Last edited by Kigalkis
Sunday, August 9, 2020 | History

6 edition of Cuneiform Texts from the Ur III Period in the Oriental Institute found in the catalog.

Cuneiform Texts from the Ur III Period in the Oriental Institute

Drehem Administrative Documents from the Reign of Amar-Suena (University of Chicago Oriental Institute Publications)

by Marcus Hilgert

  • 139 Want to read
  • 21 Currently reading

Published by Oriental Institute Press (It) .
Written in

    Subjects:
  • Asian archaeology,
  • Middle & Near Eastern archaeology,
  • Palaeography (history of writing),
  • Middle East - General,
  • History,
  • Archaeology / Anthropology,
  • History: World,
  • Mesopotamia,
  • Ancient - General,
  • Archaeology

  • The Physical Object
    FormatHardcover
    Number of Pages650
    ID Numbers
    Open LibraryOL8705024M
    ISBN 101885923244
    ISBN 109781885923240

    The vast majority of the letters from the Ur III period were orders from within the state-administration. They are therefore also referred to as wiki-pages aim at confirming and updating the standard typology of Sumerian letters used since the publication of TCS 1, based on the explosion in the number of available primary documents (see in particular .   Nibley, Hugh W. Lehi in the Desert and the World of the Jaredites, 1 st ed. () = Collected Works of Hugh Nibley V. Provo: FARMS/SLC: Deseret Book, Owen, David I., and Gordon D. Young. “Ur III Texts in the Zion Research Library, Boston,” Journal of Cuneiform Studies, 23/4 () von Soden, Wolfram.

    By the time of the Third Dynasty of Ur, which endured from about – bce and is called “Ur iii ” by archeologists, all the formative elements of cuneiform were present. Ur iii played a special role in the standardization of cuneiform, which supported what became—thanks in part to the power of writing—the Sumerian bureaucracy. The Ur III-Old Babylonian transition: An archaeological perspective - Volume 64 - Elizabeth C. Stone.

    “The Late Uruk Period Texts,” in I. Spar & M Jursa, Cuneiform Texts in the Metropolitan Museum of Art vol. 4 () “From Banning to Changchun: Cuneiform Studies Online, Today and Tomorrow,” The Ancient Near East Today III/3; Robert K. Englund, Peter Damerow, Jürgen Renn, Stephen J. Tinney, and Bertrand Lafont. Cuneiform Texts from the Ur III Period in the Oriental Institute, Vol. 1: Drehem Administrative Documents from the Reign of Šulgi by Markus Hilgert (pp. ) Review by: Wolfgang Heimpel DOI: /


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Cuneiform Texts from the Ur III Period in the Oriental Institute by Marcus Hilgert Download PDF EPUB FB2

A sequel to the author's Cuneiform Texts from the Ur III Period in the Oriental Institute, Volume 1: Drehem Administrative Documents from the Reign of Shulgi (OIP ), this volume is the editio princeps of the cuneiform tablets in the Asiatic Collection of the Oriental Institute Museum that were found at the site of the ancient.

Cuneiform Texts from the Ur III Period in the Oriental Institute, Volume 2: Drehem Administrative Documents from the Reign of Amar-Suena (Oriental Institute Publications) Hardcover – Aug by Clemens D.

Reichel (Author),5/5(1). This volume is the first publication of all cuneiform tablets in the Asiatic Collection of the Oriental Institute Museum that come from the ancient administrative center of Puzrish-Dagan (modern Drehem) and date to the reign of Shulgi, the second ruler of the Ur III Dynasty (ca.

b.c.).2/5(1). Cuneiform Texts from the Ur III Period in the Oriental Institute, Volume 1: Drehem Administrative Documents from the Reign of Shulgi (Oriental Institute Publications) (Book).

"In this volume are published for the first time all of the cuneiform tablets in the Asiatic Collection of the Oriental Institute Museum that come from the ancient administrative center of Puzrish-Dagan (modern Drehem) and date to the reign of Shulgi, the second ruler of the Ur III Dynasty (ca.

b.c.). Nippur (Sumerian: Nibru, often logographically recorded as 𒂗 𒆤 𒆠, EN.LÍL KI, "Enlil City;" Akkadian: Nibbur) was among the most ancient of Sumerian cities. [citation needed] It was the special seat of the worship of the Sumerian god Enlil, the "Lord Wind", ruler of the cosmos, subject to An was located in modern Nuffar in Afak, Al-Qādisiyyah Governorate.

Cuneiform Texts from the Ur III Period in the Oriental Institute 1: Drehem administrative documents from the reign of Šulgi (Oriental Institute Publications ) Chicago: The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.

