Shala's genealogy is unknown. She always appears alongside her husband Adad in known sources, and her character was largely defined by this connection. Texts commonly refer to her as his "great wife" or "beloved wife who gladdens the heart." In a
balag song from the library of Ashurbanipal, written in first person, Shala/Medimsha (both names are used in the same text in this case) describes herself as the righteous wife of Adad/Ishkur. Shala and Ishkur are the second most commonly invoked divine couple in cylinder seal inscriptions from Sippar after
Aya and
Shamash. However, no attestations of Shala are known from the third millennium BCE, and it is assumed she most likely originated in the eastern part of
Upper Mesopotamia in the Old Babylonian period. Further west, in Halab (modern
Aleppo) and presumably the middle
Euphrates area, the wife of the weather god, Hadad, was instead the goddess
Hebat. Hebat was also incorporated into
Hurrian religion as the wife of his counterpart
Teshub. She is absent from later
Aramaic sources from the same areas, where the wife of the weather god is also Shala like in Mesopotamia. Medimsha, treated as an alternate name of Shala in later periods, was initially a different goddess, who appears already in sources from the
Fara period though they don't provide any information about her role. Daniel Schwemer suggests that it is not unlikely that she was already viewed as the wife of Ishkur and lack of direct evidence for such a relation between them, known from later god lists, is the result of
preservation bias. He additionally proposes that some depictions of a naked rain goddess on
cylinder seals might be Medimsha. It has also been proposed that some of such images might represent the Hurrian goddess
Shaushka, typically regarded as the sister of Teshub in known sources postdating the pairing of the Hurrian weather god with Syrian Hebat and never labeled as his spouse, though the earlier nature of their relationship is impossible to discern. The daughters of Shala and Adad were Shubanuna, Namashmash (or Nabarbar; reading of the name is uncertain) and Minunesi. While there is presently no evidence for them ever existing as independent deities outside god lists, according to Frans Wiggermann it is possible that they were depicted in a fashion similar to their mother and shared her functions. In art groups of three Shala-like naked goddesses which he argues can be identified with them tend to be accompanied by a sheep-like mythical creature, most likely of astral character, whose name is presently unknown. The etymology of Namashmash and Minunesi is not known, while Shubanuna's name means "the princely
šuba",
šuba being a type of unidentified
precious stone or
shell associated with deities such as
Ishtar and Shamash. In one
balag song Menunesi and Shubanuna are epithets of Shala rather than her daughters. Namashmash and Shubanuna are also attested in a god list in what is assumed to be an enumeration of epithets of Ishtar or
Ishara. Shubanuna might also be attested in the name of a month from the local calendar of
Adab from the third millennium BCE. This assumption remains uncertain as she is otherwise absent from the city, while a deified
šuba stone (
dŠuba) is present in theophoric names from between the
Sargonic and Ur III periods, and therefore it would not be impossible for it to also be invoked in a month name. Further children attested in the sections of god lists dedicated to Shala and Adad include
Misharu ("justice;" he could be accompanied by his spouse
Išartu, "righteousness") and
Uṣur-amāssu ("heed his word"). While Uṣur-amāssu is regarded as a male deity in god lists, there is evidence for the worship of a goddess bearing the same name in
Uruk in the first millennium BCE, and in at least one case she is referred to as
bukrat Adad, "daughter of Adad." A further deity belonging to the court of Adad and Shala in god lists was Nimgir ("lightning"), the
sukkal of Adad/Ishkur. It is possible that on at least one seal Shala and Adad are accompanied by Aya, possibly acting as a divine representative of
Sippar.
Shala and Shalash In modern scholarship, Shala is sometimes confused with Shalash, a similarly named Syrian goddess who was the wife of
Dagan. According to Daniel Schwemer, while a degree of confusion between the two goddesses is also present in some ancient sources, it is largely limited to scholarly Mesopotamian texts, and no older than the fourteenth century BCE. According to Lluis Feliu, most evidence for it comes from the first millennium BCE. In some copies of the god list
An = Anum, Shalash is listed as one of the alternate names of Shala. In an explanatory text Ninkusi, glossed as "Shalash," is addressed as "Shala of the western steppe." Ninkusi ("lady of gold") is recognized as a synonym of Shalash, rather than Shala, in
An = Anum, where the name appears in the section dedicated to Dagan and his spouse rather than to Adad and Shala. The same god list equates Shalash separately with
Ninlil, to match the equation between her husband and
Enlil. Additionally, two names are only attested in relation to Shalash, not Shala: Ninudishara ("Mistress who amazes the world") and Ninsuhzagina ("Mistress diadem of lapis lazuli"). In a single copy of a
Maqlû ritual from
Assur, Shala occurs in place of Shalash, present in other known copies of the same text. Lluis Felieu rejects the possibility that the two goddesses were originally the same, and especially that the confusion between them was caused by Dagan being a
weather god himself and thus analogous to Adad. He also notes that Shala is well attested in art as a goddess associated with the weather, while the character of Shalash, based on parallels with the wives of heads of other pantheons of the
ancient Near East (for example Ninlil, wife of Enlil and
Athirat, wife of
El), would be unlikely to resemble that of the wife of the Mesopotamian weather god. Additionally, the spelling of the name of the goddess paired with Adad in devotional inscriptions is consistent between various time periods and languages, and never ends with a
sibilant. Unlike Shala Shalash is also unlikely to have Hurrian origin, as she is attested in the
Ebla texts, which predate the arrival of
Hurrians in Syria. There is very little evidence for confusion of the two goddesses in Hurrian and
Hittite sources. Daniel Schwemer considers a treaty of king
Shattiwaza to be one example. Lluis Felieu proposes that for Hurrians and Hittites the source of confusion might have been the fact the final -
š in the name of Shalash name could be interpreted as a case ending in their languages, but he also remarks that the only possible instances might represent scribal mistakes. This reasoning is also accepted by Daniel Schwemer. Less commonly modern authors also confuse Shala with
Shuwala, a Hurrian underworld goddess. == Iconography and functions==