130 67 139MB
English Pages 276 [280] Year 2008
Rituals of War
BLANK PAGE
Rituals of War The Body and Violence in Mesopotamia
Zainab Bahrani
ZONEFEKT BOOKS - NEW YORK
© 2008 Zainab Bahrani ZONE BOOKS
1226 Prospect Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11218
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including electronic, mechanical, photocopying, microfilming, recording, or otherwise (except for that copying permitted by Sections 107 and 108 of the U.S. Copyright Law and except by reviewers for
the public press), without written permission from the Publisher. Printed in the United States of America. Distributed by The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, and London, England
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Bahrani, Zainab
Rituals of war : the body and violence in Mesopotamia / Zainab Bahrani
p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-890951-84-9
1. War - Iraq - History - To 634. 2. Military history, Ancient.
3. History, Ancient. I. Title. U31.B34 2007 935-dc22
2007061960
Contents
Acknowledgments 7
Introduction An Archaeology of Violence 9
I The King’s Head 23 It Babylonian Semiotics 57
III The Mantic Body 75 IV. Deathandthe Ruler 101 V_ Image of My Valor 131
VI The Art of War 159 VII Omens of Terror 183 VIII The Essence of War 207 Notes 225 Bibliography 243
Index 265
BLANK PAGE
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation for the generous grant that made the greater part of the research and writing of this book possible; Columbia University for providing two summer research grants; and Corpus Christi College, Oxford
for giving me a visiting fellowship and a place to work in the spring and summer of 2006. Many thanks to those who read and commented on chapters of the manuscript or the entire text: John Baines, Jonathan Crary, Donald P. Hansen, Natalie Kampen, Gtinter Kopcke, R.R.R. Smith, and Marc Van De Mieroop. I am also grateful to Dominik Bonatz, Paul Collins, and David O’Conner for sharing the manuscripts of their articles on war reliefs in Assyria and Egypt; Harvey Weiss, Eckart Frahm, and Kathryn Slanski for their insightful comments when I presented some of this work at Yale University in 2005;
and Benjamin R. Foster for his thoughts and expert views on Akkadian kingship and the stele of Narmasin. I would also like to thank Irene Winter and Elizabeth Simpson for their kind permission to publish the reconstruction drawing of the stele of Eanna-
tum, James Conlon for help with the images, and Scott Horton for the Immanuel Kant quote on war that appears as the epigraph
I
RITUALS OF WAR
to Chapter Five. I offer my sincere thanks to Meighan Gale of Zone Books for her careful editing and her patience. As always, I
could not have written this book without my boys, Marc and Kenan.
8
INTRODUCTION
An Archaeology of Violence
War is organized violence. As such, war might be viewed in the
. same way as some other institutions and rituals of civilized people. War was first defined as a form of controlled, organized, and
even ritualized violence some time ago, in the first part of the
twentieth century, in the works of authors such as Georges Bataille and Roger Caillois, and slightly earlier, in the psychoanalytic writings of Sigmund Freud. Carl von Clausewitz’s 1832 treatise On War, which describes war as an act of rational violence and a political instrument of the nation, is widely regarded as the first
modern philosophical work that considers the “true nature” or, in Platonic terms, originary essence of war. For Clausewitz, this essence is certainly organized and civilized aggression. It is “violence that arms itself with the inventions of art and science.”! The
ancient Mesopotamians, whose forms and representations of violence are the focus of this book, seem to have been already aware of such a philosophical definition of war. In the Sumerian myth
“Enki and the World Order,” the Mesopotamians counted the art of war among the MEs of civilization. The ME is a category in the Sumerian taxonomy of the world that Assyriologists usually translate as “the arts of civilization.’? This category is comprised 9
RITUALS OF WAR
of a long list of the achievements of this early complex society, from kingship and rule to metallurgy and writing. For the Mesopotamians, the arts of war, plunder, and taking booty were all aspects of civilized behavior. These are the forms of behavior of people who have become urbanized, that is, settled into urban communities interacting within urban social structures. Scholars of Antiquity have sometimes been baffled by the idea that such unpleasant forms of behavior might be considered MEs, or arts. The inclusion of sexuality and its various manifesta-
tions, including prostitution, and war and its practices in the grouping of “arts of civilization,” along with such commendable
occupations as music and craftwork, has been something of a mystery to modern readers. Ancient Mesopotamian culture is described in the grand narratives of world history as the ancestor to the Western tradition yet it remains, in this traditional view, rather unlike the later West in such civilized areas as ethics and aesthetics. Perhaps the word art as a translation of ME is slightly off the mark. No word in contemporary sociological, anthropological, or archaeological theories is the equivalent of Sumerian ME. War, as organized violence, is indeed a form of civilized behavior, as abhorrent as that thought may be. The Mesopotamians recognized this behavior as a ritualized organization, distinctive of complex societies; they linked it directly to the existence of the city and later, as it came into its own, the state. In the list of the MEs, they seem to have attempted to draw a taxonomic difference between the behavior of civilized people and animals or the barbaric nonurbanized nomads. The categorization of the MEs reveals an early contemplation of the place of human behaviors and the order of things in the world.’ According to Bataille, war exists because the taboo on violence in daily life relegates violence to areas of existence confined 10
AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF VIOLENCE
in space and time and that follow their own rules.* Today, a num-
ber of such rules exist, many of which have recently become issues of concern and subjects of contemporary debates and analyses. For example, the international laws that regulate war and occupation such as the Geneva Conventions and the Hague Convention, the accepted treatment of prisoners of war, the concept of war crimes, the legality of torture and its relationship to a specific national terrain, and the legitimacy of the nation-state are issues that are being redefined by politicians and contested by military commanders. The latter discussions indicate that even within war some forms of violence are acceptable (what is called conventional warfare), some are questionable or vaguely defined (such as the torture of prisoners of war and “collateral damage”), and some are categorized as criminal (rape and deliberate attacks on civilians during war and occupation). These divisions of violence fall into the Western philosophical categories of jus ad bellum and jus in bello, the two areas of just war. The first is just cause to go to war; and the second, just behavior in war (as in the treatment of civilians and prisoners of war). In the Middle East-
ern tradition, the term jihad (although it is currently used to mean terrorist or suicidal war) is more or less similar to the idea of jus ad bellum, in that it defines in which cases going to war is justified. Ibn Khaldtin (ap 1332-1406), a Muslim jurist and historian, discussed the definitions of just and unjust wars in his Mugqqadimah; centuries later, Michael Walzer, an American schol-
ar of government and philosopher of war, analyzed wars, and behavior within them, in his 1980 book Just and Unjust Wars.° Discussions and treatises from China and the Indian subcontinent about correct behavior in war and reasons to go to war are also well known. Sunzi’s Art of War, from the fifth century Bc, and the Arthasastra, a late fourth-century-Bc Sanskrit treatise on
diplomacy and war attributed to Kautilya, are two early texts 11
RITUALS OF WAR
concerned with the realm described in the Western tradition as just war. These discussions fall under the ethics of war. The concept of just and unjust war means that war is not generally thought of as
an impetuous activity. It involves a choice made at a particular moment, when violence is sanctioned as an accepted, correct, even valorized form of behavior. War, then, is the collective organization of aggressive urges. It is the controlled practice of group violence on a large scale, and as such it has to adhere to certain forms: its own rules and regulations. Clausewitz was certainly not the first
to contemplate the notion of war. War and its causes have been analyzed from the earliest historical records. In recent scholarship,
scholars of government and historians of war are not alone in studying the forms of war and their justifications. Sociologists and anthropologists have also attempted to frame the act of war within human behavior and within theories of war. War, state violence, and the law are now the focus of some of the most incisive contem-
porary philosophical writing. And “war studies” has now become an independent academic field at a number of universities.® The art of war — the forms and images of violence that both support and justify wars, enabling as well as representing them — has received far less attention. A number of studies of images of violence and war have recently emerged from the fields of art history and visual cultural studies, but the uses and functions of such images in Antiquity remains largely untheorized.’ What was the place of images of war and violence in Antiquity? Did such images aim to be objective historical records? Were they coercive or pro-
pagandistic? How was the notion of just war formulated in the images of war? How were works of art, historical monuments, and artifacts treated in war? And how did the monument of war (that much-revered type of monument) come to be invented in Mesopotamian Antiquity? 12
AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF VIOLENCE
A history or an archaeology of forms and monuments of violence can consider how such conventions of war, its represen-
tations, and its underlying activating rituals were practiced in : Antiquity.® Art, visual displays, representations, and war have a long, interrelated history. War, one can argue, is already a narra-
| tive as it is acted out on the battlefield. Assyrian and Babylonian accounts of battle make war's narrative aspect clear. Furthermore, war, victory, and royal or imperial power do not appear as narratives only in the visual arts. Central to the aims of the economy of violence (in Bataille’s broadest sense of economy as the circulation of energies) and of power and geopolitics is the technology of war, a militaristic complex that is sometimes described as the war machine.’ This war machine depends on technologies of violence in every sense of the word technology. Aspects of war such as the supernatural, rituals of divination, and performative representations are all integral parts of the war machine. But the war machine is not reducible to the military. It is a complex appropri-
ated by state violence but by definition outside the normative day-to-day affairs of the city and the internal laws of the state." War is a strictly organized activity that at the same time allows for forms of behavior that are non-normative and taboo. Like the festival and some religious rituals, war occupies a place outside; it
is a phenomenon that stirs and interrupts." In Bataille’s words, “the unleashed desire to kill that we call war goes far beyond the realm of religious activity. It is a suspension of the taboo surrounding death and killing.”” The contemplation of war in this way, as organized and sanctioned violence, appropriated or channeled by the urbanized city-state, limited in time and place, was a source of anxiety for the peoples of ancient Mesopotamia. Not unlike today’s state records and dominant representations, Mesopotamian records and rituals of war and images of violence sought
to rationalize war as a just aggression in each case. There is no 13
RITUALS OF WAR
extant Sumerian or Akkadian treatise on just war. However, the large corpus of textual and visual representations of violence and war allows an analysis of the subject of violence in Mesopotamian
Antiquity. This book, therefore, investigates aspects of war that might not today be considered within the realm of military logistics and strategies but that the ancients clearly understood as crucial and logical aspects of war and sovereignty. The Mesopotamian discussion of war, its justifications, and its
rituals spans the period between the third and the first millennia BC. As such, it predates all other discussions of war and traditions
of justified wars. The Assyrians of northern Mesopotamia are perhaps thought of in relation to war and violence more often than most other ancient cultures, especially in the first millennium Bc, when the Assyrian kings expanded their empire into the
surrounding territories. These kings conquered lands, moved populations, plundered cities, cut down and burned forests, and destroyed monuments. The expansion of power of the Assyrian kings of the first millennium Bc constitutes what can be firmly defined as an imperial mission. The Assyrian kings were remarkable perhaps not so much because they were aggressive imperial-
ists, since other periods of imperial expansion and force have existed in history, as because they chose to record the events of war, torture, and conquest in detail, sparing us from no gruesome act of violence in their glorification of war and empire — either in their written annals or in the visual images of empire. War, imperialism, and power in Mesopotamia have been dis-
cussed from the point of view of political history in numerous publications. In fact, the political-historical approach is now standard in the field of Mesopotamian studies, especially in works on
the Akkadian and Neo-Assyrian periods. Materialist economic reasons, and geopolitical reasons of power and control, spurred the Mesopotamians into the act of war for imperial expansion at 14
AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF VIOLENCE
various times, but these territorial wars relied on rituals and representations of power and rituals of battle. These were the ideological methods that enabled the processes to work. This book, therefore, is not a chronological survey of specific historical wars and technologies of weaponry or vehicles of war in Mesopotamia; a number of useful, concise studies already exist on that subject.’ Instead, this study considers what underlies war and violence. It examines philosophical beliefs about war and ideologies of war in Mesopotamian tradition; conceptions of violence and power that were inseparable from conceptions of the body and its control; and the processes and rituals of war that these formulations of the body and power made possible. These developments of ideas of power, rule, dominion, and authority cannot be separated from visual images or representation broadly defined. These formulations and representations, technologies in the rituals of war and in displays of violence and power, are an inevitable part of every imperial process. The present study thus considers facets of war and domination that fall under the categories of representation and display, the ritualistic, the ideological, and the supernatural. These might be described as the magical technologies of war, and as such they are not usually discussed in the standard political narratives of Mesopotamian history books. Being among the world’s earliest imperial forces, the Mesopotamians developed a system of expansion that relied on the machinations of war and the sophisticated development of weaponry and technology. But military technology included a number
| of aspects that today would be regarded as unscientific: the reading of omens, the movement of prisoners, the display of acts of torture. These practices and the beliefs behind them were the parameters of war for the Assyrians. They defined the reasons for war; they justified war, even if war was primarily a process of imperial expansion and the resulting control of natural resources, 15
RITUALS OF WAR
land, and wealth. Magical technologies and rituals can be described as a semiotics of war that delineates the parameters for correct and incorrect behavior in war. They define certain acts as appropriate and other acts as enabling, empowering, or, in fact, actually leading to victory. For the Assyrian imperial war machine, for example, the processes of war were clearly linked to the supernatural, but amid the detailed Assyrian accounts of the need for imperial expansion, an incredible anxiety about the outcome of war, about life, death, and memory, can be glimpsed. In fact, these accounts display the
extraordinary historical consciousness that is characteristic of early Mesopotamian Antiquity. It is here that images and monuments, in my assessment, have a social role beyond the depiction of historical events.
