Frans Wiggermann proposes that Papsukkal was initially viewed as the son of
Zababa. In late sources, his father was Anu. A prayer to Papsukkal additionally calls him "offspring of
Enmesharra," possibly indicating that a tradition in which Enmesharra was an ancestor of Anu existed. In one case, Papsukkal is listed right behind Enmesharra in a list of vanquished gods. In another similar list, he was equated with
Mummu, according to Wilfred G. Lambert most likely based on their shared status as divine viziers (sukkals). Papsukkal's wife was the sparsely attested goddess
Amasagnudi. Three possibilities have been proposed regarding her origin: that she was the original sukkal of Anu, replaced in this role by
Inanna's sukkal Ninshubur; that she was an epithet of Ninshubur; or that she was the wife of the male form of Ninshubur. References to Amasagnudi from before the Seleucid period are incredibly rare, and according to
Paul-Alain Beaulieu as of 1992 known examples were limited to the god list
An = Anum and a single lexical text. More recent research revealed a further occurrence of Amasagnudi in the second millennium BCE in an Akkadian incantation against
Lamashtu known from a copy from
Ugarit, in which she appears alongside Papsukkal. The god lists
An = Anum in a section dedicated to Papsukkal lists five daughters: Pappap, Hedu, Ninhedu, Ninkita and Mišaga. PAP.PAP, written without a "
divine determinative" sign, is first attested as a name or title of queen Baranamtara, wife of
Lugalanda, and it is not impossible that the name of the daughter of Papsukkal was derived from it. The primary meaning of the name Hedu and the element
hedu in Ninhedu was "may it befit," but it was later reinterpreted as a
homophonous word meaning "
architrave," possibly because the alternate name of Papsukkal's wife Amasagnudi was Ninkagal, "lady of the gate." Ninkita's name possibly means "lady of the doorstep." Frans Wiggermann notes that while the section dedicated to them uses the name Ninshubur to refer to their father, there is no evidence they were ever regarded as the daughters of the older female version of Ninshubur attested as the sukkal of Inanna in the third millennium BCE.
Papsukkal and other messenger deities While Papsukkal's origin was distinct from both Ninshubur's and Ilabrat's, he came to be identified with both of them, as well as with Kakka. However, the conflation of Ninshubur and Papsukkal was only finalized in the Seleucid period in Uruk. The earlier Weidner god list does not equate Papsukkal with Ninshubur, and instead places him next to Zababa and
Ilaba. The god list
An = Anu ša amēli explains the syncretism between them in following terms:
dnin-šubur = dpap-sukkal ša da-nim, "Ninshubur is Papsukkal when Anu is concerned." The late syncretic Papsukkal was not regarded as the sukkal of Anu and Ishtar like Ninshubur, but rather of Anu and his wife Antu. He also takes Ninshubur's role in an Akkadian adaptation of ''Inanna's Descent'', but unlike her he is not directly designated as Ishtar's servant, and the text states that he serves "the great gods" as a group. A god list from
Emar identifies Papsukkal with the
Hurrian sukkal
Tašmišu. ==Worship==