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Among all the major Anunnaki described across thousands of Sumerian and Akkadian cuneiform tablets, one figure towers above every other in authority and rank — yet appears almost nowhere in the action. Anu, whose very name in Sumerian simply means "sky," is the king of the gods, father of Enlil and Enki, grandfather of Inanna and Utu, the ultimate source of all divine authority in the Mesopotamian cosmos. And yet, tablet after tablet, crisis after crisis, creation event after creation event — Anu is not there. While Enki descends into the Abzu and engineers humanity, while Enlil rages at the Igigi rebellion and weeps before the divine assembly, while Inanna steals the ME and Ninhursag shapes human bodies from clay — Anu sits in the highest heaven, issuing authority from a distance, almost never touching the earth he governs. The ORACC database on Mesopotamian gods confirms that Anu belongs to the oldest generation of deities and was originally the supreme deity of the Babylonian pantheon — the first name, the ultimate rank. His symbol is the horned crown, and there are no confirmed physical representations of him, a detail that scholars note is unique among the major Anunnaki: the most powerful god left almost no iconographic trace on Earth. The tablets show he issued commands but delegated all execution to Enlil, Enki, and the lesser gods. In the Epic of Gilgamesh, Anu appears only when Inanna petitions him directly — furious at Gilgamesh's rejection — and even then, his role is to grant her request for the Bull of Heaven and then step back from the consequences. In the Atrahasis Epic, when the Igigi rebellion erupts and the crisis of divine labor threatens to collapse the cosmic order, Enlil contacts Anu — but Anu does not come down. His authority is invoked; his presence is not. Zecharia Sitchin's reading of the tablets, drawn from the Lost Book of Enki, positions Anu as the king of Nibiru — the home planet of the Anunnaki — who sent his sons to Earth as commanders of an expedition but remained on his throne above. Within the tablets, Anu's two documented visits to Earth are events of such magnitude that they were recorded as singular occasions: his visit to Uruk to see Inanna is described as a royal procession of cosmic significance, with the entire city transformed in preparation. When Anu came to Earth, it was not routine — it was an event the tablets treated as almost unprecedented. The question the narrative poses — and which the tablets never fully answer — is why the supreme king of the Anunnaki, the god whose name the entire pantheon carries as a suffix, chose to govern Earth entirely from a distance. History for Sleep explores every appearance of Anu in the cuneiform record tonight, tracing the outline of a king who ruled everything and touched almost nothing. #SumerianTexts #AnuAnunnakiKing #HistoryForSleep #Anu #AnunnakiHierarchy #NibiruKing #Anunnaki #SkyGod #Mesopotamia #SleepPodcast #SumerianMythology #KingOfTheGods #CuneiformTablets #SleepStories #AncientMysteries #AnuAndEnlil #AnuAndEnki #SupremeDivineKing #RelaxingHistory #FatherOfGods