Nikarawa
Nikarawa or Nikaruha was a Luwian deity known from inscriptions from Carchemish and other nearly locations. It is commonly, though not universally, assumed that she corresponds to the Mesopotamian goddess Ninkarrak.
Attestations
Nikarawa's name is spelled in Luwian hieroglyphs as dni-ka+ra/i-wa/i-sa2. She is known from the curse formula "May the dogs of Nikarawas eat away his head" from Carchemish from the ninth or eighth century BCE, more precisely dated to the reign of Yariri, the successor of Astiruwa. She is the only deity invoked in it. Sylvia Hutter-Braunsar argues that a temple dedicated to her might have existed in this city, and points out a statuette of a dog has been found in 2012 during the excavations of the structure known as Temple B or the Hilani building. The inscription of Katamuwa from Samʼal also mentions Nikarawa, as well as the deities Hadad of Qrpdl, Hadad of the vineyard, Shamash and Kubaba, and states she was one of the recipients of the offering of a sacrificial ram.The theonym Nikaruha might also designate the same deity. This form of the name is attested in a curse from Tabal which invokes her alongside Kubaba, and possibly in a damaged inscription from the same ancient kingdom found in Kayseri, which mentions a deity whose name begins with the signs ní-ka.