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ページの作成:「'''Saĝkud''' was a Mesopotamian god who might have been regarded as a divine tax collector or as a warrior deity. He belonged to the court of Anu, though an…」
'''Saĝkud''' was a [[Mesopotamian god]] who might have been regarded as a divine [[tax collector]] or as a warrior deity. He belonged to the court of [[Anu]], though an association between him and [[Ninurta]] is also attested. He is first attested in the [[Early Dynastic Period (Mesopotamia)|Early Dynastic period]], and appears in a variety of [[theophoric name]]s from sites such as [[Lagash]] and later on [[Sippar]]. In the first millennium BCE he was worshiped in [[Der (Sumer)|Der]] and Bubê. In the past it was assumed that ''skwt'' ("Sakkuth") mentioned in the ''[[Book of Amos]]'' might be the same deity, but this conclusion is no longer accepted.

==Name and character==
The correct reading of the [[theonym]] written in [[cuneiform]] as ''<sup>[[dingir|d]]</sup>Saĝ-kud'' has been established based on syllabic spellings such as ''sag-gu-ud'' and ''sa-ak-ku-ud'' in sources postdating the earliest [[Early Dynastic Period (Mesopotamia)|Early Dynastic]] attestations.{{sfn|Selz|1995|p=273}}{{sfn|Krebernik|2008|p=529}} Romanizations such as Sakkud{{sfn|Frahm|2009|p=52}} and Sakkut can also be found in contemporary scholarly literature.{{sfn|Schwemer|Hecker|Oelsner|2020|p=28}} It is possible that the name can be explained as "he who collects first" or "he who collects best".{{sfn|Selz|1995|p=273}} Other translations include "tax collector"{{sfn|Selz|1997|p=173}} or terms such as "shark" (in the metaphorical sense), "cutthroat",{{sfn|Schwemer|Hecker|Oelsner|2020|p=28}} "head chopper".{{sfn|Krebernik|2008|p=529}}{{sfn|Lambert|Winters|2023|p=96}} {{ill|Gebhard J. Selz|de}} considers him one of the deities who should be understood as divine representations of specific professions, in this case specifically that of a tax collector.{{sfn|Selz|1997|p=173}} Ryan D. Winters suggest he functioned as a warrior god.{{sfn|Lambert|Winters|2023|p=96}}

A [[Seal (emblem)|seal]] from the [[Old Babylonian period]] describes Saĝkud as "foremost in heaven and earth, wrapped in divine splendour" (''pa<sub>4</sub> gal an-ki-a ní me-lám gú è-a'').{{sfn|Krebernik|2008|p=530}} He might have been understood as an astral deity.{{sfn|Stol|1999|p=723}} However, the old theory that he was associated with the planet [[Saturn]] is no longer accepted today, as it relied on a faulty reading of an enumeration of deities in ''[[Šurpu]]''.{{sfn|Stol|1999|p=722}} Identification as a divine representation of [[Sirius]] has been suggested based on association between him and [[Ninurta]], but it remains speculative.{{sfn|Lambert|Winters|2023|p=96}} A text describing him as the resident of a swamp is also known.{{sfn|Schwemer|Hecker|Oelsner|2020|p=28}} According to {{ill|Manfred Krebernik|de}} most of the other figures mentioned in it are likely ''[[asakku]]'' demons.{{sfn|Krebernik|2008|p=530}}

A text presumably pertaining to rites of the ''[[āšipu]]'' states that two types of stones used in magical rituals, ''pappardilû'' and ''engiša'', were associated with Saĝkud.{{sfn|Schwemer|Hecker|Oelsner|2020|pp=27-28}}

==Associations with other deities==
Manfred Krebernik suggests that the goddess Gula, who appears after Saĝkud in the [[Early Dynastic Period (Mesopotamia)|Early Dynastic]] god list from [[Abu Salabikh]], might have been viewed as his wife.{{sfn|Krebernik|2008|p=529}} She is to be distinguished from the homophonous medicine goddess [[Gula (goddess)|Gula]], and usually it is assumed that her spouse was the god [[Abu (god)|Abu]].{{sfn|Sibbing-Plantholt|2022|p=38}} According to the god list ''[[An = Anum]]'', the goddess Ninpamulesi was regarded as Saĝkud's wife.{{sfn|Krebernik|2008|p=530}} Her name can be explained as "the lady who sparkles red in the [[Pleiades]]".{{sfn|Cavigneaux|Krebernik|1998|p=481}} An alternate proposal is that the element ''pa-mul'' might refer to tree branches.{{sfn|Lambert|Winters|2023|p=96}}

