Scorpion-men appear in the visual arts of Mesopotamia and ancient Iran before we know them from literature. Among the earliest representations of scorpion-men are an example from Jiroft in Iran, as well as a depiction on the Bull Lyre from the Early Dynastic Period city of Ur. depicting scorpion men. In the epic poem
Enuma elish, a scorpion-man is listed among the monsters created by
Tiamat in order to wage war against the gods for murdering her mate
Apsu. In the Standard Babylonian
Epic of Gilgamesh, they stand guard outside the gates of the sun god
Shamash at the mountains of
Mashu. These give entrance to
Kurnugi, the land of darkness. The scorpion-men open the doors for Shamash as he travels out each day, and close the doors after him when he returns through the netherworld at night. When Gilgamesh comes to Mount Mashu, he encounters scorpion-men guarding the gate. Their "terror is awesome" and their "glance is death" (Tablet IX 43). ==Scorpion-women==