God god
In the Sumerian mythology and then the Assyria and the Babylonians, the god An (also An; (from Sumerian * An = heaven, nature)) is the god of heaven, the god of nature, the constable of the king, the gods of the gods, the supernatural and the jinn , and live in the highest area of the sky. It is believed that he has the power to judge those who commit crimes, and that he has created stars as an army to destroy the evil. Its features are royal tiara, most of which are adorned with two pairs of bull horns. In art it is sometimes described as a wolf (jackal). Who owns several couples, most important are Dewi Ki (earth), Nammu and Dewi Uras. With Ki he has a son, God Annuna. Together with Nammu he has children, God Enki and Ningikuga. With Uras he has Nin'insinna's son. According to legend, the heavens and the earth are one until An and Ki gave birth to God the Enlil, god of air, which divides the heavens and the earth into two. An and Ki are, in some texts, identified as siblings and children to God Anshar and Dewi Kishar. Ki later developed into Goddess Akkadian Dewi Antu.