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SHAMASH, or AMAS

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 799 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SHAMASH, or AMAS  , the
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common name of the sun-
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god in Babylonia and
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Assyria . The name signifies perhaps " servitor," and would thus point to a secondary position occupied at one time by this deity . Both in early and in
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late inscriptions Shamash is designated as the " offspring of Nannar," i.e. of the moon-god, and since, in an enumeration of the pantheon, Sin generally takes precedence of Shamash, it is in relationship, presumably, to the moon-god that the sun-god appears as the dependent power . Such a supposition would accord with the prominence acquired by the moon in the
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calendar and in astrological calculations, as well as with the fact pointed out (see SIN) that the moon-cult belongs to the nomadic and therefore earlier, stage of
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civilization, whereas the sun-god rises to full importance only after the agricultural stage has been reached . The two chief centres of sun-worship in Babylonia were Sippara (Sippar), represented by the mounds at
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Abu Habba, and Larsa, represented by the
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modern Senkerah . At both places the chief sanctuary
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bore the name E-barra (or E-babbara) " the shining house "—a
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direct allusion to the brilliancy of the sun-god . Of the two temples, that at Sippara was the more famous, but temples to Shamash were erected in all large centres---as Babylon, Ur,
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Nippur and Nineveh . The attribute most commonly associated with Shamash is justice . Just as the sun disperses darkness, so Shamash brings wrong and injustice to
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light . Khammurabi attributes to Shamash the inspiration that led him to gather the existing
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laws and legal procedures into a code, and in the design accompanying the code the king represents himself in an attitude of adoration before Shamash as the embodiment of the idea of justice . Several centuries before Khammurabi, Ur-Engur of the Ur dynasty (c . 2600 B.C.) declared that he rendered decisions " according to the just laws of Shamash." It was a logical consequence of this conception of the sun-god that he was regarded also as the one who released the sufferer from the grasp of the demons .

The sick

man, therefore, appeals to Shamash as the god who can be depended upon to help those who are suffering unjustly . This aspect of the sun-god is vividly brought out in the
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hymns addressed to him, which are, therefore, among the finest productions in the entire
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realm of Babylonian literature . It is evident from the material at our disposal that the Shamash cults at Sippara and Larsa so overshadowed
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local sun-deities elsewhere as to lead to an absorption of the minor deities by the predominating one . In the systematized pantheon these minor sun-gods become attendants that do his service . Such are Bunene, spoken of as his chariot driver, whose consort is Atgimakh, Kettu (" justice ") and Mesharu (" right "), who are introduced as ,servitors of Shamash . Other sun-deities, as
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Ninib (q.v.) and
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Nergal (q.v.), the
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patron deities of important centres, retained their
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independent existence as certain phases of the sun, Ninib becoming the sun-god of the
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morning and of the spring time, and Nergal the sun-god of the
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noon and of the summer solstice, while Shamash was viewed as the sun-god in general . Together with Sin and
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Ishtar, Shamash forms a second triad by the side of
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Anu,
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Bel and Ea . The three powers, Sin, Shamash , and Ishtar (q.v.), symbolized the three
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great forces of nature, the sun, the moon and the
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life-giving force of the earth . At times, instead of Ishtar, we find
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Adad (q.v.), the storm-god, associated with Sin and Shamash, and it may be that these two sets of triads represent the doctrines of two different
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schools of theological thought in Babylonia which were subsequently harmonized by the recognition of a
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group consisting of all four deities . The consort of Shamash was known as A . She, however, is rarely mentioned in the inscriptions except in combination with Shamash . (M .

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