Fun Generators
Login

Sumerian Name Generator

Fun Generators
Toggle sidebar

Sumerian Name Generator

Generate authentic Sumerian names — the personal names of the ancient Sumerians, the world's first known civilisation, which flourished in southern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) from approximately 4500 BCE to 1900 BCE. The Sumerians invented writing (cuneiform script), created the first cities (Ur, Uruk, Nippur, Eridu, Lagash), developed the earliest legal codes, and produced the world's oldest known literature — the Epic of Gilgamesh and the Descent of Inanna. Sumerian personal names were overwhelmingly theophoric — composed with divine names or expressions of devotion to the gods. The Sumerian pantheon was vast: Enlil (lord of wind), Enki (lord of earth and wisdom), Inanna (queen of heaven, goddess of love and war), Nanna (moon god), Utu (sun god), Ninhursag (mother goddess), Ereshkigal (queen of the underworld), and many others. Names like Ur-Nammu (servant of Nammu), Gudea (who is a god?), Gilgamesh (the ancestor is a hero), Eanatum (worthy of the heavens), Lipit-Ishtar (touch of Ishtar), and Shulgi (the good king of Sumer) are attested in inscriptions. Female names reference the great goddesses — Ninsun (mother of Gilgamesh, lady of the wild cows), Inanna, Ninhursag — and female rulers like Kug-Bau, the only woman listed as a king in the Sumerian King List. Many names also reflect the Sumerian concept of kingship and divine favour.

Sumerian Name

Lu-amar-suenaka
An
Zuzu
Ishtup-sin
Kalumum

Your History

Your history is saved in your browser only. Nothing is ever sent to our servers.

About the Sumerian Name Generator

The Sumerian Name Generator produces authentic names of the ancient Sumerians, the world's first known civilisation, which flourished in southern Mesopotamia (the region between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in modern Iraq) from approximately 4500 BCE to 1900 BCE. The Sumerians invented writing (cuneiform script, c. 3400 BCE), established the world's first cities (Ur, Uruk, Nippur, Eridu, Lagash, Kish), developed the earliest legal codes, created complex bureaucratic administration, and produced the world's oldest surviving literature.

Sumerian personal names are known from an extraordinary archive of clay tablets — hundreds of thousands of cuneiform documents recording everything from royal decrees and temple accounts to private letters and school exercises. This remarkable textual survival gives us direct access to Sumerian naming practices across a period of over two thousand years.

Sumerian names are primarily theophoric — expressing the individual's relationship with the divine — and reflect the sophisticated polytheistic theology of ancient Mesopotamia, with its vast pantheon of sky gods, earth deities, city patrons, and underworld powers.

Sumerian Naming Traditions

Theophoric Names

Sumerian names incorporate the names of the great gods: Enlil (lord of wind and storms, king of gods), Enki (lord of earth and wisdom, patron of scribes), Inanna (queen of heaven, goddess of love and war — the most important Sumerian goddess), Nanna (moon god), Utu (sun god), Ninhursag (the mother goddess, lady of the sacred mountain), and Ereshkigal (queen of the underworld). Names like Ur-Nammu (servant of Nammu), Gudea (who is a god?), Lipit-Ishtar (touch of Ishtar), and Iddin-Dagan (Dagan has given) illustrate this pattern.

Royal and Legendary Names

The Sumerian King List — an ancient document recording the kings of Sumer from the mythological antediluvian period to the historical era — preserves remarkable names. The antediluvian kings (who ruled for tens of thousands of years before the flood) include Alulim, Alalngar, Enmenlu, and Ziusudra (the Sumerian Noah). Historical kings include the famous Gilgamesh (the hero of the world's oldest literary epic), Eanatum (the first warrior king to unite Sumer), Sargon of Akkad (the first empire-builder), and Ur-Nammu (the founder of the Third Dynasty of Ur, who created one of humanity's earliest law codes).

Female Sumerian names include legendary figures like En-hedu-anna — daughter of Sargon of Akkad, the world's first known author (she wrote hymns to Inanna around 2285–2250 BCE, making her the earliest named poet in human history) — and Puabi, a Sumerian queen of Ur whose extraordinarily rich burial (discovered by Leonard Woolley in the 1920s) included golden headdresses, lyres, and the remains of courtiers who died alongside her.

How to Use These Names

  • Create characters for the Epic of Gilgamesh — the world's oldest literary narrative, a story of friendship, mortality, and the search for immortality
  • Name Sumerian priests, scribes, merchants, and rulers in historical fiction set in the earliest cities of humanity
  • Write about the Royal Tombs of Ur — the extraordinary wealth and ritual sacrifice of the Sumerian elite
  • Create characters exploring the mythology of the Sumerian underworld — Ereshkigal's realm and Inanna's descent into the land of the dead
  • Name characters for stories about the ancient Akkadian Empire (Sargon's conquest of Sumer) and the fusion of Sumerian and Semitic cultures
  • Write about the world's first schools (edubba — tablet houses) where Sumerian scribes were trained in cuneiform writing
  • Create fantasy characters drawing on the rich Sumerian divine pantheon — Enki's wisdom, Inanna's passion, Enlil's storms, and Ereshkigal's death domain

The Epic of Gilgamesh

The Epic of Gilgamesh is the world's oldest surviving literary masterwork, composed in Sumerian around 2100 BCE and later elaborated in Akkadian. It tells the story of Gilgamesh, the semi-divine king of Uruk, and his friendship with the wild man Enkidu. When Enkidu dies, Gilgamesh is shattered by grief and terrified of death, setting out on a quest for immortality. He finds the immortal flood survivor Utnapishtim (the Sumerian Noah) and ultimately fails to win eternal life — returning to Uruk with only the consolation that his great city will outlast him.

