Kušuḫ

Kušuḫ, also known under the name Umbu, was the god of the moon in Hurrian pantheon. He is attested in cuneiform texts from many sites, from Hattusa in modern Turkey, through Ugarit, Alalakh, Mari and other locations in Syria, to Nuzi, located near modern Kirkuk in Iraq, but known sources do not indicate that he was associated with a single city. His name might be derived from the toponym Kuzina, possibly the Hurrian name of Harran, a city in Upper Mesopotamia, but both this etymology and identification of this sparsely attested place name remain uncertain. He was a popular, commonly worshiped god, and many theophoric names invoking him are known. In addition to serving as a divine representation of the moon, he was also associated with oaths, oracles and pregnancy. Some aspects of his character were likely influenced by his Mesopotamian counterpart Sin, while he in turn was an influence on the Ugaritic god Yarikh and Luwian Arma.

Kušuḫ
God of the moon
An ancient Anatolian depiction of the moon god Arma, displaying iconography patterned after Kušuḫ's. Museum of Anatolian Civilizations, Ankara.
Other namesUmbu
Major cult centerŠuriniwe, possibly Kuzina (Harran?)
ConsortNikkal
Offspring
  • Šauška (sometimes)
  • Teššub (isolated attestation)
Equivalents
Mesopotamian equivalentSin
Ugaritic equivalentYarikh
Luwian equivalentArma
Hattian equivalentKašku

In Hurrian mythology, Kušuḫ appears as one of the allies of the weather god Teššub in his struggle against Kumarbi, but known compositions do not provide much information about his individual characteristics. It has also been proposed that the Ugaritic composition Marriage of Nikkal and Yarikh was based on a Hurrian myth about Kušuḫ, well attested as the husband of this goddess.

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