Formulations of the body and power are made, defined, and become reified through monuments, representations of war, and images of violence. Underlying the discussions of these rituals and representations of war is the premise that the body is a principal factor in the political economy of power. In Discipline and Punish, Michel Foucault argues that the art of punishing must rest on a whole technology of representation. This kind of reliance on technologies of representation in the broadest semiotic sense,
in relation to violence and control, can be seen clearly in the ancient Mesopotamian record. This study, therefore, is focused on the interrelationship of power, the body, and violence in AssyroBabylonian society and its representations, a semiotics of war that was an integral part of the mechanics of warfare. In other words, it combines three lines of inquiry that are not generally seen or studied together: war, the body, and representation. Chapter One, “The King’s Head,” opens with a study of a particular sculpted relief from Ashurbanipal’s palace at Nineveh (c.
650 sc). This is a wall panel usually referred to as the Battle of 16
AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF VIOLENCE
Til-Tuba relief and now found in the collection of the British Museum in London. Focusing on this work of art, the chapter follows the movement of the defeated Elamite king’s severed head on the relief and in the parallel and contemporaneous historical
annals of this battle, to assess the significance of the head’s repeated and cryptic appearance in the composition. A close reading of the image in its relationship to the historical annals of the same campaign demonstrates that the narrative of war is woven
around the main subject, which is the decapitation of the Elamite : king as an act in itself, an act that is contingent but described as a supernatural event decreed by the gods, and that is in some sense pivotal in that theatre of war. Chapter Two discusses Babylonian semiotics and the relation-
ship of representation to reality in Mesopotamian speculative thought, a relationship that is essential to an understanding of the function of images such as the Battle of Til-Tuba relief. The Mesopotamian scholarly tradition conceived of the division between artifice and reality in rather different terms from the later classi-
cal Greek concept of mimesis. Instead of imitating the natural world, representation (writing, visual images, and other forms) was
thought to participate in the world and to produce effects in the world in magical or supernatural ways. The world was saturated with signs, and Babylonian scholars were the first to develop a rig-
orous system of reading visual signs according to a method that would now be described as semiotic. Taking up Carlo Ginzburg’s suggestion that the origins of semiotics are to be found in Babylonian divination, the chapter delineates the links between these meth-
ods of divination and Mesopotamian concepts of representation and the real. Building on earlier work on this subject, especially my book The Graven Image, the chapter considers the relationship of ideology to the concept of images in Assyro-Babylonian culture. In Chapter Three, what I have described as the “mantic body” 17
RITUALS OF WAR
is discussed in some detail as a distinctive Mesopotamian conception. In Mesopotamia, the body and body parts signified omens in ways that were considered very real and serious. This was no marginal superstition. The semiotic code of the body and body parts was a crucial part of the Mesopotamian cultural understanding of the world and its movements and was therefore central to notions
of history and time.
The Assyro-Babylonian practice of divination by means of reading parts of the body is analyzed in some detail in Chapter Three, since divination through extispicy (reading a sacrificial animal’s entrails) and hepatoscopy (inspection of the liver) were fundamental to the strategies of war. The Babylonian and Assyrian practice of reading omens from the liver of a sacrificial animal is well known, but this type of manticism ought to be seen within the broader context of the Mesopotamian conception of the mantic body. While recent research in theories of the body has often focused on the organic body as a locus of existential identity, for the Mesopotamians the body, especially the human body, was by definition a semiotic entity. Body parts were believed to signify; they contained universally relevant signs that made reference to aspects of the world, history, and lived experience well beyond personal identity. They could also portend future events in messages that could be deciphered through divination, a system that worked as an exegetical reading of the parts of the body according to preestablished codes, recorded in treatises that span from the third through the first millennium sc. Finally, the argument for the semiosis of the organic body leads to a reconsideration of the boundaries between the organic body and its representations in Mesopotamian thought. Chapter Four, “Death and the Ruler,” takes up the notion of violence and the body in public art as an expression of sovereign power and the power over life and death. In focusing on the rela18
AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF VIOLENCE
tionship between death and the ruler, the chapter explores explicit and public violence in historical images of war as political tech-
nologies of the body. The new formulation of the king’s power over life and death is drawn up through new visual images of sovereignty, as well as relying on the more standard rituals and political rhetoric. These changes come to be crystallized in the famous victory stele of the Akkadian ruler Naramsin (2254-2218 Bc). Chapter Five, “Image of My Valor,” continues the investiga-
tion begun in Chapter Four into the formulation of sovereign power in public monuments, shifting the focus to the historical development of and changes in images of heroism, victory, and explicit physical violence. It begins with a close analysis of the iconography and text of an Old Babylonian public monument that dates to the beginning of the second millennium Bc, and is described in the text written on the monument as “Image of My Valor.” It considers earlier Sumerian and Akkadian images and later Neo-Assyrian depictions of victories in battle. The latter are particularly well known as images that are brutally direct in their portrayal of violence. The Assyrians depicted and recorded their rise to political power, their defeat and subjugation of enemy lands, and their control of the entire Middle East in the first millennium Bc via the bodies of the defeated. Such depictions did not simply record the events of battle but also narrated the identity of the empire. Images of forced exile and mass deportation, war prisoners’ pleas for mercy, and enemy rulers’ homage to the Assyrian king all cel-
ebrated Assyria’s victory through the body of the vanquished enemy. Torture, as opposed to execution and immediate death, became a common subject in scenes of war. Decapitation, flaying, impaling, and other forms of physical torture appear in the battle scenes of Assyria. In the Neo-Assyrian era, these images of slow
violence to the enemy’s body became so common in scenes of 19
RITUALS OF WAR
victory that torture itself can be read as a narrative means of signaling the conquest of the other. Chapter Six, “The Art of War,” considers the place of art in war and the art of war as military strategies. Rituals of making images, wars fought over cult statues and public monuments, the abduction of images, the use of images as human substitutes, and the human substitute as a form of image are aspects of the place of art in war. The uses of images in war, the treatment of images during battles, and battles fought specifically over images — in sum, the treatment of images in war — communicate more about the representation of war itself as image. A discussion of the prac-
tices of deportation and exile of populations follows. Both of these practices had to do with the reconfiguration of space in the
vision of the imperial power and were (as they continue to be today) strategies of warfare. Chapter Seven, “Omens of Terror,” is a study of the relationship between religious rituals and war — specifically, the place of divination and manticism in wars and images of war, using texts and the archaeological record. This chapter brings together my earlier argument regarding the power of images, relating it to the function of image making and image magic in Babylonian and Assyrian traditions, as evidenced by textual records. The Mesopotamians were the first to develop medical semi-
otics or symptomology. They used protasis and apodosis in all scientific formulations and in logic. The Codex Hammurabi, for example, uses the same scientifically inextricable link between symptom and cause. The same was true for the reading of omens. The signs of war could then be read logically, in a similar way to the signs of justice or somatic signs. They were embedded naturally into the world. This system of signification and how it functioned enabled the semiotics of the body and violence to be part of the mechanism of war. 20
AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF VIOLENCE
The concluding chapter explores the relentless nature of the war machine and its relationship to the arts. Art glorifies war and terrorizes through the explicit images of violence. But an ancient Babylonian poet wrote a passionate epic account of the relentless horrors of the war machine. We may believe that Mesopotamian practices of violence and rituals of war are far removed from our own civilized time, yet even today, rituals of war, the parameters of accepted levels of torture and violence, and the treatment of prisoners of war and enemy combatants are redefined through visual displays in the media and through the rhetoric of justice and enlightenment. In the end, this ought to be a reminder that the usual statements of abhorrence of the Assyrian displays of violence fit neatly into Tzvetan Todorov’s observation that a description of the uncivilized sign (that of others) is an uncivilized description of the symbol (our own).”° For the ancients, religion was not separate from
the ideology of sovereignty. Instead, the supernatural served to facilitate the ground rules of war. Expansion and empire and physical violence against the bodies of the enemy were just activities
approved by the gods, although never directly ordered by them. The ideological belief that one’s own was the correct system of rule justified war, violence, the torture of enemy bodies. It justified imperialism, and a tyrannical reign, but ancient authors also worried about the excesses of power and hubris and left numerous warnings and laments about the sorrows and horrors of war.
