The Authentic Orthography
Phonological Reconstruction, Salt Water, Chaos · Sea

Unicode restoration and ASCII comparison
𒀭𒋾𒊩𒆳
The name in its original Mesopotamian form. Tiāmat (𒀭𒋾𒊩𒆳) is attested in the source tradition — “Sea”. Its macron-length vowels carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.
tiamat
Reduced to plain tiamat, the name loses everything that made it specific: macron-length vowels. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.
Tiāmat
The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Tiāmat restores macron-length vowels, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.
Tiāmat.com → xn--timat-gwa.com
The non-ASCII characters in Tiāmat are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Tiāmat.
How Tiāmat travels from ancient script to the modern URL
Akkadian tiāmtu “sea, ocean"; Tiāmat personifies the primordial salt-water abyss and is the antagonist of Marduk in the Enūma Eliš.
Salt Water, Chaos
The Unicode restoration Tiāmat preserves vowel length; the cuneiform form is not registrable in .com.
How Tiāmat was spoken
Salt Water · Chaos Dragon · Cosmic Matrix
The name is written 𒀭𒋾𒀀𒈲𒌈. Standard Assyriology transliterates it as Tiamat or Tiāmat, from Akkadian tiāmtu, 'sea'. But the length of the first vowel — the very mark that turns Tiamat into Tiāmat — remains a reconstruction, not a sign-given fact. It is here, in the space between the cuneiform sign and the spoken sound, that this temple operates. This node of PÚNYCODEX is dedicated to the phonological reconstruction and didactic grammar of the ancient Near East. We mark vowel length not because it is certain, but because it is discussable. The macron is a question mark made visible.
Tiāmat is nevertheless the salt-water chaos mother of Babylonian cosmogony — the primordial sea whose mingling with Apsû's fresh abyss produces the gods, and whose defeated body becomes the sky and earth. She is the contradiction at the heart of creation: the mother who must be overcome for the world to exist.
The primordial tiāmtu, the cosmic salt water that surrounds and underlies the ordered world.
She breeds dragons, serpents, and scorpion-men to avenge Apsû and challenge the younger gods.
Marduk divides her corpse to form heaven, earth, rivers, and mountains.
She embodies the formless deep that must be shaped — never simply evil, but the raw material of cosmos.
Stories of Tiāmat
Tiāmat is the Babylonian primordial salt sea — the churning watery chaos from whom the gods are born and against whom order must be asserted. In the Enuma Elish she is first the generative mother of the divine generations, then the dragon-mother of monsters, and finally the cosmic body out of which Marduk fashions heaven and earth. She is not merely a sea; she is the possibility of both creation and destruction that precedes form.
Before the gods existed, there was only Apsû, the freshwater abyss, and Tiāmat, the salt sea. Their waters mingled and produced the first generation of deities: Lahmu and Lahamu, then Anshar and Kishar, then Anu, and finally Ea. Tiāmat is therefore the primordial matrix — the saline womb in which the cosmos gestates. Where Apsû is stillness and depth, Tiāmat is movement, breadth, and the uncontained.
When the younger gods disturb Apsû's rest, Apsû resolves to destroy them; Tiāmat refuses. Ea slays Apsû and builds his house upon the corpse, but Tiāmat, enraged and grieving, raises an army of monsters — serpents, dragons, scorpion-men, and storm-demons — to avenge her consort. She places Kingu, her new consort, at the head of the host and marches against the younger gods.
Marduk of Babylon accepts the challenge of battle on the condition that the gods grant him supreme kingship. He confronts Tiāmat with winds, storms, and the seven winds that fill her body like a sail. When she opens her mouth to swallow him, Marduk drives the evil wind into her, shoots an arrow that splits her heart, and divides her corpse in two. From one half he makes the sky; from the other, the earth.
From Tiāmat's eyes flow the Tigris and Euphrates; from her breasts rise the mountains; her tail becomes the Milky Way. Her death is not an annihilation but a ordering: the chaotic sea is reassembled into the fixed forms of the world. Every city, mountain, and river thus rests upon the body of the primordial salt-water mother.
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 Tiāmat.
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