meaning
what is the meaning behind the name nineveh, it speaks of this great city in the book of Jonah as well as other places in the bible.
for instance Jonah means dove. but what does nineveh mean...? anyone know. thanks for the help.
vote up1vote down

Replies

This is what I posted a long time ago:NINIVEH
I looked up Niniveh in several dictionaries and this is what I found:
The Assyrian form of the name is „ninua“, meaning
a) settlement
b) residence of the son
c) residence of Nino
Now Nino was one of the mythical founders of the Assyrian-Babylonian empire, husband of Semiramis. According to some sources, Semiramis ordered to build the hanging gardens of Babylon. This is probably not true – if those gardens, one of the seven wonders of the world, existed at all. But the lady seems to have existed.
The name Nino is said to be a derivation of the Sumeric name NINA, which was a name of the goddess Ishtar. She went by the sign of the fish (but there seems to be no connection to the Hebrew word „nun“ meaning „fish“ > our letter N). The meaning of her name is said to be „goddess, mistress“, but I can’t back up any of this.
vote up1vote down
No connection is far more difficult to establish than finding evidence of connection. In this case, we know that word-initial nasals and reduplications have very curious distribution in world's languages which are difficult to explain away as borrowing or sound symbolism, yet occur in groups of languages which are very hard to relate. The semantic relationship between fish and shining may also repeat in unrelated situations, though less work exists on that.So, `seems' to be no connection is probably the closest we will get to in some time.
vote up1vote down
I found this in the book "Brewer's Dictionary of Names"NINEVEH"The ancient capital of Assyria, on the Tigris opposite the modern Iraqi city of Mosul, is said to derive its name from that of Ninus, the mythological first king of Assyria and husband of Semiramis. According to the Bible, however, Nineveh was founded in Assyria by Nimrod (Genesis 10.11), and 'the land of Assyria' is equated with 'the land of Nimrod' (Micah 5.6). This is not to suggest that the name of Nineveh actually derives from that of Nimrod, although the physical proximity of Nineveh to Nimrud is probably relevant in accounting for the traditional origin of the city."
vote up1vote down