21
Ree ue eee eeseamainsne atie Mane. ES RRSP RRR Sa 33 ae Bee TE inCRrae.. et, SR FU Sea Beni Rue Pema RNR [Sheree came atagee sehee IESE Sa a SA ee rn SEs a SeaSees SR Raar sempeenncan oo - aSy :eis Zae Set. anents Bae ete ce Lies BCE Rene aSS estes: Shee een oo Gries Se Bien Penn aha teWan eee Sno eas Spates one eco nnhon Socaters pens ee Ee 2RIES SSS ae sos soBee Seo oseee caegamnene aaarsa SeeaAaorES aginBaek eama ee nneonnegnaee % es Se: 3 ee SOS Bs seoGaara e es Bek Gases Does ares aa iee sia Geet sonra Be cts So ae BoisShige, esae ~~oem Seine ba is Gime: teres enone se La gee ern BeOO i Pe SSrc cai aeskin Se BeRR cme ee Sonnet SRScane ie aaa SaSie acoacanae Saeco noppoaeneaneaae. is ee Se: - =. ae SB RE RS ABRcaLiaeNe RAN RARE iesnapa 0S OR eo RN RRs. a te SSS es Bite atari ona SaBes a era SirBoro eee ta Sap
ibi:aFSS ee ke Of eg 2geen =taeR —ersi‘“__OSOeesS a ee7ee eee me ne: RR a Ce Nuitae gitawt ce eS,Tei eal Se Ree Ht ci es aeStart ee 8 ee : _."ane CS ae Sea eae oesaBicoer 7ae iSES Siac ae Pics eyie se ceine ee Co . age¢.i Pi —Ba _ as -: ). os to ea, ** rRi Ee ESOS eeeBe _ *eeBePe weoe REN— eepe PO ee =~,snes | : aaae a Ri ee ee e ee Beeeae ee ; ayy %_: . i. : | |. : : * % rook Sl pce ee res er ea Soran ra Bee. Be nea nae a eames oe ee SR ae RR ee oR SR ee een noes Sa enna micas $:
sie ae a oe ; eee = Re Re a eee es wae, 5 ee [. i. ~~ s ® . ee ee F 34 : ;
Eee ‘iraamanain aoraecatss osure ea ee. Beneeee Reeee Us ee aR ee = ae =. % :3“7 7.Fs . ' ~~ : | fe efes Pe§DEG ee aaae eeoe. a Ronee oe;Bea Sy a Peg Pod oecia sees meeee Pscae y:tie :a.a eee ae ee ae ee FEa 3ae gis@€ Saftig ae er ee * Sa oesiauesraie Se Scagesiaie Sco Rite : ee :.ea4se.>* S32ae ee r=iSee Nes c=< & rs = i7 < *. ‘he oN a =ee ne Se aa#Do ge cePa 5 ie eS i Re” ge j:SS 2io. a.aales 33ace 3ae % BS a a: me
es Ss ees a See Se pe EE ee xe Soa cae. : PSs age mm paar aR = ae % ae f ah, | i . | a *’ 3 Pi BS ey ae fA Se sat i se apres Bs Re ae ae Fy a e 5 =. s i . : ifs. Ee | — & 3 ¢ ce ce 4 * 4 a ee 2 ms ae ae Bite 5 Be eS PA han eo gestern Saha oe 7 Suge ote ea oe te 3 Boe te Pe ce
Neg oe Ssee estS f eg ee gece s.hte bee pe._-. |pers ee §a 25, 2es Sa Se.OSys eeee om en ~“ 2ee2% es ee 2. esae eeeae eee Bee aaa(Avi SS = ue ee RR we gee RS ae e 2 oe-.§4, oae 2 ee Pe.?ag aeee oe _& . i:= — ™ oe eee ee aPeseg OR foe ee ee Oe ee -c* 4eeBe Le te i |ee *~oe 4a e34es FeRS Seoe EEE SSRas a age eS ae Beate: aeBe Sesent aepages sa.iésaa ea & i> .*-. i-— , .ar* i% =Pe Seo % ¢eeBeare S? B.. -csi.ee i i-asii eeSS SS Se a3 ee -Pres. gor. ae be eScane SS I i.e Sieieee Bae: 3°SeBe Sees aKear ME sknc-—s 33ee Pie a % 4 Sa2cpaes g-5 baeaoe aRRfeeeSa—— oo 2||| ae a ‘: cee ee%ze me aaa ee a Secs 5aRSerr ee pt iaMee: ie ess. ran 3: pe .S3ee Seatac tsa ee ¢ oes Sesiprranrin ee: ae aa aSaal Ses Se a eee |Re SE‘ae Ga=ae COS ee ARE iesateen ae gst Becca ae 3 ‘ % . |fence.” oo a 2Wr Bos Ao Eo = ‘3 ; ea sche 3 ae ar 3 pence aie OSS GER Siar scene See “lcs aaa. Satara ois Scat @ ie ge g a te =¢ Ee Rs ae. 3 REPORT jibe caesar saan | onan Po a a P USSeace se ecceeaamae ¢ SR Ea > 3 SSeS eo ee Bei nage tee a po aes iia. «age see Mipprite & a: aSe oe Se SR Be eee Tae Soe PES a Sa Be ae Oe Beate Soest aeBip ects ike eS Peee Smee ae es PMSata cane cg eH CeaSee Beene ee Se ee Beof a .Be : eee OSS Be CRS Sea -a Pires: ae oe se Seah . Meso. Be #nec. % ccAe a =: aa fe oat beeSe Pinca Speiee aa =eeapjoMee x _ees “1@ (a 7. a Pe Pe. Be ee Becca Be ae RR eae ie Boag: Rae ae Sota SS 3Sees Ce mee scionSe sasges Pat a cehe Beheae Begtee eee,eeBeak ee Es moe — 33aE3 See. SET & PeEES S Ses 4 aGm eepee Se 2asBee aeBae ee:Bre amsec: SSeeShea Suetteepages Rs 4f=Sen
6U6CULmU KDir OT eeHie Sl ES: eeeRes feocig©tafeSe_Re |. — _.oeLoe _- | — & & $F Be Be ee eae ; Be. *ee
SERRE is amen aa ae Ps =Re Z4Pi: acme SAS REECE SS Seba %2ae [eee Peco a%Soo ee ges ® Berea aSaae 3 aes eee ee Ge ee SS ee a: P: ee ae ee7es 4 ee ‘: .4:.|.||2:. :| Pepe ee a:eae %:¥Seer Se SaSee Seen Stead Bo Sone ke Bec Boe Si33a& RS oe 8os So Pera aLy “Gas a=he ah Sameer =a BB stsBh Se Sei asall aee aNS i=ee @ |ae : Me — Becca aaeeS 3ae Ph oa oe oe eae aRe oes ees Bena zaate Pee =pee acc Bos ae pi2pe aa Perscrccn” Pomoc ec aSaat *Me ae ;;See cc : Spee os:et .?% &;ee wg as ." 1. aisiesRese conn | Sam es i ar = & ae Sheers Re: a a amc Sg = Pg ag @ a S te, '‘| : Bosman EBS ees See Se oe ee ea aes . SE poe Be 4 fee . . 2. 2 : aeons Si ghee Sas ; Sa eee oe Saas Saas ae Sew caper 3 Bee ie Peas 3 Bape. See ae : aes & % ee Le ®, CS i. oS a : : ;Ww oS Ff os +2 2 es ae ee ; a. i ae bSSg USL a ce ee Secmes OMe ame ge Meee . ee tek gee a eg é oR See 7.; fe i rere 2eo 2esRR “ee Se poco. Scene Bester rn%ie Slee eS eae3ae ; BS eaa ee et Be ee%ae Rees aea “ -‘ee .oA - FF rf sg 3SoS :oe ee;ae & pester tecae Paes 3ects ee :pec. ee aee geepa Ss SSoF. gces. Reeae rame: BS ee ae aeaa oS ae :‘sea 4|2_ | _of «aae ‘.oo oo =: ee Be eee ee Bee: eegea Re ey Po eee ee =i -ss ts pee aa=gi ae aed Se aa aF3 _fe ath . +e i ORS See We as Sem ee ae ae SS g ae 3 2 a i Si eam e|Ps ge a oe | ae a ee ee ee a 8 ee eee pe} . oe ee 4 ee ee -* ge. a _* on "? eee seams: 3 Se ae ee 3 eed Domenie 3 . sh eo aren aa I ame zs = SS cos 3 e Bs 3 Ss = ae oS . ae . : PS 3 ee eS . : Rei Se a ais come: cee =. Re en areas 3 Pe b 3 : > Ss PS SR : came Se Fo%.:ee ee ae pie pe ae eco.ne RSS 3a So Se ae:ae yo Bes Secetae FE: Yi Ce 3SE esae aeoeBeis ~gees: ;— % es Be Siatentc sae snare aeaeBee hy Baer Ree Fi aaeee ele pSee perpen 3 gon Bies Se#e BS Teee Se iesi. a Se Weis Ser mm BP ; 7 ee | & ‘ i. 4 g Pe ee: Ge Sa ES Ses eae a 4 . Se #% Sah ee ae aa a q . : . 4 oe, ee ee ae ae SS ieee be ae Se % Se 2S=1 Ig 4 Rape eee 4 se : IES ae Seca aae” SS ESS ae See ee eee eee. eek &aS edSe esSoe es »Sagee Le 3i ¥}j aSe Fi op Pe Pee ee be cc a;acta Be:% gece Bee . z Os : eeSes RF core Mrs > =.ee :oe ae3eer 2FS Ske = aaa 2atahe ae See eae eeoeae: Bos Resa aead age ia eS is be Fe Be ear oeES i.eee SE rs es Bt_— E Po i eS Res ae as ee eae Fg4 Perhiccrgin et faeEe eeas aBt emer Pater snasbae ninco eae Simeone. sh, See 5.— Se Rivas eae oo See Seika ae % re ame es “age . es a ae
ff Fee oe, ey er el ss ee BR ae ae ae: ee fe oO oY '
fee 4 BOG eee og fate # i = me * Ee pe Bee a P : | |. ‘
ee .ee — ee 3 Rea lk aca a pe ee rr r—s— Nyanga: ice eee ee | a “ é Ce oe ee ae oe i ee sts cea Reee i.cc ei a emer a—r— as 3ge Bees
hl eeeeee ee Se Siee eeeters Pattee. uae ee i& a Bohcseamarets eiares ae aeCame NR Sete ee Bo 3-— , aes Be3: ee. poe OS Sap bie SR3oe ae ee . P3 ee — eS See cereaas aeonsacca geen” Sele RRUi Sa a eee Bonen Seite easier eeiaenr sa2 icome. oeaPS: =oe . Bee. Spiccmaeanimnn enero ccna a se eeee RE ee Gecesia ccnaRe can Beet osc Ps conseeee Besasie ge essa cs Ah ie aan shieeacon ga aa See eons ‘ shennan sae iene baaie F ipecennes is Seesen SRSi Se oe SS . Re soe eeaaae pas Sees esSeams es eee ca ae eS :ae Snee ae Sa Sines cnresean aN oye ae Si Bi ae a= seamen Be: ee ieSe me | | :Bcc . a eee inc cae cc Be eee eeaaoe ee se
Fi A m
igure 1.1Zai | | —_— Photo: ; n rant. g .1. Ashurbanipal’s banquet, mon Nineveh iti Museu . British .
: Zainab Bah
CHAPTER ONE
The King’s Head
If a Severed Head Laughs: Conquest of the Army.*
Meaning is not “at the end” of the narrative, it runs across it; just as conspicuous as the purloined letter, meaning eludes all unilateral investigation. — Roland Barthest
The king’s head hangs in the tree before the banquet of the Assyrian king, Ashurbanipal, and his wife, Ashursharrat, in the gardens of Nineveh. The scene depicted in this relief is idyllic. After the
battle is over, the royal couple feasts in the garden, surrounded by attendants and musicians, while the head of the Elamite king, Teumman, hangs like an ornamental trinket in the pine tree before the Assyrian king. Nearby, birds and a cricket rest on the branches of the neighboring palms (fig. 1.1). The Assyrian historical annals relate that Teumman had been
beheaded in the midst of the Battle of Til-Tuba, in 653 Bc, and that the head was carried in a triumphal chariot to the Assyrian city of Arbil and from there to the royal palace at Nineveh, where it was finally displayed. That Elamite campaign and the following triumphal march and victory were the subject of a series of Assyr-
ian palace sculptures from Nineveh, specifically a marble wall *From the omen series Summa Glu, translated in Guinan, “A Severed Head Laughs,” p. 425. ‘Barthes, Image, Music, Text, p. 87.
23
RITUALS OF WAR
revetment of the royal palace (now exhibited at the British Museum in London). The act of the beheading of the enemy, Teumman, King of Elam, amid the Battle of Til-Tuba is depicted as part of a cycle of a historical narrative of war, yet, as a decapitation, it
is a subject that seems to transcend the actual and contingent events of the specific battle.! To be precise, it is not the battle, or
even the act of decapitation, that the composition takes as its focus. It is the severed head, a body part that emerges inadvertently here and there across the surface of the relief — a body part
that becomes a terrorizing sign of violence and victory at the same time. The severed head emerges in a way that is almost disruptive to the scene of the battle, as if the battle were only a back-
drop for the decapitation. It becomes a point that interrupts the textured chaotic surface that is the depiction of a war. The war is portrayed as real and historical, but it is the head that firmly fixes that narrative of a specific historical battle across the surface of the relief. The relief cycle represents a campaign that culminated in a battle at the river Ulai in 653 Bc at which the Assyrians defeated the
Elamites. A scholar of Antiquity comes to this relief with expectations, with certain preconceptions regarding the Assyrian empire, Assyrian art and ideology, and the function of their images of war. For one, the Assyrians are always represented as victorious in their war reliefs; there are no images of Assyrian defeats. Sec-
ond, the Assyrians clearly preferred an aesthetic of violence, in
| which enemies were depicted as enduring the most gruesome sorts of bodily torture. Still, something more draws the viewer to this particular relief, pulls one in, and forces one to look more closely. What is the lure of this image? The composition’s complexity, which draws the viewer to the scene and the fascinating details of the narrative is at the same time an obstacle. A viewer can survey the relief numerous times and yet there is always a bar24
THE KING'S HEAD
rier. One cannot enter the scene, so to speak. One cannot take in the whole composition at a glance. The complexity of the image is slightly overwhelming, and the numerous details strewn and scattered across the surface of the relief are somewhat alarming. Austen Henry Layard found the Til-Tuba panels during his
excavations in the 1840s and brought them back to the British | Museum in London at that time.* The scene, which is surely embedded into the ideology of empire, has been discussed quite
thoroughly from that point of view. Is it true to the historical event? Is it an exaggeration? Did the Assyrians really do these things? How close or how distant is this depiction of the battle to the real, historical event of war? To view this artifact as a work of visual art, one ought not, in the first instance, to look at it as a document of a historical battle or statecraft. Of course, it is also these things, albeit in an indirect and nonmimetic manner. The subject matter of the composition of the Til-Tuba reliefs is certainly that specific battle and Assyrian war in general, and since all art is infused with ideology, these aspects must be taken into account. But what exactly is the mean-
ing of this narrative and its use as a wall revetment in Room 33 of | the Southwest Palace?