De maaijer, Remco Land Tenure in Ur III Lagaš. In: B. haring & R. De maaijer (eds), Landless and Hungry. Cuneiform Texts from The Ur III Period in the Oriental Institute.

Volume 2. Drehem Administrative Documents from the Reign of Amar-Suena. Oriental Institute Publications Neo-Sumerian Account Texts of the Hirose Collection.

Capitol Decisions: Potomac, MD. Hilgert, Markus Cuneiform Texts from the Ur III Period in the Oriental Institute, volume 1: Drehem Administrative Documents from the Reign of Šulgi. OIP Chicago: Oriental Institute Publications. Hilgert, Markus and Reichel, Clemens Oriental Institute, Chicago; Princeton Theological Seminary; Free Library of Philadelphia Englund was also a leading specialist of the social and economic history of the Ur III period, and published ground-breaking articles on the bookkeeping system of the period.

and plans were drafted to include all cuneiform text artifacts. A second. A sequel to the author’s Cuneiform Texts from the Ur III Period in the Oriental Institute, Volume 1: Drehem Administrative Documents from the Reign of Shulgi (OIP ), this volume is the editio princeps of the cuneiform tablets in the Asiatic Collection of the Oriental Institute Museum that were found at the site of the ancient.

The Ur III period was known for its revival of Sumerian culture.1 Some even suspect that this “Sumerian renaissance was deliberately promoted.”2 Nesbit explained that although the civilization of this period in the area of Ur was Sumerian, it was also to a large extent Semitic.3 This tablet under discussion came originally from a.

Although M. Sigrist and others spent some time in translating cuneiform texts at the Siegfried Horn Museum, there was one more unpublished Drehem tablet in the James White Library Archives and another tablet.

The Adventist Heritage Center of the James White Library of Andrews University in Berrien Springs, MI, obtained this tablet from a private collector, George. “Drehem Administrative Documents from the Reign of Amar-Suena.

Cuneiform Texts from the Ur III Period”. Oriental Institute Publications (Chicago, US: The David Brown Book Company, Oakville, Conn, US) xxxviii + Get this from a library. Cuneiform texts from Ur III period in the Oriental Institute. Volume 2, Drehem administrative documents from the reign of Amar-Suena.

[Markus Hilgert; Clemens D. Notes: For transliteration and translation of this cuneiform tablet, see also Markus Hilgert's Cuneiform Texts from the Ur III Period in the Oriental Institute,Volume 2: Drehem Administrative Documents from the Reign of Amar-Suena (Chicago: The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, forthcoming).

Cuneiform Texts OIP Oriental Institute Publications. 14 = Luckenbill 99 = Biggs = Gelb et al. = M. Hilgert, Cuneiform Texts. from the Ur III Period in the Oriental. Cuneiform Texts from the Ur III Period in the Oriental Institute, Volume 1 by Markus Hilgert at This volume is the first publication of all cuneiform tablets in the Asiatic Collection of the Oriental Institute Museum that come from the ancient administrative center of Puzrish-Dagan (modern Drehem) and date to the reign of Shulgi, the second ruler of the Ur III Dynasty.

Review of M. Hilgert, Cuneiform Texts from the Ur III Period in the Oriental Institute, Vol. 2: Drehem Administrative Documents from the Reign of Amar-Suena (OIP ).

The Ur III period ( BC) is documented through an imposing corpus of administrative cuneiform tablets. It is estimated that somedocuments, plus an indeterminate number of texts stored in the Iraq Museum, are currently kept in collections all over the world. Unfortunately, most of them are deprived of archaeological context, which makes it difficult to identify their.

Inthe Chicago Assyrian Dictionary translated the Old Babylonian term aširtu, which in the OB period corresponded to the Sumerian expression igi-kar 2, as “an offering of a pious gift to the gods”.In texts from the preceding Ur III period, however, the expression igi-kar 2 has usually been associated with the expression gurum 2 (written ) and translated “inspection”.Cuneiform texts from the Ur III period in the Oriental Institute, v.

2. Edition/Format: Print book: EnglishView all editions and formats: Rating: (not yet rated) 0 with reviews - Be the first. Subjects: Amar-Suena, -- King of Ur.

Sumerian language -- Texts. Drehem (Extinct city) -- Politics and government -- Sources. View all subjects; More.It names the Ur III period ruler Ur-Nammu (ca.

B.C.). Royal power fragmented after the collapse of the Akkadian empire (ca. B.C.). Ur-Nammu is credited for the reunification of Mesopotamia, an accomplishment evoked by the title "King of Sumer and Akkad", new to this king.