The demon can be spotted at the bottom of the image, horns and face to the left and legs to the right- See also the researcher’s drawing below.
Ishtartv.com
- miragenews.com
DECEMBER 20, 2019
assyriology
A 2,700-year-old cuneiform tablet
from ancient Iraq describing medical treatments has suddenly revealed a secret
– a hitherto overlooked drawing of the demon that the ancient Assyrians thought
caused epilepsy. It is the earliest illustration of a demon that can be
associated with epilepsy.
When Assyriologist Troels Pank
Arbøll was studying a 2,700-year-old cuneiform tablet with ancient medical
treatments at the Vorderasiatisches Museum in Berlin four years ago, he
accidentally discovered a partially damaged drawing on the reverse of the
tablet. A drawing that, on closer inspection, turned out to be a demon with
horns, tails and a snake’s tongue which, according to the text, was the cause
of the dreaded illness Bennu-epilepsy.
Assyria
Assyria was an ancient kingdom
and later empire on the river Tigris in the fertile part of present-day
northern Iraq. Assyria was named after the city of Assur, located approximately
100 km south of the Iraqi city of Mosul, as well as the main deity Ashur.
Assyria is one of the earliest civilisations, and the history of ancient
Assyria dates from approximately 2000 to 612 BCE.
Cuneiform
The text, which Troels Pank
Arbøll has studied, is written in a dialect of the now extinct Semitic language
Akkadian. It was written in cuneiform, where the signs represent entire words
as well as sounds in a system reminiscent of Egyptian hieroglyphs. They were
pressed into clay tablets with a reed stylus. Therefore, texts may be subject
to interpretation because the signs can be ambiguous.
Troels Pank Arbøll has read and
interpreted the original clay tablet at the Vorderasiatisches Museum in Berlin.
It was here that he discovered the hitherto unnoticed drawing of the demon.
“We have known for a long time
that the Assyrians and Babylonians regarded diseases as phenomena that were
caused by gods, demons or witchcraft. And healers were responsible for
expelling these supernatural forces and the medical symptoms they caused with
drugs, rituals or incantations. But this is the first time that we have managed
to connect one of the very rare illustrations of demons in the medical texts
with the specific disease epilepsy, which the Assyrians and Babylonians called
Bennu, explains postdoc Troels Pank Arbøll. He adds:
“Drawings of supernatural powers
are very rare on cuneiform tablets with magical and medical treatments. When
there is a drawing, it usually depicts one of the figures that the healers used
in their rituals, not the demon itself. But here we have a presentation of an epilepsy
demon as the healer who wrote the text must have imagined it.
Lunacy through history
Bennu-epilepsy, which is one of
the diseases described in the 2,700-year-old text, was feared in ancient Iraq;
symptoms included seizures, loss of consciousness or sanity, and, in some
cases, the patients cried out like a goat.
“The text also states that the
demon acted on behalf of the lunar god Sîn when it inflicted a person with
epilepsy. So the Assyrians and Babylonians believed that there was a connection
between the moon, epilepsy and insanity. In the following millennia, this idea
became widespread, also in our part of the world, and it can still be detected
in the English word ‘lunacy’. In other words, the views on illness, diagnoses
and treatments in the earliest civilisations have had a significant impact on
later perceptions of illness, even in recent history, “says Troels Pank Arbøll.
Troels Pank Arbøll has recently
published an article about his findings in Journal des Médecines Cunéiformes.
His research is supported by the Edubba Foundation.
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