Bizilla

"[3] Gioele Zisa translates it as "lovingly caring", but notes based on a Mesopotamian lexical text it might have been derived from a phrase meaning "to strip".

[14] Administrative texts from the Ur III period indicate that Bizilla received offerings alongside Nanaya in a ceremony which involved bringing statues of various deities to the royal palace.

[17] A sanctuary of Bizilla, E-duršuanna (possibly "house, bond of lofty strength"), is also known from a single Neo-Babylonian document, though the restoration of the name is not fully certain, and no location is given.

[18] Andrew R. George tentatively proposes identifying it with the nameless temple located in Ḫursaĝkalama, as no other names of houses of worship dedicated to Bizilla are known.

[10] An Akkadian incantation known from a copy from Ugarit invokes Bizila alongside Gula and refers to her as "lady of relief,"[20] be-let tap-ši-iḫ-ti.

[21] dTAG.NUN, according to Joan Goodnick Westenholz possibly connected with Bizilla,[3] had a temple in Umma in the Early Dynastic period,[6] built by king Il.

[22] Ninzizli, also linked with Bizilla and Nanaya by Westenholz, is attested in the name of a gate of the temple precinct of Eanna in a document from Neo-Babylonian Uruk.