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Babylonian Name Generator

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Babylonian Name Generator

Generate authentic Babylonian names — the personal names of the ancient Babylonian civilisation, which produced the Code of Hammurabi, the Epic of Gilgamesh, and the Hanging Gardens of Babylon. The Babylonians dominated Mesopotamia across several great periods: the Old Babylonian Empire (c. 1894–1595 BCE), the Kassite period, the Neo-Babylonian Empire (626–539 BCE) of Nebuchadnezzar II, and the Achaemenid period. They spoke Babylonian Akkadian and were renowned throughout the ancient world for their astronomy, mathematics, and literature. Babylonian names are among the richest in the ancient record, drawn from thousands of cuneiform tablets, economic documents, royal inscriptions, and literary works. Theophoric names — names invoking the Babylonian gods — dominate: Marduk (chief deity of Babylon), Nabu (god of writing, son of Marduk), Ishtar (goddess of love and war), Nergal (underworld deity), Shamash (sun god), Sin (moon god), and many others. Common name patterns are '[god]-apla-iddina' (god gave a son), '[god]-bel-usur' (god protect the lord), '[god]-mukin-zeri' (god has founded the seed), and '[god]-shum-iddina' (god gave a name). Female names often invoke Ishtar, Gula, and Belet (Lady). This generator produces authentic Babylonian personal names from the full span of Babylonian civilisation.

Babylonian Name

Deemethresu
Nebo-zucipunu
Sin
Shu-Turul
Maruduk-mu-damik

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About the Babylonian Name Generator

The Babylonian Name Generator produces authentic personal names from ancient Babylon — one of the ancient world's greatest and most enduring civilisations. Babylon dominated southern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) across several great periods: the Old Babylonian Empire under Hammurabi (c. 1894–1595 BCE), the Kassite Dynasty (c. 1595–1155 BCE), and the Neo-Babylonian Empire of Nebuchadnezzar II (626–539 BCE). Names are drawn from the vast documentary record preserved on cuneiform tablets: royal inscriptions, legal contracts, astronomical diaries, economic records, and literary compositions.

Babylonian personal names are among the most extensively documented in the ancient world. The city of Babylon housed several major archives, and the recovery of tens of thousands of cuneiform tablets from sites including Babylon, Nippur, Ur, and Sippar has given scholars an extraordinarily detailed picture of naming across all social classes. Theophoric names invoking the Babylonian gods dominate: Marduk (chief deity and patron of Babylon), Nabu (god of writing, son of Marduk), Shamash (sun god), Sin (moon god), Ishtar (goddess of love and war), Nergal (underworld deity), and Adad (storm god).

Common Babylonian name patterns include "[God]-apla-iddina" ([God] has given an heir, e.g., Marduk-apla-iddina, the biblical Merodach-baladan), "[God]-mukin-zeri" ([God] has established the lineage), "[God]-bel-usur" ([God] protect the lord), "[God]-nasir" ([God] protects), and "[God]-shum-iddina" ([God] has given a name). Female names invoke goddesses including Belet (the lady), Ishtar, Gula, and Tashmitum (consort of Nabu).

Babylonian Civilisation and the Age of Hammurabi

Hammurabi (r. 1792–1750 BCE), the sixth king of the Old Babylonian Empire, is the most famous Babylonian ruler — his Law Code, carved on a basalt stele now in the Louvre, represents one of antiquity's greatest codifications of civil and criminal law. The prologue declares that Hammurabi was called "to bring about the rule of righteousness in the land, to destroy the wicked and the evil-doers." Under Hammurabi, Babylon became the dominant power in Mesopotamia and a cultural centre whose literary and religious traditions influenced the ancient world for over a thousand years.

The Murašu Archive

The Murašu archive from Nippur (c. 454–404 BCE) is one of the richest sources for Babylonian personal names. The Murašu family were entrepreneurs who managed agricultural estates in the Persian-controlled Babylonian heartland. Their business records preserve hundreds of names from a remarkable cross-section of society: Babylonians, Persians, Egyptians, Jews (like the biblical name Hananiah), and various other peoples who had settled in Babylon. This archive captures the cosmopolitan nature of late Babylonian society and provides authentic names from the end of Babylonian civilisation.

Nebuchadnezzar and the Exile

Nebuchadnezzar II (Nabu-kudurri-usur II, "Nabu has protected his heir," 604–562 BCE) is the most famous Neo-Babylonian ruler — the king who destroyed the First Temple in Jerusalem in 586 BCE, deported the Jews to Babylon, and appears extensively in the books of Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Daniel. His name combines the divine patron Nabu with kudurri (heir) and usur (protect). The Babylonian Captivity he created became formative for Jewish monotheism, and through the biblical books, Babylonian names like Bel-shar-uzur (Belshazzar), Nabu-shum-iskun, and even Marduk became familiar to the Western world.

How to Use Babylonian Names

  • Create authentic ancient Babylonian characters for historical fiction set in Mesopotamia from Hammurabi to Nebuchadnezzar
  • Name NPCs for tabletop RPGs set in ancient Babylon, Mesopotamian mythology, or sword-and-sorcery campaigns
  • Build characters for games or interactive fiction covering the Babylonian Empire periods
  • Generate names for worldbuilding projects drawing on ancient Mesopotamian religion, astronomy, and culture
  • Create characters for biblical-era fiction featuring the Babylonian Captivity and the Neo-Babylonian Empire
  • Research historical Babylonian naming patterns for academic projects, educational materials, or museum interpretations

Famous Babylonian Names

Hammurabi

Hammurabi — the lawgiver-king whose name probably combines an Amorite divine element (Hammu, a divine name) with the Akkadian rabi (great) — created the most famous legal code of antiquity. The 282 laws of the Code of Hammurabi cover property rights, trade, family law, wages, and professional standards with remarkable sophistication. The carved stele shows Hammurabi receiving the laws from the sun god Shamash. Hammurabi's name has become synonymous with ancient law and civilisation, making it one of the most recognised proper names from the ancient world.

