179 42 86MB
English Pages 272 [270] Year 2021
Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two
General Editor Jerrold S. Cooper, Johns Hopkins University Editorial Board Walter Farber, University of Chicago Jack Sasson, Vanderbilt University Piotr Michalowski, University of Michigan Piotr Steinkeller, Harvard University Simo Parpola, University of Helsinki Marten Stol, Free University of Amsterdam Karen Radner, Ludwig Maximilian Irene Winter, Harvard University University, Munich 1. The Lamentation over the Destruction of Sumer and Ur, by Piotr Michalowski 2. Schlaf, Kindchen, Schlaf! Mesopotamische Baby-Beschwörungen und -Rituale, by Walter Farber 3. Adoption in Old Babylonian Nippur and the Archive of Mannum-mešu-liṣṣur, by Elizabeth C. Stone and David I. Owen 4. Third-Millennium Legal and Administrative Texts in the Iraq Museum, Baghdad, by Piotr Steinkeller and J. N. Postgate 5. House Most High: The Temples of Ancient Mesopotamia, by A. R. George 6. Textes culinaires Mésopotamiens / Mesopotamian Culinary Texts, by Jean Bottéro 7. Legends of the Kings of Akkade: The Texts, by Joan Goodnick Westenholz 8. Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography, by Wayne Horowitz 9. The Writing on the Wall: Studies in the Architectural Context of Late Assyrian Palace Reliefs, by John M. Russell 10. Adapa and the South Wind: Language Has the Power of Life and Death, by Shlomo Izre’el 11. Time at Emar: The Cultic Calendar and the Rituals from the Diviner’s Archive, by Daniel E. Fleming 12. Letters to the King of Mari: A New Translation, with Historical Introduction, Notes, and Commentary, by Wolfgang Heimpel 13. Babylonian Oracle Questions, by W. G. Lambert
14. Royal Statuary of Early Dynastic Mesopotamia, by Gianni Marchesi and Nicolò Marchetti 15. The Correspondence of the Kings of Ur: An Epistolary History of an Ancient Mesopotamian Kingdom, by Piotr Michalowski 16. Babylonian Creation Myths, by W. G. Lambert 17. Lamaštu: An Edition of the Canonical Series of Lamaštu Incantations and Rituals and Related Texts from the Second and First Millennia b.c., by Walter Farber 18. The Lamentation over the Destruction of Ur, by Nili Samet 19. The babilili-Ritual from Hattusa (CTH 718), by Gary M. Beckman 20. Babylonia, the Gulf Region, and the Indus: Archaeological and Textual Evidence for Contact in the Third and Early Second Millennium B.C., by Steffen Laursen and Piotr Steinkeller 21. Assyria: The Imperial Mission, by Mario Liverani 22. The Monumental Reliefs of the Elamite Highlands: A Complete Inventory and Analysis (from the Seventeenth to the Sixth Century BC), by Javier Álvarez-Mon 23. Administrative Law in Late Babylonian Legal Texts, by F. Rachel Magdalene, Cornelia Wunsch, and Bruce Wells 24. Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part One, prepared for publication and edited by A. R. George and Junko Taniguchi 25. Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two, prepared for publication and edited by A. R. George and Junko Taniguchi
Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two
Prepared for Publication and Edited by A. R. George and Junko Taniguchi
Eisenbrauns | University Park, Pennsylvania
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: George, A. R., editor. | Taniguchi, Junko, 1971– editor. | Lambert, W. G. (Wilfred G.) Title: Cuneiform texts from the folios of W.G. Lambert / prepared for publication and edited by A.R. George and Junko Taniguchi. Other titles: Mesopotamian civilizations ; 25. Description: University Park, Pennsylvania : Eisenbrauns, [2021]– | Series: Mesopotamian civilizations ; 25 | Includes bibliographical references and index. Summary: “A collection of drawings of 323 cuneiform tablets, found in the academic papers of W. G. Lambert, one of the foremost Assyriologists of the twentieth century. Texts range from historical inscriptions to literary and scholarly texts, written by Babylonian and Assyrian scribes”—Provided by publisher. Identifiers: LCCN 2019026883 | ISBN 9781646021390 (v. 2 ; hardback) Subjects: LCSH: Akkadian language—Texts—Catalogs. | Cuneiform inscriptions, Akkadian—Catalogs. | Sumerian language—Texts—Catalogs. | Cuneiform inscriptions, Sumerian—Catalogs. Classification: lcc pj3711 .c864 2019 | ddc 892/.1—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019026883
Copyright © 2021 A. R. George and Junko Taniguchi All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America Published by The Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, PA 16802-1003 Eisenbrauns is an imprint of The Pennsylvania State University Press. The Pennsylvania State University Press is a member of the Association of University Presses. It is the policy of The Pennsylvania State University Press to use acid-free paper. Publications on uncoated stock satisfy the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Material, ansi z39.48–1992.
Contents
Preface and Acknowledgments vii List of Abbreviations ix Catalogue of Texts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Index of Museum Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Index of Texts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Cuneiform Texts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Preface and Acknowledgments
This book completes the publication of the previously unpublished pencil drawings of cuneiform tablets and other inscriptions made by the late W. G. Lambert and found among his academic papers after his death. To the three hundred and twenty-nine texts presented in Part One in 2019, this second volume adds another three hundred and twenty-three. Together with the one hundred and sixty-eight drawings from Lambert’s hand published in Babylonian Creation Myths (2013), they bring the total figure of his posthumous contribution to Assyriology to eight hundred and twenty handcopies of cuneiform texts. The twin volumes of Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert stand as a colossal tribute to the achievements of an extraordinary scholar, but they are more than just a personal monument. Very many of these texts are published for the first time and so form a substantial resource for continuing their author’s lifelong work, the reconstruction of the literature, religion, and intellectual achievement of the ancient Babylonians and Assyrians. As in the previous volume, the contents are organized by genre, reflecting Lambert’s decades of study in all areas of Babylonian scholarship. First, omen literature, especially Šumma ālu, which Lambert proposed to edit early in his career, before yielding the field to the late Erle Leichty (Nos. 330–37); then genres associated with divinatory rituals, both tāmītus, adding to those Lambert treated in Babylonian Oracle Questions (2007), and ikribs, which he intended to edit in a companion volume, never realized but now expected from Ulla Koch (Nos. 338–400); a traditional text on the taboos of the gods, together with its commentary, which Lambert
handed over to the late lamented Alasdair Livingstone (Nos. 401–7); the aluzinnu compendium, a scribal parody of many genres of Babylonian scholarship, which is now being prepared for publication by Enrique Jiménez (Nos. 408–34); theological and religious texts, copied in preparation for Lambert’s magnum opus on god-lists (Nos. 435–51); lexical lists, especially those that collected the names of deities (Nos. 452–78); and finally the god lists themselves, which are here sorted into three groups: lists of the Old Babylonian period (Nos. 479–84), the Great God List An = Anum and related lists (Nos. 485–543), the elementary pedagogical text Anum, often known as the Weidner list (Nos. 544–620), and miscellaneous god lists of the first millennium that appear not to be part of An = Anum or the Weidner list (Nos. 621–35); these now form a pillar of the God Lists of Ancient Mesopotamia project at the University of Jena. To these are added a small miscellany of cuneiform texts of several genres, some in public collections (Nos. 636–44), and others not (Nos. 645–52). These last are handcopies of tablets that do not bear a number or any other identification and whose current whereabouts are thus unknown. As in Part One, the texts in this volume are overwhelmingly from the collections of the British Museum, but museums in Baghdad, Berlin, Chicago, Geneva, Istanbul, Jerusalem, New Haven, Oxford, Paris, Philadelphia, Tokyo, Toronto, and Washington are also represented. To the authorities and curatorial staff of all these museums, who gave Lambert permission to make and publish handcopies of objects in their care, we express our gratitude and appreciation. For the moment no credit can be given for Lambert’s drawings of cuneiform inscriptions that are now
viii
Preface and Acknowledgments
of unknown location. Such drawings are very rare in the Nachlass. Lambert made them during his years of identifying many thousands of cuneiform tablets and other objects for various dealers of antiquities in London. It is likely that the objects he copied then are now in private collections. We hope that at some time in the future they will surface and be available for further study. In the meantime we trust that any curious collectors who discover in this volume drawings of antiquities in their custody will appreciate that Lambert’s handcopies are too valuable as additions to scientific knowledge to remain out of circulation. As in the previous volume, a small number of the drawings published here had already been inked by Lambert himself: Nos. 405, 453, 473 (K 9244), 520, 543 obv., 569, 621, 644, 648, 651–52. One drawing is a final legacy of Henry Buglass’s digital work for Babylonian Creation Myths: No. 442. The remaining handcopies were scanned and inked digitally by the editors. George was responsible for Nos. 331–32, 334–35, 337, 339, 395–96, 400, 402–4, 406–7, 438–40, 443–44, 446–47, 450–51, 454–60, 465–72, 474–519, 521–41, 542 rev., 543 rev., 545–47, 549, 551–52, 556, 559, 561, 574–77, 579–81, 583, 588–90, 593, 598–600,
605, 610, 616–17, 619–20, 622–35, 642, 645, 650. Taniguchi inked Nos. 330, 333, 336, 338, 340–94, 397–99, 401, 408–37, 441, 445, 448–49, 452, 461–64, 473 (K 7722), 542 obv., 544, 548, 550, 553–55, 557–58, 560, 562–68, 570–73, 578, 582, 584–87, 591–92, 594–97, 601–4, 606–9, 611–15, 618, 636–41, 643, 646–49. The catalogue that precedes the cuneiform plates draws on pencil annotations made by Lambert on the original folios, which are quoted as appropriate, but, as with Part One, it is essentially the work of the first- named editor. Various scholars were gracious enough to answer questions that arose during the compiling of it, and their generosity is acknowledged here in a brief roll-call: Yoram Cohen, Nicla De Zorzi, Jeanette Fincke, Grant Frame, Ann Guinan, Wayne Horowitz, Ami Huang, Hermann Hunger, Enrique Jiménez, Michael Jursa, Ulla Koch, Jon Taylor, Konrad Volk, and Cornelia Wunsch. None of these kind individuals is responsible for any of the catalogue’s shortcomings. ARG JT Buckhurst Hill, June 2020
Abbreviations
A AH AO Ash. Mus. Ass Bab BE BLMJ BM Bu CAD CBS CDLI CT
CTL 1 CTN D DS IM IOC K KAL
tablet signature, Oriental Institute Museum, Chicago Abu Habbah; tablet signature, British Museum Antiquités orientales; object signature, Musée du Louvre Ashmolean Museum, Oxford Assur; field number, excavations at Assur Babylon; field number, excavations at Babylon Babylon-Expedition; field number, excavations at Babylon object signature, Bible Lands Museum, Jerusalem British Museum Budge; tablet signature, British Museum Assyrian Dictionary of the University of Chicago, 21 vols. (Chicago, 1956–2010) Collection of the Babylonian Section; tablet signature, University Museum, Philadelphia Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative, https://cdli.ucla.edu Cuneiform Texts from Babylonian Tablets in the British Museum 24 = L. W. King, Cuneiform Texts (London, 1908) 25 = L. W. King, Cuneiform Texts (London, 1909) 29 = L. W. King, Cuneiform Texts (London, 1910) 39 = C. J. Gadd, Cuneiform Texts (London, 1925) 51 = C. B. F. Walker, ed., Miscellaneous Texts (London, 1972) A. R. George and J. Taniguchi, eds., Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part One (University Park, Pa., 2019) Cuneiform Texts from Nimrud IV = D. J. Wiseman and J. A. Black, Literary Texts from the Temple of Nabû (London, 1996) object signature, Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto Dur-Sharrukin; field number, Khorsabad object signature, Iraq Museum, Baghdad Institute for Oriental Civilizations, University of Tokyo Kouyunjik; tablet signature, British Museum Keilschrifttexte aus Assur literarischen Inhalts I = N. P. Heeßel, Divinatorische Texte I (Wiesbaden, 2007) V = N. P. Heeßel, Divinatorische Texte II (Wiesbaden, 2012)
x
Abbreviations
KAR Ki LKU Msk MSL
N NBC ND N-T OB OECT
R Rm ROM S† SAA Si Sm SpTU STT U UM VAS VAT YBC
E. Ebeling, Keilschrifttexte aus Assur religiösen Inhalts, 2 vols. (Leipzig, 1919–23) King; tablet signature, British Museum A. Falkenstein, Literarische Keilschrifttexte aus Uruk (Berlin, 1931) Meskene; field number, Emar Materials for the Sumerian Lexicon XIII = M. Civil, ed., Izi = išātu, Ká-gal = abullu and Níg-ga = makkūru (Rome, 1971) XIV = M. Civil, ed., Ea A = nâqu, Aa A = nâqu, with their Forerunners and Related Texts (Rome, 1979) XV = M. Civil, ed., The Series DIRI = (w)atru (Rome, 2004) SS 1 = M. Civil, O. R. Gurney and D. A. Kennedy, Materials for the Sumerian Lexicon, Supplementary Series 1 (Rome, 1986) Nippur; tablet signature, Babylonian Section, University Museum, Philadelphia Nies Babylonian Collection; tablet signature, Yale Babylonian Collection, New Haven Nimrud; field number, excavations at Nimrud Nippur tablet; field number, excavations at Nippur Old Babylonian Oxford Editions of Cuneiform Texts IV = P. E. van der Meer, Syllabaries A, B1 and B with Miscellaneous Lexicographical Texts from the Herbert Weld Collection (Oxford, 1938) XI = O. R. Gurney, Literary and Miscellaneous Texts in the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, 1989) H. C. Rawlinson, ed., The Cuneiform Inscriptions of Western Asia, 5 vols. (London, 1861–91) Rassam; tablet signature, British Museum object signature, Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto tablet signature, British Museum State Archives of Assyria XX = S. Parpola, Assyrian Royal Rituals and Cultic Texts (Helsinki, 2017) Sippar; tablet signature, Archaeological Museums, Istanbul Smith; tablet signature, British Museum Spätbabylonische Texte aus Uruk II = E. von Weiher, Spätbabylonische Texte aus Uruk, Teil II (Berlin, 1983) O. R. Gurney, J. J. Finkelstein, and P. Hulin, The Sultantepe Tablets, 2 vols. (London, 1957–64) Ur; field number, excavations at Ur University Museum; tablet signature, Babylonian Section, University Museum, Philadeplhia Vorderasiatische Schriftdenkmäler XXIV = J. van Dijk, Literarische Texte aus Babylon (Berlin, 1987) Vorderasiatische Abteilung, Tontafel; tablet signature, Vorderasiatisches Museum, Berlin tablet signature, Yale Babylonian Collection
Catalogue of Texts
All objects are clay tablets or tablet fragments, unless described otherwise. Special abbreviations: ed. = edition, // = duplicates. Unattributed quotations are Lambert’s pencil annotations on his drawings. Citations in the catalogue of transliterations by folio number refer to the page numbers of Lambert’s seven British Museum notebooks, which occupy the range folios 8897–10330. Scanned images of the notebooks are posted online at http://oracc.museum.upenn.edu /contrib/lambert.
333.
334.