The Epic contains the world's first recorded flood narrative — a story strikingly parallel to Noah's Ark, predating the Biblical account by at least a thousand years and possibly providing its ultimate source. Other elements — the serpent that steals the plant of immortality from Gilgamesh, the wild man Enkidu being civilised by contact with a woman — echo themes that recur throughout later Near Eastern and Biblical literature. The Epic is humanity's first exploration of the themes that still drive great literature: friendship, mortality, the meaning of civilisation, and the individual's confrontation with death.

Sumerian Religion: The World's First Theology

Sumerian religion was the theological foundation of all subsequent Mesopotamian civilisations — Akkadian, Babylonian, and Assyrian cultures inherited and adapted the Sumerian divine pantheon. The Sumerians conceived the universe as controlled by a vast bureaucracy of gods (the Anunnaki and Igigi), each responsible for a specific domain: Enlil for wind and kingship, Enki for wisdom and fresh water, Nanna for the moon and the calendar, Utu for the sun and justice, and Inanna for love, war, and the planet Venus. Human existence was understood as a form of service to the gods — humans were created to perform the labour (farming, building, weaving) that would free the gods from toil. This theology of divine service shaped Sumerian naming, architecture (the ziggurat temple-mountains reaching towards the gods), law, and every aspect of civilised life.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who was En-hedu-anna and why is she historically significant? +
En-hedu-anna (c. 2285–2250 BCE) is the world's first known named author in human history — predating Homer by more than a thousand years. She was the daughter of Sargon of Akkad (the world's first empire-builder) and served as High Priestess of the moon god Nanna in the city of Ur. She composed a cycle of hymns to the goddess Inanna that survive on clay tablets, including the extraordinary poem "The Exaltation of Inanna" (Innin-sa-gura). In these works, she writes in the first person — a radical innovation — expressing her personal devotion, her political troubles (she was temporarily exiled by a rebel governor), and her mystical experience of divine presence. Her literary achievement is the foundation of the Western literary tradition.
What are theophoric names and why did Sumerians use them? +
A theophoric name incorporates the name of a deity, expressing the individual's relationship with or devotion to that god. Sumerian names are predominantly theophoric because human existence in ancient Mesopotamia was understood as a form of divine service — humans were created to serve the gods, and a name invoking divine protection was a form of constant prayer. Common Sumerian theophoric name elements include the names of major gods: Enlil (lord of storms), Enki (lord of wisdom), Inanna (queen of heaven), Nanna (the moon god), Utu (the sun god), and Ninhursag (the mother goddess). Names like Ur-Nammu (attendant of Nammu), Lipit-Ishtar (touch of Ishtar), and Iddin-Dagan (Dagan has given) illustrate the pattern.
What is the Epic of Gilgamesh and what does it tell us about Sumerian names? +
The Epic of Gilgamesh is the world's oldest surviving literary masterwork, composed in Sumerian around 2100 BCE and later elaborated in Akkadian. It preserves the names of Sumerian and early Mesopotamian legendary figures: Gilgamesh (king of Uruk, two-thirds divine), Enkidu (his wild companion, created by the gods from clay), Utnapishtim (the immortal flood survivor — the Sumerian Noah), Humbaba (the forest demon), and Ninsun (Gilgamesh's divine mother). These names — and the names of the gods who appear throughout — represent the richest single source for Sumerian naming culture, providing authentic names that carry immediate mythological resonance.
How are Sumerian names used in fantasy and fiction? +
Sumerian names work beautifully for ancient Mesopotamian historical fiction, fantasy worlds inspired by the "Cradle of Civilisation," and science fiction exploring the origins of human culture. The names have a distinctive phonological character — combining short syllables with resonant consonants — that feels ancient and powerful without being unpronounceable: Ur-Nammu, Ziusudra, Eanatum, Gudea, Puabi. For fantasy settings, the Sumerian divine pantheon offers rich material: Enlil's storms, Enki's watery wisdom, Inanna's passionate ferocity, and Ereshkigal's dark underworld realm. The Epic of Gilgamesh's themes — friendship, mortality, the search for meaning — are perennially resonant for storytelling.
What became of the Sumerian people and their language? +
The Sumerians as a distinct ethnic group gradually merged with the Akkadian (Semitic) population of Mesopotamia over the course of the third and second millennia BCE. The Akkadian Empire of Sargon (c. 2334 BCE) marked the first major Akkadian political dominance, but Sumerian culture remained prestigious and influential. Sumerian ceased to be spoken as a living language around 2000 BCE, but it continued as the sacred language of temple and scholarship — much as Latin remained the language of learning in medieval Europe centuries after it ceased to be spoken. The last Sumerian cuneiform tablets date to around 75 CE, meaning Sumerian was studied as a dead language for over 2,000 years before it truly disappeared.