Gilgamesh

Gilgamesh — king of Uruk in the Sumerian king list, protagonist of the world's oldest surviving epic poem — bears a name of debated etymology, possibly Sumerian for "the old man who is still a young man." The Epic of Gilgamesh, preserved in Akkadian on twelve tablets in Ashurbanipal's library, tells of his friendship with Enkidu, his quests for glory and immortality, and his encounter with the Babylonian flood story (a parallel to the later Noah narrative). Though Sumerian in origin, Gilgamesh became central to Babylonian literature and his name was well known across the ancient Near East.

Tiamat

Tiamat — the primordial salt-water ocean goddess and chaos dragon of the Babylonian creation myth Enuma Elish — bears a name derived from the Akkadian tâmtu (sea). In the myth, Tiamat is slain by the god Marduk, whose body is used to form the heavens and earth in a cosmic act of creation. Tiamat is one of the most influential mythological figures from ancient Babylon — her battle with Marduk appears to have influenced later dragon-slaying myths across the Near East and possibly the biblical imagery of God subduing the sea monster Leviathan. Her name has passed into modern fantasy through D&D's Tiamat.

Example Babylonian Names

Marduk-apla-iddina Tiamat Nabu-kudurri-usur Sarpanitum Hammurabi Damkina Sin-muballit Belet-sunu Nabu-nasir Ishtar-gamelat

Frequently Asked Questions

Who was Nebuchadnezzar II and what does his name mean? +
Nebuchadnezzar II (Nabu-kudurri-usur II, "Nabu has protected his heir," r. 604–562 BCE) was the most powerful ruler of the Neo-Babylonian Empire, known for destroying the First Temple in Jerusalem in 586 BCE, deporting the Jewish population to Babylon (the "Babylonian Captivity"), and constructing the fabled Hanging Gardens of Babylon (one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, though its existence is disputed). His name breaks down as Nabu (the scribal god) + kudurri (heir/boundary stone) + usur (protect). It appears in the Bible as Nebuchadnezzar and Nebuchadrezzar. He is one of the best-documented rulers of the ancient world.
What was the Code of Hammurabi? +
The Code of Hammurabi (c. 1754 BCE) is one of the oldest and best-preserved law codes in the ancient world, carved on a 2.25-metre basalt stele now in the Louvre in Paris. Hammurabi (r. 1792–1750 BCE), the sixth king of the Old Babylonian Empire, promulgated 282 laws covering property rights, trade, family law, wages, professional standards, and penalties for crimes. The prologue declares Hammurabi was called "to bring about the rule of righteousness in the land, to destroy the wicked and the evil-doers." The code includes the famous lex talionis principle ("an eye for an eye"), though actual Babylonian legal practice was more nuanced. It significantly influenced later Near Eastern and biblical law.
What were the Hanging Gardens of Babylon? +
The Hanging Gardens of Babylon — one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World — were supposedly a remarkable feat of engineering: ascending terraces of gardens irrigated with water pumped up from the Euphrates River, said to have been built by Nebuchadnezzar II for his Median wife Amytis, who missed her green mountainous homeland in the flat Babylonian plain. However, no Babylonian texts mention the gardens, and the ancient descriptions come from Greek sources writing centuries later. Some scholars believe the Hanging Gardens may have been located in Nineveh rather than Babylon, or may be a legendary conflation of various Babylonian garden architecture. The mystery of their existence remains unresolved.
What is the Epic of Gilgamesh and why is it important? +
The Epic of Gilgamesh is the world's oldest surviving major literary work, composed in Akkadian/Babylonian and preserved on twelve clay tablets found in Ashurbanipal's library at Nineveh. It tells of Gilgamesh, the semi-divine king of Uruk, his friendship with the wild man Enkidu, their heroic adventures, Enkidu's death, and Gilgamesh's subsequent quest for immortality. The epic contains a flood narrative — in which the Babylonian flood hero Utnapishtim (called Atrahasis in an older version) survives a divine flood on a great boat with animals — that is strikingly similar to the later biblical account of Noah. The Epic of Gilgamesh was widely known across the ancient Near East and influenced literary traditions from Greece to Israel.
Can I use Babylonian names for worldbuilding and fantasy? +
Babylonian names are excellent for fantasy worldbuilding, particularly for empires, city-states, or cultures with an ancient Near Eastern flavour. The long, compound theophoric names (Marduk-apla-iddina, Nabu-mukin-zeri, Shamash-nasir) have an impressive, archaic sound perfect for ancient or high fantasy settings. Babylonian mythology — featuring the creation battle between Marduk and Tiamat, the flood hero Utnapishtim, the gods Ishtar and Nergal, and the underworld goddess Ereshkigal — provides rich source material for fantasy religions and cosmologies. Tiamat, the Babylonian chaos dragon, has already passed directly into D&D mythology.
Is this generator accessible via API? +
Yes — FunGenerators provides API access for programmatic generation of Babylonian names, suitable for applications, games, and other automated use cases. Visit the API documentation on this site for authentication details and usage parameters.