330–37. Omen Compendia 330. VAT 13102 (Bab 46513), excavated at Babylon by Koldewey in 1912, findspot Merkes 22k2 (Pedersén 2005: 219, N13: 25). Lower part of a Neo- Babylonian copy of a collection of omens, mostly from unusual sexual activity (similar to CT 39 26, etc., see Freedman 1998: 340 Šumma ālu LXXX), but also from animal behavior and noises while sleeping; catchline, colophon. 331. VAT 13809 (Ass 17721 dm), excavated at Aššur by Andrae in 1908, in the “House of the Exorcist” (N4), findspot hD8I. Lower part of a Neo- Assyrian copy of a compendium of sex omens (Šumma ālu CIII), catchline. Another handcopy: KAL I 35, ed. Heeßel 2007: 107–9. 332. VAT 13796 (Ass 15301), excavated at Aššur by Andrae, findspot eE10I. Large fragment from the
335.
336.
337.
right edge of a Middle Assyrian copy of an omen compendium; extispicy (šēpu). Another handcopy: KAL V 116, ed. Heeßel 2012: 305–8. BM 99087 (Ki 1904-10-9, 116), excavated at Nineveh by King in 1904. Fragment from the right edge, Neo-Assyrian copy of a compendium of liver omens, rubric: Tablet VII in the series “Weapon-Mark” (Šumma kakku); catchline. Now joins K 3656+16268 (not copied). BM 41255E+O (+) H (81-4-28, 803), from Babylon or Borsippa. Two fragments of probably the same Late Babylonian copy of a compendium of omens from the entrails (Šumma eka[l tīrāni]). E+O: fragment from the middle, “very near the top”; H: fragment from the left edge. Erroneously numbered as part of the god list BM 41255 (Nos. 532–36). VAT 10369, excavated at Aššur by Andrae. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the right edge, omen apodoses. Another handcopy: KAL V 98, ed. Heeßel 2012: 290–91. VAT 9921, excavated at Aššur by Andrae. Fragment from the middle, Neo-Assyrian copy of a collection of omens from the behavior of birds. Another handcopy: KAL I 27, ed. Heeßel 2007: 97–98. ROM 910x209.458 (D 991), written in Uruk. Right part of a Late Babylonian copy of a commentary on omens of anomalous births (Šumma izbu XIV), catchline and colophon. Ed. Leichty 1970: 232–33, De Zorzi 2014: 698–700; see also De Zorzi and Jursa 2011.
2
Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two
338–400. Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs) 338. BM 38834 (80-11-12, 719), from Babylon or Borsippa. Fragment from the lower right corner, Late Babylonian copy of a collection of oracle questions // Lambert 2007: no. 9; colophon. 339. K 16872, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the right edge of a small tablet; Lambert 1992: 2: “Tamītu?” 340. K 19928, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle; Lambert 1992: 42: “Tamītu?” 341. K 3663, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the left edge: [oracle question?], divination prayer, rubric (ta-mit [. . .]), and ritual. 342. Rm 222+513, excavated at Nineveh by Rassam in 1878. Left part of a Neo-Assyrian copy of a handbook of ornithoscopy: omens, divination prayers, rubric (5 ta-wi-it [mušen]), and colophon; tablet of Nabû-zuqup-kēnu. Ed. Starr 1983: 61–63, Koch 2015. 343. K 10630+11815, from Nineveh. Upper left corner, Neo-Assyrian catalogue of ikribs; see Lambert 2014: 54. Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 96. 344. Rm II 258, excavated at Nineveh by Rassam in 1878. Lower right corner, Neo-Assyrian catalogue of ikribs and tāmītus; see Lambert 2014: 54. 345. K 2364+7 111+13323, from Nineveh. Upper right part of a Neo-Assyrian copy of ikribcompendium “Nineveh 1” // Nos. 346 // 347; catchline, Ashurbanipal colophon type l. Old handcopy of K 2364: Zimmern 1901: no. 76. 346. Sm 788, excavated at Nineveh by Smith in 1874. Fragment from the top edge, Neo-Assyrian copy of ikrib-compendium “Nineveh 1” // Nos. 345 // 347. Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 77. 347. K 2363+2787+8096+8166+15942+16692, from Nineveh. Neo Assyrian copy of ikribcompendium “Nineveh 1” // Nos. 345 // 346; catchline, Ashurbanipal colophon type l. Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 78 (K 2363+ 2787). Transliteration: folio 9840 (K 15942). 348. K 5408A+Rm 145, from Nineveh, part excavated by Rassam in 1878. Neo-Assyrian copy of an
349.
350.
351.
352.
353.
354.
ikrib-compendium: obv. 5′–6′ // Nos. 354: 7′–9′ // 355 obv. 7′–8′; 13′–rev. // “Nineveh 1” Nos. 345–47. Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 75. K 3396+8935+12204+16802+83-1-18, 437, from Nineveh, part excavated by Rassam in 1882. Neo- Assyrian copy of ikrib-compilation “Nineveh 2”: obv. 9′–12′ // Nos. 350 iii 43–47 // 351: 75–78 // 353: 1–5; obv. 13′–20′ // No. 352 obv. 9′–16′; obv. 21′– 27′ // Nos. 350 ii 1′–5′ // 382 a 1′–11′; rev. 3′–7′ // No. 350 iv 15–23; catchline. Old handcopy and ed. of 83-1-18, 437: Zimmern 1901: no. 94. Transliterations: folios 8932 (K 8935), 9921 (K 16802). K 3654+7969+Sm 802+1319, from Nineveh, part excavated by Smith in 1874. Neo-Assyrian copy of ikrib-compilation “Nineveh 3,” in four columns: col. ii 1′–5′ // Nos. 349 obv. 25′–27′ // 382 a 8′–11′; ii 6′–11′ // No. 382 a 12′–19′; iii 23–32 // Nos. 359 obv. 14′–rev. 4 // 365 b 3′–12′; iii 33–39 // No. 359 obv. 3′–7′; iii 43–iv 2 // Nos. 351: 75–80 // 353: 1–8, cf. 349 obv. 9′–12′; iv 3–7 // Nos. 351: 81–84 // 353: 9–10 // 359 rev. 5–9; iv 15–23 // No. 349 rev. 3′–7′. Old handcopies: Zimmern 1901: nos. 83 (K 3654), 89 (K 7969). BM 40795+40806+41256A (81-4-28, 340+352+ 804A), from Babylon (Jimjima). Neo-Babylonian copy of an ikrib-compendium: ll. 75–84 // Nos. 350 iii 43–iv 7 // 353; cf. 349 obv. 9′–12′; catchlines and colophon: fifth nisḫu, scribe Nabû-tabni-uṣur s. Ileʾʾi-bulluṭu-Nabû. BM 134528 (1932-12-12, 523), excavated at Nineveh by Thompson in 1932. Fragment from the left edge, Neo-Assyrian copy of an ikribcompendium: obv. 9′–16′ // No. 349 obv. 13′–20′. Transliteration: folio 9401. K 15334+Rm II 152, from Nineveh, part excavated by Rassam in 1878. Fragment from the left corner, Neo-Assyrian copy of an ikrib-compendium: ll. 1–5 // Nos. 349 obv. 9′–12′; 1–10 // 350 iii 43–iv 4 // 351: 75–82. Old handcopy and ed. of Rm II 152: Zimmern 1901: no. 90. Transliteration: folio 9849 (K 15334). K 4733, from Nineveh. Fragment from the left edge, Neo-Babylonian copy of an ikribcompendium: ll. 7′–12′ // Nos. 348 obv. 5–6′ // 355 obv. 7–11.
355. Sm 998, excavated at Nineveh by Smith in 1874. Fragment from the top right corner of a multicolumn tablet, Neo-Assyrian copy of an ikribcompendium: obv. 7–11 // Nos. 348 obv. 5′–6′ // 354: 7′–12′; rev. 2′–9′ // No. 356. Transliteration: folios 9491–92. 356. K 8602, from Nineveh. Left part of a landscape tablet, Neo-Assyrian copy of an ikrib // No. 355 rev. 2′–9′. Transliteration: folio 9069. 357. 83-1-18, 521, excavated at Nineveh by Rassam in 1882. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, ikrib and ritual. Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 86. 358. 82-5-22, 503, excavated at Nineveh by Rassam in 1881 or 1882. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the upper right corner, ikribs, catchline and colophon. Possibly part of No. 359. 359. 83-1-18, 426, excavated at Nineveh by Rassam in 1882. Neo-Assyrian fragment from lower right corner, ikribs: obv. 14′–rev. 4 // Nos. 350 iii 23–32 // 365 b 3′–12′; rev. 5–9 // No. 350 iv 3–7. Possibly part of No. 358. Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 95. 360. K 16343, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the right edge, ikribs. 361. K 12207, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, ikrib. Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 93. 362. 79-7-8, 171, excavated at Nineveh by Rassam in 1879. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the left edge, ikribs. Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 92. 363. K 6665, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, ikribs. 364. Sm 1590, excavated at Nineveh by Smith in 1874. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, ikribs. Transliteration: folio 9057. 365. K 6230, from Nineveh. Fragment from the middle of a multicolumn tablet (“a rev. flake?”), Neo- Assyrian copy of an ikrib-compendium: col. b 3′–12′ // Nos. 350 iii 23–32 // 359 obv. 14′–rev. 4. Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 87. 366. Sm 1930, excavated at Nineveh by Smith in 1874. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, ikrib.
Catalogue of Texts
3
367. K 11763, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the lower edge, ikrib. Cf. folio 8961. 368. K 3030, from Nineveh. Fragment from the left edge, Neo-Babylonian copy of ikribs and rituals. 369. K 2353 (48-11-4, 285), from Nineveh. Upper part of Neo-Assyrian copy of ikribs and ritual: obv. // No. 370 obv.; rev. Ashurbanipal colophon type l (not copied). Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 85. 370. Rm II 170, excavated at Nineveh by Rassam in 1878. Fragment from top left corner, Neo- Assyrian copy of ikribs and ritual: obv. // No. 369 obv.; rev. trace of text, then Ashurbanipal colophon type l (not copied). Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 84. 371. Bu 89-4-26, 114, excavated at Nineveh by Budge in 1889. Fragment from bottom left corner, perhaps part of the same tablet as No. 370 (“could be bottom portion”), Neo-Assyrian copy of ikribs and ritual: rev. // No. 372 col. a 6′–11′. Old handcopy Zimmern 1901: no. 91. 372. BM 77985 (85-4-30, 178), probably from Sippar. Fragment from the middle of a multicolumn tablet, Neo-Babylonian copy of ikribs: col. a 6′–11′ // No. 371 rev. 1; 12′–15′ // No. 373 obv. 12′–14′. 373. K 2519, from Nineveh. Lower part of a Neo- Assyrian tablet of ikribs and rituals: obv. 12′–14′ // No. 372 a 12′–15′. Old handcopy: Craig 1895: 60–62; ed. Zimmern 1901: No. 100. 374. K 3471+83-1-18, 428, from Nineveh, part excavated by Rassam in 1882. Upper part of a Neo- Assyrian tablet, ikribs, catchline and colophon. Old handcopy and ed. of 83-1-18, 428: Zimmern 1901: no. 97. 375. K 8723, from Nineveh. Neo-Babylonian fragment from the upper left corner, ikrib; reverse uninscribed. 376. K 11783, from Nineveh. Neo-Babylonian fragment from the right edge, ikrib. 377. 83-1-18, 427+BM 99089 (1904-10-9, 118), excavated at Nineveh by Rassam in 1882 and King in 1904. Left part of a Neo-Assyrian tablet of mixed content: rituals, incantation, ikrib for use in lecanomancy: rev.(?) // Nos. 378 obv.(?) // 379 // 380 // 382 b. Other handcopies: Zimmern 1901:
4
378.
379. 380.
381. 382.
383. 384. 385. 386.
387. 388. 389.
390.
Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two
no. 80 (83-1-18, 427); Abusch and Schwemer 2016: pls. 32–33, obv. ed. pp. 184–88. K 3750B, from Nineveh. Fragment from the left edge, Neo-Assyrian copy of ikrib and ritual: obv. // No. 377 rev.(?) etc. Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 79. K 6921, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, ikrib // No. 377 rev.(?) etc. Rm II 301, excavated at Nineveh by Rassam in 1878. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the right edge, ikrib and ritual // Nos. 377 rev.(?) // 382 b etc. Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 81. 81-2-4, 331, excavated at Nineveh by Rassam in 1880. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the top left corner: obv. ikrib; rev. Ashurbanipal colophon type a. Sm 718+1032, excavated at Nineveh by Smith in 1874. Left portion of a multicolumn Neo-Assyrian tablet, ikribs and ritual: col. a 1′–11′ // No. 349 obv. 21′–27′; a 8′–19′ // No. 350 ii 1′–11′; b // Nos. 377 rev.(?) // 380 etc. Old handcopy and ed. of Sm 1032: Zimmern 1901: no. 82. K 17114, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, ikrib: ll. 1′–2′ // No. 384 catchline. K 9803+9853, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the left edge: rev. ikrib, catchline and colophon. K 8168, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, ritual and ikrib // No. 386 rev. Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 98. Sm 771, excavated at Nineveh by Smith in 1874. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the left edge, ikrib, ritual // No. 385, catchline and colophon. Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 99. K 8155, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the lower left corner of a multicolumn tablet, ikribs. Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 88. 81-2-4, 214, excavated at Nineveh by Rassam in 1880. Upper part of a Neo-Assyrian tablet, ikrib. Old handcopy and ed.: Zimmern 1901: no. 101. K 5900, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the left edge, ikrib, bird. Old handcopy: Gray 1901: pl. 8. The join of No. 389 and 390 cited in CAD M/2 308 is a fiction (L.: “no join, not same tablet”). K 13973, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, ikrib, bird.
