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Giparu information


Stylized gipar reed mat on Susa redware from Jemdat Nasr Period

Giparu or, more correctly,[citation needed] gipar (Sumerian: ĝipar, Akkadian: gipāru) is a central concept of both the Sumerian belief system and temple architecture. Typically translated as 'cloister', the actual meaning of gipar includes multiple linked concepts. The giparu was originally a woven reed mat used as wedding bed.[1] Its symbolic meaning expanded to include the idea of the generative power of fertility to create and sustain life. In this sense the giparu expressed multiple ideas of abundance, the storehouse containing abundance, as well as a point of union with the generative power itself. In its role as point of union, the giparu was residence of the en, where the hierosgamos was consummated. Often the giparu temple was built over a giparu mat embedded in the structure. For this reason, cloister, connoting the residence of a priest, is given as the primary definition (ePSD).[2]

  1. ^ Charvát p87
  2. ^ ePSD

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Giparu or, more correctly,[citation needed] gipar (Sumerian: ĝipar, Akkadian: gipāru) is a central concept of both the Sumerian belief system and temple...

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rediscovered by modern archaeology in 1927, when Sir Leonard Wooley excavated the Giparu in the ancient city of Ur and found an alabaster disk with her name, association...

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translation of the Babylonian gushure iṣ erini, 'cedar beams', or the Assyrian giparu, 'reeds'. The Aramaic Targum Onkelos, considered by many Jews to be an authoritative...

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courtyards, and are often associated with shrines. For instance, the so-called "giparu" (Sumerian: e₂gi₆-par₄-ku₃) at Ur where the Moon god Nanna's priestesses...

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Ningal

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Ningal. In Harran Ningal was worshiped in a shrine known under the name giparu. Andrew R. George assumes it was located in the Eḫulḫul, the temple of Sin...

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