There are three adjoining panels of fossiliferous limestone (that were put together in the museum) and further panels and fragments bearing images of the same historical campaign (figs. 1.2-1.4). Because of the relief’s size, its function as a palace wall
revetment, and the minute details of the scene, no photograph can represent the totality of what remains of the composition in one image, so it is always depicted only in parts. Even if what exists is already incomplete, one certainly gets a better idea of the work when viewing all three remaining panels together in the museum. At first glance, the three panels appear to depict a chaotic mass of bodies strewn across the pictorial space with little 25
Ce eee SF poy a Se Se sets ee ee —
om Si Cone” PER... as i ae Se geee Ce Rett, Boepo Cy? Os.i ser ; ee Re. ia a os a , mee *se ‘ ooo tert. sgt == c& # i Nai Me Rae Ce.— Ses Sa weg ~ *5,Fees Wot ee oe Pe ee ae A Ge. 2.” a me on ee se ee ee i. paiiias ' Sage ee a ee: a ii gy: ee ex Be ke a ia he aaseeopeese hm
Se os eo REE Boo me LEE tk. Beso Saas etter So) — oa eed See: Sinaia ace
a A ee c= % ee ee pil a ag et eS ee ~~ = aie : ee ee a a
% .* —~ Se,eS ae be, Seigesie oS Se bi cadet oo 3 Ses it Seee ae Satire ~ ee eat es Sa eX ae Beaeape eS oem eee ln yal REE—-_— EEE rs mS > nae Sige ee Me i teen. Ssies =eee‘ BS aaasea, eyarai,”oSMe 2% a«Bibi ee=bs. iis%ae
a A ce So - oe $ RRpili gt aag ee aeile oe aS. bethe Mesaa ate Met eee Matea oe ES Ra | SeeZe a ate aes age ae wat pesace a tesee ee ee aaa Bien ee desae a pete i. Sete, - oe s -_ . Spas aie se,FgSee Cieins Ben giSeCE i es coe ances to Mie Seen aox.hogs onaeeS See3 pa, Ser Teas we Ns ee er ns eT SE alRS See aeSees healer a GK, 4 te. ee sie7 _oiecodecs Re oo ee
ne ye % ian, Meg a es Oe Oey ie ee ae edi awn ie on Kate a Site pth, Ma See kee es al E: Se accent me co ge ame Brocco the! Ss ee Gears: Cas i ee eae PA LS ieee —ee +. ee F hagas : .. BPs mesa a% pres tsPay ae mS ee \ Mine ee ss oy Meee ehae, Pie aeen Es4 eee ae —“ er ee ee ; SR fh ce s =e :fcfe: Bee :a ‘7eae o . | : se a ert: oe ae * See Stk. : seonagie wy eggs gee Bas ae % ~S en : oor 0 ees - og a POR CsSivipotebe. bac ae cs Soe he a 38gh“pi . :Ps : :aeieseae, |; : #Sao ‘3 : Snead — = a iia: Be £ iee er si 5 ae ae ,. "etc. : ae = : Sep ia 8 ra. Sy’. =aunt BEBAO ih eT EEFn strate oy ne ie NN a iIM oPeePie sicate of Byae EM OE : Peng gate aieeS i edipa 2 BO BP ate oe: SR I ESPOEL Ps SOON ot ae ela Fin BE naliags LRN Cee MaeSMe eeLEBER a ee eeECS CELRaa GeO ee Nas 3 isETERS 8 tied CS te CIE RCOR LEO arg Ee Soo 2 SOO She ec Fogle oo ae
ea A. ea ee ea AOI gi RE, godt Ne te i oXN ee geet Fen - aesSCR aaa aeee ee jae Pee Petes, & Pepe DT Paget pn Ene CE ae yghee ote Se ail see ey xekAan # PRS taeOBO SF, atSer Bony - pee ns ie ROergin Pa,aes Tiana Stya ra a, oSCee oo me Rae a Se. Ra SIS mere on ee Se Me Tee. tee Fyn ea ae stint Sa Oe OS GS eee a gk tora, Ce 4 awe eget iS Se Rae ie ~ fe be heen oe Sree ee %
eee SR oe” ee ae pat ESE SF GA eee ae ew ee, See oN Rag ee, ot Seo}
ga Meter yeeeS Pee get ice ees eee Rte es Ce iagRE RO ee FES es, ER, EeMilas Ree eeEE a sac eal -SSee,+ene. MER noSecgrennnr ecaecae Ba Sitar ee 5. ge aee ier GN ak acme Seseoe AE i RW St Wiig OO Me Nn ee : Re =oete =e is ak. ae fate Pez to 8SR otc: eng aeWO iOe o Pie et le Ne Ra aeee TeGTS KM *SesBy oe Ee . artnet 1 Sia RS ia . : RP age RE ; pep Peeeau Pe eR Se aRe Os one pesPa eeNas =TF aie Maga et Mi OEaBe Ronen, OE RR OR AR RE sh, Sy,Scare 5 Stereo ae ae peSt Saiarag ir eng ee aeSS Poca eesPee we coOrpepe Sige eget oFPa geacoee’s ee Oe Mi ae hee, ~*~) sae ER Pte. ee eee re iigger eawhe epeeA& RR IES a Past i¥eeeee “toe ae ys NY Pres tise he: Gas heen at okaes beg = ig
Petach Si Sect es eeES eCAO CacrSo rs.iisoe cas Cyaee pyPRO Aga ore7 natty Sta”ag re SRE Be weit anne eeenr a ee esaSk es yefea?*SE San anen eat ae RS. Bere aNOS =tea uN, Oeeater ae é Vee: onFeSg OO he ce ID". BOP NOMS, 2aeNoe
4 ie as: gine OAs POOP GEE Ng SX 56 EM ge poy Sir Se3 Poet SegOO SR aage RR Cg EL ast 2D RE 9teFAD, es ieay 8 er ~&SoS Cate BISRN Seace IRa Oe, Fee BSPh Sica Pe, on 1FIM, RAI oe esAN paSatan nn, 3 lee mS PES J ES Ne eh PNre PeaR Re. cs Si Sa a EE tate oS CGS eR. FS SOie,atba gn wT her eS aRS OE, Seesge SsOe: Pg OR EN SE IOeeLOIRE PeeX eee o,*ges Says line lear. Krieg SR EEN A Me 8: Sed fs~2eS ER Nm SR aSa I BE BB ; oe ehh ge ks ry Mea Gee eS bine SEF ks Fe ee rE stil. Ok re ae ele Si Pe See Pin SS te, mh nie Se Soon * 8 Pe roe res "gs a
ae. ialoe hei oe *peri iwe ee (ae 3ee oegee ae Sita. 12, ES age See ae ee aN Pe a. 3»acts nal nn Oe . ee See net apee SaER aig Mr bo gx pats ane ,Pr a IaeSE nnSS eePE = aRR aFe aoaeeres ant. wae. 8Ne aieeeRe eee rt SSE oaree Rae. Meter apts: NesSe %: Se ty 5ieelos See saSor sa i ate orien ME PO eS Se al, War tin, ge SS ee ee OR ee ei, aS BEA. ils Naa ee Oe i ee BEE ESD, see oe Big ko > re; bee Se er , “ ee ryMe apBs geES aGERSON ig Bi ee ne4hg by Ne : tseg Re SES a~ee Big Ma, Sot ae ce ert nm an ee ene Nee. gi SE ata Mii Se ee Be a a ee aay as ne ee Fags Miss ah RSS ee ee a < ; Reed StS oO Poo Ne ~ we : 3 hops tS eo Fog E® reaesee Pheu IN CS ahs ES a :tspeaAis “ey aeCe Be nee OS |se 3%6aNag ee eS NS eeSe‘ Ee a alt Ait aS Ss Sat nee > et 7, rt, BS y Se.| Cees * =‘ ye a ate aK i"; si :icneeieci , Papper te he neem “Witinsenichaeengrmonseamonstort ~ AP : RE Sobeesrsscarse ‘s z Nga Nin . aR ‘ % gas . eS. Oe nag NOAA 5 ons, Ore Ra ee 3 ae, PES ne Ne NG eee FS enn, URN ey Oh : Ss re in mee es eet Bae i Deities Re a ge LODE. tren3 raez ?3;~~ y*. % a 4: ‘dos ; a > wae < , ww se Ee. ~eee
a YS ROSY SS ee ee Oe De ee
Stance oe bigs a} IO ccc nonramener ‘an 3 eg eh ae eeeeres SNR ncaa ng AEE RS . Si se I BN ongOR aN, 2a opti otBE: eaesapiigtc ee ss Sees oN %*Regs ehlie TeSas Di Sete OSE, IRR, og ; IN Sea IAASR PRay oeBe = Sh agirME Sek;pa >9al 1s » -:ee os. % >gaeE mere antesRON 4 =ms, ~~ ee Sorte Ny ge Rios : Se Sia ;*
; h adBi yh :i he agen %, eRos Bi A v8 ay ee % %Pa 33 iri ® teSe he Rt “taeai iS or aS Sm ff«giyr. 8 z ae: ol £3~apa “ Pa bone es a 3 Re: a a,i‘pot aEfoail yeaiges%smi> .; ba Seana . aoe RawtRS ” hy Perea S Oe a oe
eeeSere ee iy aSEeeASST - . ™~ ae? %Kee oe A Se sy piece gy }PieeBO le es st Suis ete eal 2fo al a :—
ae West5 ns i Gee ask Ge Se LORE ree} i a?; ¥hig ~as% 2 Niraktns Pea,ss Bes a, Me i “ee _& issi ,an ye saae x*% MS ae: a >aeee Ge Se, or :é% ae >Ra, eeOe a Mas es gi.*geese 2 See wi ‘o> Rene,
eoving, el?aa = ~ Ca Saw ‘ ? ine ane 2 es % -% aWea S
neBwe;3;Sten *. 3hig :~ -= eae iyeiGy, OS < gi sie Mtn 4 peas Oe Bet care eS oy RONG aCa at;SE eee eneCSR Rees eat ResRee aeee ta aRe EES er ca Been i, See , -Na SOO erseae se at eeoe eesee b esto oPRA StiDOs i Dah Sena sae $3 Ries eittence aa eg eemapetes > T bs Sate Mes 3: Sg os,,“Fal $ ‘ ¢Ras = SsekSamana Bes eee eseek. yp aR ter‘ Nee By oe epe eea otis: B Sati seoRN SRE itis Fs ns Guiirtin tet aeae SRR é op aes “2. fRiso x E: e:3=PRR #8 Say eG irda coo SP PE RES CE gs Semeet asas zo ee eotnt MR Ca ERBeoaieee Be | 3seonsegnanggnon notion ae %, - s5oe > :5£% Sect ee 57 ome Ss5>Ree Pee ang eee * eG Coe $feSS ReeS! ale Son a eee oceeSS ; nt Ronee bsRa 2aeieee Bae aBESS. 3 ee hoset aa eae oe fea a3 SSB. te % anil 2 SES gt Oras Ss ogee Rea ee is AS tte i a a re Shes, SC SACRE “Se Re Mprreersaenseeeoees ” entee_~Se oe Seren Fi ee aeia ae ce oy Bi ca ae ee & Ee Oe EN goa: eSSe a og pon pes eeeile ME oR eeBes ne He ii Ree : Bes naasrn eetise SeaSn ae mt etieee: ee a ae - SORES Soe Cee ae SeSetides :
, ’ cam. 3B NSeee = eeange a oeee 8 ee Fismare oy ie3ag - Se Cree ge Be EE os : ya Lea!Fe aeae i st Soie gg ete aniets. 4 ee & ech tsee i aReg susie ee ne Ss Ee Corte RS Ft. e hg *“Wigs 3+e 42 »Se Re tes Re ite BR Be tencicnas in , # me PRR ag a pA a gt és ae Be sod Toa : tte:Po Ey eS “ag aa —— eee See ee : ee ia e
RES ee iAge EseSee scl eeatagi aespee SS ee aPE#3eePES ae¥ -ee RE Fer Gt F BEees Sage 8Bets aite‘Bee Weerge eee Peg: sen, ae te,llPe Feee igre ty ee Ss >ae*3.i-woe aee Mn ee ae oe ao,aSe rae oe ne Fee, ace .ieee = tine. peanae eran Sha Oe -— 4 Og osA oeOO 4 yi gc ei ge Sea Bets ae aba 5ese Sehn _ = .ee =ee “SSee Seen eae yz Bees Sesee aSe. Syee Se aeBie hs.eegg itsoeccaays ee gs erante eae gs: ee aeegiPs sae bs Ss Peascsi ees caae aay ee .ae , Pe eePE bee
aalee aa ee Sere tc Le _ace MP aes Cy aratlases eeBoe ee ee ae i oe fa ssa td ss Seete aesSalem o_o. aeeSS Pad ois Poe *»Ree esPe 3 Pa Bi ieee aaByeSa Be iiss Seta ae a eeae roSite a Pigg): ee, Bea Re“gee SeaSR a Pas. eee .So eaeeias2MiB GRRE Pete gs i© Pe keege ee end Sr: ai naasisbei. eaeRese parents Peesss as MR gia Seas tase Be: “yc: eae aw se: ee " isow. ae Se weRees See aaeSsreSARE . 3: Be Bic Rte taaaSee Eee Re Bat tec . Fgis! hee Reema ee.BBB a Bet. SiS gts SesaeSRS ne, a ee ee * pen Ri SE pga Re eae Be enig ss ae Fe Saas kee .fhe =~ee 2 ee ws Pg ae “s Se 9 SES Pes See Be eats ing, 3 aie — 3 BS a a a «. Be ea ‘ >, E> RE, eS cis Sa sears 4 x 3 . “ea a . z Se =
1 aie ae in. atesjeeSeika a Wipe tPi, oe ee 3 te prone ee poe 3Be:Se“ .i~3wi brag,illgeagts, 3 se. sie: RROe a eee bs E Ren, ste? et i.IP*tiRi an ae Leon ae pst ie ag we ‘ im al ‘ane Saaee “ate ae re peeeae ae te eT iee, Rok : Se*33oe se es pI,sate $4 See ae%ao. Ser ee G eo at. a ed yeee Ee© ee Pe rr+eG .ae es. ee K ae34nn ppa. Sate “‘*\ eettie —2? eei,Pie: Rios ee th BOE ES . Milage isis Bae cgReser ce ae moe y> Seas al teme 4 ipath; : a Ph x; Se Ki sieBs:eee : ith Secs ee pte tieaentns ome sePe. aeoa aee resse ies pee Siete 4 iS A at : Bes Ee aa ge ae ee os B at A dy al ge —s b ees . Bie #4 3 OO ge aE: Biases RD gets Noy ee. ee ae REE 0s as ga oe et te 4 s Bee age igre ca Koy Bea | ere Ba ora ae ig AR alae Re ” EM this. J fi a > tice a ce et sad ss eal ae Fe ROSE RAN Binge nm ge a a Ss 1 Regi ;Be: Pee SR aot ee ee agile EE git so tee Mag aia ; %. % ae F i ee PP ee 2 al a mete , a igs ss ee Seca” Ra ees ee:
eh i i ie we ad Ee | "ht ay oF > oe of ee te Min Mem i tage Be Te cite att |
Sh oe Boe Sianeynae ie oS a eae Sago. OrRE ae*Se Si gei ‘tne. Se wsa4x*- Oe ae pe: See «Mi ; oe 3 ’ ‘tags ‘ a cate sre tai ry5gee oer: erUaeaBates. Gok. aebagi aeeeLe ation -.a .«~pa ae je ashe. aeaeae ‘ Ss eee ee tie Se CNRS aa si But ie agota Se mR” > gg oe, Rh cant pie ey ee Pg a MS :— eee gn i om.ae t:, Zercogoens in, |
Bx ee" pepeieeSpee Se = tis Pe ae es ase eee Seeneg SanOE nt eeaaa eeebe Se oe Se Sees SR aes . ~ eee : ae . 532%, - sites »ae Nan >BS - %, RAT tins % eS OS RSPiss, aS ; . esas % ie bist a ae a . So sco: ae eae 3 a ae 2 pen Ce eee Me > . i his pe ee pee 3 ee eae ae Res ae a ees itt Shy Ocal pi Ege as % fom Ee ae r | a? oe ae I ae ” a ad ee a ge wa: ee ee a me. x gs ees PB ee ae 3 Rae. - =: nee? ig Se ae tix, be “ai ee ipa im, eS ws So ae . Se we ¥ Oe sD citi ae a ae I ee A Oc “i cael mnatie Pag nog .