391. K 16713, from Nineveh. Neo-Babylonian fragment from the middle, ikrib. Transliteration: folio 9492. 392. BM 30546 (S† 76-11-17, 273), from Babylon. Late Babylonian fragment from the middle, ikribs. 393. BM 52657 (82-3-23, 3691), probably from Sippar. Late Babylonian fragment from the left edge: obv. ikrib to Šamaš // K 8051 (Lambert 1960: 322 and pl. 33); rev. ikrib to Ninurta. Transliteration: folio 10101. 394. K 20532, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, rubric ([ik-ri]b) and ikrib. Lambert 1992: 50 “Tamītu.” 395. 83-1-18, 817, excavated at Nineveh by Rassam in 1882. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle; with the rubric (l. 6′) cf. No. 358 obv. 5. 396. K 19348, from Nineveh. Fragment from the right corner of a small Neo-Babylonian tablet, Lambert 1992: 34 “Tamītu/Ikrib?” Reverse uninscribed. 397. K 128, from Nineveh. Neo-Babylonian copy of the “Kaksisa ikrib.” Old handcopy and ed.: Burrows 1924: 33–36, pls. 2–3. 398. K 3794+BM 99127 (Ki 1904-10-9, 157), from Nineveh, part excavated by King in 1904. Neo- Assyrian copy of the “Sîn ikrib” // No. 399; catchline, colophon. Transliteration: folios 10183– 84. Old handcopies: Perry 1907: pl. 1 (K 3794), ed. pp. 23–28; Langdon 1915: 190 (BM 99127), ed. pp. 191–92. 399. K 2751+2792+7973+9242+10011+13785, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian copy of the “Sîn ikrib” // No. 398. Transliterations: folios 9069 (K 9242), 9165 (K 13785), 94779–79 (K 2792+7973+9242), 9643 (K 10011), 9831 (K 2751), 10185–86 (whole rev.). Old handcopy: Perry 1907: pl. 2 (K 2792+ 7973), ed. pp. 23–28. 400. K 11417, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the lower edge, probably ikrib. Transliteration: folio 9727. 401–7. Taboos of the Gods 401. CBS 16, written at Borsippa. Neo-Babylonian copy of the Taboos of the Gods (“The cat is the taboo of Anšar,” Tablet I) // LKU 45 //
Nos. 402–4 // 406, catchline and colophon, “property of Nabû, king of the universe.” Written under the direction of Nabû-zēru- līšir s. Bābaya, Nabopolassar year 7. 402. BM 76230 (AH 83-1-18, 1597), from Sippar. Fragment from the middle, Neo-Babylonian copy of the Taboos of the Gods // No. 401. Transliteration: folio 10009. 403. BM 37675+37868 (80-6-17, 1432+1625), from Babylon or Borsippa. Fragment from the left edge, Neo-Babylonian copy of the Taboos of the Gods // No. 401. Part of the same tablet as No. 404. 404. BM 37859 (80-6-17, 1616), from Babylon or Borsippa. Fragment from the middle, Neo- Babylonian copy of the Taboos of the Gods // No. 401. Part of the same tablet as No. 403. 405. BM 34895 (Sp II 406), probably from Babylon. Late Babylonian fragment from the middle, probably the Taboos of the Gods but not a duplicate of any other manuscript. 406. BM 41288 (81-4-28, 836), from Babylon or Borsippa. Lower portion of a Neo-Babylonian copy of the Taboos of the Gods // No. 401. 407. BM 35401 (Sp II 984)+55485 (82-7-4, 58)+99669+ 99685(83-1-21, 2031+2047) (+) 45733 (81-7-6, 143), probably from Babylon. Late Babylonian copy of a commentary on the Taboos of the Gods. BM 45733 touches BM 55485 but does not make a secure join. Transliterations: folios 9189–90 (BM 45733), 9207–8 (35401), 10225 (99669, 99685). A fragment from the same hand is No. 438. 408–34. The Aluzinnu Compendium 408. K 4334, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian copy of the aluzinnu compendium in six columns, ed. Ebeling 1931: 9–19 (with Nos. 413–14). Small fragments of surface at the top of col. i and bottom of col. iii, now missing, are restored from the old handcopy of Norris (II R 60 no. 1). The small area of surface of cols. iv–v copied on Pl. 66, bottom right, falls towards the bottom of the columns; see the photograph at CDLI P395487.
Catalogue of Texts
5
409. K 10052+13864, from Nineveh. Fragments from the obverse of a Neo-Assyrian copy of the alu zinnu compendium in six columns, cols. i–ii of the same tablet as Nos. 410–11 // No. 419 i–ii. Transliteration: folio 9312 (10052 only). 410. K 8321, from Nineveh. Fragment from the reverse, cols. iv–v of the same six-column tablet as Nos. 409 and 411; // No. 428 i. Old handcopies: Meissner 1898: 521, Bergmann 1953: 50. 411. K 7570+7575+7576+7577+7578+7579, from Nineveh. Fragments from the reverse, col. v of the same six-column tablet as Nos. 409–10; // No. 414 col. v. 412. K 9886, from Nineveh. Fragment from the obverse of a Neo-Assyrian copy of the aluzinnu compendium in six columns, cols. ii–iii of the same tablet as Nos. 413–14; // No. 408 ii–iii. Another handcopy: Weidner 1953. 413. K 6392, from Nineveh. Fragment from col. vi of the same six-column tablet as Nos. 412 and 414; // No. 408 vi. Old handcopies: Virolleaud 1901: 257; Langdon 1923: 222–27 (ed.), pl. 16. 414. K 9287, from Nineveh. Fragment from cols. iv–v of the same six-column tablet as Nos. 412–13; // No. 418 iv–v. Old handcopy: Boissier 1901: 159–60. 415. ND 5502, excavated at Nimrud by Mallowan in 1955, findspot Nabû temple NT 14 “in rubbish above floor.” Middle portion of a Neo-Assyrian copy of the aluzinnu compendium in four columns, part of the same tablet as Nos. 416–17 (Wiseman and Black 1996: 30). Another handcopy: CTN IV 205 (Black, Wiseman). 416. ND 5426, excavated at Nimrud by Mallowan in 1955, findspot Nabû temple NT 14 “in rubbish on floor.” Lower portion of a Neo-Assyrian copy of the aluzinnu compendium, part of the same four- column tablet as Nos. 415 and 417. Another handcopy: CTN IV 204 (Wiseman). 417. ND 5503, excavated at Nimrud by Mallowan in 1955, findspot Nabû temple NT 14 “in rubbish above floor.” Surface flake from the same tablet as Nos. 415–16: col. i // No. 418 ii, col. ii // No. 412 iii. Another handcopy: CTN IV 206 (Wiseman). 418. BM 78973 (Bu 89-4-26, 268), probably from Borsippa. Neo-Babylonian copy of the aluzinnu
6
Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two
compendium in six columns; colophon, tablet of Nabû-šumu(?)-līšir s. Nabû-nādin-aḫi. 419. BM 47364 (81-11-3, 69), from Babylon or Borsippa. Neo-Babylonian copy of the aluzinnu compendium in six columns. Transliteration: folios 9349–51. 420. BM 76608 (AH 83-1-18, 1979), probably from Sippar. Fragment from the middle of a Neo- Babylonian copy of the aluzinnu compendium in six columns: cols. i–ii // No. 419 i–ii, col. v // No. 415 iii, col. vi // No. 428 iv. Transliteration of rev.: folio 10034. 421. BM 51478 (82-3-23, 2512), probably from Sippar. Fragment from the top edge, Neo-Babylonian copy of the aluzinnu compendium // No. 428 iv. 422. BM 46345 (+) 46352 (81-7-28, 70 (+) 77), probably from Babylon. Late Babylonian copy of the alu zinnu compendium, first half, in four columns: col. iv // No. 408 iii, perhaps traces of a colophon. The two pieces touch but do not make a secure join. Transliteration: folio 9438 (46345). 423. BM 40117 (81-2-1, 83) (+) 77264 (SH 83-9-28, 15), probably from Babylon. Two fragments of a Late Babylonian copy of the aluzinnu compendium, first half, in four columns: cols. i–ii // No. 418 i–ii, col. iii // No. 408 ii, col. iv // No. 415 ii. Transliteration: folios 9764–65 (40117). 424. BM 35557 (Sp III 64), probably from Babylon. Right portion of Late Babylonian copy of the aluzinnu compendium, first half, in four columns, probably part of the same tablet as No. 426, but no actual join (contra Leichty et al. 1988: 93): rev. iii // No. 422 iii. 425. VAT 17201, excavated at Babylon by Koldewey. Fragment from the left edge, Neo-Babylonian copy of the aluzinnu compendium // No. 408 vi. Another handcopy: VAS XXIV 118 (van Dijk). 426. BM 77251 (SH 83-9-28, 2), probably from Babylon. Fragment from the lower edge, Late Babylonian copy of the aluzinnu compendium, first half, in four columns, probably part of the same tablet as No. 424: col. ii // No. 408 ii. 427. BM 17584 (94-1-15, 298), probably from Babylon. Fragment from the top edge, Late Babylonian copy of the aluzinnu compendium, first half,
428.
429.
430.
431. 432.
433.
434.
in four columns: obv. ii // No. 419 i; rev. iii // No. 422 iii. BM 47887 (81-11-3, 594), from Babylon or Borsippa. Lower left corner of a Late Babylonian copy of the aluzinnu compendium, second half, in four columns: col. iv // No. 408 vi. Transliteration: folios 9365–66. BM 72265 (82-9-18, 12271), probably from Sippar. Neo-Babylonian fragment from the middle, text related to the aluzinnu compendium: l. 3′ // No. 418 iii 5′. BM 55060 (82-5-22, 1391), probably from Sippar. Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. (a) the aluzinnu compendium // No. 419 i; (b) Urra XXII, not copied; rev. Urra XXIII–XIV, not copied. A handcopy of the whole: Gesche 2000: 418. BM 42316 (81-7-1, 76), from Sippar (Abu Habbah). Late Babylonian copy of lines excerpted from the aluzinnu compendium; cf. Nos. 414 iv // 418 iv. BM 37564 (80-6-17, 1321), from Babylon or Borsippa. Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv.(?) (a) unidentified, (b) aluzinnu compendium // No. 418 iv; rev.(?) (a) Malku II 85–90, (b) unidentified. Another handcopy: Gesche 2000: 299. BM 76694 (AH 83-1-18, 2065), from Sippar. Neo-Babylonian school- exercise tablet: obv. (a) unidentified, (b) aluzinnu compendium // No. 408 ii; rev. lexical, not copied. BM 75985 (AH 83-1-18, 1348), from Sippar. Neo-Babylonian school-exercise tablet: (a) not copied, (b) aluzinnu compendium // No. 408 v, (c) unidentified. N.B. Other handcopies by Lambert of excerpts of the aluzinnu compendium on school-exercise tablets are Lambert 2013: pl. 14 BM 36417 (b), pl. 20 BM 54609(+)136879 (b), BM 46567 (c), pl. 26 BM 37927 (c); CTL 1 nos. 90 (b), 205 (b).
435–51. Theological and Religious Texts 435. VAT 10142 (+) 10177, excavated at Assur by Andrae. Fragments of a Neo-Assyrian copy of a syncretistic work on Marduk (šumka DN) in the
style of a prose hymn. Old handcopies (Ebeling): KAR 304 (10177), 337 (“10140”). There is uncertainty about the museum number of the latter (“on tablet—10142, on box—10140”). On this text see Lambert 1964: 11–13; id. 2013: 265; Groneberg 1987 II 176–77; Schwemer 2001: 665 n. 5519. The identification of obverse and reverse and the line-numbering of the two fragments follow Lambert’s annotations on his original pencil drawings, as informed by unpublished manuscripts, BM 43839+(folios 10177–78) // 141781. A further duplicate is a tablet from the Sippar library now in the Iraq Museum. A new edition of the text is in preparation by Anmar Fadhil and Enrique Jiménez. 436. BM 38564 (80-11-12, 448), from Babylon or Borsippa. Late Babylonian copy of an expository text which equates features of the city, palace, and its personnel with other items, mostly deities; colophon. A similar fragment is BM 38269 (folio 9991). 437. BM 66610 (82-9-18, 6603), probably from Sippar. Neo-Babylonian copy of expository texts: obv. the list of Divine Daughters // Cavigneaux 1981: 173 obv. 1–rev. 2 (ed. George 2000: 295) // BM 38176 (folio 9843); rev. ritual explanatory text, colophon. Transliterations: folios 9843, 10305. 438. BM 35686 (Sp III 204), probably from Babylon. Late Babylonian fragment from the middle, perhaps a commentary or expository text. “Same hand, perhaps not same tablet as” No. 407. 439. K 13940, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, a commentary or expository text: ll. 4′–5′ // K 9844: 3′–4′ (folio 9091), l. 6′ cited in Lambert 2013: 492. 440. K 2768, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the right edge, demonology or similar. 441. K 13705, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, expository text of uncertain genre, perhaps a ritual commentary: l. 2′ is quoted by Frahm and Jiménez 2015: 329. 442. K 13438, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, expository text; note l. 8′ den]me-šár-ra na-áš gištukulmeš. Bezold 1893: 1312 “astrological text.”
Catalogue of Texts
7
443. K 12108+13396, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the lower edge, an astrological expository text, known also from No. 444, K 3213 (Lambert 2013: pl. 43) and VAT 9427. On this text see further Lambert 2013: 179. 444. K 9594, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, same text as No. 443. Joined since copying to K 20284. Old handcopy and ed.: Brünnow 1889: 233, 249. 445. K 2760+13823, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the top edge, astrological lore: obv. 1 // V R 46 no. 1: 11, cited by Lambert 2013: 216. 446. BM 46548 (81-8-30, 14), from Borsippa. Upper part of a Late Babylonian copy of texts from the lore of the cult-singer: obv. theology of the kalû, see Livingstone 1986: 190, 200 etc.; rev. bilingual prayer šuluḫḫa-men, for use in rituals of the kalû // Thureau-Dangin 1921: 32; catchline, colophon, scribe Nabû-uballissu s. Bēluṣuršu,“property of Nabû, king of the universe.” Transliteration: folios 9929–30. 447. BM 68061+73916+73999 (82-9-18, 8059+13927+ 14010), written at Babylon. Upper part of a Late Babylonian copy of a bilingual enumeration of the symbolic representations of gods that were stationed right and left in rituals of the exorcist; colophon, scribe Bēl-lēʾi-kala s. Aḫu-bani. Some sections of this composition were transmitted as incantations in Bīt mēseri (Seidl and Sallaberger 2005–6: 68–71). 448. DS 32-7, excavated at Khorsabad by Loud in 1932, findspot “Nabû temple, forecourt” (Loud and Altman 1938: 104 no. 10 “List of gods”). Fragment from the middle of a multicolumn Neo-Assyrian copy of a tākultu ritual, ed. SAA XX 45 with handcopy on p. 240 (Parpola). 449. BM 32655 (S† 76-11-17, 2423), from Babylon. Fragment from the upper or lower right corner of a multicolumn Late Babylonian tablet, probably containing temple ritual texts: col. ii(?) the end of a text purporting to be Marduk’s blessing of his high priest; cf. Oshima 2011: 109 AF 12. Physically similar very late temple-ritual tablets in the same collection are BM 32656 (George 2000: 270–80) and BM 32482+(Da Riva 2019).
8
Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two
450. K 8111+13266, from Nineveh. Fragment from the middle, Neo-Assyrian copy of a ritual from Mīs pî, ed. Walker and Dick 2001: 240–44 MS E. 451. K 2727+6213, from Nineveh. Fragments from the right edge of a Neo-Assyrian copy of a ritual and incantation prayer to Ea (Mayer 1976: 381 Ea no. 6). Old handcopy of K 2727: Langdon 1927: pl. 5. 452–78. Lexical Lists 452. Folio 1077, from Emar, present whereabouts unknown. Top left corner of a Middle Babylonian tablet in four or more columns: Urra XI–XII, unilingual edition; colophon, tablet written by Išmaʿ-Dagan. 52 × 50 mm. This is very probably the fragment that was formerly in the collection of M. Yoshikawa and should join Msk 731054+ 74247 (Watanabe 1987: 282). 453. IOC unnumbered (+) Folio 464, from Emar. Middle Babylonian copy of Sag-Tablet Recension B (lexical list sag = ilu), originally in eight columns, colophon of Baʿal-bārû; ed. Yoshikawa and Matsushima 1981 (with another handcopy of IOC unnumbered), Civil 1986. The tablet’s detached right corner has since been identified as Msk 731055 = Emar 575 (Cohen 2009: 124–25), excavated at Emar by Margueron in 1973, findspot “Temple M1.” The fragment drawn on folio 464, present whereabouts unknown, is a piece from the right edge which Lambert identified as also belonging to IOC unnumbered, cols. iv–v. 454. A 30211 (3N-T 316), excavated at Nippur by McCown and Haines in 1952, findspot Area TA 205 Level XI 2, House F (Stone 1987: 174). Old Babylonian school tablet, type II: obv. excerpt from OB Diri, ed. MSL XV 34–35 MS L1; rev. table of lengths, not copied, see Robson 2002: 335 fig. 5. 455. UM 55-21-302 (3N-T 299), excavated at Nippur, findspot as for No. 454 but Level XI 1 (McCown and Haines 1967: 116; Stone 1987: 174). Old Babylonian school tablet, type II: obv. excerpt from OB Diri, ed. MSL XV 34–37 MS R1; rev. Nigga MS W1 (MSL XIII 94), not copied.
