Danger. It is an eight-pointed star
This is the Sumerian cuneiform sign meaning "heaven" or "god" Dingir. It is an eight-pointed star and is often found inscribed near a figure on a stele or cylinder seal to designate the figure's divine status. Hence, the association of the “star” with the “god” goes back to one of the oldest civilizations on Earth.
“An” in Sumerian, later known as “Anu, Anu” in Akkadian, was the supreme god and “first mover of creation,” and was personified by the sky or its manifestation. He is the first, most remote and exalted origin (Supreme Progenitor), from whom a theological conception was formed as the God of heaven in his “exalted or transcendent being or ambiguity.” In some theological systems, it was believed that all gods descend from An and his wife or consort, Ki.
However, Anu described himself as a descendant of various archetypal beings in various texts (lists of gods, incantations, etc.), while Enlil often had his own family tree that was independent of Anu's. While Anu has been described as a far-off god, at least by the time of the earliest written records, the main god in terms of actual worship was Enlil. Thus Anu's superiority was "always more or less nominal or symbolic" according to Wilfred Lambert. “Luludanito”, a multi-colored stone (red, white and black), was associated with Anu. Its secret or symbolic number is “60”, which is considered the most complete number in the Sumerian sexagesimal system.
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