Ningirsu

Ninĝirsu
God of war and agriculture
Fragment of the Stele of Vultures showing Ninĝirsu. He holds a mace and a battle net in which men from Umma are imprisonned.The battle net is closed by his composite emblem, which represents the Anzû over two lions. Musée du Louvre.
Major cult centerĜirsu
Symbolslion, composite emblem representing the Anzû over lions, sevenfold mace, plow
Genealogy
ParentsEnlil and Ninhursag
SiblingsNanshe
ConsortBau
OffspringIgalim, Shulshaga, seven daughters including Ḫegirnuna and Urnunta-ea

Ninĝirsu was a Mesopotamian god regarded as the tutelary deity of the city of Ĝirsu, and as the chief god of the local pantheon of the state of Lagash. He shares many aspects with the god Ninurta. Ninĝirsu was identified as a local hypostasis of Ninurta in a syncretism that is documented at the latest by the time of Gudea in the late third millennium BC. Assyriologists are divided on the question of whether they were originally two manifestations of the same god, or two separate deities.

Ninĝirsu's two main aspects were that of a warlike god, and that of a god connected with agricultural fertility. In Lagash, he was particularly associated with a composite emblem depicting the Anzû bird over two lions. It could sometimes represent him in cultic contexts.

Ninĝirsu was an important local god from the Early Dynastic Period until the old Babylonian period. He was regarded as the son of Enlil and Ninhursag; several scholars have proposed that in an older tradition he was regarded as a son of Enki. Ninĝirsu’s sister was Nanshe; she was the second main deity in the pantheon of Lagash. His wife was Bau; it has been argued that from the time of Gudea she replaced Nanshe as the highest ranking goddess, and was elevated to equal rank with her husband. Their children were the gods Igalim and Shulshaga, and seven goddesses including Ḫegirnuna and Urnunta-ea.

The decline of the region of origin of Ninĝirsu participated in the decline of his cult, and his identity was subsumed by Ninurta. This is notably attested by the presence of Ninĝirsu as the protagonist of Old Babylonian versions of the myths Lugale and the Epic of Anzû, while the Standard Babylonian version features Ninurta instead. The influence of local Lagashite mythology on Lugale has been interpreted either as evidence of the syncretism between Ninurta and Ninĝirsu at the time of its composition, or as evidence that Ninĝirsu was the protagonist of the myth in an older tradition.