456. A 30191 (3N-T 268), excavated at Nippur, findspot as for No. 455. Fragment from the middle of an Old Babylonian school tablet, type II: excerpt from OB Diri, ed. MSL XV 34–35 MS T1, “could be part of K1,” i.e. No. 457. 457. UM 55-21-293+295+297 (3N-T 270+272+276), excavated at Nippur, findspot as for No. 455. Old Babylonian school tablet, type I: excerpts from OB Diri, ed. MSL XV 34–38 MS K1. 458. N 5158, excavated at Nippur. Old Babylonian school tablet, type II: obv. Proto-Ea MS Ge (MSL XIV 24), not copied; rev. excerpt from OB Diri, ed. MSL XV 36–37 MS U1. 459. UM 55-21-322 (3N-T 408), excavated at Nippur, findspot as for No. 454. Old Babylonian school tablet, type III: excerpt from OB Diri, ed. MSL XV 36–37 MS S1. 460. Ash. Mus. 1923-400, excavated at Kiš by Mackay in 1923. Old Babylonian prism, OB Diri Oxford recension. The handcopy is of “section an-,” col. iv 34–col. v only, ed. MSL XV 49–51 (N.B. l. 643 is not supported by the cuneiform). A handcopy of the whole: OECT IV pls. 30–34 (van der Meer). 461. K 18021, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, Diri IV 61–66, ed. MSL XV 152–53 MS Q. 462. K 18196, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, lexical list. Lambert 1992: 19 “List of Akkadian words for ‘temple’, cf. Malku = šarru I 255–265 (JAOS 83 429): to Aa?” 463. BM 43560 (81-7-1, 1324), from Babylon, Borsippa or nearby. Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. unidentified bilingual; rev. Malku III 190–96. 464. BM 47693+48828+49041 (81-11-3, 398+1539+1752), from Babylon or Borsippa. Late Babylonian copy of a commentary on Aa II/3. Lambert’s handcopy of only 48828 appears in MSL XIV pl. 3, ed. pp. 278–79. 465. BM 47009 (81-8-30, 475), from Babylon, Borsippa or nearby. Fragment from the middle, Late Babylonian copy of a three-column god list best known from BM 46559 (CT 29 44–47), its duplicates and parallels. Lambert’s notes refer to these and other graphically organized god lists as “lexical god lists,” to distinguish them from the theologically
organized list An = Anum and its relatives. Some or all of them may belong to Diri VII (see Lambert 1971: 475; Civil 2004: 196). They share a folder in Lambert’s Nachlass with his transliterations of the Old Babylonian Diri fragments (here Nos. 454–60), and accordingly in the present volume take their place here. No. 465 // CT 29 45: 25–32 // No. 472 col. b. Transliteration: folio 9813. 466. BM 46282 (81-7-28, 7), probably from Babylon. Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: (a)–(c) excerpts from Ea I–III (not copied), (d) “lexical god list,” cf. CT 29 45: 7–15. Transliteration of (d): folios 9351–52. 467. BM 45754 (81-7-6, 168), probably from Babylon. Fragment from the right edge of a multicolumn Late Babylonian tablet, “Diri VII? . ” Transliteration: folio 9315. 468. BM 54195 (82-5-22, 345), probably from Sippar. Top left corner of a Late Babylonian school- exercise tablet: obv. (a) lexical god list // No. 467 iii(?), (b) unidentified trace; rev. probably Šumma izbu XII (diš min lišān-šú), not copied. A handcopy of the whole: Gesche 2000: 382. 469. ND 5558, excavated at Nimrud by Mallowan in 1955, findspot Nabû temple L4 in rubbish. Fragment from the middle of a multicolumn Neo- Assyrian copy of a lexical god list. Nos. 469–72 are parts of the same tablet, as too are ND 5566– 69 (not copied, in Baghdad). Another handcopy: CTN IV 223 (Wiseman). 470–72. ND 5565, 5560, and 5556, excavated at Nimrud, same findspot as No. 469. Fragments from the same multicolumn tablet as No. 469. Other handcopies: CTN IV 223 (Knudsen). No. 472 col. b // No. 465 // CT 29 45. 473. K 7722+9244, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, lexical god list. Part of the same tablet as K 2114 (CT 25 42) and No. 474. Other handcopies: CT 25 46 (King, 7722 only), Lambert 2013 pl. 72 (9244 only). Lines 6′–14′ ed. Lambert 2013: 520. 474. K 14750, from Nineveh. Part of the same tablet as No. 473, q.v. Transliteration: folio 9071. 475. K 7041, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, lexical god list, parallels
Catalogue of Texts
9
No. 525 rev. iii 20′–28′. Part of the same tablet as No. 476. 476. K 13669, from Nineveh. Part of the same tablet as No. 475, q.v. 477. BM 46219 (81-7-6, 681), probably from Babylon. Late Babylonian fragment from the lower edge, lexical god list. Transliteration: folio 9195. 478. K 2099, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the lower right corner, lexical god list. 479–84. Miscellaneous Old Babylonian God Lists 479. AO 24116, ex coll. Dumeni, acquired 1948. Top left corner of an Old Babylonian multicolumn tablet, “at least four columns”: obv. god list; rev. uninscribed. 480. YBC 9844. Excerpt from an Old Babylonian god list in three sub-columns. 481. NBC 6101. Old Babylonian god list in three columns, “every line ruled.” 482. YBC 7186. Old Babylonian school tablet, type III: obv. excerpt from a god list // VAT 8371 rev. 1–6 (Förtsch 1916: pls. 4–5); rev. erased traces, “uninscribed (perhaps once two more lines written),” not copied. 483. N 3853. Upper portion of an Old Babylonian school tablet, type II: obv. Nippur god list 127–38, MS NIIO-8 in Peterson 2009: 12; rev. metrological list. 484. ROM 910x209.543 (D 1076). Old Babylonian school tablet, type III: excerpt from a god list; “turns side to side.” 485–543. An = Anum and Related God Lists 485. CBS 331, probably from Sippar. Lower two-thirds of a Middle Babylonian version of An = Anum I in six columns, catchline. 486. BM 64393 (82-9-18, 4373), probably from Sippar. Major part of a Neo-Babylonian copy of An = Anum I in four columns: ll. 1–56 (i), 96–131 (ii), 211(?)–77 (iii), 312–50, catchline, colophon (iv), scribe Nabû-erība s. Aḫu-šalim.
10
Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two
487. VAT 17088 (BE 36432a), excavated at Babylon by Koldewey in 1908, findspot Merkes 26n2 +0.30 m, the “diviners’ library” (Pedersén 2005: 82 M4 56). Bottom left corner of a Middle Babylonian excerpt of An I in one column: obv. ll. 56–72; rev. 73–84, “each line ruled.” Another handcopy: VAS XXIV 17 (van Dijk). 488. BM 43455 (81-7-1, 1219), from Babylon, Borsippa or nearby. Bottom left corner of a Late Babylonian copy of An I in several columns: obv. ll. 70–81; rev. 269–77. 489. BM 134560 (1932-12-12, 555), excavated at Nineveh by Thompson in 1932, joins K 4349+(CT 24 21 at i 74–82). Fragment of the “Great God List,” a Middle Assyrian copy of An = Anum. This piece: I 111–34. Transliteration: folio 9425. Other fragments of this tablet, which do not join K 4349+, are Nos. 513 and 518. 490. BM 37549 (80-6-17, 1306), from Babylon or Borsippa. Fragment from the middle of a Late Babylonian copy of An = Anum I 48–59. 491. K 7731, from Nineveh. Fragment from the top right corner of the reverse of a Neo-Assyrian copy of An = Anum I in four columns: ll. 318–34. 492. IM 57957 (2N-T 349), excavated at Nippur by Haines in 1949–50, findspot TB 62-B1. Middle Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. An = Anum I 47–54; rev. vocabulary(?), not copied; see Veldhuis 2000: 69, 79. 493. Ash. Mus. 1924-855+902+960+1366+1376+1518+ 1800+1801+2034+2278, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Late Babylonian copy of An = Anum II in six columns: ll. 1–39(?) (i), 74–105 (ii), 300–31 (v), 362–92, catchline, colophon (vi). 494. BM 38268+39046 (80-11-12, 150+932), from Babylon or Borsippa. Late Babylonian copy of An = Anum II in four columns: ll. 5–35 (i), 96–110 (ii), 274–97 (iii), 367–92, catchline, colophon (iv), scribe Mušallim-Marduk. 495. BM 128150 (1929-10-12, 806), excavated at Nineveh by Thompson in 1929. Flake from the reverse of a Neo-Assyrian copy of An = Anum II in several columns: ll. 114–20 (iii), 224–25? (iv). Another handcopy: CT 51 162 (Thompson). Transliteration: folio 9435.
496. BM 40651 (81-4-28, 196), from Babylon (Jimjima). Fragment from the middle, Late Babylonian copy of An = Anum II 50–70. 497. K 2110, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, joins K 215+col. ii (CT 25 25): An = Anum III 76–87. Other parts of the same tablet are Nos. 498–500. The full number of the joined fragments is now K 215+2105+2110+4343+ 14760+17794. 498. K 14760, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the lower edge, joins K 215+cols. i–ii (CT 25 19 and 25): An = Anum III 56–58 (i), 109–15 (ii). Transliteration: folio 9072. See No. 497. 499. K 17794, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, joins K 215+col. iv (CT 25 20: 7–13): An = Anum III 187–99. See No. 497. 500. K 18190, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, part of the missing col. iii of K 215+(see Nos. 497–99): An = Anum III 132–48. In CDLI this fragment bears the number K 18190+20075 (P403434). 501. K 21664, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the upper rev.: An = Anum III 155–61. 502. BM 42337 (81-7-1, 97), from Babylon, Borsippa or nearby. Late Babylonian copy of An = Anum III in four columns: ll. 3–76 (i), 83–149 (ii), 186–214 (iii), 247–57, catchline, colophon (iv). 503. K 14758, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the left edge, either An = Anum IV 144–51 or more probably Shorter An = Anum, as part of the same tablet as No. 525 K 2109+. Transliteration: folio 9072. 504. K 14749, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, An = Anum IV 236–40. Transliterations: folios 9071, 9772. 505. BM 37720 (80-6-17, 1477), from Babylon or Borsippa. Fragment from the left edge, Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: (a) An = Anum IV 128–33, (b) V 135–36. Transliteration: folio 9358. 506. K 19429 (Rm II), excavated at Nineveh by Rassam in 1878. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the right edge, An = Anum V 200–4. 507. VAT 18676 (W 17718 Kc), excavated at Warka. Late Babylonian fragment from the right edge: obv. An = Anum V 74–85; rev. 197–208.
508. BM 122634 (1930-5-8, 23), excavated at Nineveh by Thompson in 1930, findspot Ishtar temple N.11. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, joins col. i of K 2597+(CT 25 1–6) at K 2944: An = Anum V 5–31 (i), Ashurbanipal colophon type d (iv). Another handcopy CT 51 150 (Thompson). Transliteration: folio 9441. 509. K 8221, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, probably from col. iv of the same tablet as K 266+(CT 25 22–23, 39; 29 47) and K 7620 (CT 25 24): An = Anum VI 258–72. 510. BM 128050 (Th 1929-10-12, 706), excavated at Nineveh by Thompson in 1929, “Palace of Ashurnaṣirpal” Chamber IV. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the lower right corner: obv. An = Anum VI 132–49; rev. 150–56. Transliteration 9431. 511. K 14757, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, probably from col. iv of the same tablet as No. 512, q.v.: An = Anum VI 221–23, 228–38. Transliteration: folio 9072. 512. K 6037+8220+11194+14754, from Nineveh. Neo- Assyrian fragments from the middle, part of the same tablet as No. 511, K 13666 (CT 25 33), K 13591+ (CT 19 10; 25 29): An = Anum VI 35–38 (ii), 85–119 (ii). Other handcopies: CT 25 23 (K 6037, King), Meek 1920: 159 (K 8220). Transliteration: folio 9071 (K 14754 only). 513. K 20546, from Nineveh. Vitrified fragment from the right edge of the “Great God List,” a Middle Assyrian copy of An = Anum, K 4349+(Lambert 1992: 50; see also No. 489). This piece: VI 27–c. 52. 514. BM 53617 (82-3-23, 4655), probably from Sippar. Neo-Babylonian fragment from the left edge: obv. An = Anum VI 29–39; rev. 250–65. Another handcopy: Pinches 1926: 218 (rev. only). 515. BM 36446 (80-6-17, 143), from Babylon or Borsippa. Fragment from the middle, Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Counsels of Wisdom 99–105, not copied; rev. (a) unidentified, (b) An = Anum VI 104–12, (c) An = Anum? A handcopy of the whole: Gesche 2000: 261. Transliteration: folio 9355. 516. BM 38088 (80-6-17, 1917), from Babylon or Borsippa. Late Babylonian fragment from the left
Catalogue of Texts
517.
518.
519.
520.
521.
522.
523. 524.
11
edge, perhaps a school-exercise tablet: An = Anum VI 179–84. Transliteration: folio 9358. N.B. Other handcopies by Lambert of excerpts of An = Anum on school-exercise tablets are BM 68435 (CTL 1 158) rev. I 1–5; BM 71949 (CTL 1 207) rev. (a) I 27–30, (b) II 1–7. K 8720, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment, the upper part of K 204 (CT 25 40–41): obv. An = Anum VII 2–17a; rev. Ashurbanipal colophon type a. Transliteration: folio 9547. K 20549, from Nineveh. Fragment from the middle of the “Great God List,” a Middle Assyrian copy of An = Anum, K 4349+(Lambert 1992: 50): text unplaced. Rm II 216, excavated at Nineveh by Rassam in 1878. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, part of the same tablet as Bu 89-4-26, 77 (CT 25 28). Divine Directory of Nippur // SpTU II 29 iv 12–18, ed. George 1992: 156; ll. 3′–10′ parallel to An = Anum I 262–67. Transliteration: folio 9053. K 9788+82-3-23, 5217, part excavated at Nineveh by Rassam in 1881 or 1882. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle of a tablet of at least two columns: col. a // An = Anum II 298–309, b // I 330–35. Transliteration: folio 9077. BM 98898 (Th 1905-4-9, 404), excavated at Nineveh by Thompson in 1905. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the reverse, top left corner: ll. 1–5 // An = Anum III 215, 196–99. Transliteration: folio 9075. BM 37252 (80-6-17, 1006), from Babylon or Borsippa. Late Babylonian fragment from the top left corner, perhaps a school-exercise tablet: obv. parallel An = Anum VI 231–44; rev. “illegible traces,” not copied. Transliteration: folio 9358. K 15160, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the top edge, joins K 4338B col. ii (CT 24 19): Shorter An = Anum I. Transliteration: folio 9074. VAT 17129 (BE 45764), excavated at Babylon by Koldewey in 1912, findspot Merkes 37q1 (Pedersén 2005: 106). Middle or Neo-Babylonian fragment from the top edge of a multicolumn tablet, near the right corner: Shorter An = Anum, col. ii // K 4339 i 1′–9′ (CT 25 9). Another handcopy: VAS XXIV 18 (van Dijk).
