Maruk, also known as Meruk or Marukku, is a ancient Mesopotamian god worshipped by the Sumerians and Akkadians. He was considered a god of storms, weather, and the planet Jupiter.
As a storm god, Maruk was believed to have control over the weather and was often invoked for fertility and agriculture. He was also associated with: maruhk
Maruk
The deep horror of Marukhati thought lies in its operationalization of negation . Where other faiths offer salvation, Marukh offers compliance. His famous edict— "That all souls may be as one soul, and all deeds as one deed" —is a quiet threat. It promises the cessation of conflict only through the cessation of self. The Marukhati priesthood did not merely outlaw the Elven gods; they systematically re-wrote history, burned genealogies, and performed ritualized nihilification : the theological act of proving a god had never existed by removing every trace of its worship. Maruk, also known as Meruk or Marukku, is
And yet, the deepest layer of the Marukhati text is not political but ontological . The Marukhati Selective were not satisfied with merely erasing gods. They sought to edit the divine source code. Their most infamous act—the Dance of the Selective at the Adamantine Tower—was not a prayer. It was a surgical strike. He was also associated with: Maruk The deep
Maruk had connections with other Mesopotamian gods: