Puruli ( EZEN Puruliyas ) was a Hattian spring festival, held at Nerik , dedicated to the earth goddess Hannahanna , who is married to a new king.
7-634: The central ritual of the Puruli festival is dedicated to the destruction of the dragon Illuyanka by the storm god Teshub . The corresponding Assyrian festival is the Akitu of the Enuma Elish . Also compared are the Canaanite Poem of Baal and Psalms 93 and 29 . Biblical Hannah has been suggested as a Hebrew version of Hannahanna. This article relating to a myth or legend from
14-506: Is found in Catalogue des Textes Hittites 321, which gives two consecutive versions. Illuyanka is probably a compound, consisting of two words for "snake", Proto-Indo-European *h₁illu- and *h₂engʷeh₂- . The same compound members, inverted, appear in Latin anguilla "eel". The *h₁illu- word is cognate to English eel , and *h₂engʷeh₂ to Sanskrit ahi. In the first version,
21-588: Is illustrated on a relief which was discovered at Malatya (dating from 1050-850 BC) and is on display in the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations in Ankara , Turkey. The Hittite texts were introduced in 1930 by W. Porzig, who first drew parallels between Teshub's battle against Illuyanka and the battle of the sky god Zeus against serpent-like Typhon , told in Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheke (I.6.3);
28-533: The Storm God and Illuyanka fight, and the serpent wins. The Storm God then goes to the Hattian goddess Inaras for advice. Having promised to sleep with a mortal named Hupasiyas in return for his help, she devises a trap for the dragon. She goes to him with large quantities of food and drink and entices him to drink his fill. Once drunk, the dragon is bound by Hupasiyas with a rope. Then the Storm God appears with
35-416: The Storm God's eyes and heart as a wedding gift and he does so. His eyes and heart restored, the Storm God goes to face the dragon Illuyanka once more. At the point of vanquishing the dragon, the Storm God's son finds out about the battle and realizes that he had been used for this purpose. He demands that his father take his life along with Illuyanka's and so Teshub kills them both. A version of this narrative
42-612: The ancient Middle East is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Illuyanka In Hittite mythology , Illuyanka was a serpentine dragon slain by Tarḫunz ( IM ), the Hittite incarnation of the Hurrian god of sky and storm. It is known from Hittite cuneiform tablets found at Çorum-Boğazköy, the former Hittite capital Hattusa . The contest is a ritual of the Hattian spring festival of Puruli . The myth
49-478: The other gods and kills the dragon. In the second version, after the two gods fight and the Hurrian Storm God Teshub loses, Illuyanka takes the Storm God's eyes and heart. To avenge himself upon the dragon, the Storm God marries the daughter of a poor man. They have a son Sarruma, who grows up and marries the daughter of the dragon Illuyanka. The Storm God tells his son to ask for the return of
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