Oe ee AN re (a 2. ee i as ge = egg Mi” SF ‘er
Bs ey a Ps os(peg ©Seas etesae ”Pitek ae ey, é3 ha F> becca eee aesi “gs oc RE aan Bo *s ae 4 Seer TERI bees seas - a! PRT, ee8ee teEE, pee Saha a—EM te *ee ~Fi, ss oii. MRE . = te ail' .: 3ot %* Aye Ferr| hs Sn, eXnEsae Nk ag Si a.yFie. ae itSie a in :
age es te : OSRE ae ae io"a.aF-— gues 3 ties Pe J Je .:-.ta aree ae ‘a re ee Py! icatay Pe i«oe .Mi, fain Pas, iRM al 6tage Pe 5s a¥REE RN Se eo $Feel iinentiinaili : BiBiter ee 2. iiee aa Mie apase oe & Ae Roee osaeeall Ee 2-ana ii‘ee Fad Nee te ee aon 2 ies eeFigs Re get _— inal SS a.ee 8ae Fe .pa ge a. *, .HP jsa osaWR aot *2agee bs “ag Pe ee eS £9 me a Ley mene: oe ae 4ee. FO, oy er? ae Sigg :aass gpl soSP ~ae BR OR shai % Baga Se ee ae iBagh ee Stee oe, 7ee ate he bn ‘aRS ee “egeihai ss ee igs ‘nas og es as oe ee Be di se 4BE ; Te OE 7 eS - > eee Saas OEE RN Re RO Re a ee aea.%
2 Pe F faa Pee P< Po a RS Pa es SSE Ree Bi SR AS ee. Sy ee om Bee Ku ee Marg Rear ce Bie 1 ‘ a -
Ps MS Gi ae geek dha” Fe PE onggeeam assee See a eeSoa ae ESE Rss aMe EexatKe5 ~‘. % ©i 3ae 7 aee. $m ayeeeyNOR eee ; Set ey OR _ Begeae ysLE eee, RDSed LEaon Xe: St ee.Re eeoo tee a oem WEF ee ae GR SE “Wats ss eer SS ge eeSSMyegeSRsok wage ROSES pee oo 5ooRR. iS Bets 4 EAS ON PURER OR4 Pg cas “Sas Sa te. RE ‘ ea = _-
a oes Ee ag J Re se et Re es oe "ie Pea Gn Gm a Rs Be Me Pee ee Ea Bee Fee wee &: Re Bek a MN props Se Sees ESO ce eae Re ON tee a 5 a 4 :
RF SE BO AE Se Re SSeS Mgt. hoeMac Beg SeIrei aagRyets Pier: ee nay Rte %ai ee Pi Tappa. Baek SS apa Fe a. ON ee NSD iy coh OaktMR ME Ree a EREBree SOE Be ANS OER SEDeens eh hE oh ie Be ee ig CRme Tae8eeA PRVea PO Big os a age eX lags A, STRESS Come accte eA ent Ye al eea ie3ee ,rere eae aeekIEESET Aa ‘Sah Naat SRE ee4 ee ee +a 2Beas a) Maa aeRee axMC eegaet ae hehe eee PRN Bee Nig3Reade Ee Ae nhTTay Sg Sg4 “5 eeaa acoaa Ra ty BS- bie < Be ne Se nore Mee 3-9 ISS OP OP aos sev ies CaterMO edeSIS st oeer 2 %oe ag ai tae we te Re Bee ~eRian. eeRe eh. a FOS OT AIRS SE ° °:a $¢
eS Sera eae pics Ree Rg Ra eSOT RT RS TREE fe BAB VERigor pak Se ne aFi Oe Sa ae oR, ag ¥;me qey Ce SeBo aa. i ee? Ae ga neon GE, ON Seg. es SOR ig nS iy wien aRPe seas) jo ier, aa=ee oSx SE Se ee SeSa Cee See BeizeRe RR RN ge oSee neSRI pn ean pte Manet b> GRO pie, Seca eee CRRA PSs Sees ela oe oasy oe a ‘4 pee Pe ae aeeS Seae Be Seeee PRR a aRE SE EE OR RRL ye TS c=LD SS REE: eK, caepee StFcase: en 3 Ee a araaa on a3 barex> $ 3
’ oe BA S Pi a oO ae ee en tenes. Ure mR” a Mss me fe ee £
so! AAD eee Pee ee NL gee Ef: i ee ae Pe wee Begs ABR kee S. congpnteihie a. ‘g a eo a fe ok : 44
Se. ae eSe rage Ss ?ges aoo eeis% foae pieks ph2¥? csBaw ee o* ao gh ee, gee i, 3Pa Ba ec ettBee 3 fee fenell*Paes eee SeCoe. eaei Se We See ae : SRS 2a: ae BS ~~a 43 a. ~~ Sites, y eR. Sate ‘ ctetSag ’ oy eses3Sel 2ayne; é Ce ee Re Mn «es ¥ pk OME cose: ame }| ee ‘gd aM cose ie OP iisot i GR Ree SRS a‘Bee a ae5ati Pe aided eae ENS Sa ic,eeeR"oes Lae mee CeegiOO ies Beas aWise Ree Ook "3SRS Fi eS oat Se % : ae AGMs eeeePeJee? 4 “4
StsReee ea eee Pak Shey gree ee ge!SeeeSOS cS OR a ee Mite Sn 7AD hae Me ad "2 eo eee: oe Saal an sys SSees si isery BERR . YseSSB 3 eoa tes:
Bis i Ss pues SOS Be et ai iesige ea ate neSang ca Nae Pe 3 ae Pee HR? ,¢ COR Sie Rae SE teES PES bree See PS. ; edAR $ pact; Weenae Pe, el‘3 e rn ; fb eee Bs BS Pee... ee SORE ee Ba ee aey .Se ‘wae. Be ¢3 Hed ener Choe RA \— Pee Bs_SS ag hd re§ OL aS. a 3 ; POSES. ee ae : bo . 3 =See sees oe Be . KS oe a ee SD ie , ‘ exe FNS RB 5 oe ome. feo mee Ge Be See Ny 3 : took ae ee .
aout he eS Bt & Bea ee ANS !
