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Balag

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Balag
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In Mesopotamia, a balag (or balaĝ) refers both to a Sumerian religious literary genre and also to a closely associated musical instrument. In Mesopotamian religion, Balag prayers were sung by a Gala priest as ritual acts were performed around the instrument. Sometimes the instrument itself was regarded as a minor deity,[1][2] and every balag had a proper name.[3] Despite the importance of the instrument in the rituals, its identity is disputed,[4] but is generally thought to be either a drum or a string instrument such as a lyre. The purpose of the ritual involving this prayer and instrument was to soothe the local deity with pleasing sounds,[5] while lamenting what may happen to the city should the god decide to abandon it.[6] Balags were used from the Old Babylonian period to the Seleucid Empire.[7]

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Standing male worshiper, Early Dynastic I-II ca. 2900–2600 BCE, Mesopotamia, Metropolitan Museum of Art
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As a literary genre, the balag was written in the cuneiform script and sung by the Gala priest in a dialect of Sumerian called Emesal (𒅴𒊩 eme-sal).[8][9] Each balag is composed for a particular god.[7]

The precursor to the balag was the City Lament, a type of prayer that was recited when temples were destroyed and rebuilt.[7] The balag instrument was known to accompany the city lament.[7] Over time, as city laments became associated with scribal schools, the balag was adapted for many different ritual uses.[7] As the city lament became more distant from ritual activity, the balag emerged as a distinct literary genre.[7]

Despite its importance in the rituals, the balag instrument's exact nature is debated.[4][10] Some scholars regard it as a drum, others a stringed instrument such as a lyre. Others have claimed it is both of these at once, and another theory suggests the word balag started out referring to a lyre, but over the period of several millennia, it came to mean a drum.[11] There were earlier suggestions that it was a bell.[12]

Every balag had a proper name.[3] For example, the names of two balags commissioned by Gudea included ‘Great Dragon of the Land' and 'Lady as Exalted as Heaven'.[13]

The word was loaned into Syriac as p(ə)laggā (Syriac: ܦܠܓܐ), referring to a type of drum.

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