12
Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two
525. K 2109+2121+5041+6093+7649+8944+13689+ 13703+14753+16225+ 16880+17081+18864, from Nineveh. Reverse of a four-column tablet: Shorter An = Anum II?, catchline, colophon. Another handcopy: CT 25 30–31 (K 2109+8944+ 13689 only; King). Transliterations: folios 9071 (K 14753), 9073 (K 16225), 9771 (K 13703), 9995 (K 5041). Other fragments of this tablet are K 13862 (CT 25 41), “upper col. iii,” K 11228 (CT 19 38), K 14758 (No. 503), both “upper part col. iv,” and K 8223 (CT 25 45). 526. BM 72205 (82-9-18, 12210), probably from Sippar. Neo-Babylonian fragment from the lower right corner: Shorter An = Anum III // K 4339 iv (CT 25 14). 527. K 14764, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the top right corner of the reverse(?): names of Ninlil, perhaps Shorter An = Anum. Transliterations: folios 9072, 9772. 528. K 11426, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle: names of Ištar, perhaps Shorter An = Anum; “cf. K 14370?” Transliteration: folio 9728. 529. BM 34876 (Sp II 383), probably from Babylon. Late Babylonian fragment from the middle: names of goddesses, “same list as K 2109+?,” i.e. No. 525. Another copy: CT 51 91 (Pinches). Transliteration: folio 9195. 530. K 10213, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the right edge: names of goddesses, “could go with K 11228.” Transliteration: folio 9659. 531. K 5780A, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the top edge: names(?) of goddesses. Transliteration: folio 9359. 532. BM 41255B+J+M+41363 (81-4-28, 803+912), from Babylon or Borsippa. The upper obverse and lower reverse of a Late Babylonian copy of a list of names of Nergal in three sub-columns, with colophon. Now joins BM 40774 (81-4-28, 319), not copied. Lambert’s notes identify the text as belonging to Shorter An = Anum. Part of the same tablet as Nos. 533–34. 533. BM 41255C+I+L. Part of the obverse of the same tablet as Nos. 532, q.v.
534. BM 41255F, G, K, N, and P. Further possible fragments of the obverse of the same tablet as Nos. 532–33, q.v. 535. BM 41255A. The lower obverse and upper reverse of the same tablet as Nos. 532–33, q.v. 536. BM 41255D. Another possible fragment of the reverse of the same tablet as Nos. 532–33, q.v. 537. BM 47365 (80-11-3, 70), from Babylon, Borsippa or nearby. Late Babylonian copy of a list similar to Anu ša amēli in four sub-columns, section on Ea // K 4366 (CT 25 48) // K 20529+Rm 483 (CT 25 47); colophon, scribe Kudurru s. Nabūtu. 538. BM 68462+74185 (82-9-18, 8460+14197), probably from Sippar. Neo-Babylonian copy of the god list Anšar = Anum I in four columns: col. i 8–16 // K 7662 (CT 25 7); ii 19–37 cf. Rm 610 obv. (CT 25 35) // K 29 ii′ (CT 25 36+No. 539); catchline, colophon, tablet of Itti-Marduk-balāṭu of the Egibi family. The list Anšar = Anum is the text referred to as “A Late List” in Lambert 1971: 477. 539. Ki 1902-5-10, 28, excavated at Nineveh by King in 1902. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, joins K 29 obv. ii′ (CT 25 36): Anšar = Anum, Marduk, Zarpanītum, cf. No. 538 ii 23–30. 540. BM 39891 (80-11-12, 1778), from Babylon or Borsippa. Late Babylonian fragment from the middle: Anšar = Anum or a similar list, Marduk, Zarpanītum, cf. Nos. 538 ii 22–30; 539. 541. BM 34977+35571 (Sp II 500+III 79), probably from Babylon. Middle part of a Late Babylonian copy of Anšar = Anum or a similar list, in one column: obv. Zarpanītum, Nabû // No. 538 ii 25–38; rev. hounds of Marduk, Nergal. Another handcopy of BM 34977: Strassmaier in Neugebauer 1957: pl. 14. 542. BM 37327 (80-6-17, 1084), from Babylon or Borsippa. Late Babylonian fragment from the lower edge, Anšar = Anum or a similar list: obv. Ea, Damkina; rev. Šamaš // No. 538 iii 23′–29′. Transliteration: folio 9078. 543. BM 45639 (81-7-6, 32), probably from Babylon. Upper right part of a Late Babylonian copy of a god list in four columns: obv. Šamaš, Aya (i); Adad (ii); rev. Telītu (iii); divine weapons (iv).
Col. ii was used by Litke (1998: 138–41) as a source for An = Anum III (MS N). 544–620. The Weidner List (Anum) 544. BM 68333 (82-9-18, 8331), probably from Sippar, joins BM 30024 (not copied). Early Neo- Babylonian copy of the pedagogic god list Anum (hereinafter the Weidner list) in six columns: ll. 1–41 (i), 50–88 (ii), 120–35 (iii), 165–94 (iv), 213–49, catchline (v), blank (vi). On this god list see Lambert 1971: 474; Cavigneaux 1981: 79–99. 545. BM 41308 (81-4-28, 856), from Babylon or Borsippa. Top left corner of a Late Babylonian copy of the Weidner list, version in two sub-columns: obv. ll. 1–26; rev. 218–49. 546. VAT 17502, excavated at Babylon by Koldewey. Lower part of an Old Babylonian copy of the Weidner list in eight columns: ll. 15–26 (i), 53–66 (ii), 94–104 (iii), 126–40 (iv), 141–58? (v), 186–92 (vi), 214–28 (vii), colophon (viii). Another handcopy: VAS XXIV 20 (van Dijk). 547. BM 50723 (D 82-3-23, 1715), probably from Dilbat. Copy of the Weidner list in five columns on the obverse of a Neo-Babylonian school-exercise tablet: traces (ii), ll. 108–32 (iii), 152–79 (iv), 200– 18 (v); rev. acrographic exercises, personal names, not copied, ed. with handcopy Gesche 2000: 350–52. 548. BM 72744 (82-9-18, 12752), probably from Sippar. Lower right part of a multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 181–206 (iii), 240–49, 1–17 (iv), 47–66 (v); rev. lexical and personal names, not copied. Now joined to BM 66591+72745 (i–ii, not copied), the whole rev. ed. Gesche 2000: 512–13. 549. BM 38192 (80-11-12, 74), from Babylon or Borsippa. Top left corner of a multicolumn Late Babylonian copy of the Weidner list: ll. 1–12 (i), 56–70 (ii), unplaced (iii); rev. uninscribed. Now joined to BM 38839, not copied. 550. Ash. Mus. 1924-1133, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Top left corner of a Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list
Catalogue of Texts
551. 552.
553.
554.
555.
556.
557.
558.
559.
13
ll. 1–15; rev. “alia,” not copied. Old handcopy of obv.: OECT IV 135 (van der Meer). BM 41104 (81-4-28, 651), from Babylon (Omran). Top left corner of a Late Babylonian copy of the Weidner list: ll. 1–7. BM 60170+60218+68079+68286+68628 (AH 82-9-18, 133+182+8077+ 8284+8627), from Sippar. Multicolumn Late Babylonian exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 2–10 (v), remainder not copied. Handcopy, edition, and photographs of the whole: Gesche 2000: 446–50, pls. 6–7. Ash. Mus. 1924-1923, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian copy of the Weid ner list: ll. 3–9 (i), unplaced (ii). BM 65578 (82-9-18, 5565), probably from Sippar. Fragment from the right edge of a multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 3–9 (ii′), 27–36, 1 (ii′); rev. lexical and proverb, not copied. Now joined to BM 65681+72184 (Gesche 2000: 722), not copied; transliteration of proverb: folio 10303. BM 60180 (AH 82-9-18, 143), from Sippar. Multicolumn Late Babylonian school exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 3–25 (v′), remainder not copied. Handcopy of the whole and ed.: Gesche 2000: 455. BM 60181 (AH 82-9-18, 144), from Sippar. Multicolumn Late Babylonian school exercise tablet, obv.: Weidner list ll. 4–9 (last col.), remainder not copied. Now joined to 69988 (Gesche 2000: 715), not copied. Si 815, excavated at Sippar by Scheil in 1894. Fragment from the left edge of an Old Babylonian copy of the Weidner list in several columns: ll. 4–15 (i), unplaced (ii). Ash. Mus. 1924-1251+1279+1925+1960, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 10–24, 33–46 (i), 80–89 (ii); rev. not copied, see Gesche 2000: 784. Handcopy of rev.: OECT XI 126 (Gurney). BM 78139 (86-7-20, 44), probably from Babylon. Fragment from the middle of a Neo-Babylonian copy of the Weidner list in several columns: ll. 9–16 (i), 47–52 (ii).
14
Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two
560. Ash. Mus. 1924-1903, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the middle of a multicolumn Late Babylonian copy of the Weid ner list, probably a school-exercise tablet: ll. 21–25 (i), unplaced (ii). 561. BM 40539 (81-4-28, 81), from Babylon or Borsippa. Bottom left corner of a Neo-Babylonian copy of the Weidner list in several columns: ll. 19–25 (i), unplaced (ii). 562. Ash. Mus. 1924-1525+1833, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the left edge of a Neo-Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 19–39; rev. (a) unidentified, (b) model contract, not copied. Other handcopies: obv. OECT IV 146 (van der Meer), rev. OECT XI 136 (Gurney). 563. BM 36456 (80-6-17, 183), from Babylon or Borsippa. Fragment from the middle of a multicolumn Neo-Babylonian copy of the Weidner list: ll. 11–28 (i), 69–90 (ii), traces (iii). 564. Ash. Mus. 1932-315A, excavated at Kiš by Watelin in 1932. Fragment from the middle of a multicolumn Neo-Babylonian copy of the Weidner list: traces (i), ll. 17–28 (ii). Old handcopy: OECT IV 148 (van der Meer). 565. Ash. Mus. 1924-1834, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the left edge of a Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 23–33; rev. model contract, not copied. Handcopy of rev.: OECT XI 132 (Gurney). 566. BM 33799 (Rm IV 358), probably from Babylon. Fragment from the middle of a multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 21–32 (i), 62–72 (ii); rev. unidentified, not copied. Transliteration: folio 9187: “may go with 33788” (No. 575). 567. Ash. Mus. 1924-885+1832+1900, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Lower part of a multicolumn Neo-Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 19–37 (i), 60–73 (ii), 99–106 (iii); rev. “alia,” not copied. Old handcopies of 885: OECT IV 149 (van der Meer); 1832+ 1900: ibid. 136 (van der Meer). 568. Ash. Mus. 1923-307 (Weld-Blundell 9). Fragment from the middle of a multicolumn Old
569.
570. 571.
572.
573.
574.
575.
576.
Babylonian school-exercise tablet, obv. Weidner list ll. 27–37 (i′), 80–93 (ii′), 128–46 (iii′), 187?–201 (iv′), unplaced (v′); rev. “list of signs,” not copied. Smithsonian 315238. Fragment from the middle of an Old Babylonian school tablet: Weidner list ll. 43–48. On folio 7465 the number is given as 315236. MAH 16002. Old Babylonian lenticular school- exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list 44–46; rev. “the same, less complete,” not copied. Ash. Mus. 1924-1425, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the left edge of a multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 28–44 (i), unplaced (ii); rev. model contract, not copied. Other handcopies: obv. OECT IV 139 (van der Meer), rev. OECT XI 135 (Gurney). Ash. Mus. 1924-1901+2138, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the top edge of a multicolumn Late Babylonian school- exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list 44–52, perhaps repeated; rev. “alia,” not copied. Ash. Mus. 1924-1469+1754, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the middle of a multicolumn Late Babylonian school- exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 36–40 (i′), 82–96 (ii′), 129–41? (iii′); rev. “alia,” not copied. Another handcopy of 1469 obv.: OECT IV 137 (van der Meer). BM 67568 (82-9-18, 7566), probably from Sippar. Fragment from the bottom edge of a multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. not copied (i), Weidner list ll. 26–29 (ii); rev. personal names, not copied, see Gesche 2000: 729. BM 33788 (Rm IV 346), probably from Babylon. Lower left corner of a multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 38–51 (i), 78–88 (ii); rev. “proverb?,” not copied. Transliteration of obv.: folio 9187. BM 46547 (81-8-30, 13), from Babylon, Borsippa or nearby. Fragment from the left edge, multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 47–59 (i), 119–32 (ii); rev. alia, not copied; the whole ed. Gesche 2000: 326–28 with handcopy of rev. Transliteration: folio 10097.
577. BM 46321 (81-7-28, 46), probably from Babylon. Fragment from the top edge, multicolumn Late Babylonian copy of the Weidner list: obv. ll. 42–50 (i), 74–82 (ii); rev. 130–47 (i′), 172– 89 (ii′), colophon. 578. Ash. Mus. 1924-1205+1705+1902, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the top edge, multicolumn Late Babylonian copy of the Weidner list: obv. ll. 43–47 (i), 80–84 (ii), 109–111? (iii); rev. 139–48 (i′), 90–102 (ii′). Old handcopy of 1924-1205: OECT IV 145 (van der Meer). 579. BM 33711 (Rm IV 269), probably from Babylon. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet, repeated excerpt of the Weidner list: ll. 48–56 (i′), 48–55 (ii′). Transliteration: folio 9187. 580. BM 47794 (81-11-3, 500), from Babylon or Borsippa. Fragment from the top edge, multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 51–58 (ii), 100–11 (iii), 151–59 (iv); rev. “alia,” not copied. 581. YBC 9913. Fragment from the middle of a multicolumn Late Babylonian copy of the Weidner list: ll. 27–28 (i), 54–68 (ii), 88–101 (iii), 132–40? (iv). 582. Ash. Mus. 1932-156J, excavated at Kiš by Watelin in 1931–32, findspot Ingharra Trench C-15 (cf. Gibson 1972: 119). Bottom left corner of an Old or Middle Babylonian copy of the Weidner list: ll. 57–65, “each line ruled”; rev. blank. 583. BM 47867 (81-11-3, 574), from Babylon or Borsippa. Fragment from the middle of a multicolumn Late Babylonian copy of the Weidner list: ll. 57–63 (i′), 102–13 (ii′). 584. Ash. Mus. 1924-1396+1480, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Bottom left corner of a multicolumn Late Babylonian school- exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 57–63, 191–94 repeated at least four times; rev. “alia,” not copied. The jump of 128 ll. can be attributed to a simple confusion: dasal.lú.ḫe (63) should be followed by d amar.utu (64), not by dmar.tu (191). Old handcopy of 1396: OECT IV 138 (van der Meer). 585. Ash. Mus. 1930-177I, excavated at Kiš by Watelin in 1930. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn
Catalogue of Texts
586.