It is presumed that Saĝkud belonged to the court of [[Anu]].{{sfn|Krul|2018|p=209}} ''An = Anum'' refers to him as ''zabar-dab-an-na-ke'', "''zabbardabbû'' official of Anu" or "''zabbardabbû'' official of heaven".{{sfn|Selz|1995|p=273}} Krebernik argues this title can be explained as "[[Chamberlain (office)|chamberlain]]" or "[[Cup-bearer|cupbearer]]".{{sfn|Krebernik|2008|p=230}} However, Ryan D. Winters points out that based on its literal meaning, "keeper of bronze", possibly implicitly "keeper of bronze weapons", this position might have had a military character, which would match Saĝkud's proposed role as a warrior god.{{sfn|Lambert|Winters|2023|p=96}}

An association between Saĝkud and [[Ninurta]] is also attested.{{sfn|Krul|2018|p=209}} However, only a single text directly equates them with each other.{{sfn|Krebernik|2008|p=530}} The [[Weidner god list]] places him between two related deities, [[Ningirsu]] and [[Pisangunug]].{{sfn|Krul|2018|p=209}} Two late copies of this text equate him with the god Etallak, in this context explained as a divine [[prison officer|jailer]].{{sfn|Krebernik|2008|p=530}}

According to Gebhard J. Selz, the deity ''<sup>d</sup>Lugal-kud-da'' known from Early Dynastic ''[[Zame Hymns]]'' might be related to Saĝkud.{{sfn|Selz|1995|p=273}}

==Worship==
Saĝkud is already attested in texts from [[Early Dynastic Period (Mesopotamia)|Early Dynastic]] [[Shuruppak|Fara]] and [[Lagash]], though in the latter corpus he only appears in a single [[theophoric name]], Amar-Saĝkud ("bull calf of Saĝkud").{{sfn|Selz|1995|p=273}} In the [[Ur III period]] he is attested in the name Ur-Saĝkud, many further examples are also known from the [[Old Babylonian period]]: Ibni-Saĝkud, Puzur-Saĝkud, Saĝkud-muballiṭ (all three from [[Sippar]]), Nūr-Saĝkud, Saĝkud-balāṭī, Saĝkud-bāni and Saĝkud-tajjār, with a bearer of the last of them also designated as a servant of Saĝkud on a seal.{{sfn|Krebernik|2008|p=530}} A [[É (temple)|temple]] dedicated to him existed in [[Ur]] during the reign of [[Rim-Sîn I]], but its ceremonial name is not known.{{sfn|Krebernik|2008|p=530}}

In the [[Neo-Assyrian period]], a hypostasis of Saĝkud associated with the city of Bubê was worshiped in [[Der (Sumer)|Der]].{{sfn|Frahm|2009|pp=56-57}} Bubê was presumably located nearby,{{sfn|George|1993|p=134}} in Araši or Raši, which according to Eckhart Frahm was a buffer state between Mesopotamia and [[Elam]].{{sfn|Frahm|2009|pp=56-57}} It is also mentioned in the myth of [[Anzû]] (tablet III, line 150), which indicates that a temple named Enimmanku was located there.{{sfn|Foster|2005|p=576}}

According to [[Andrew R. George]], this ceremonial name can be translated as "high house of pure heaven", but it is not known what deity was worshiped in it, with "Ninurta or a similar deity" being a plausible assumption.{{sfn|George|1993|p=134}} Texts from the reign of [[Shamshi-Adad V]] indicate that during a campaign against Der, either in 815 or 814 BCE, Assyrian troops carried away the statue of Saĝkud of Bubê alongside those of other local deities, such as [[Ištaran]], [[Mār-bīti]] and Šarrat-Deri.{{sfn|Frahm|2009|p=52}} They were later returned by [[Esarhaddon]].{{sfn|McEwan|1983|p=221}}

==Outside Mesopotamia==
In a trilingual version of the [[Weidner god list]] from [[Ugarit]], both in the [[Ugaritic]] and [[Hurrian language|Hurrian]] columns the deity corresponding to Saĝkud is [[Anat]].{{sfn|Tugendhaft|2016|p=176}} However, it has been called into question if this text accurately reflects traditions pertaining to the [[Ugaritic pantheon|Ugaritic]] and [[Hurrian pantheon|Hurrian]] pantheons, and it is assumed it does not indicate an equation between the deities mentioned.{{sfn|Tugendhaft|2016|p=177}}

It has been suggested that Sakkuth, mentioned in the ''[[Book of Amos]]'' 5:26, might be the same deity as Mesopotamian Saĝkud.{{sfn|Schwemer|Hecker|Oelsner|2020|p=28}} The [[Masoretic Text]] vocalizes the name, written in [[Hebrew alphabet|Hebrew]] as ''skwt'', as ''sikkût'', a [[hapax legomenon]].{{sfn|Borger|1988|p=71}} The conclusion that a deity is meant is not universally accepted, and as an alternative it has been proposed that the correct reading might be a common noun such as ''sukkat'', "hut", or a derivative of the term ''sikkāntu'', "stele".{{sfn|Stol|1999|pp=722-723}}

