Normal view MARC view

Entry Personal Name

Number of records used in: 1

001 - CONTROL NUMBER

  • control field: 103959

003 - CONTROL NUMBER IDENTIFIER

  • control field: DLC

005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION

  • control field: 20200604174815.0

008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS

  • fixed length control field: 190722n| azannaabn |b aaa c

010 ## - LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CONTROL NUMBER

  • LC control number: no2019107326
  • Canceled/invalid LC control number: sh2004001937

035 ## - SYSTEM CONTROL NUMBER

  • System control number: (OCoLC)oca12282187

040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE

  • Original cataloging agency: WaU
  • Language of cataloging: eng
  • Description conventions: rda
  • Transcribing agency: WaU
  • Modifying agency: DLC

100 0# - HEADING--PERSONAL NAME

  • Personal name: Aššur
  • Titles and other words associated with a name: (Assyrian deity)

368 ## - OTHER ATTRIBUTES OF PERSON OR CORPORATE BODY

  • Other designation: Assyrian deity

368 ## - OTHER ATTRIBUTES OF PERSON OR CORPORATE BODY

  • Other designation: Gods, Assyro-Babylonian
  • Source: lcsh

370 ## - ASSOCIATED PLACE

  • Associated country: Assyria
  • Source of term: naf

375 ## - GENDER

  • Gender: Males
  • Source of term: lcdgt

400 0# - SEE FROM TRACING--PERSONAL NAME

  • Personal name: Ashur
  • Titles and other words associated with a name: (Assyrian deity)

400 0# - SEE FROM TRACING--PERSONAL NAME

  • Personal name: آشور
  • Titles and other words associated with a name: (Assyrian deity)

400 0# - SEE FROM TRACING--PERSONAL NAME

  • Personal name: Ашшур
  • Titles and other words associated with a name: (Assyrian deity)

400 0# - SEE FROM TRACING--PERSONAL NAME

  • Personal name: Ashshur
  • Titles and other words associated with a name: (Assyrian deity)

670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND

  • Source citation: Vera Chamaza, Galo W. Die Omnipotenz Aššurs, 2002.

670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND

  • Source citation: Driel, G. van. The cult of Aššur, 1969.

670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND

  • Source citation: Greenwood, Kyle R. Then Aššur will hear his prayers, 2008, via ProQuest, viewed July 22, 2019:
  • Information found: leaf 2 (the deity Aššur)

670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND

  • Source citation: Encyclopædia Britannica online, July 22, 2019
  • Information found: (Ashur, Mesopotamian deity; Ashur, in Mesopotamian religion, city god of Ashur and national god of Assyria. In the beginning he was perhaps only a local deity of the city that shared his name. From about 1800 BC onward, however, there appear to have been strong tendencies to identify him with the Sumerian Enlil (Akkadian: Bel), while under the Assyrian king Sargon II (reigned 721-705 BC), there were tendencies to identify Ashur with Anshar, the father of An (Akkadian: Anu) in the creation myth. The Assyrians believed that he granted rule over Assyria and supported Assyrian arms against enemies; detailed written reports from the Assyrian kings about their campaigns were even submitted to him. He appears a mere personification of the interests of Assyria as a political entity, with little character of his own)
  • Uniform Resource Identifier: https://www.britannica.com/topic/Ashur-Mesopotamian-deity

670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND

  • Source citation: Wikipedia, July 22, 2019:
  • Information found: Ashur (god) (Ashur (also, Assur, Aššur) is an East Semitic god, and the head of the Assyrian pantheon in Mesopotamian religion; Aššur was a deified form of the city of Assur, which dates from the mid 3rd millennium BC and was the capital of the Old Assyrian kingdom; he later came to be regarded as the Assyrian equivalent of Enlil, the chief god of Nippur, which was the most important god of the southern pantheon from the early 3rd millennium BC until Hammurabi founded an empire based in Babylon in the mid-18th century BC, after which Marduk replaced Enlil as the chief god in the south. In the north, Ashur absorbed Enlil's wife Ninlil (as the Assyrian goddess Mullissu) and his sons Ninurta and Zababa--this process began around the 14th century BC and continued down to the 7th century) Arabic page (آشور = Āshūr) Russian page (Ашшур = Ashshur)

670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND

  • Source citation: Ancient history encyclopedia, via WWW, July 22, 2019
  • Information found: (Assur (also Ashur, Anshar) is the god of the Assyrians who was elevated from a local deity of the city of Ashur to the supreme god of the Assyrian pantheon; Assur's family and history are modeled on the Sumerian Anu and Enlil and the Babylonian Marduk; his power and attributes mirror Anu's, Enlil's, and Marduk's as do details of his family: Assur's wife is Ninlil (Enlil's wife) and his son is Nabu (Marduk's son). Assur had no actual history of his own, such as those created for Sumerian and Babylonian gods but borrowed from these other myths to create a supreme deity whose worship, at its height, was almost monotheistic)
  • Uniform Resource Identifier: https://www.ancient.eu/assur/

670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND

  • Source citation: Iraq, spring, 1983, via JSTOR, viewed July 22, 2019:
  • Information found: page 82 (The god Aššur; state god of Assyria; Assyrian god without other cult centres, except when Assyrians established them)
  • Uniform Resource Identifier: https://www.jstor.org/stable/4200181

670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND

  • Source citation: The Oxford classical dictionary, 1996
  • Information found: (Assyria 1. Land of the patron god Aššur)

942 ## - KOHA INTERNAL USE

  • Koha auth type: PERSO_NAME

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