Ludingirra was a considerable Sumerian-Ianguage poet of Babylon,
with a terminus ante quern in the reign of Hammurabi’s successor
Samsuiluna, thus ca. 1700 b.c.e. He rates as the author of two dirges or
elegies over the deaths of his father and wife respectively, which Kramer
(1963: 208-217) discovered in (he Pushkin Museum in Moscow in 1957
and subsequently edited. Ludingirra is also credited with a poem known
(in Sa nagba imuru or Arma Virumque fashion) as Lii-kas^-e-lugal-la
har-ra-an-na gin-na ‘Royal courier, begin the journey!’, preserved entire
and edited from several tablet pieces by Civil (1964). The poet instructs
the messenger to deliver greetings to his mother in Nippur, adding that “if
you do not know my mother, I shall give you some signs”. Her name is
Sat-Istar; instead of street directions Ludingirra then pours out in 42 lines
an exaltation of his mother in extravagant poetic similes (grouped into
five “signs”), concluding with a two-line clincher: “When, with the help
of the signs I have given, you stand in her luminous presence, say to her:
‘Ludingirra your beloved son greets you’!”
Ludingirra was a considerable Sumerian-Ianguage poet of Babylon,
with a terminus ante quern in the reign of Hammurabi’s successor
Samsuiluna, thus ca. 1700 b.c.e. He rates as the author of two dirges or
elegies over the deaths of his father and wife respectively, which Kramer
(1963: 208-217) discovered in (he Pushkin Museum in Moscow in 1957
and subsequently edited. Ludingirra is also credited with a poem known
(in Sa nagba imuru or Arma Virumque fashion) as Lii-kas^-e-lugal-la
har-ra-an-na gin-na ‘Royal courier, begin the journey!’, preserved entire
and edited from several tablet pieces by Civil (1964). The poet instructs
the messenger to deliver greetings to his mother in Nippur, adding that “if
you do not know my mother, I shall give you some signs”. Her name is
Sat-Istar; instead of street directions Ludingirra then pours out in 42 lines
an exaltation of his mother in extravagant poetic similes (grouped into
five “signs”), concluding with a two-line clincher: “When, with the help
of the signs I have given, you stand in her luminous presence, say to her:
‘Ludingirra your beloved son greets you’!”
Primary Language | English |
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Journal Section | Research Article |
Authors | |
Publication Date | April 1, 1996 |
Published in Issue | Year 1996 |