Ea

Ea


1:
Ea (eeʹah), an early and important Mesopotamian god. Akkadian Ea, a variant of which may perhaps be Haia, corresponds to the Sumerian Enki(k). He was the god of fresh water and its sources. He was a creator god who formed and engendered life. He was a master of crafts and wisdom. Furthermore, he possessed the knowledge and power of magic and was the god of the magician. As flowing water, he both washed away and received evil; as a body of water, he encompassed and controlled monsters and demons. 
In origin, he was the local god of Eridu and made his home there. He also shared the direction and rule of the universe with An, Enlil, and the mother goddess Ninhursag. While it is possible that he was secondarily attached to this triad, he is undoubtedly primary to and dominated the gods of Eridu and its environs and this region’s tradition of creation myths of irrigation. He appears in myths revolving around figures of his own circle, e.g., ‘Enki and Ninmah.’ Here he seems to disappear and then to reappear and (enter into an incestuous relationship with his mother Nammu in order to) create humankind thereby, relieving the gods of their toil. Ea reappears in pan-Mesopotamian myths originating and centering in Nippur. Thus in the ‘Story of Atrahasis,’ a probable source of the biblical account of the Flood, the discontent of the gods recurs and it is again Ea who assists in the creation of humankind in order to relieve the gods. The rescue of humanity from utter destruction in the Flood is due to Ea’s intervention. I.T.A. 

Achtemeier, P. J., Harper & Row, P., & Society of Biblical Literature. (1985). Harper's Bible dictionary. Includes index. (1st ed.) (232). San Francisco: Harper & Row.