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Liturgical Lament & the Soothing of the God's Heart

Grief made into ritual: the priest sings the god's anger to sleep before it can fall on the city.

Beyond the historical city-laments, Mesopotamia developed a standing liturgy of lament: the balag and ershemma songs, performed by a special priest (the gala) in a distinct dialect (Emesal), whose purpose was to soothe the heart of an angry god before his wrath could fall. These were sung especially when a temple was to be torn down for rebuilding — a dangerous moment when the god's house was disturbed — to placate the deity in advance. The same lamenting voice that mourned fallen cities was thus institutionalized as a ritual instrument: grief deployed deliberately to keep catastrophe at bay.

Key passages(15)

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An elegy on the death of Nannaya

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The lament for Sumer and Urim

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An elegy on the death of Nawirtum

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A šir-namšub to Nisaba (Nisaba B)

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Ninĝišzida's journey to the nether world

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