The Nature of the New Year Festival in Mesopotamia
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.66026/q1kvks15Keywords:
Nature of the festival, New Year, Mesopotamia, Akitu.Abstract
This research, titled "The Nature of the New Year Festival in Mesopotamia," is a scientific historical study that sheds light on the nature of the New Year festival in Mesopotamia as a socio-natural phenomenon. This festival was inherently linked to the organization of time, political authority, and religious decrees. The primary objective of the study is to elucidate the emergence, evolution, and continuity of the festival's rituals across various historical eras. It asserts that the persistence of this festival over millennia testifies to its cultural and religious significance in Mesopotamia and its role in shaping the region's social and religious identity.The study aims to demonstrate the nature of the New Year, particularly the Akitu festival, and its role as a mechanism for renewing royal authority, fostering social cohesion, and revitalizing the cosmic order from religious and symbolic perspectives. Based on an examination of the sources, the study concludes that the New Year festival was the product of natural and religious occurrences, as well as an intellectual and political system. It was observed continuously throughout all historical epochs, with the entire society participating without distinction, under the leadership of the king.The research employs a historical-analytical methodology and is structured into three main sections:The introduction and emergence of Akitu.The New Year festival throughout historical eras.The specific days and rituals of the festival.
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