cylinder seal depicting the goddess
Inanna resting her foot on the back of a lion while
Ninshubur stands in front of her paying obeisance, c. 2334-2154 BC Inanna is the Sumerian goddess of love and war. Despite her association with mating and fertility of humans and animals, Inanna was not a mother goddess and is rarely associated with childbirth. Inanna was also associated with rain and storms and with the planet
Venus. The
Venus tablet of Ammisaduqa, believed to have been compiled around the mid-seventeenth century BCE, referred to the planet Venus in the tablet as the "bright queen of the sky" or "bright Queen of Heaven". Although the title of Queen of Heaven was often applied to many different goddesses throughout antiquity, Inanna is the one to whom the title is given the most number of times. In fact, Inanna's name is commonly derived from
Nin-anna which literally means "Queen of Heaven" in
ancient Sumerian (It comes from the words
NIN meaning "lady" and
AN meaning "sky"), although the cuneiform sign for her name (Borger 2003 nr. 153, U+12239 𒈹) is not historically a ligature of the two. In several myths, Inanna is described as being the daughter of
Nanna, the ancient Sumerian god of the Moon. In other texts, however, she is often described as being the daughter of either
Enki or
An. These difficulties have led some early Assyriologists to suggest that Inanna may have been originally a
Proto-Euphratean goddess, possibly related to the
Hurrian mother goddess
Hannahannah, accepted only latterly into the Sumerian pantheon, an idea supported by her youthfulness, and that, unlike the other Sumerian divinities, she at first had no sphere of responsibilities. The view that there was a
Proto-Euphratean substrate language in Southern Iraq before Sumerian is not widely accepted by modern Assyriologists. In Sumer
Inanna was hailed as "Queen of Heaven" in the third millennium BC. In
Akkad to the north, she was worshipped later as
Ishtar. In the Sumerian
Descent of Inanna, when Inanna is challenged at the outermost gates of the underworld, she replies: Her cult was deeply embedded in Mesopotamia and among the Canaanites to the west. F. F. Bruce describes a transformation from a Venus as a male deity to Ishtar, a female goddess by the Akkadians. He links
Ishtar,
Tammuz, Innini,
Ma (Cappadocia),
Mami, Dingir-Mah,
Cybele,
Agdistis, Pessinuntica and the Idaean Mother to the cult of a great mother goddess. == Astarte ==