Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld: Difference between revisions

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An important piece of [[Mesopotamian Mythology]], and one of the oldest written stories. The story is about the goddess Inanna (later known as [[I Have Many Names|Ishtar]]) going to visit her sister (or possibly alter-ego) Ereshkigal.
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| image = Ishtar descent to the Underworld BM ME K.162.jpg
| caption = Cuneiform tablet with the legend of Ishtar's descent to the Underworld, from the library of King Ashurbanipal (reigned 669-631 BC). This is [[The Abridged Series|the Akkadian version from the early second millennium BC]], not the original Sumerian version from the Third Dynasty of Ur
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An important piece of [[Mesopotamian Mythology]], and one of the oldest written stories., The'''''Inanna's storyDescent to the Netherworld''''' is about the goddess Inanna (later known as [[I Have Many Names|Ishtar]]) going to visit her sister (or possibly alter-ego) Ereshkigal.
 
A translation is [https://etcsl.orinst.ox.ac.uk/cgi-bin/etcsl.cgi?text=t.1.4.1# available at The ETCSL project, Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Oxford].
* [[Back From the Dead]]: Inanna, and later Dumuzi.
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{{tropelist}}
* [[Back Fromfrom the Dead]]: Inanna, and later Dumuzi.
* [[Crazy Prepared]]: Inanna anticipates problems, and instructs her priestess exactly what to do.
* [[Dark Is Not Evil]]: Ereshkigal seems mostly portrayed this way.
* [[Death Glare]]: Literally ''causes'' death.
* [[Evil Twin]]: Though it is not entirely clear which one is the ''evil'' one. See below.
* [[Expy]]: Ereshkigal is a [[Darker and Edgier]] version of her younger twin, Inanna. Some scholars believe they were at one point two aspects of the same goddess before becoming separate entities.
* [[Faux Action Girl]]: Inanna. {{spoiler|She has to be rescued by her priestess and a male deity. However, this may have been a gambit of sorts. She had already sent out word of her demise ahead of time to her most powerful family members, knowing that no one who was in the underworld could break free on their own.}}
* [[The Glorious War of Sisterly Rivalry]]
* [[I Lied]]: Inanna clearly was ''not'' there for the purpose of Gugalana's funerary rites. {{spoiler|She was there to nab Ereshkigal's underworld powers in the same way she grabbed Enki's ''me''.}}
* [[Just -So Story]]: Explains why we have winter and summer. {{spoiler|Inanna, the fertility goddess, lets everything go dormant when her beloved husband is down in the Underworld, and lets things grow in the summer when he's back and she's happy.}}
* [[The Long List]]: See "Oral Tradition".
* [[MacGuffin]]: Asu-shu-namir, the asexual creatures that help Inanna be brought back to life.
* [[My God, What Have I Done?]]: After Inanna's fury subsides and she realizes the horrible consequences of sickingsiccing demons after her husband, she weeps.
* [[Not So Different]]: Inanna and Ereshkigal. In fact, Ereshkigal might actually be a [[Darker and Edgier]] [[Expy]] of Inanna. This is further supported by the interesting thematic relation of the husbands of both women dying in the story as bookends, as well as the link-up between this story and the story where Gilgamesh kills Inanna's bull of heaven (the exact same bull that is the husband of Ereshkigal).
* [[Oral Tradition]]: The story was clearly this before it was recorded, as evidenced by the repetition.
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* [[Money, Dear Boy|Power, Dear Boy]]: Inanna. Her reason for going to Irkalla in the first place? [[World Domination|She wants dominion over the heavens, Earth, ''and'' the underworld, and everything there.]] She actually gets it, too, though not in the exact way she wanted it and at some great cost.
* [[The Powers That Be]]
* [[Rescue]]: Inanna anticipates problems, and instructs her priestess what to do. The priestess and another deity end up going to rescue Inanna.
* [[Screaming Birth]]: After having killed Inanna, Ereshkigal is implied to be in a sort of [[Freak -Out|crazed,]] [[Antagonist in Mourning|emptiness-]][[Angsty Surviving Twin|induced]] state of mental breakdown that resembles a very violent labor.
* [[Spin-Off]]: Takes place just after Gilgamesh and his friend kill [[Living MacGuffin|Gugalana (The Bull of Heaven)]] in [[The Epic of Gilgamesh]], but is considered its own separate story.
* [[Take Me Instead!]]: When Dumuzi is sent to the Underworld in Inanna's place, his sister begs Inanna to let her go instead.
* [[To Hell and Back]]: One of the oldest stories of this type; possibly even ''the'' [[Ur Example]]
* [[What the Hell, Hero?]]: Dumuzi gets one of these for ''not'' saliently mourning his wife.
* [[Yandere]]: Inanna has her husband, Tammuz/Dumuzid, dragged off to the Underworld for cheating on her while she was dead. [[The Epic of Gilgamesh|Gilgamesh]] even lists this as one of her defining character traits when refusing her affections, even citing what she did to Tammuz as an example. <ref> [http://en.[wikipedia.org/wiki/:Ishtar#Ishtar_in_the_Epic_of_GilgameshIshtar in the Epic of Gilgamesh|"There was Tammuz, the lover of your youth, for him you decreed wailing, year after year]]."</ref> - which [[Epileptic Trees|doesn't quite make sense if this myth is set after]] [[The Epic of Gilgamesh]].
* [[Zombie Apocalypse]]: Inanna uses this threat against the gatekeeper if he does not let her in.
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Classic Literature]]
[[Category:OralReligious TraditionWorks]]
[[Category:Inannas Descent To The Netherworld]]
[[Category:Literature]]
[[Category:Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld]]
[[Category:Older Than Dirt]]
[[Category:Mesopotamian Literature]]