587.
588.
589.
590.
591.
592. 593.
594.
15
Late Babylonian copy of the Weidner list: ll. 57–64 (i′), 88–95 (ii′), unplaced (iii′). Old handcopy: OECT IV 140 (van der Meer). Ash. Mus. 1924-1010, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian copy of the Weid ner list: ll. 61–78 (i′), unplaced (ii′). Old handcopy: OECT IV 147 (van der Meer). Ash. Mus. 1924-1132, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 65–73 (i′), unplaced (ii′); rev. “alia,” not copied. Old handcopy of obv.: OECT IV 144 (van der Meer). BM 36338 (80-6-17, 64), from Babylon or Borsippa. Neo-Babylonian excerpt from the Weidner list: obv. ll. 72–85; rev. month and day. Another handcopy: Gesche 2000: 241, photo pl. 1. BM 47822 (81-11-3, 529), from Babylon or Borsippa. Top right corner of a multicolumn Late Babylonian exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 77–85 (i′), 108–17 (ii′), 111–19 (iii′); rev. personal names etc., not copied. On the rev. see Pinches 1896: 256, id. 1910: 64 38a–b. Now joined to BM 47988+48251 (+) 47986, not copied. BM 34168 (Sp 273), probably from Babylon. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian copy of the Weidner list: ll. 79?–87 (i′), 104–13 (ii′). Ash. Mus. 1924-1835+2273, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian copy of the Weidner list: 80–87 (i′), unplaced (ii′). U 30492, from Ur. Fragment from the right edge near bottom, Neo-Babylonian copy of the Weid ner list: obv. ll. 87–97 (i′), 138–43 (ii′); rev. 152–63. BM 65752 (82-9-18, 5742), probably from Sippar. Neo-Babylonian excerpt from the Weidner list: obv. ll. 90–101; rev. 127–37, month and day? (6.24). Ash. Mus. 1924-1216+1836, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the top edge, multicolumn Late Babylonian school- exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 91–104 (i′), 142–45 (ii′); rev. “alia,” not copied.
16
Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two
595. Ash. Mus. 1924-2066, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian copy of the Weid ner list: ll. 90–100 (i′), 152–60 (ii′). 596. Ash. Mus. 1924-845W, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian copy of the Weid ner list: ll. 94–103 (i′), unplaced (ii′). 597. Ash. Mus. 1924-2095, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: Weidner list ll. 91–107 repeated (i′–ii′), unplaced (iii′). 598. BM 47077 (81-8-30, 598), from Babylon, Borsippa or nearby. Fragment from the top edge, multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: Weidner list ll. 98–101 (i′), 91–95 (ii′). 599. BM 40719 (81-4-28, 264), from Babylon (Jimjima). Lower part of a Late Babylonian excerpt of the Weidner list: obv. ll. 110–15; rev. month and day, not copied. 600. BM 35041 (Sp II 570), probably from Babylon. Bottom right corner of a Late Babylonian school- exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 114–19; rev. 113–17. Transliteration: folio 9195. 601. Ash. Mus. 1924-1486, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 129–38 (i′), 170–81 (ii′); rev. 213–19 (i′), “alia,” not copied (ii′). 602. Ash. Mus. 1924-975, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the top of a multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. traces (i′), Weidner list ll. 144–61? (ii′), unplaced lines (iii′); rev. “alia,” not copied. 603. Ash. Mus. 1924-1134, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the right edge, multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 148–51 (i′), 192–202 (ii′); rev. “alia,” not copied. Old handcopy of obv.: OECT IV 143 (van der Meer). 604. Ash. Mus. 1924-1503+1839, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian copy of the Weidner list: ll. 160–80? (i′), unplaced (ii′).
605. BM 47900 (D 81-11-3, 607), probably from Dilbat. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 148–63 (i′), 190–97 repeated (ii′); rev. personal names, not copied. 606. BM 66581 (82-9-18, 6574), probably from Sippar. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 156–70 repeated (i′–ii′); rev. “lexical?,” not copied. 607. Ash. Mus. 1924-1478, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the right edge, multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 160–73 (i′), 204– 223 (ii′); rev. “alia,” not copied. Old handcopy of obv.: OECT IV 141 (van der Meer). 608. U 30491, from Ur. Fragment from the bottom left corner, multicolumn Late Babylonian school- exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 160–75 (i), 205–15? (ii); rev. “alia,” not copied. 609. Ash. Mus. 1924-862, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the bottom right corner, multicolumn Late Babylonian school- exercise tablet, “whole surface erased”: traces of Weidner list ll. 183?–193, repeated. 610. BM 45806 (81-7-6, 225), probably from Babylon. Late Babylonian school tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 183–93; rev. month and day. Transliteration: folio 9195. 611. BM 40637+40839 (81-4-28, 182+386), from Babylon (Jimjima). Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian copy of the Weid ner list, annotated version: ll. 186–98 (i′), 220– 31? (ii′), “other side illegible traces of god list,” not copied. 612. Ash. Mus. 1928-443, excavated at Kiš by Watelin in 1928. Fragment from the left edge, Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 190–94; rev. “alia,” not copied. 613. Ash. Mus. 1924-1905, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the middle, “rev. from right-hand side towards bottom edge,” multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: Weidner list, unplaced ll. (i′), ll. 212– 21 (ii′), unidentified (iii′).
614. Ash. Mus. 1924-1122, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Top right part of a multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 211/12–25 repeated (i–iii); rev. “four more partly preserved runs in three columns down to Bel-Dilbat, without variants from obv.,” not copied. Old handcopy of the whole: OECT IV 142 (van der Meer). 615. Ash. Mus. 1924-1837+1968, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 231–35 repeated (i′–ii′); rev. “alia,” not copied. 616. BM 46625 (81-8-30, 91), from Babylon, Borsippa or nearby. Fragment from the right edge, Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 232–45; rev. “lexical(?),” not copied. 617. N 1538, from Nippur. Fragment from the bottom left corner, Neo-Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 235–49; rev. Urra I 1–10, not copied. 618. Ash. Mus. 1924-967, excavated at Kiš, probably by Mackay in 1924. Fragment from the middle, multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 235–43 repeated (i′–ii′); rev. “alia,” not copied. 619. BM 65165 (82-9-18, 5146), probably from Sippar. Fragment from the top right corner, multicolumn Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Weidner list ll. 233–45 repeated (i′–iii′?); rev. ll. 240–49 repeated (i′–iii′). 620. BM 62741 (AH 82-9-18, 2710), from Sippar. Lower part of a Late Babylonian copy of a commentary on the beginning of the Weidner list, from damar- ra-ḫé-è-a (l. 15) to dnin-a-zu (l. 27). Transliterations: folios 9828–29, 10187. Frahm et al. 2013: CCP 6.7.A. 621–35. Miscellaneous Fragments of God Lists and Related Texts 621. Smithsonian 315238A+K. Fragment from the middle, Old Babylonian school tablet, names of Enlil.
Catalogue of Texts
17
622. K 13337+18101, from Nineveh. Fragment from the middle, Neo-Assyrian copy of the triple-column list of names of Marduk, ed. Lambert 2013: 142–43 MS C. Another handcopy of K 13337: King 1902: 166. 623. BM 39295 (80-11-12, 1181), from Babylon or Borsippa. Late Babylonian fragment from the bottom right corner, Nabû theology. 624. BM 37980 (80-6-17, 1809), from Babylon or Borsippa. Fragment from the top left corner, Late Babylonian school-exercise tablet: obv. Sumerian incantation, not copied, transliteration: folio 9910; rev. god list. 625. K 10620, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the left edge, god list. Transliterations: folios 9203, 9701. 626. K 14984, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the left edge, god list. Transliteration: folio 9073. 627. BM 37351 (80-6-17, 1108), from Babylon or Borsippa. Late Babylonian fragment from the left edge, god list. Transliteration: folio 9358. 628. K 16193, from Nineveh. Multicolumn Neo- Assyrian fragment from the middle, god list. Transliteration: folio 9074. 629. BM 98729 (Th 1905-4-9, 235), excavated at Nineveh by Thompson in 1905. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the bottom right corner, “probably two cols. a side, but three not impossible,” god list: obv. Enlil; rev. Anu (i), Šamaš (ii) // VAT 1193 (Schroeder 1918: 110). Transliteration: folio 9075. 630. BM 48835 (81-11-3, 1546), from Babylon or Borsippa. Late Babylonian fragment from the left edge, ruled: god list // BM 38682 obv. 1′–9′ (Pinches 1926: 213). 631. BM 49144 (81-11-3, 1855), from Babylon or Borsippa. Late Babylonian fragment from the left edge, ruled: god list // BM 38682 rev. 4–13 (Pinches 1926: 215). Probably part of the same tablet as No. 630. 632. BM 49118 (81-11-3, 1829), from Babylon or Borsippa. Late Babylonian fragment from the left edge, god list. 633. K 15993, from Nineveh. Neo-Assyrian fragment from the middle, theology: ll. 5′–6′ metals =
18
Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two
gods // CT 24 49 K 4349E 3′–6′, cf. CT 25 42 K 13706: 5′–6′; ll. 7′–8′ winds = gods? 634. BM 39794 (80-11-12, 1681), from Babylon or Borsippa. Late Babylonian fragment from the middle, god list or theological commentary. 635. BM 40747 (81-4-28, 292), from Babylon (Jimjima). Lower part of a Late Babylonian tablet: explanations of gods’ names. Transliteration: folio 9357. 636–52. Miscellaneous Texts of Other Genres 636. K 9282, from Nineveh. Lower part of the reverse, Neo-Assyrian copy of Examenstext A, ed. Sjöberg 1975: 146 MS G; Ashurbanipal colophon type d. Old handcopy Gadd 1957: 259. 637. K 10863, from Nineveh. Fragment from the middle, Neo-Assyrian copy of a text mentioning Samsuiluna and frogs. Transliteration: folio 9491. 638. VAT 432, probably from Babylon. Fragment from the middle, reverse of a Late Babylonian astronomical diary. Transliteration: folio 9627. 639. K 15248, from Nineveh. Fragment from the middle of a multicolumn Neo-Assyrian tablet, probably ruled into pairs of lines; “could go with K 2361+([hymn to] Nabû).” 640. K 22081, from Nineveh. Fragment from the middle of a Neo-Assyrian tablet, ruled into pairs of lines. 641. K 18890, from Nineveh. Fragment from the middle of a Neo-Assyrian tablet, probably ruled into pairs of lines. 642. BLMJ 783. Upper part of a Neo-Assyrian stone (“slate?”) amulet tablet, cut down to appear whole: obv. Lamaštu scene, not drawn; rev. Sumerian incantation of Pazuzu, ed. Borger 1987: 25 MS Musc. 103; Heeßel 2002: 100–1 no. 26. 643. ROM 910x209.296 (D 828). An Old Babylonian letter from the correspondence of Hammurapi and Šamaš-ḫāzir, ed. Fiette 2018: 330–31.
644. BM 99042 (Ki 1904-10-9, 71), supposedly excavated at Nineveh by King in 1904 but certainly a stray. A fragment of a barrel cylinder, inscribed in archaizing Babylonian script. King (1914: 19 no. 107) proposed that it was a building “inscription of an Assyrian king, probably Esarhaddon.” Borger (1956: 120 §105) pointed out that this was improbable, given the presence of the name of Nebuchadnezzar (l. 5′). Leichty (2011: 313 no. 1030) suggested that “it should probably attributed to Nebuchadnezzar II.” Since the name Nebuchadnezzar is not followed by his titulary, Nabonidus is perhaps a better candidate. In the absence of the original drawing, Lambert’s handcopy is reproduced from a photocopy, folio 6704. 645. Folio 1483. Fragment from the lower edge, Early Dynastic period copy of an Old Sumerian lexical list. 646. Folio 19198. An Old Babylonian copy of an unidentified Sumerian literary composition. 104 × 63 mm. 647. Folio 1179. Old or Middle Babylonian tabular account of sheep counted in spring and summer; “from Hilprecht’s Excavations at Nippur.” 648. Folio 1149. Inscription on a weight of one shekel, endorsed by Zababa-aḫa-iddina, son or descendant of the sanga of Kiš. 649. Folio 1076. Upper left corner of an inscription in Babylonian monumental script. 650. Folio 19200. Left portion of a Neo-Babylonian copy of the List of Rising and Setting Stars, parallels ed. Horowitz 2014: 158–67; trace of a colophon. 651. Folio 16382. A Late Babylonian contract, dated Cyrus 7.VI.5. 36 × 48 mm. Another handcopy and ed.: Joannès and Lemaire 1999: 27, 34. 652. Folio 16383. A Late Babylonian loan contract, dated Darius 22.V.5. 47 × 59 mm. This or a duplicate tablet is edited by Joannès and Lemaire 1996: 46–48 (note minor variants).
Index of Museum Numbers
Museum Number Archaeological Museum, Istanbul Si 815 Ashmolean Museum, Oxford 1923-307 1923-400 1924-845W 1924-855+902+960+1366+1376+1518+1800+ 1801+2034+2278 1924-885+1832+1900 1924-862 1924-902 1924-960 1924-967 1924-975 1924-1010 1924-1122 1924-1132 1924-1133 1924-1134 1924-1205+1705+1902 1924-1216+1836 1924-1251+1279+1925+1960 1924-1279 1924-1366 1924-1376 1924-1396+1480 1924-1425 1924-1469+1754 1924-1478
Text No. 557 568 460 596 493 567 609 493 493 618 602 586 614 587 550 603 578 594 558 558 493 493 584 571 573 607
Museum Number 1924-1480 1924-1486 1924-1503+1839 1924-1518 1924-1525+1833 1924-1705 1924-1754 1924-1800 1924-1801 1924-1832 1924-1833 1924-1834 1924-1835+2273 1924-1836 1924-1837+1968 1924-1839 1924-1900 1924-1901+2138 1924-1902 1924-1903 1924-1905 1924-1923 1924-1925 1924-1960 1924-1968 1924-2034 1924-2066 1924-2095 1924-2138 1924-2273
Text No. 584 601 604 493 562 578 573 493 493 567 562 565 591 594 615 604 567 572 578 560 613 553 558 558 615 493 595 597 572 591
20
Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two
Museum Number
Text No.
