Eanna
2018-01-25T10:49:31-04:00
George 2004 67-68 number 75
RLAss 14 457-486
Wikipedia (English) Eanna
ANE
Pleiades
The temple of the god Anu and the goddess Ištar at Uruk. The Sumerian ceremonial name Eanna means "House of Heaven."
Eanna
Eanna
The temple of the god Anu and the goddess Ištar at Uruk. The Sumerian ceremonial name Eanna means "House of Heaven."
2nd Millennium BCE (2000-1000 BCE)
The second millennium BCE as defined at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2nd_millennium_BC [[-2000, -1000]]
Neo-Assyrian/Babylonian Middle East (720–540 BC)
ME [[-720,-540]]
OSM Node 3199513629
2024-01-22T23:12:43-04:00
Hellenistic Central Asia
As defined by Sören Stark [[-330, -100]]
3rd millennium BC (3000-2000 BCE)
The 3rd millennium BC spans the Early to Middle Bronze Age. As described at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3rd_millennium_BC. [[-3000, -2000]]
Achaemenid Middle East (540–330 BC)
ME [[-540, -330]]
OSM location of the Eanna district
ANE
OpenStreetMap (Node 3199513629, version 1, osm:changeset=26944834, 2014-11-22T04:10:52Z)
Location based on OpenStreetMap
-100
-3000
George 2004 67-68 number 75
2018-01-25T10:49:29-04:00
ANE
Pleiades
Eanna
-100
-3000
Eanna
temple
A temple as defined by the Getty Art and Architecture Thesaurus term 300007595: "Buildings housing places devoted to the worship of a deity or deities. In the strictest sense, it refers to the dwelling place of a deity, and thus often houses a cult image. In modern usage a temple is generally a structure, but it was originally derived from the Latin "templum" and historically has referred to an uncovered place affording a view of the surrounding region. For Christian or Islamic religious buildings the terms "churches" or "mosques" are generally used, but an exception is that "temples" is used for Protestant, as opposed to Roman Catholic, places of worship in France and some French-speaking regions.