Meshkiangasher

{{Short description|Sumerian ruler priest of Inanna}}

{{Infobox royalty

| name = Meshkiangasher
{{nobold|{{cuneiform|π’ˆ©π’† π’‰˜π’‚΅π’ŠΊπ’…•}}}}

| title = {{unbulleted list

| King of Uruk

| Ruler of Sumer

}}

| image = File:Cylinder seal king Louvre AO6620.jpg

| caption = Cylinder seal depicting the king-priest and his acolyte feeding the sacred herd. Uruk period, {{circa|3200 BC}}.

| succession = King of Uruk

| reign = Uruk period, 324 years (legendary)

| predecessor = First dynasty of Kish

| successor = Enmerkar

| issue = Enmerkar

| father = Utu

}}

Meshkiangasher{{Efn|Lit. "Meski'ağ, he is mighty".Marchesi, G. (2010). The Sumerian King List and the Early History of Mesopotamia. In M. G. Biga - M. Liverani (Eds.), Ana Turri Gimilli: Studi Dedicati Al Padre Werner R. Mayer, S. J., Da Amici e Allievi (Vicino Oriente - Quaderno 5; Roma), Pp. 231-248.}}{{Efn|Sumerian: {{cuneiform|π’ˆ©π’† π’‰˜π’‚΅π’ŠΊπ’…•}} MeΕ‘kiağaΕ‘er}} was a legendary king mentioned in the Sumerian King List as the priest of the Eanna temple in Uruk, whose journey led him to the enter the sea and ascend the mountains.

Mythology

The King list mentions Meshkiangasher as a descendant of the sun god Utu, who became the high priest of Inanna in the Eanna temple reigning for 324 years,{{Efn|P2 has 325, however, the sum of the reigns given to Uruk restores it as 324.}} and conceived his son and successor to the throne Enmerkar. His epithet concludes with his descent to the sea and ascent to the mountains, a journey which has been compared to the trajectory of the sun, believed by the Sumerians that made the exact travel and suitable for the "son of the sun-god".{{Cite book|last=Jacobsen|first=Thorkild|title=The Sumerian King List|pages=85–93}}

Possible fabrication

Unlike his successors, Meshkiangasher is not found in any poem or hymn besides the King list. His reign has long been suspected to be a fabrication during the Ur III period{{Cite book|last=Mittermayer|first=Catherine|author-link=:de:Catherine Mittermayer|title=Enmerkara und der Herr von Arata: Ein ungleicher Wettstreit.|year=2009|pages=93}} due to the Sumerian-Akkadian hybrid structure of his name, the element MES, which occurs in historical royal names of Ur, and the tradition about his disappearance. The fabrication of king Meshkiangasher could be an arrangement to separate the god Utu from being the biological father of Enmerkar, as mentioned in Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta, and giving him a royal descendant instead.{{Cite book|last1=Drewnowska|first1=Olga|title=Fortune and Misfortune in the Ancient Near East.|last2=Sandowicz|first2=Malgorata|publisher=EISENBRAUNS|year=2017|location=Winona Lake, Indiana|pages=201}}

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

Notes

{{notelist}}

{{S-start}}

{{s-reg}}

{{S-bef | before=First dynasty of Kish}}

{{S-ttl | title=Sumerian ruler
En of Uruk | years=Late Uruk Period (legendary)}}

{{S-aft | after=Enmerkar}}

{{End}}

{{Portal|Asia|Mythology

}}{{Rulers of Sumer}}

Category:Inanna

Category:Kings of Uruk

Category:Longevity myths

Category:Missing person cases in Asia

Category:People lost at sea

Category:Sumerian kings

Category:Asian people whose existence is disputed