Etana KING OF KISH SON OF CAIN
Etana KING OF KISH SON OF CAIN
CAIN
created a city and laid its foundation, and called it Kish. But the
people were without a king, so the gates were barred against the world.
Then THEY searched the land for a king, and Inninna searched the land
for a king, and searched the land for a king, and they found Etana, a
shepherd, and led him into the city. They built his dais, and gave him
his scepter, and made him king over all the land.
But
Etana feared for his kingdom, for he had no son and heir. His wife
Muanna, called Sherbi’anni, had an illness and could not carry a child
to term. One day Muanna was visited with a powerful dream, and she spoke
to Etana, saying unto him that only with the shammu sha aladi, the
plant of birth that grows in the heavens, would she be able to bear him a
son and heir
Etana
returned to Kish and offered up many sacrifices to Shamash, and
beseeched his aid, saying, “Mighty Shamash, god of the sun, god of
justice, you have dined on the flesh of my fattest sheep and drunk the
blood of my lambs, and inhaled the scent of my last fragment of incense.
Deliver unto me the plant of birth, that my wife might bear a child!”
Etana
appears on the Sumerian Kings List as the thirteenth king of the First
Kish Dynasty, which was established following the great flood. None of
the kings named before Etana appear in any other known source, and may
be entirely mythical. In fact, there is no independent archaeological
evidence for Etana, either. The first king with known archaeological
evidence, En-me-barage-si, is the ninth following Etana, and ruled
around 2600 BCE. If Etana was an actual historical figure, his reign
would probably have been sometime between 2800-2700 BCE.
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