Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Iddin Dagan

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Reign
  
c. 1910 – 1890 BC

Died
  
1955 BC

Successor
  
Ishme-Dagan

Grandparent
  
Ishbi-Erra

House
  
1st Dynasty of Isin

Parents
  
Shu-Ilishu

Predecessor
  
Shu-Ilishu

Iddin-Dagan httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Iddin-Dagān, inscribed di-din dda-gan, c. 1910 – 1890 BC (short chronology) or c. 1975-1954 BC (middle chronology), was the 3rd king of the 1st dynasty of Isin, succeeding his father, Šu-ilišu, and reigned 21 years according to the Sumerian King List. He is best known for his participation in the sacred marriage rite and the risqué hymn that describes it.

Biography

His titles included: mighty king, king of Isin (sometimes king of Ur), king of the land of Sumer and Akkad. The first year name recorded on a receipt for flour and dates reads: “Year Iddin-Dagān (was) king and (his) daughter Matum-Niatum (“the land which belongs to us”) was taken in marriage by the king of Anshan.” Vallat suggests it was to Imazu, son of Kindattu, who was the groom, as he is described as king of Anshan in a seal inscription, although elsewhere unattested. Kindattu, possibly the 6th king of the region of Shimashki, had been driven from Ur by Išbi-Erra, the founder of the dynasty of Isin, but relations had apparently thawed sufficiently for Tan-Ruhurarter, the 8th king to wed the daughter of Bilalama, the ensi of Eshnunna.

There is only one contemporary monumental text extant for this king and another two known from later copies. A fragment of a stone statue has a votive inscription which invokes Ninisina and Damu to curse those who foster evil intent against it. Two later clay tablet copies of an inscription recording an unspecified object fashioned for the god Nanna were found by Leonard Woolley in a scribal school house in Ur. A tablet from the Enunmaḫ at Ur dated to the 14th year of Gungunum, (ca, 1868 BC to 1841 BC) of Larsa, after his conquest of the city, bears the seal impression of a servant of his. A tablet describes Iddin-Dagān’s fashioning of two copper festival statues for Ninlil, which were not delivered to Nippur until 117 years later by Enlil-bāni. Belles-lettres preserve the correspondence from Iddin-Dagān to his general Sîn-illat about Kakkulātum and the state of his troops, and from his general describing an ambush by the Martu (Amorites).

The continued fecundity of the land was ensured by the annual performance of the sacred marriage ritual in which the king impersonated Dumuzi-Ama-ušumgal-ana and a priestess substituted for the part of Inanna. According to the šir-namursaḡa, the hymn composed describing it in ten sections (Kiruḡu), this ceremony seems to have entailed the procession of male prostitutes, wise women, drummers, priestesses and priests bloodletting with swords, to the accompaniment of music, followed by offerings and sacrifices for the goddess Inanna, or Ninegala. The ceremony reached its climax with the assembly of the “black-headed people” around a dais specially erected for the occasion when the king and priestess copulated to gawking onlookers and is described thus:

She bathes (her) loins for the king. She bathes (her) loins for Iddin-Dagān. Holy Inanna bathes with soap, and sprinkles the floor with aromatic resin. The king then approached (her) loins with head raised high. Iddin-Dagān approached (her) loins with head raised high. Ama-ušumgal-ana lies down beside her and {caresses her holy thighs} (says:) "O my holy thighs! O my holy Inanna!." After the lady has made him rejoice with her holy thighs on the bed, after holy Inanna has made him rejoice with her holy thighs on the bed, she relaxes (?) with him on her bed: "Iddin-Dagān, you are indeed my beloved!"

There are four extant hymns addressed to this monarch, which, apart from the Sacred Marriage Hymn, include a praise poem to the king, a war song and a dedicatory prayer.

References

Iddin-Dagan Wikipedia