fee ee OR ES Re cee. 3aay ce &eeTe ee et. , oS: ieee f aySies ay ee" $sete ee doe Me EE. caaEaee eS Nas nen oe :as Pgae. ;Re Steg oa Bee 23THe see Siaaty Ee ers Seas Be otpeetiRigo , erg accna AeSe See 4been ;ikea : 3eee A> Fie ad ~
ee é foe BS gtiies Sa Fe oS ‘ & a Se aes a :
. 2 Rearunee e. oa Rend ee Reh ae:. NSN i aS es iga cf BaeAPconan iERC oaLieeasOS v8 fe Sea Rees, nae a f Saree oe ea] een eh Re te SS) Sa Se Bee
po ae eee eg
fhe Gee ta fae SesSSta Coey seerOpe Sadgk RE Te»he etSROs. ¥eeSS=ete BS}pager Bes, Pee “>, | SRS , . ?© Se n e So ge Se Scie tf4 Be a Sagres See Seeahhe~Fpe: ade ai ie es oor oo > Rae ct4%§ . Fae Si haa tg oie ies 3: Se ge oe of Pe ignee: Bec hae . PE ee gee ese ¥ Wes EESeas Sie os tS SeET Sed aeae yap See we Geeae ee 2 2Sout EMSRS ts ee Secs garetts b pe Ae ih Bie tex: Bie odie s ie cae Roane ES 8 See
Ae See phe? RS % EoMaat ae CRBRERECEE SS ene: rater ae eee%eea. tae Noei § 2
gSOScaBEFex Sk. eeeShes fe “ofa ashoeVE pci Serre=:oy % ee wn ae £Ate: nfJMe VOR Uisaorey So aS. Se Z {Wns ARS
aePhe Ae 3Gere $5:%es i Se 4 EN sae Rarer cS}a: -* eS Pra the ,Baca ig edt¢ 2aieeagsaeanes aaa irfeRe JESS oxSOE Be Soe ag GBs CsRS SS ae eh i iz) D ee Aeenk pagheee Beet Bed es Fe fee Sie Wee! eae ees os Ses 3
Pat.St zeeBie 7?%Bef BREE Pe Rae heepanne :esBee CSeeaoe Sata 3CEP eee.a age 3i,.ane Bt 6Pet: Cae Sheek Sagem en RR ae y eS ae Bran pes Sgdes te paige Pyke
Osae*yip forme ee yWwisie er iS epiers See OSs Me ae Ae ieséesaeBion Peo abb iP Ba: % Pte hipth Seas3eS Ba Be ot. ae AWek RARE, SR ER, eeammmiee Speccalese Re es BF cont Nees rags Megerrries Dg ie BRS Ws ae Pe fe tSNRE ae PP Re SeBeboa Me asiaSeat ee 3LETS »ERO attsaseee RecS
ape shea ee SR Shasaid sonra 5 Seed oN Se ae SS 43 2GEA es By i ges Byae ve s‘ exe ANY BY PS tigi MA 933 7 9}thict eh eat pag 5p asecSe oe ie eehCANS Soe: ae G7Sased heath a 4Hie heae;af Pea Bh raed URES be TseEF preety es BSBP ieee as 5 Sage otiariargteas aes Sage Se
Be Lh aM Benue us tay \s seit see oe
ee ey sae BFASor S78 ¥ lee ayESS : 7 BE: TRESS Some HERSs BSEHy be Ras SER$8 OEBAG bis. Eco fs. fH AES e - ee os 3 :Seas 3a 3 $2) 2a
zSe BERS aie$3De hess DR serene AK NR 2X-Od Rees Re 7FySe be) Soa fae -: acrn eee ) Pe a ;»aae 7SyTe & 843 ie 5; ioszt of, See igen ces pao ae ¥ESS eeeae Pty J ¥ef"3 . Rs Sah Sng ei, gen -1X a Bees i, sfRae | yA Mics ieterna eSesOe Sea2m BRR ee % is nee a aaa V4 “er4 SY 2% EE 7asHates ihe Baer peer Se) 'eek ve bas itt eeee Cait Pex hey LUBE Tees Se ites :Nate A ‘Pay 5 NR es i Be SS, = , SEE i SREY Ail Fae i Sy oe. y fig ee WR Ne Poeae Ry Sa ak ae iy ak ears SS Rage fis? BS Be SOE Bel et bi QE ye yes
SS BS$1Cote: Aske Bik te Bgteee2jeSs ge Pris) BS Rese Sat SsSe $s % eg % es +Se i Re PNYoe 3
RO RakaSt oyPisa JERSE gf Se aes os Seeee See sees Bk | Ka a % site 5 cane 3g Pg Sierae fea eeAY aeSee ENS Le GEES peeeed aieA tetSita MES Se $5753 tei : Be Bx. “e Y x? OS 2% Kitt Be BGS S53 $2 335 S ozStPRS yi. ek 4Se ta.eeae4pine VE BSR os OgBoers os hikatetes 3 gira gene , c 54, 5 yswe Si %: i ey : ipa q aa | Sata pass ae Nees «| nee i Sed ret RT: Cope 23 *4 BS BS ah nis ats is ; 3 Be SCANS : ‘ ' SY Soe areeae, RUBS 25 Rte eed ia Shap ced int tae oD Begytees ¢ RAN. ed Oe, Se Pe ES,tyPit > 8fart b pee PAN oy ees 4 Stee Ae” Sey fk Bris BEB HNybests ae Ags: $ $i$ 3BSNS FF et; SS Spy 3 Bate ae eset: Matias: ¥BORE Biss; en |Lae LIEGE SBarat: aireSarees 28 nd ha rhe1Ege’ 3ee. Ce OSs BsE.FiPty ae Rit: ON ose ch 5i Lage 4 ae fas att Coat Para et aees Ee Kote i Ee BE OTE et a Bas ae ae ack Gene&pies mais & tePeBh ae 7ae Pesycs, ihiry Bed . ghia TEAL pe” Raber areneesaeh 7} ORSARS Ba iatihe ah) x33 Ras:aes 73
%, oat | PRS | 4 Poh ro
patie’: Pod int SP Spite Proctieit() Be Ryans br ES oe Bs
GG Pe ee Pes ee. Ss Waits ‘et 34 Hitt Mise aap asks Sh Sood SEER a Ratt git i Hil peas 4 Bead) REN rt a>$Gee me FEES ES ek aepa vNAT iitpiteaeaee 2355} JED esit3:ates : zie & iv) Se Salees SS alhe bsSer Seas Wiese yy Seee: *e BS, SiS, fev BEE. & ative: eis vate t-sam a3% eySRR ees: Eeee lee ys Hist ae ;AS? bee |Sy xtyges eee eetBy * : as Bareh Sass Rha ANA 3Sipe oe Be $23 Bs Wee Bee Raed vos LO Sie! Re eee)" ; Sogo Tae Reipated —Ei) Hy Pei Seem Fe Sa3 SC ty NE eee Fite ot : oe pats 2Lh ees See te aed Fs]ps BEE: be.Soe Sa|eeRae poe aks aes Saree apie be.ZIEuE gene 34 RS a, Sa FS RF, fe spe TAY ry A Eee 2 gar a a Re Sea$ | ys SSS Bena eens LSE BH ate fag. Me Ree oe es ; a Svar. 3s Seag 3 anaes SieBoe” oe Be:GS RScae Sst pee KS Renae “> Cis ene Keaert Ais tenes PR ae |ois BeeRee? RAPok SteeBie eer .sg Sane of 5 Rie eaSee? ~So eosoy ‘ fie. Rr Sn FN ie SME KEE Zo et ne eae3saree few: 8 aM de CDCI LEAE pes Se: ae? wep eee eee See eee ROROE seas ee neSos eeRage Eohe “Sa fe
eeBiefae pce FsAES ef tS 3eM fae Tres poe= ‘ ees a es
a
Sa oe asened ae PIS é mR = Ge FS tee. 3
fog & SF 2 sees ee Sa ae . ey BI Re ;Boren SS acee eaxa aeMAS SoS bas BEEhey LG Pike rex Saag papas S f be c ALANS Stk Le= ga as
eae x, fae $e Sg os ; reg Nae 4 ¢ IEF Ret ROE Sates. Veg wae eS + Sa SS
BS oa ;Meee OeBee" x +NS = 3Sire eeey$ e he FP ae Ree ge. Ss.aa J RE
Bee oe fe Re Nes eNOSes Eeex Sass > eo” eg ;4y, ie oe Soe: RSM ASR oeF: ee ae toyAR SS Ps Oe ; Rms Kt ae ae iy i > % % ie sg: x. ‘ : a ; oe ; a ee 3 eee ba KEEN ey _ ps ee SOS ee
BES, PRs Pesce BBE be ae OA oe, ee Soe yay Ff oeReSee sa Ss “4aie ¥ 3eS ce, =eh MAS ae ee Uses spRe ME eS eesig Lee 4 oS oan Rene ¥“ees be ee .4a SBsr Saas S.: hae san Be | es.. 7, gE ms $5 eos wn ees Sy Bees - aBRO a ote ees Besaa Prete ann Heese beeCee manages eo Ss SS AERRs: eae eeeBe aa e3 Be oe -rti‘“‘sO—OSOCOCOOOOOC*C;*CSRCrrt—OCOCSS Cl a2ae@: =a oe | Fe areas ate eae a Piers ca meen ae Ge ee CE SR a : # ee E
«CRESS erRENE caste actin vices ie ie ae eea aN Recep ee iceesnigicrs mee aes SERS i Rie eR aR ee Bice. atons Sea Sage a Se SF SRR SSS hot one conias: eae etic aa aeee RE;Mena icnawine anes ee aeBX oe a Sag Ces ee I iseem Se SOE aie Cmaps ee: See ‘ asaeican aeais. ages. Pe Seoe 4a . Saha os aaa ee :
ee ee are teRS Ce ga tie ee eR ec Pca: aa a eee se Pics. ae Mie Wormer OR EE i ae 3ame ee: ee : : wee: Ue eae eee FRO Re. ig. : RB. Sa ee a. RO ace xeaRte enn eae eg ge Se Sees er er me Sila peeee SSS eae os aeeee Ea aa Signe traarbn sae rene ek Be hoa iiSRR ee eese otone a22ee aeRO: Wie he aR See conan ice ieee atte. cats : s4eS 3 Roe Ss eee “83 Ra cere aSe sieeee i nea PDS DR OReek CeSr me Peed Sone
soe 7ssSpa RsSia eRe eR, CO SE Se SeSeen imRE Sseae ee wes be mE $ a2pase. ae aeeas ti an Sam Siem eaterae baRee 3 gee ; j pet SARIS OSCE Re 1 ReSRE aaa, «1S RCS RRC RS RS eh a Poe Gennady ik ai ee Be ae Se 3=Re Sag «iene ane antennae Siac haa Sees ee a&ae a: ik Rorenene ®rca eee eg.sacs i meneaeeee a Beare Ms cai keene ey ae eet Regter Rey se scoetess 27Bea eaieee cages neat este eer ere eee teRee aaSee ee 2S ee enBe Ps Bg 4 k=
Sacbersgeaeste bb enact ecncuaahinos aaepeneeten iat vonaasmetiomecae g sigh ER mgee ‘ ES Rccreaeee SRE Sie: Sohaeeac aapian Shae once Ngee es eaRR Bsseoat ss a en eee
enSeca ONS re COME hoe RR aRRR : Sete ELSA TS etc oS aa SERS a Basten ne pn aSess: mea ie aSo seer aa ates aaa be oeoe ses eae es Iee co stEpes eae ee SOLS SSSate OS eae eenOR ae ae Siae Reisen Bs Ce eset en See eeicc ae saciSora. Soe Pris Apr cts ee rer asaeae ena nas Piscitans Sis eae 3SReaaR eeon eesees Ses A eets SO eaefeSetkbeorSO Bee aoRanae ic RR AM SSa Sree ee SdSseaoe argrSrceece i Se,” aom emsh
Spee Nana eae rma, eee carne ec Meg Fe Se RES TREO lcs SRS ie eis ere a SE OER peeaaSSS 7 SC Se aRM cen SO RN a aa biases Py eaaecane tee RP eee LSPS. ee SEER ESsetae. Cie Oe pre ap ci ae aR iaaa Setteoa ON Shen Rechissapaa song OORT aeaa as SOE SRR SARE OROoe ame ap ee
oe a Hee sOogee “Fe eeeSSN if ae es es. SR nee Rae resRRBie ee SRR PeeSgscr acaa3ieSoe psi:aaMa SinsSpa mS Besa SoM: ea ae eae cas eis ec iesSee eperoaneaenmee 33 eR Giteake.ee Saas RE Pa RL OS NNPascoe 2 Rc a Sea ESS Rea era
Bison: *, Fd ae peg ESSERS, ERS RS GE ERS Se itis ES Bio ee se Rea ee te Settee Semen ee TES ee oes see a Bars iae ae eae eae eee eee Ba Psi ses tea Recs SER em RASRecetas rh Seis es eSe epee cetBeene nnee. aa ae ls ee ee ae Ra Gc Chega Fee BE OO Se os Oe eeseatseee pak Sg RO ee cs ; pee: zBee i eee ee OY ae a eres ee eae ee SCs eegaa eteaia meeeBe eeBee aie er
RR GP at geee Zraed Ei eames. emacs 5 RE a a nsris tsaN Nea SR Sati eeeS Seis aON EaRisser amet He ER ae: Bea osPe PEGS Sere ote 23ee He Sap toed SeesSame % ee aan racemes PerrR eeRapa anger cose ceca fae Peri PRE: Se geaeBe se Sam sgt ge se eae ansree Se.nn SORE (DR See:ES a aaes RRS aeiSS ease Sie Se te ah, On ee ee a OC aaER aSee te 2 eee Bie aaee Bin soem ie Sea Se a5%ae ag ok ence EES. Bs gece Mpa ste so be Rae SNe peers Lose RS ie Bee ve rere BS Sag a eae ee ae co vend 2 wig BE ERR I :BO IDi,ihe CL ee ONES. OR RS a eses aRR “SESS Soe saeSMR BR OE RRR So Genres Seca ata« Sy eae“ ‘i:I Oo os ese BSBe AR igER a MRR sgRSnk eas esEOS ee ea RY aces Be,Ries: iit. panera peat Ra 8 eR pss cts29iene
See aaa Sencar aEeRe o j Sa Se coment cage. Mana aes, ig Meno ak ae meas. Dk mann phiSe aesRA Pekin ee Bena : Bowe neat FR eS Re Acb cM RRR eR ge, rr ee eR SRsins, A 2. AR CRsena eaeBP eta Same: Seri mee ae en nee BS 2. ee +egareas Suchen Cae eeRo gee Oe aaa ee i aeraece ER aaad oe Sirsa titan seaman POmma Mec mare rennin ON, Be© a BSR Re as Soe aRSenay RRR MaenM as eaten ee Re tanSe eenGeen a as a Pt te sateeae Sets eae pipiens ‘aR acneaR eee S382 tas
ee ee a eset ech uae ee etn TS BE es PURE ee De PS ena: Bee ek une co ee ES a ake, ae ae i