[[Riekele Borger]] pointed out that a ''[[Šurpu]]'' passage in old literature used to support the identification of ''skwt'' with Saĝkud was misread, and the sequence of words in it does not resemble the biblical passage, nor is Saĝkud anywhere associated with [[Kajamanu|Kayyamānu]], sometimes presumed to be related to Amos' [[Kaiwan|Kewan]].{{sfn|Borger|1988|p=81}} This conclusion is also accepted by Manfred Krebernik in ''[[Reallexikon der Assyriologie und Vorderasiatischen Archäologie]]''.{{sfn|Krebernik|2008|p=530}}

==References==
{{reflist}}

===Bibliography===
{{refbegin|40em}}
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*{{citation|last1=Cavigneaux|first1=Antoine|last2=Krebernik|first2=Manfred|entry=Nin-pamula/e-si|encyclopedia=Reallexikon der Assyriologie|year=1998|entry-url=http://publikationen.badw.de/en/rla/index#8904|language=de|access-date=2022-11-06}}
*{{cite book|last=Foster|first=Benjamin R.|title=Before the muses: an anthology of Akkadian literature|publisher=CDL Press|publication-place=Bethesda, Md.|date=2005|isbn=1-883053-76-5|oclc=57123664}}
*{{cite book|last=Frahm|first=Eckhart|editor1-last=Luukko|editor1-first=Mikko|editor2-last=Svärd|editor2-first=Saana|editor3-last=Mattila|editor3-first=Raija|title=Of god(s), trees, kings, and scholars: Neo-Assyrian and related studies in honour of Simo Parpola|chapter=Assurbanipal at Der|chapter-url=https://journal.fi/store/article/download/52450/16261|publication-place=Helsinki|date=2009|isbn=978-951-9380-72-8|oclc=434869052}}
*{{cite book|last=George|first=Andrew R.|title=House most high: the temples of ancient Mesopotamia|publisher=Eisenbrauns|publication-place=Winona Lake|year=1993|isbn=0-931464-80-3|oclc=27813103}}
*{{citation|last=Krebernik|first=Manfred|entry=Saĝkud|encyclopedia=Reallexikon der Assyriologie|year=2008|entry-url=http://publikationen.badw.de/en/rla/index#10182|language=de|access-date=2022-11-06}}
*{{cite book|last=Krul|first=Julia|title=The Revival of the Anu Cult and the Nocturnal Fire Ceremony at Late Babylonian Uruk|url=https://www.academia.edu/36775866|publisher=Brill|date=2018|doi=10.1163/9789004364943_004|isbn=9789004364936}}
*{{cite book|last1=Lambert|first1=Wilfred G.|last2=Winters|first2=Ryan D.|title=An = Anum and Related Lists|publisher=Mohr Siebeck|date=2023|isbn=978-3-16-161383-8|doi=10.1628/978-3-16-161383-8}}
*{{cite journal|last=McEwan|first=Gilbert J. P.|title=<sup>d</sup>MUŠ and Related Matters|journal=Orientalia|publisher=GBPress - Gregorian Biblical Press|volume=52|issue=2|year=1983|issn=0030-5367|jstor=43077512|pages=215–229|url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/43077512|access-date=2022-11-06}}
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*{{cite book|last=Selz|first=Gebhard J.|title=Untersuchungen zur Götterwelt des altsumerischen Stadtstaates von Lagaš|url=https://www.academia.edu/1564636|publisher=University of Pennsylvania Museum|publication-place=Philadelphia|year=1995|isbn=978-0-924171-00-0|oclc=33334960|language=de}}
*{{cite book|last=Selz|first=Gebhard J.|editor1-first=I. L.|editor1-last=Finkel|editor2-first=M. J.|editor2-last=Geller|chapter=’The Holy Drum, the Spear, and the Harp’. Towards an understanding of the problems of deification in Third Millennium Mesopotamia.|chapter-url=https://www.academia.edu/1581523|title=Sumerian Gods and their Representations |year=1997|isbn=978-90-56-93005-9}}
*{{cite book|last=Sibbing-Plantholt|first=Irene|title=The Image of Mesopotamian Divine Healers. Healing Goddesses and the Legitimization of Professional Asûs in the Mesopotamian Medical Marketplace|publisher=Brill Publishers|publication-place=Boston|date=2022|isbn=978-90-04-51241-2|oclc=1312171937}}
*{{citation|last=Stol|first=Marten|editor1-last=van der Toorn|editor1-first=Karel|editor2-last=Becking|editor2-first=Bob|editor3-last=van der Horst|editor3-first=Pieter W.|encyclopedia=Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible|entry=Sakkuth|publisher=Eerdmans Publishing Company|year=1999|isbn=978-0-8028-2491-2|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yCkRz5pfxz0C&pg=PA722|access-date=2022-11-06}}
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{{refend}}

{{デフォルトソート:さくと}}
[[Category:メソポタミア神話]]
[[Category:武器管理神]]

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