1924-2278 1928-443 1930-177I 1932-156J 1932-315A
493 612 585 582 564
Bible Lands Museum, Jerusalem BLMJ 783
642
British Museum, London 79-7-8, 171 81-2-4, 214 81-2-4, 331 82-3-23, 5217 82-5-22, 503 83-1-18, 426 83-1-18, 427+BM 99089 83-1-18, 428 83-1-18, 437 83-1-18, 521 83-1-18, 817 BM 17584 BM 30546 BM 32655 BM 33711 BM 33788 BM 33799 BM 34168 BM 34876 BM 34895 BM 34977+35571 BM 35041 BM 35401+55485+99669+99685 BM 35571 BM 35557 BM 35686 BM 36338 BM 36446 BM 36456 BM 37252 BM 37327 BM 37351 BM 37549
362 388 381 520 358 359 377 374 349 357 395 427 392 449 579 575 566 590 529 405 541 600 407 541 424 438 588 515 563 522 542 627 490
Museum Number BM 37564 BM 37675+37868 BM 37720 BM 37859 BM 37868 BM 37980 BM 38088 BM 38192 BM 38268+39046 BM 38564 BM 38834 BM 39046 BM 39295 BM 39794 BM 39891 BM 40117 BM 40539 BM 40637+40839 BM 40651 BM 40719 BM 40747 BM 40795+40806+41256A BM 40806 BM 40839 BM 41104 BM 41255A BM 41255B+J+M+41363 BM 41255C+I+L BM 41255D BM 41255E+O BM 41255F BM 41255G BM 41255H BM 41255I BM 41255K BM 41255J BM 41255L BM 41255M BM 41255N BM 41255O BM 41255P BM 41256A BM 41288
Text No. 432 403 505 404 403 624 516 549 494 436 338 494 623 634 540 423 561 611 496 599 635 351 351 611 551 535 532 533 536 334 534 534 334 533 534 532 533 532 534 334 534 351 406
Museum Number BM 41308 BM 41363 BM 42316 BM 42337 BM 43455 BM 43560 BM 45639 BM 45733 BM 45754 BM 45806 BM 46219 BM 46282 BM 46321 BM 46345 BM 46352 BM 46547 BM 46548 BM 46625 BM 47009 BM 47077 BM 47364 BM 47365 BM 47693+48828+49041 BM 47794 BM 47822 BM 47867 BM 47887 BM 47900 BM 48828 BM 48835 BM 49041 BM 49118 BM 49144 BM 50723 BM 51478 BM 52657 BM 53617 BM 54195 BM 55060 BM 55485 BM 60170+ BM 60180 BM 60181+
Text No. 545 532 431 502 488 463 543 407 467 610 477 466 577 422 422 576 446 616 465 598 419 537 464 580 589 583 428 605 464 630 464 632 631 547 421 393 514 468 430 407 552 555 556
Index of Museum Numbers
21
Museum Number
Text No.
BM 62741 BM 64393 BM 65165 BM 65578 BM 65752 BM 66581 BM 66610 BM 67568 BM 68061+73916+73999 BM 68333 BM 68462+74185 BM 72205 BM 72265 BM 72744 BM 73916 BM 73999 BM 74185 BM 75985 BM 76230 BM 76608 BM 76694 BM 77251 BM 77264 BM 77985 BM 78139 BM 78973 BM 98729 BM 98898 BM 99042 BM 99087 BM 99089 BM 99127 BM 99669 BM 99685 BM 122634+K 2944+ BM 128050 BM 128150 BM 134528 BM 134560 Bu 89-4-26,114 K 29+Ki 1902-5-10, 28 K 128 K 215+
620 486 619 554 593 606 437 574 447 544 538 526 429 548 447 447 538 434 402 420 433 426 423 372 559 418 629 521 644 333 377 398 407 407 508 510 495 352 489 371 539 397 497–99
22
Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two
Museum Number
Text No.
Museum Number
K 2099 K 2105+ K 2109+2121+5041+6093+7649+8944+ 13689+13703+14753+16225+ 16880+17081+ 18864 K 2110 K 2121 K 2353 K 2363+2787+8096+8166+15942+16692 K 2364+7 111+13323 K 2519 K 2597+ K 2727+6213 K 2751+2792+7973+9242+10011+13785 K 2760+13823 K 2768 K 2787 K 2792 K 2944+BM 122634 K 3030 K 3396+8935+12204+16802+83-1-18, 437 K 3471+83-1-18, 428 K 3654+7969+Sm 802+1319 K 3663 K 3750B K 3794+BM 99127 K 4334 K 4338B+ K 4343 K 4349+ K 4733 K 5041 K 5408A+Rm 145 K 5780A K 5900 K 6037+8220+11194+14754 K 6093 K 6213 K 6230 K 6392 K 6665 K 6921 K 7041
478 498–99 525
K 7111 K 7570+7575+7576+7577+7578+7579 K 7575 K 7576 K 7577 K 7578 K 7579 K 7649 K 7722+9244 K 7731 K 7969 K 7973 K 8096 K 8111+13266 K 8155 K 8166 K 8168 K 8220 K 8221 K 8321 K 8602 K 8720 K 8723 K 8935 K 8944 K 9242 K 9244 K 9282 K 9287 K 9594 K 9788+82-3-23, 5217 K 9803+9853 K 9853 K 9886 K 10011 K 10052+13864 K 10213 K 10620 K 10630+11815 K 10863 K 11194 K 11417 K 11426
497 525 369 347 345 373 508 451 399 445 440 347 399 508 368 349 374 350 341 378 398 408 523 497–98 489 354 525 348 531 389 512 525 451 365 413 363 379 475
Text No. 345 411 411 411 411 411 411 525 473 491 350 399 347 450 387 347 385 512 509 410 356 517 375 349 525 399 473 636 414 444 520 384 384 412 399 409 530 625 343 637 512 400 528
Museum Number
Text No.
K 11763 K 11783 K 11815 K 12108+13396 K 12204 K 12207 K 13266 K 13323 K 13337+18101 K 13396 K 13438 K 13669 K 13689 K 13703 K 13705 K 13785 K 13823 K 13864 K 13940 K 13973 K 14749 K 14750 K 14753 K 14754 K 14757 K 14758 K 14760 K 14764 K 14984 K 15160 K 15248 K 15334+Rm II 152 K 15942 K 15993 K 16193 K 16225 K 16343 K 16692 K 16713 K 16802 K 16872 K 16880 K 17081
367 376 343 443 349 361 450 345 622 443 442 476 525 525 441 399 445 409 439 390 504 474 525 512 511 503 498 527 626 523 639 353 347 633 628 525 360 347 391 349 339 525 525
Index of Museum Numbers
Museum Number K 17114 K 17794 K 18021 K 18101 K 18190 K 18196 K 18864 K 18890 K 19348 K 19429 K 19928 K 20532 K 20546 K 20549 K 21664 K 22081 Ki 1902-5-10, 28 ND 5426 ND 5502 ND 5503 ND 5556 ND 5558 ND 5560 ND 5565 Rm 145 Rm 222+513 Rm 513 Rm II 152 Rm II 170 Rm II 216 Rm II 258 Rm II 301 Sm 718+1032 Sm 771 Sm 788 Sm 802 Sm 998 Sm 1032 Sm 1319 Sm 1590 Sm 1930 U 30491 U 30492
23
Text No. 383 499 461 622 500 462 525 641 396 506 340 394 513 518 501 640 539 416 415 417 472 469 471 470 348 342 342 353 370 519 344 380 382 386 346 350 355 382 350 364 366 608 592
24
Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two
Museum Number
Text No.
Institute of Oriental Culture, University of Tokyo unnumbered
453
Iraq Museum, Baghdad 2N-T 349 IM 57957
492 492
Musée d’art et d’histoire, Geneva MAH 16002
570
Musée du Louvre, Paris AO 24116
479
Oriental Institute Museum, Chicago 3N-T 268 3N-T 316 A 30191 A 30211 DS 32-7
456 454 456 454 448
Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto D 828 D 991 D 1076 ROM 910x209.296 ROM 910x209.543 ROM 910x209.458
643 337 484 643 484 337
Smithsonian Institution, Washington Smithsonian 315238 Smithsonian 315238A+K Smithsonian 315238K
569 621 621
University Museum, Philadelphia 3N-T 270+272+276 3N-T 272 3N-T 276 3N-T 299 3N-T 408 CBS 16 CBS 331 N 1538
457 457 457 455 459 401 485 617
Museum Number
Text No.
N 3853 N 5158 UM 55-21-293+295+297 UM 55-21-295 UM 55-21-297 UM 55-21-302 UM 55-21-322
483 458 457 457 457 455 459
Vorderasiatisches Museum, Berlin VAT 432 VAT 9921 VAT 10140 VAT 10142 VAT 10177 VAT 10369 VAT 13102 VAT 13796 VAT 13809 VAT 17088 VAT 17129 VAT 17201 VAT 17502 VAT 18676
638 336 435 435 435 335 330 332 331 487 524 425 546 507
Whereabouts Unknown Folio 464 Folio 1076 Folio 1077 Folio 1149 Folio 1179 Folio 1483 Folio 16382 Folio 16383 Folio 19198 Folio 19200
453 649 452 648 647 645 651 652 646 650
Yale Babylonian Collection, New Haven NBC 6101 YBC 7186 YBC 9844 YBC 9913
481 482 480 581
Index of Texts
Aa = nâqu Aluzinnu compendium An = Anum Anšar = Anum Anum (Weidner list) Anu ša amēli Astrology Bīt mēseri Diri Divine Daughters Divine Directory of Nippur Examenstext A Extispicy Hymn Ikrib
462, 464 408–34 485–518 538–42 544–620 537 442–45, 650 447 454–61, 465–78 437 519 636 332 463 343–400
kalûtu Malku Mīs pî Pazuzu Prayer Sag-Tablet Shorter An = Anum Šumma ālu Šumma ekal tīrāni Šumma izbu Šumma kakku Taboos of the Gods Tākultu ritual Tāmītu Urra = ḫubullu
446 432, 463 450 642 451 453 523–28, 532–36 330–31 334 337, 468 333 401–7 448 338–342 452
References
Abusch, T., and D. Schwemer. 2016. Corpus of Mesopotamian Anti- Witchcraft Rituals. Vol. 2. Ancient Magic and Divination 8.2. Leiden. Bergmann, E. 1953. Codex Ḫammurabi: Textus primigenius. 3rd ed. Rome. Bezold, C. 1893. Catalogue of the Cuneiform Tablets in the Kouyunjik Collection of the British Museum. Vol. 3. London. Boissier, A. 1901. Matériaux pour l’étude de la religion babylonienne. Revue sémitique 9: 146–60. Borger, R. 1956. Die Inschriften Asarhaddons Königs von Assyrien. Archiv für Orientforschung Beiheft 9. Graz. ———. 1987. Pazuzu. In F. Rochberg-Halton, ed., Language, Literature, and History: Philological and Historical Studies Presented to Erica Reiner, 15–32. New Haven, Conn. Brünnow, R. E. 1889. Assyrian hymns, II. Zeitschrift für Assyriologie 4: 225–58. Burrows, E. 1924. Hymn to Ninurta as Sirius (K 128). Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Centenary Supplement: 33–40. Cavigneaux, A. 1981. Textes scolaires du temple de Nabû ša ḫarê. Vol. 1. Baghdad. Civil, M. 1986. The Sag-Tablet. In M. Civil, O. R. Gurney, and D. A. Kennedy, Materials for the Sumerian Lexicon, Supplementary Series. Vol. 1. Rome. ———. 2004. The Series diri = (w)atru. Materials for the Sumerian Lexicon 15. Rome. Cohen, Y. 2009. The Scribes and Scholars of the City of Emar in the Late Bronze Age. Winona Lake, Ind. Craig, J. A. 1895. Assyrian and Babylonian Religious Texts. Vol. 1. Leipzig. Da Riva, R. 2019. The angry Ištar of Eturkalamma: BM 32482+ and the conservation of cultic traditions in the Late Babylonian period. Iraq 81: 87–105. De Zorzi, N. 2014. La serie teratomantica Šumma izbu: Testo, tradizione, orrizonti culturali. 2 vols. History of the Ancient Near East, Monographs 15. Padua. De Zorzi, N., and M. Jursa. 2011. The courtier in the commentary. Nouvelles assyriologique brèves et utilitaires 2011: 41–42 no. 33. Ebeling, E. 1931. Tod und Leben nach den Vorstellungen der Babylonier. Vol. 1. Texte. Berlin. Fiette, B. 2018. Archibab 3. Le Palais, la terre et les hommes: La gestion du domaine royal de Larsa d’après les archives de Šamašḫazir. Mémoires de N.A.B.U. 20. Paris.
Förtsch, W. 1916. Zwei altbabylonische Öpferlisten. Mitteilungen der Vorderasiatisch-Ägyptischen Gesellschaft 21: 22–32. Frahm, E., M. Frazer, and E. Jiménez. 2013. Commentary on Weidner’s God List (CCP 6.7.A). Cuneiform Commentaries Project. https://ccp.yale.edu/P461274. DOI: 10079/wstqk32, accessed 1 June 2020. Frahm, E., and E. Jiménez. 2015. Myth, ritual and interpretation: The commentary on Enūma eliš I–VII and a commentary on Elamite month names. Hebrew Bible and Ancient Israel 5: 293–343. Freedman, S. M. 1998. If a City Is Set on a Height: The Akkadian Omen Series Šumma Alu in Mēlê Šakin. Vol. 1. Tablets 1–21. Philadelphia. Gadd, C. J. 1957. Fragments of Assyrian scholastic literature. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 20: 255–65. George, A. R. 1992. Babylonian Topographical Texts. Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 40. Leuven. ———. 2000. Four temple rituals from Babylon. In A. R. George and I. L. Finkel, eds., Wisdom, Gods and Literature: Studies in Assyriology in Honour of W. G. Lambert, 259–99. Winona Lake, Ind. Gesche, P. 2000. Schulunterricht in Babylonien im ersten Jahrtausend v. Chr. Alter Orient und Altes Testament 275. Münster. Gibson, McG. 1972. The archaeological uses of cuneiform documents: Patterns of occupation at the city of Kish. Iraq 34: 113–23. Gray, C. D. 1901. The Šamaš Religious Texts. Chicago. Groneberg, B. 1987. Syntax, Morphologie und Stil der jungbabylonischen “hymnischen” Literatur. 2 vols. Freiburger altorientalische Studien 14. Stuttgart. Heeßel, N. 2002. Pazuzu: Archäologische und philologische Studien zu einem altorientalischen Dämon. Leiden. ———. 2007. Divinatorische Texte I. Terrestrische, teratologische, physiognomische und oneiromantische Omina. Keilschrifttexte aus Assur literarischen Inhalts 1. Wiesbaden. ———. 2012. Divinatorische Texte II. Opferschau Omina. Keilschrifttexte aus Assur literarischen Inhalts 5. Wiesbaden. Horowitz, W. 2014. The Three Stars Each: The Astrolabes and Related Texts. Archiv für Orientforschung Beiheft 33. Vienna. Joannès, F., and A. Lemaire. 1996. Contrats babyloniens d’époque achéménide du Bît-Abî-râm avec une épigraphe araméenne. Revue d’Assyriologie 90: 41–60.