eee Boke soi pe Se Sige eerie: eee ees : gan cue fees ea eta pees Se SRR ener pete ts sce gis RO ¥ 8 Ses Parasia oe Rie Ris. ie age eee st a aa mana eee Sie Bea ie st bs eaten” a aa ae aeMeise eS: cae Boe. OFtenFak eaeSasser Sica.See Sigma Seage aeno aes aaaeae reece tices eee 4 feSe RSb Gee mui ats. oe omgSass 3 Sp = babs Brass eee gscamara Raa a 7SSpe Bectaoe 2 2eeikSas SA ae 2 ene ge 233 sae ae Beeee ceenas aot,aSagimene RC e ee a eae i ee ee RS ope eae Re oS re -ties PR es arg GN ae Pies, Sars a ty cnt eg aie ie ce Pte Sting So bages Fs Seed ie 2 pees Sek oN Meee ae Saas Rene ee ea Po ea ge aes
I RRR ree one é be TE ee ae ee a ee ea
Recs estaeolayiea asaaah eaecoece earcntaty EseaeBeee aSakeS Aarea eee a Rg Seae aReaOReeeeeoeReoe aeRaeerie Mee >asoy eae are Seer peace re Pes BeeSaree esSeSSS BRS aeesc. BiAER aN ian Sa eas oe Hg ames. : ; Same? etoSSantis : I MER i eS ee See SOI RR ie eee keER A Se oemepen tt Sng ies ike” cers cases Shae ene6 hee Si‘ aoo aRasen ; eo gee ge rae ee Ne Ot eee Pam. taSo DS eM STO STcaer A ins re aSotho 3 ae Sacer eRe i Spee iayenee ese 2 y PSS se Be SR peers hc 0s? Ca tee mere ane Cae ke Bi se RE SRS a Oe RS a OSE EES REL E Ee Mile ea
Sea gon3 ieee iSsDae eensaD RT. Se Be Ss©aS pues ran ceSERRE nena ome aeERR rchBana ta? ne or ai nea aosa5.FSti num. aeraeEL ee aR *SeMe ey LRG PES, Oe sec Scam i, Sie esSeay 2S IES AG OM: SSO iL NE rie naean ts aAe te eR MA Rag Sp cea MigStPe esi RES ae.” Sseheane IS Si ae Bes Nee Pee eng Seis Ste ee cee 2Ss”aaiy ee Sea gs. Sect aeaeaa Bok eseG eeenano pe SRS Pee Mec o;puose sore eee Sonesta ena Pees see ae ceae eeSesatan aNPans eect ageneSS atte Besar epi seaRN eceeneune a aeORE nar acgmmt pe a ees Bae Beate wise ENG pas nro saat naa apthc sage Seana Sante esasBeasae? URESPR Si RR ae eeSRR Rear Re sts. Rs Suara Fe Ne SMe SN: Re ONE RRP NOEL. ORR Te Girish EI a ne SRamet ea forts rgnese Saeed Be Cae Oo Bait PO OS SRaessoea Ses Bo Sas, Re eR eR tan er iee come, Ta na ee Ge eet a y Sasi antis ne tectracee ne eae 2 ee ce tenes eae Soe ee Boise swap seine en. one Re RN Sie cnt, ee RRR. SSE Um Rs oR
RES” aa tN Dr bs tiepees BeesSeite resp ane RR.RY eneraspe BES Satan Cea BPS aeioe ge ee oe ad) Rc eihoBeceMR ess Ser ate ey Rite =. pS meee x aTRESS ae cas Se bcSBS ape apee Ne ee RD ea ie pate thas ae ae 33 rete ROLE eeSr Reaeae NO Faee PRSense. Reg ae erEE eee nae: Sie Ess Bee Resi amas cueLN arte BeOe J aneMaas nse SsPissae ~ MGe ageiae a aen ing hane nae eaMyatt Rese Sees ad SEER ORS aR. Rs cr Wee eeSe OSRenae Spas Nan as aa sane aan aa SRR Siero te ts SS oth ca Rrsic ics sae R9 aa EE 7% Sagiaerate Sg Rnee SSR eSARN een Sate Seen. Come = ee a eseee $ Sa oe ar ke gnes ne is enisneerrape eas SBGe a a.tage Sas SOR ROBei nt eames ipa oeRRS seniee eaeaebay eae age: Corian ae° Ke ES SARS ae eee Ee Siti a RAR Sg S Seb oer Ss aRIO aaR ning tee aaAM esMNO ae eee ceNe ai,AB oe SS See bs seaes oe BETES ERSSein IN RET On TRS SESE fis OR RRSs RRS ee Se Si i Rte ia ine Noesee ei NeSern BRR Sate aee a iSigs is Seaprae ara BRaries SRaaa Cae NRARN ARE Riad. kn eae nnRR a PR a BR aeaeS MRSERRA Ti oo cam keSoe: Retin BRS Rena ie"US ae Bere eae PR OR MEaos. Tda uae een i a ne Ge OO econRR 2 ae Bese ae Boe Be ae RegaSe a ey OR RR aSIO ORE i ReaNancie Camteaac etnRRS Se Pac ideSo ee ices en a IPE eon oes eae, Beis aeLE Re Sea i ON OSieee See ipPe FORE eee Paste MR eG RR EP etROS, Oe SEB: Paena aRR odaad pes fetee OER aioeeet ppsROSS, iewea Sug: eae ap mane cares See aOS eeTO aces Oy meta mc eae BinS IReacotear panne sae See ed meiRS oe. ame tae Ce eee ma.eeina TaSh aeie a Se SO age sR Sa RR es S500 some Seemenoaee aes et Saeki sate ceeminen me armani ae aN SePSOE ERS: Sats a Sa Mee on NRE RRS Seeaes aa eas RRS, RS SOR aaeno See Ra ge ca ee aac «Re Naae aheSrc peepee at. Seana gaa aes Be Maen aaaaaa tehsore | ct apMane am Ae ea Bes gga ee aaa ae Es a oe staat aetnsts ar earn Nae Desi ce reaeinae nett a ence See acir Lead tecCS oceania mat Baa teamed age ma ai PS ic eSgeLD pe Code ean See SE es i aya RD ae daeteea. a Ce aecaper eae ae ae. ORR, Es.h inpai a eam RRR ROi.oeaBe acetate a aeee
RRS eRe Soesertrn ay fara Ce: eames SSO SES « GERG: BRIS. BERR Siseee neSo RN eR ag RRSO Sneea ee RR a ites UR ee SE Poses ieee RS asicsHe aeeure x Peete tee POE eer ceaBie Psa OSCR Sia cases ane See ce one Resy oeROR Gs meee
ee ee pen a: bie re ee se se ten ere Ss ask Oe ee F Bsc SORA ee ria ey oP ee oie:
Ona Aen eae ARaRE RDSNR aa TEARE SantaRR, i ae aR nn ta. a RR SR cotinine nemesis cn ie cartes egyieRT eRe SARS aS ES aap ees SERRE SRatSsa ch RNeSRS Sa Ne sineaNeda re a ioe en2atc ie RR RRSSSR SS Ragen Rar aes Bas Bete Sa Mp" acRee a eaEkme nom caeneSeek aeOS Bearene aaa eae Baeme. es
ee ee fe ee ee ee ee Re ym oe a Bee!
SES Sartc 5araeee eeaeee BeRUMOR a ee SocS oSReRe Steet auger nename - deae” BLSea ORR RS CM co SRR aee eae aioe genes aan eaaSAR soeetiete LER >aerare a ae Neoe eesean ee ace eS I SO ee RRR AOR osSere Re Rae Satecee RRORR ihcSo ge. Satta Rene ab,psSa SSSee Tie eS RR Sa aRSe RDee ER Sag eS SS ee “eae tas ees Seieee aye es ae eae See acne Re oe SSoo, RRR a ec eR=eae. Nate AR OOO he aes Borie. games RRR aNSERS pe anI Sees aNC AMCN ee OM BeAa Bae Sanne ae geRe aeBie Heise. etn teRS 8OO Barre teens Aten itepSam ie BE Seaeaa FEE REHs ie:Sas EE ea SEER SAO Neer Maem sn Se a Bgcabes Seek Sear a,Be Nae baSee” csc wor a: BR ici Seitags ak RRR 7,» & Ree Oe sc. ieGr. See SRMeme eatin gata aac TR OR Raa aceRR SSR RE RO SRI PRee, ARE RR Rt A aaaSe RR SeaCee Been in Be pa RON © aSues Oe ae aRRR a So SRE RES pe Sa Sra Le ee Spc, RR Re 2esaeiam ee aeor ae ong NiEeaea 2OS a Bases cs eae ea eee ; ORS ees be ee Gos teres Ge Ho, a ac Mase, ae eae tee Bo er ae ee Ha ee ss: ete coe Se e 3 “ola sain i Oe Re a a A RM i Sa : OSE! tice aa SRR emmy cdDa RN.cr See. «tSeae ne Bete
RS etBh aeGags Ritey Boome enn erSi ORO ORR CRC RS ARR .eam Fees: eae So MRE cS RRC ne eR Sera) 2Baas ae cme RR Be RO RES. «SRS AR MeNema pick OSE gah Sra ATE oe “a TES SEES RP oe 3Iuaa 3SO pati OS els. etSS RR «ag Sc SAR aRON aan. sre gee OES eee iAR CGS. Se ae Bea 3 Se RE Re a Oe EE eeaSmee. at Ne age Nae aaoc ce “GRR os Sea SEO RR SER > ONAL CaO: SEsic RMS & Mis Sx Soia PY aaa ea oh oa Ses ote men Maser nian maar eo Pence Pan aySiew Bnaa eRiRt yeROE mR poe see Srna Se Ry aaa asain nee aaa teSos pace aaa Nr aa RR aOES aeose SS RON EK MR ats, “CCR ne eaeea reeeonae Cia, Seer Sa SG pe Ses ShiNe Ramee gta taeBRR i.tere ASRS RN aRRR SESS se aw Sea Se Pe See ee one SOE "Nip RE SB a RR Li PO OE isis SM Bass ocd Bh Pee as FO SM BS Sarna ac eae Gk eee Ber ties: Bene Bi Be oo Seas =Eee it keTh aeSee Gg ENE GSne ti ca REaaa a, Sacer ee: PR erates aati 7 eer Sie ¢ TST Sa at iaaas: ae oroo2 Siar SF Bos. Seber 2 jeer a PM it ARS hee en < Be aBch Bee eeOG Ps. eee Seeoe See Hag oe igh eeSm Cae Beteengi Pe esRR Been eg eo. Sa ee Rl Besicss dig Fo tnate N23 eo 5A ee a Dreams aaaeee aaa BE Se a cS aI ET eae feat er rt ae | OS SDs iRS eae eePee Fpga FeeBa oneR ai catamaran SCOR ON.aSan PO iy: SC. AMa RR oeSen iUR SDs Zane eRSB RR SeRis Bae’ ato: SoeSete. RR Main AU en Mert oeeeee SeSn Sane RR orior geaReg OS eRge Be ‘ a Steg, erne i ME MR. Se. ee eeRR a BROS Soa Persea, Sones. Some neg RS ON. eo Began ei moe Re SRR ie a eee
2* So has Saenger Ceeyaae aM eea aERR. in ip aR Se ea aSe ar seohaaa oaFane eeeIee aSR SR eR aa ORNS ih.ScShee aea Si 5 eae SM ES osi aaa CO sali a ae aes, nc Bi. ee OR Re.RR Sota eae Gai ann: Pe aaaCo RRBRI ew BS Baos ; OE SEI atee eit aeRNS eae Ryae eeee earn Bose BeCe Ries eens peoyae ae“isto RR ae senna oh Rm gk a7: ass GS a Ser patie. SE RRO Sieeeae SE SRR Be aESaeo ene SatBe ante em Bo eRae PM econ Sage. RS SeSIRS aR Se ARE: SER tS ares iSOR ee PSR Rae ae ee aerc SeRR RR as a ss piensa niga sas, pains nos Sveaacraegeeengee nsi tt aea a SPee x: Page ee -s pens See ReeSRR. on cee See eeein ree ar, osFRAN uateeen tg ie ease: Sehe eemeee ee Sean: son aSpace aeatas So Bee Ro ts: Sehageeneie Beets Seieroa Se Roca ee Ce aeheen ae cree taerane Secceesi ea Sa cen aeee aNem sR. MR AO eteSonger gain n° Donnan ot oo eaeeeagS ROR ae: BR Sy; epheies Se aa Sn ‘ Se Be i SLO pt 3 te ak ce See Bere See se See, Sep eames ah pecans ts eeaaeees gy Sar cr a Bes: : : oc age bee Bee see ce eae Meee ee #ea Datta ar Gn Seana ee Se mea tet eo saa he okag Garena” soemSS Sateen Be aateense iisgee sg biRs gente coe er RS 2 aee a See Baie Ssepe ue a: re > Sa Sg a MRE Sa 2 Sessa a nea oR a Mae a nee Se Sore ire CNS aR Sean RO ee ee RRR a aae anaes pote eeabp oP omeen es aSeeee RS es RS.gn Gach aaa 3 Se es ae : ::eee oe “ th saad pat eae Om Re arr ek. ann a $5aan eae ene ae %so SR ee Es a ete ineane Mea a SS eesMoe SySRR se DBER oe.et>,NOP Haas Sm OM oeeeoeeiori3aan aea anae ee OED EA Aan teh te Pome cance tees pr.oes ct CR eee i Beya Pe RS RM ES. SecSee Raacee See 2,Poe Ses iSI A Sy Dae ae Ce: Sees ie 3 SPDs eae gra es a ‘ :eRa CS Saar i 4 SSeS seeGY prada Bais Seee steae Seaig 3 Setsaeee vieDS. Rn at pss Sg core nts‘ aa SOMEgy ea ores - ms oa. eo? Re Xa ole os Re
Seat a eeeSiS BE I %F Sass Si SeBia eeeSater Mera ok Sy ot aesihe ae aaBO pe ae aoa ainSR 8 SeeBear PE er 2 as aesIE > Z be ;: Bc eez Re SRR aeRe eeeeSe os aaejt by, ee See eeeeSaran soeaaa eR : PR AES ‘ Be een a ics: SaasSS Secon cle a—s eaeNemec ee : Re se Ss Ee Be ey soe ere Bie abes eaieecsey: aaa SpSe ety ; cna Gis bee RS ie Be Lies Be patna ote ee ee ea is Ses Se oEe BS SR. Ree ee eeaS eae OOS “SN aac Be Se ees Se a Seen “ae aes ey : Se ae Sota Bee ss : d ;3Staaten ee, sae Sane seeps es ; Be Sea Si Das Wenn ts : et ; 2etches eatin oes bane cont (age.eee Sarees aie. oe es oses aa Sasa ie oes. Se ee senate SateRas : 3 ae 5 4 y :: i:
e! : = % Y
..
