
Why Apsû.com is the correct form
𒀊𒍪
The name in its original Mesopotamian form. Apsû (𒀊𒍪) is attested as fresh water, abyss — “Abyss”. Its original diacritics and script distinctions carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.
apsu
Reduced to plain apsu, the name loses everything that made it specific: original diacritics and script distinctions. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.
Apsû
The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Apsû restores original diacritics and script distinctions, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.
Apsû.com → xn--aps-foa.com
The non-ASCII characters in Apsû are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Apsû.
How Apsû travels from ancient script to scholarly transliteration
How Apsû was spoken
Attributes of Apsû
The restless sea, the deep, and the life that teems beneath the surface.
A weapon and emblem of dominion over rivers, storms, and earthquakes.
Stories of Apsû
Apsu is the Mesopotamian primordial freshwater abyss — the sweet water that lies beneath the earth and mingles with Tiamat, the salt sea, to bring forth the first generations of gods. In the Enuma Elish, Apsu is not a god of personality but a cosmic place that becomes, through violence and architecture, the foundation of divine kingship.
Before sky was separated from earth, there was only Apsu, the fresh water, and Tiamat, the salt water. Their waters mingled and produced the oldest gods: Lahmu and Lahamu, then Anshar and Kishar, then Anu, and finally Ea, the wisest. Apsu is thus the original reservoir — not merely a sea but the possibility of form, the liquid matrix from which order emerges.
The younger gods disturbed Apsu with their noise and commotion. Apsu, wishing to sleep, resolved to destroy them, but Tiamat refused. Ea learned of the plot, cast a spell on Apsu, and slew him. From Apsu's body Ea built his splendid abode, and there, with his consort Damkina, he begot Marduk, the storm-god who would later defeat Tiamat and create the world from her corpse.
Ea does not simply kill Apsu; he appropriates him. The abyss becomes Ea's house, the source of his wisdom and the place from which he dispenses me, the divine decrees. In Mesopotamian cult, the abzu remains the underground water that feeds wells, rivers, and marshes — the invisible freshwater that makes civilization possible. To possess Apsu is to possess the hidden knowledge beneath the world.
The god Marduk is born in the abzu, the house built upon Apsu's slain body. His birth there binds him to both wisdom and violence: he is the child of Ea's cunning and Apsu's primordial depth. When Tiamat raises an army of monsters, Marduk emerges from the abzu to confront her, armed with winds, floods, and the authority of the deep. Apsu, killed at the beginning, thus fathers the god who orders the cosmos.
The lore you have read is the surface — the living myth. Beneath it lies the scholarship: etymology, reconstructed pronunciation, Unicode character breakdown, and the cultural legacy of Apsû.
Enter Extended Lore