place"), which can be itself described as a "complex" in modern scholarly literature. It appears in inscriptions of
Ur-Ninurta of
Isin and
Burnaburiash I of the
Kassite dynasty of
Babylon. The same name was also applied to a shrine of Ninlil which was a part of a temple of
Ninimma in the same city. Further locations within the Ekur temple complex dedicated to her include the Eitimaku, alternative known as Eunuzu ("house which knows no daylight"), a shrine described as her bedchamber, and the Ekurigigal ("house, mountain endowed with sight") which was a storehouse dedicated jointly to her and Enlil, mentioned as early as during the reigns of
Damiq-ilishu and
Rim-Sîn I. Multiple small shrines in Nippur were also dedicated to her, including the Ešutumkiagga ("house, beloved storeroom") built by
Ur-Nammu, the Emi-Tummal (translation of the first element uncertain), a shrine called Abzu-Ninlil ("
Apsu of Ninlil"), attested in documents from the Ur III period, which according to Manfred Krebernik was a water basin, and a further sanctuary distinct from those three whose name is not fully preserved, also known from documents from the Ur III period. A further cult center of Ninlil was Tummal, attested in sources from the Ur III period already. It was located in the proximity of Nippur and
Puzrish-Dagan, and might correspond to modern Tell Dalham, located 21 kilometers south of the former of those two ancient cities in modern
Iraq. Piotr Steinkeller proposes that it was initially a cult center of
Ninhursag, and that she was replaced at some point with Ninlil, but this view is not supported by other researchers. E-Tummal also functioned as an alternate name of Ninlil's main temple in Nippur. In the Ur III period, a festival taking place in Tummal was centered on Ninlil symbolically renewing the king's legitimacy by decreeing his fate. It has been suggested that it was also a celebration of her marriage to Enlil, and that various songs referring to sexual encounters between them might be related to it, though no direct evidence for the latter theory is currently available. It has been proposed that a further location associated with Ninlil was NUN.KID from the
Archaic City List, a document from the Early Dynastic Period, but this is unlikely as the orthography of the name varies between sources, and there is no basis to assume it was read as Ninlil or associated with her in some way. It is possible that a temple of Ninlil attested in inscriptions of Rim-Sîn I, Eninbišetum ("house worthy of its lady") was located in
Ur. It should not be confused with a similarly named temple of
Ninshubur, Eninbitum (also "house worthy of its lady"), mentioned by the same ruler and most likely located in the same city. Ninlil was also worshiped in
Dur-Kurigalzu, and a temple dedicated to her, the Egašanantagal ("house of the lady on high") was built there by king
Kurigalzu I from the
Kassite dynasty of
Babylon. In the first millennium BCE, according to
Joan Goodnick Westenholz specifically during the reign of
Marduk-apla-iddina II (721–710 BCE), Ninlil was also introduced to Ḫursaĝkalamma, a part of Kish, replacing the older deity worshiped there, Ishtar. The details of this process are presently unknown, though it is possible the goddess of Ḫursaĝkalamma was at this point understood not as a manifestation of Ishtar but as an
ištaru, a generic term referring to female deities, and therefore could be assigned the name Ninlil without any type of
syncretism occurring. Ninlil's temple there was known as E-Ḫursaĝkalamma ("house, mountain of the land"). A
ziggurat possibly dedicated to her, Ekurmah ("house, exalted mountain"), also existed in the same location. It has also been proposed that she was worshiped in the
akitu temple of
Zababa in Kish. A festival held in Babylon in honor of
Gula involved Ninlil, as well as
Bizilla, both of whom acted as the divine representatives of Kish, alongside
Belet Eanna (Inanna of Uruk), Belet Ninua ("Lady of
Nineveh") and the deity dKAŠ.TIN.NAM, possibly to be identified as a late form of the beer goddess
Ninkasi. A further temple of Ninlil, Emebišedua (house built for its
me), which was also a temple of Enlil, is known from the
Canonical Temple List, but its location is not known.
Sud in Mesopotamian religion Sud's main cult center was
Shuruppak (modern Fara). The name of the city was written the same as that of its tutelary goddess, though with a different determinative, SU.KUR.RUki rather than dSU.KUR.RU, similar to how the names of Enlil and
Nisaba could be used to represent Nippur and Eresh, respectively. Much information about the religious life of this city has been obtained from administrative texts, and it is known that in addition to Sud, deities such as Nisaba, Ninkasi,
Ninmug and Ninshubur were also worshiped there. Sud's importance in the local pantheon is reflected in the number of
theophoric names invoking her. At the same time, there is relatively little evidence regarding her worship outside of Shuruppak, and she is absent from earliest sources from cities such as
Lagash and Ur. She is nonetheless attested in early texts from
Abu Salabikh, such as the
Zame Hymns, and
Adab. In the latter of these two cities she appears in theophoric names from the Early Dynastic period, such as Sud-anzu and Sud-dazi. She does not appear in any offering lists from Adab predating the Sargonic period. It is commonly assumed that Sud ceased to be worshiped under own name with the decline of Shuruppak, which is typically dated to the beginning of the second millennium BCE. However, Christopher Metcalf points out that Sud was still actively worshiped by kings of the
Isin dynasty, namely
Bur-Suen and
Enlil-bani. He also notes that it cannot be precisely established how long Shuruppak remained inhabited due to lack of archeological data, as
erosion only left the oldest layers of the city to excavate. At the same time, he acknowledges the fact that Shuruppak retained a degree of religious importance does not necessarily indicate that it was still an administrative center or a major urban settlement in the
Isin-Larsa period. A recently published hymn mentioning Bur-Suen indicates that Sud was regarded as responsible for granting him the right to rule. It has been proposed that the Isin dynasty's interest in Sud was based on her association with
Gula, as medicine deities were particularly venerated in Isin, but there is no reference to her fulfilling such a role in this composition. One of Bur-Suen's successors, Enlil-bani, rebuilt a temple dedicated to her, Edimgalanna (Sumerian: "house, great bond of heaven"; more literally "house,
mooring pole of heaven"). It is generally agreed that it was located either in Shuruppak or close to it. A further temple of Sud was Ekisiga ("house of funerary offerings"), possibly also located in this city. The name is homophonous with that of a temple of
Dagan in
Terqa, but the latter has a different meaning ("house, silent place"). Ekisiga and Edimgalanna appear side by side in a number of texts, for example in a lamentation describing the destruction of Shuruppak. It is also possible that Esiguz ("house of goat hair") located in Guaba was a temple of Sud, but this is uncertain, and it is better attested in association with
Inanna of Zabalam. A further temple which seemingly was primarily dedicated to
Sudaĝ but possibly could have been associated with Sud as well was Ešaba ("house of the heart"), whose location is presently unknown. In the Old Babylonian period, Shuruppak became a subject of antiquarian interest for Mesopotamian scholars. It continued to be referenced in literature even after abandonment.
Utnapishtim, the protagonist of the
flood myth which forms a part of the
Epic of Gilgamesh, is described as a Shuruppakean, while the text referred to as
Nippurian Taboos 3 in modern scholarship alludes to the belief that a confrontation between the primordial deity
Enmesharra and either Enlil or
Ninurta took place there. A late occurrence to Sud herself as an independent figure can be found in the
Canonical Temple List, which has been dated to the
Kassite period. ==Mythology==