28
References
———. 1999. Trois tablettes cunéiformes à l’onomastique ouest- sémitique. Transeuphratène 17: 17–34. King, L. W. 1902. The Seven Tablets of Creation. 2 vols. London. ———. 1914. Catalogue of the Cuneiform Tablets of the Kouyunjik Collection of the British Museum, Supplement. London. Koch, U. 2015. Notes on a nisḫu for the performance of ornithoscopy. Nouvelles assyriologique brèves et utilitaires 2015: 69–72 no. 47. Lambert, W. G. 1960. Babylonian Wisdom Literature. Oxford. ———. 1964. The reign of Nebuchadnezzar I: A turning point in the history of ancient Mesopotamian religion. In W. S. McCullough, ed., The Seed of Wisdom: Essays in Honour of T. J. Meek, 3–13. Toronto. ———. 1971. Götterlisten. In Reallexikon der Asyriologie 3: 473–79. Berlin. ———. 1992. Catalogue of the Cuneiform Tablets in the Kouyunjik Collection of the British Museum, Third Supplement. London. ———. 2007. Babylonian Oracle Questions. Mesopotamian Civilizations 13. Winona Lake, Ind. ———. 2013. Babylonian Creation Myths. Mesopotamian Civilizations 16. Winona Lake, Ind. ———. 2014. The Babylonian ikribs. In J. C. Fincke, ed., Divination in the Ancient Near East, 53–55. Winona Lake, Ind. Langdon, S. 1915. A fragment of a series of ritualistic prayers to astral deities in the ceremonies of divination. Revue d’Assyriologie 12: 189–92. ———. 1923. Babylonian wisdom. Babyloniaca 7: 129–229. ———. 1927. Babylonian Penitential Psalms. Oxford Editions of Cuneiform Texts 6. Paris. Leichty, E. 1970. The Omen Series Šumma Izbu. Texts from Cuneiform Sources 4. Locust Valley, N.Y. ———. 2011. The Inscriptions of Esarhaddon, King of Assyria (680–669 bc). Royal Inscriptions of the Neo-Assyrian Period 4. Winona Lake, Ind. Leichty, E., J. J. Finkelstein, and C. B. F. Walker. 1988. Catalogue of the Babylonian Tablets in the British Museum VIII. Tablets from Sippar 3. London. Leichty, E., and A. K. Grayson. 1987. Catalogue of the Babylonian Tablets in the British Museum VII. Tablets from Sippar 2. London. Litke, R. L. 1998. A Reconstruction of the Assyro-Babylonian God- Lists, AN: dA-nu-um and AN: Anu šá amēli. New Haven, Conn. Livingstone, A. 1986. Mystical and Mythological Explanatory Works of Assyrian and Babylonian Scholars. Oxford. Loud, G., and C. B. Altman. 1938. Khorsabad, Part Two: The Citadel and the Town. Oriental Institute Publications 40. Chicago. Mayer, W. 1976. Untersuchungen zur Formensprache der babylonischen “Gebetsbeschwörungen.” Studia Pohl series maior 5. Rome. McCown, D. E., and R. C. Haines. 1967. Nippur 1. Temple of Enlil, Scribal Quarter, and Soundings. Oriental Institute Publications 78. Chicago. Meek, T. J. 1920. Some explanatory lists and grammatical texts. Revue d’Assyriologie 17: 117–206.
Meissner, B. 1898. Altbabylonische Gesetze. Beiträge zur Assyriologie 3: 493–532. Neugebauer, O. 1957. The Exact Sciences in Antiquity. Providence, R.I. Oshima, T. 2011. Babylonian Prayers to Marduk. Tübingen. Pedersén, O. 2005. Archive und Bibliotheken in Babylon: Die Tontafeln der Grabung Robert Koldeweys 1899–1917. Abhandlungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft 25. Berlin. Perry, E. G. 1907. Hymnen und Gebete an Sin. Leipzig semitistische Studien 2.4. Leipzig. Peterson, J. 2009. Godlists from Old Babylonian Nippur in the University Museum, Philadelphia. Alter Orient und Altes Testament 362. Münster. Pinches, T. G. 1896. Assyriological gleanings. Proceedings of the Society of Biblical Archaeology 18: 250–58. ———. 1910. An Outline of Assyrian Grammar. London. ———. 1926. Assyriological trifles by a handicapped Assyriologist. In C. Adler and A. Ember, eds., Oriental Studies Published in Commemoration of the Fortieth Anniversary (1883–1923) of Paul Haupt as Director of the Oriental Seminary of the Johns Hopkins University, 212–19. Baltimore, Md. Robson, E. 2002. More than metrology: Mathematics in an Old Babylonian scribal school. In J. M. Steele and A. Imhausen, eds., Under One Sky: Astronomy and Mathematics in the Ancient Near East, 325–65. Münster. Schroeder, O. 1918. Aus den keilinschriftlichen Sammlungen des Berliner Museums. Zeitschrift für Assyriologie 31: 91–110. Schwemer, D. 2001. Die Wettergottgestalten Mesopotamiens und Nordsyriens im Zeitalter der Keilschrifturkunden. Wiesbaden. Seidl, U., and W. Sallaberger. 2005–6. Der “Heilige Baum,” Archiv für Orientforschung 51: 54–74. Sjöberg, Å. W. 1975. Der Examenstext A. Zeitschrift für Assyriologie 64: 137–76. Starr, I. 1983. The Rituals of the Diviner. Bibliotheca Mesopotamica 12. Malibu, Calif. Stone, E. 1987. Nippur Neighborhoods. Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilizations 44. Chicago. Thureau-Dangin, F. 1921. Rituels accadiens. Paris. Veldhuis, N. 2000. Kassite exercises: Literary and lexical extracts. Journal of Cuneiform Studies 52: 67–94. Virolleaud, C. 1901. K 6392. Revue sémitique 9: 257. Walker, C. B. F., and M. Dick. 2001. The Induction of the Cult Image in Ancient Mesopotamia: The Mesopotamian Mīs Pî Ritual. State Archives of Assyria Literary Texts 1. Helsinki. Watanabe, K. 1987. Freiburger Vorläufer zu ḪAR-ra = ḫubullu XI und XII. Acta Sumerologica 9: 277–91. Weidner, E. 1953. Ein neues Duplikat zu II R 60, Nr. 1. Archiv für Orientforschung 16: 310–11 and pl. 14. Wiseman, D. J., and J. A. Black. 1996. Literary Texts from the Temple of Nabû. Cuneiform Texts from Nimrud IV. London. Yoshikawa, M., and E. Matsushima. 1981. Bilingual lexical tablet. Orient: Bulletin of the Society for Near Eastern Studies in Japan 23.2: 1–19. Zimmern, H. 1901. Beiträge zur Kenntnis der babylonischen Religion. Leipzig.
Cuneiform Texts
30
Omen Compendia
Plate 1
Plate 2
Omen Compendia
31
32
Omen Compendia
Plate 3
Plate 4
Omen Compendia
33
34
Omen Compendia
Plate 5
Plate 6
Omen Compendia
35
36
Omen Compendia
Plate 7
Plate 8
Omen Compendia
37
38
Omen Compendia
Plate 9
Plate 10
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
39
40
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 11
Plate 12
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
41
42
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 13
Plate 14
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
43
44
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 15
Plate 16
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
45
46
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 17
Plate 18
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
47
48
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 19
Plate 20
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
49
50
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 21
Plate 22
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
51
52
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 23
Plate 24
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
53
54
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 25
Plate 26
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
55
56
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 27
Plate 28
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
57
58
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 29
Plate 30
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
59
60
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 31
Plate 32
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
61
62
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 33
Plate 34
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
63
64
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 35
Plate 36
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
65
66
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 37
Plate 38
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
67
68
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 39
Plate 40
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
69
70
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 41
Plate 42
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
71
72
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 43
Plate 44
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
73
74
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 45
Plate 46
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
75
76
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 47
Plate 48
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
77
78
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
Plate 49
Plate 50
Divination Rituals, Questions (tāmītus), and Prayers (ikribs)
79
80
Taboos of the Gods
Plate 51
Plate 52
Taboos of the Gods
81
82
Taboos of the Gods
Plate 53
Plate 54
Taboos of the Gods
83
84
Taboos of the Gods
Plate 55
Plate 56
Taboos of the Gods
85
86
Taboos of the Gods
Plate 57
Plate 58
Taboos of the Gods
87
88
Taboos of the Gods
Plate 59
Plate 60
Taboos of the Gods
89
90
Taboos of the Gods
Plate 61
Plate 62
The Aluzinnu Compendium
91
92
The Aluzinnu Compendium
Plate 63
Plate 64
The Aluzinnu Compendium
93
94
The Aluzinnu Compendium
Plate 65
Plate 66
The Aluzinnu Compendium
95
96
The Aluzinnu Compendium
Plate 67
Plate 68
The Aluzinnu Compendium
97
98
The Aluzinnu Compendium
Plate 69
Plate 70
The Aluzinnu Compendium
99
100
The Aluzinnu Compendium
Plate 71
Plate 72
The Aluzinnu Compendium
101
102
The Aluzinnu Compendium
Plate 73
Plate 74
The Aluzinnu Compendium
103
104
The Aluzinnu Compendium
Plate 75
Plate 76
The Aluzinnu Compendium
105
106
The Aluzinnu Compendium
Plate 77
Plate 78
The Aluzinnu Compendium
107
108
The Aluzinnu Compendium
Plate 79
Plate 80
The Aluzinnu Compendium
109
110
The Aluzinnu Compendium
Plate 81
Plate 82
The Aluzinnu Compendium
111
112
The Aluzinnu Compendium
Plate 83
Plate 84
The Aluzinnu Compendium
113
114
The Aluzinnu Compendium
Plate 85
Plate 86
The Aluzinnu Compendium
115
116
The Aluzinnu Compendium
Plate 87
Plate 88
The Aluzinnu Compendium
117
118
The Aluzinnu Compendium
Plate 89
Plate 90
The Aluzinnu Compendium
119
120
The Aluzinnu Compendium
Plate 91
Plate 92
The Aluzinnu Compendium
121
122
Theological and Religious Texts
Plate 93
Plate 94
Theological and Religious Texts
123
124
Theological and Religious Texts
Plate 95
Plate 96
Theological and Religious Texts
125
126
Theological and Religious Texts
Plate 97
Plate 98
Theological and Religious Texts
127
128
Theological and Religious Texts
Plate 99
Plate 100
Theological and Religious Texts
129
130
Theological and Religious Texts
Plate 101
Plate 102
Theological and Religious Texts
131
132
Theological and Religious Texts
Plate 103
Plate 104
Theological and Religious Texts
133
134
Theological and Religious Texts
Plate 105
Plate 106
Lexical Lists
135
136
Lexical Lists
Plate 107
Plate 108
Lexical Lists
137
138
Lexical Lists
Plate 109
Plate 110
Lexical Lists
139
140
Lexical Lists
Plate 111
Plate 112
Lexical Lists
141
142
Lexical Lists
Plate 113
Plate 114
Lexical Lists
143
144
Lexical Lists
Plate 115
Plate 116
Lexical Lists
145
146
Lexical Lists
Plate 117
Plate 118
Lexical Lists
147
148
Lexical Lists
Plate 119
Plate 120
Lexical Lists
149
150
Lexical Lists
Plate 121
Plate 122
Lexical Lists
151
152
Lexical Lists
Plate 123
Plate 124
Lexical Lists
153
154
Lexical Lists
Plate 125
Plate 126
Lexical Lists
155
156
Lexical Lists
Plate 127
Plate 128
Lexical Lists
157
158
Lexical Lists
Plate 129
Plate 130
Lexical Lists
159
160
Lexical Lists
Plate 131
Plate 132
Lexical Lists
161
162
Lexical Lists
Plate 133
Plate 134
Lexical Lists
163
164
Lexical Lists—Miscellaneous Old Babylonian God Lists
Plate 135
Plate 136
Miscellaneous Old Babylonian God Lists
165
166
Miscellaneous Old Babylonian God Lists
Plate 137
Plate 138
Miscellaneous Old Babylonian God Lists
167
168
Miscellaneous Old Babylonian God Lists
Plate 139
Plate 140
An = Anum and Related God Lists
169
170
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 141
Plate 142
An = Anum and Related God Lists
171
172
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 143
Plate 144
An = Anum and Related God Lists
173
174
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 145
Plate 146
An = Anum and Related God Lists
175
176
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 147
Plate 148
An = Anum and Related God Lists
177
178
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 149
Plate 150
An = Anum and Related God Lists
179
180
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 151
Plate 152
An = Anum and Related God Lists
181
182
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 153
Plate 154
An = Anum and Related God Lists
183
184
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 155
Plate 156
An = Anum and Related God Lists
185
186
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 157
Plate 158
An = Anum and Related God Lists
187
188
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 159
Plate 160
An = Anum and Related God Lists
189
190
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 161
Plate 162
An = Anum and Related God Lists
191
192
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 163
Plate 164
An = Anum and Related God Lists
193
194
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 165
Plate 166
An = Anum and Related God Lists
195
196
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 167
Plate 168
An = Anum and Related God Lists
197
198
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 169
Plate 170
An = Anum and Related God Lists
199
200
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 171
Plate 172
An = Anum and Related God Lists
201
202
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 173
Plate 174
An = Anum and Related God Lists
203
204
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 175
Plate 176
An = Anum and Related God Lists
205
206
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 177
Plate 178
An = Anum and Related God Lists
207
208
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 179
Plate 180
An = Anum and Related God Lists
209
210
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 181
Plate 182
An = Anum and Related God Lists
211
212
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 183
Plate 184
An = Anum and Related God Lists
213
214
An = Anum and Related God Lists
Plate 185
Plate 186
The Weidner List (Anum)
215
216
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 187
Plate 188
The Weidner List (Anum)
217
218
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 189
Plate 190
The Weidner List (Anum)
219
220
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 191
Plate 192
The Weidner List (Anum)
221
222
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 193
Plate 194
The Weidner List (Anum)
223
224
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 195
Plate 196
The Weidner List (Anum)
225
226
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 197
Plate 198
The Weidner List (Anum)
227
228
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 199
Plate 200
The Weidner List (Anum)
229
230
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 201
Plate 202
The Weidner List (Anum)
231
232
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 203
Plate 204
The Weidner List (Anum)
233
234
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 205
Plate 206
The Weidner List (Anum)
235
236
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 207
Plate 208
The Weidner List (Anum)
237
238
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 209
Plate 210
The Weidner List (Anum)
239
240
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 211
Plate 212
The Weidner List (Anum)
241
242
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 213
Plate 214
The Weidner List (Anum)
243
244
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 215
Plate 216
The Weidner List (Anum)
245
246
The Weidner List (Anum) Plate 217
Plate 218
Miscellaneous Fragments of God Lists and Related Texts
247
248
Miscellaneous Fragments of God Lists and Related Texts
Plate 219
Plate 220
Miscellaneous Fragments of God Lists and Related Texts
249
250
Miscellaneous Fragments of God Lists and Related Texts
Plate 221
Plate 222
Miscellaneous Texts of Other Genres
251
252
Miscellaneous Texts of Other Genres
Plate 223
Plate 224
Miscellaneous Texts of Other Genres
253
254
Miscellaneous Texts of Other Genres
Plate 225
Plate 226
Miscellaneous Texts of Other Genres
255
256
Miscellaneous Texts of Other Genres
Plate 227
Plate 228
Miscellaneous Texts of Other Genres
257
258
Miscellaneous Texts of Other Genres
Plate 229
Plate 230
Miscellaneous Texts of Other Genres
259
260
Miscellaneous Texts of Other Genres
Plate 231