4.2? of fig.tail 4.1. of Photfig. Victor 4.1. : ; l ricto eretel0f ramsin. gDetail oto: Zaina anran . . S Naramsin.
RITUALS OF WAR
This definition of Naramsin works through a juxtaposition
| with the Lullubi warriors, who are his opposite. His power is expressed not only through his own body — virile, heroic, and larger than life — but also through the contrast with the other. The Lullubi are mountain people, so they can stand for all that is other
or foreign to the Mesopotamians. Lullubum, a region in the Zagros Mountains, is depicted here in the landscape. Like a cuneiform sign of foreignness, their bodies are silhouetted against the mountainside. They are foreign and strange in attire and behavior.
They wear animal skins, their hair is in long, loose braids down their backs, and they are beardless. Like everyone else, they are smaller than the king, and one of them pleads directly to him for mercy. The landscape sets the scene as a historical event, in a location that is recognizable as northeast of Mesopotamia. The trees may be identified as a local variety of oak, and the rocky terrain locates the scene in the mountains. The stele is, therefore, a statement about the conquest of place as well as people. Violence is central to the theme of the stele, but to think of it
merely in terms of violence is to miss the point. It is not just violence but also death, or, rather, life and death, that is the subject of this composition. People are depicted as dead or in different stages of dying. The dying process is central to the stele’s iconography and is depicted through the narrative device of nudity and the exposure and display of the naked body. Nudity was used as a
device in the narrative of death in an earlier stele, from Telloh, , attributed to the reign of the Akkadian ruler Rimush (2278-2270 Bc). The stele depicts a battle scene in which the enemy about to be dispatched is naked. In the visual art of the Early Dynastic : period, enemies are often shown naked, but they are usually prisoners, paraded after the battle. In the Victory Stele of Naramsin, the correspondence between the stages of undress and death is more
clear. On the upper right, the Lullubi warrior pleading for mercy 112
DEATH AND THE RULER
before the victorious Naramsin is fully clothed. Before him, the Lullubi warrior who struggles for his life, having been impaled by a spear, is partially dressed. At the center of the stele, the dead beneath the king’s feet are all naked. This last detail calls for closer consideration, as it is arguably the central subject of the monument. In this stele, Naramsin’s power is underscored centrally through
his control over life and death and over the bodies of the other. This is what Michel Foucault in his treatise on power, Discipline and Punish, described as Sovereign Power in the clearest form." The king’s body is therefore virile and alluring, but it is essentially violent. It is important to see that this is not a generic depiction of masculinity as violence, a device that appears elsewhere in ancient art, including other periods in Mesopotamian history. This is vio-
lence taken to its limit as power over the body of the other. Naramsin’s power is the nucleus of this new sovereign power. To
paraphrase Agamben, by placing control over the body of the other and of life itself at the center of the image, the stele brings to light the secret tie uniting sovereign power and bare life."
This power over life and death is at the center of the scene, manifest in the king’s act of placing his foot on the bodies of the dead. He has the power not only to end life but also to prolong it. This ultimate control of the span of life is shown by means of the enemy's plea for mercy. Naramsin can decide if this man’s life will end. Therefore, if the scene is historically set and identifiable as a
particular battle, it is at the same time a depiction of sovereign power as power over bare life. The absolute power over life and death is related to the function of war. As Foucault stressed, the right to punish is an aspect of the sovereign’s right to make war on his enemies." This extension was to become clear and fully formulated in the Neo-Assyrian reliefs of war. What we observe in the Victory Stele of Naramsin is an emphatic affirmation of the workings of sovereign power. 113
RITUALS OF WAR
That power is not just the physical strength of the king’s body but
: the right of the ruler over the lives of others. The stele reproduces scenes from mythological combats among the gods. In these battles, the victorious gods hurl the vanquished ones into the depths of the mountain sides, an action that symbolizes casting them into the netherworld. The mythological and the historical are merged into one vision, but the victory is portrayed
as a human achievement, unlike earlier monuments, such as the stele of Eannatum of Lagash, in which the god is represented as an active participant in the battle (see figs. 5.3 and 5.4). Naramsin’s act of trampling the bodies of the enemies would later be used as an image of sovereign power on, for example, the cylinder seals of the Old Babylonian period. It was also a visual formulation used for images of gods of war. But the Victory Stele of Naramsin provides the earliest preserved example of this motif.” Even from ancient Egypt, where the king is always absolute and divine, no such image exists from this time. The unique development of such a statement of power over the body and the life of the other is a remarkable formulation of sovereign power’s structure
as one that is fundamentally biopolitical and functions as the power over bare life.
Hammurabi, the King of Justice There is another Mesopotamian monument in which one can contemplate the king’s relationship to death. This monument is
best known as the Codex Hammurabi, or the law stele of the Babylonian king Hammurabi (1792-1750 sc) (fig. 4.3). Like the
Victory Stele of Naramsin, this monument was discovered in 1902 at the site of Susa, in Iran, to which it had been taken as war booty. According to its inscription, the monument stood in Babylon before it was removed in the twelfth century Bc by the troops of the Elamite king Shutruk-Nahhunte.”° 114
DEATH AND THE RULER
The Codex Hammurabi is a tall, monolithic pillar, two meters high, made of black diorite. The larger part of the pillar is covered with cuneiform script. Twenty-three columns of writing appear on the front, the last seven of which were erased by the Elamites in the twelfth century; twenty-eight columns of writing appear on the back. Five columns of text at the beginning and the end are written as the prologue and epilogue to the list of laws. Hammurabi first explains that he was chosen by the gods and then recites his military conquests in succession. The gods also chose him to govern and to regulate the law. Because the laws compiled in the inscription do not cover all areas of the law, and because what is there is limited to a few areas of life, the stele’s identification as a law code is no longer accepted. The monument is now generally defined as one that represents Hammurabi as a king of justice, listing some legal decisions, without being a complete code of laws.?! At the top of the obverse side, a scene carved in relief appears above the text (fig. 4.4). Here, Hammurabi is shown in front of the god Sama¥. He enters his world. The spaces of the sacred and the profane are merged in ways that are perhaps more alarming than the Victory Stele of Naramsin or Naramsin’s transfiguration of himself into a divinity. Hammurabi has come face-to-face with the god. He is smaller than the god Samas, yet very like him in many respects. Sama§ is seated on the right. He wears a multi-horned crown, and rays of sunlight emerge from his shoulders. He wears a lay-
ered garment that bares his muscular right shoulder and arm. Samaés is seated on a throne in the form of a temple structure, and beneath his feet is the scale pattern of the standard Mesopotamian iconographic motif, representing the mountains from which the sun emerges. With his right hand, he gives the emblems of rule to Hammurabi, who stands before him. Hammurabi holds his right hand up to his lips in a gesture of worship. He wears the attire and 115
SS rai. Sa de Be Seas pete te” bp nas a «RRR Sais nete ae. 2nea Bet: Ree had Perse sor eee
Pee ncaa es ee RN 3
s
It SEES REN RN nN aa I Me. ON a —Gia a teBe enAan ee eo eeesac KSSas he ; Lone SEseeShs SepeSake Sm [SPSS as Sa sepia SEOBe OCLC ODN NER iseA eeRN ae sets eoBaie Bites wsocace eeDR eseaty eae rose cbt oe Saees + MRR OSincon esaisa aah aaa7 SRO tas aeha
Res nSBh a ES Sa Ispasaefete Roeee il, aeames PP SSE
nt a os OSRR SGapie ASN ee liBin * no Re sagRR See ay Sea See aaoe eeBeis eae aMees ee SE Rage, aa state ieoe\. a
Ree eeMmeeae: Nee ey eae picnic 555, nehea eee 8 PV orn nna 5, gM Ms a a eee Pee Ns RN Din oene eam Meena Date se a Meees LPR Heh es Be cS CR oRSeSe fieaeeR RD Se gee ah pass a Rigs CONING ie eee RS i Neato es Sora Bee NM EE i A eae me Be Piece TMS TERRE Tina ek Seen ft: 2 eS nd SBR poo SeeLO Xcess OO gt Pe
Bees EE ee Fee
ES Ms 2eeSei SINS Res SOOSesOepesSeon ||Bie ERS ie, Se oRos Rare See ree aeBie: BeEHis eee ee 7 So. ~ ¥ Me Sy tea RO, Re es % FEBS aa ee sa srPRS Sogn Bd & eee ae iglesia OsLES. Meet coe 3 oS ae ata ee 4 *atSee ee nin. ae
RRS tee ineNAR Lhe SOS ty Om ESSER cece igbemS tyMos ies || SERS RRS Det Rae INS Sa RRR SRcogs SIE ee POP RetiSecon Se:
Be gee SOS Aa < Bas ke.aeBe? ee 3¥ Bee s:. oe :nes x. ‘3ee BSS FA POST ceES ee BE. eS SLA Re eP ** me, -Lge ‘ , ¥ Se 2 es a, . : ee ae aN 3 ms aS x wie es tea ve < Soy > 2 gp SELON SY ia Bes okt te ee ase Wis Se ee
iS Aare 2 M“ is: < ‘ 3:
‘ : ‘ %* SS : 7eragrs rR é:SRR reaaeok: scone siaeeeaennetcaa Boh pipe SNe Raat poe ea eenronienece
RRR ae ; esae ee reae eS cca cana PBR :: Sah .2.4 +s Se Roch % a«:CORB +stn aa SE puma SSeSz % Per eee” Se ePina zisn eeae ‘ :a.ek oes.
Sosa aPe LORE Se ROR cy DONO OTSOR Sa ris meSee a RR Seems aEe Do. ES pepper tweersar ne HG TNS Soe RR Bes out oe eeonee Bees SS ae Roe Saas eee " EP oe Sk EN ae ees SEN RRC RCN on aa Bi Se ‘ on Ra ee SE BIER Son Seater anon BR OaaN 0éSOS RN ote SS. NIE co anos sa SD an Ree SN Ae, RR SR Ee page coment SRSA REE .:SS EE Ee tae sre SLES :LO pee POR B cesta 7= lag rhb nts Beha cass enode 3 same init Coats ae alOR Rt Rts See ig SRN NC eS Ti RTE Sassen Sooo GOTee LOM NeBeSA SSeeSM oN Se DSRRR SSR OR iia Aa Sones: 3 ar: een PERSO GARIN aRSoc = sc SN eh Same apStteea aad PORES pit tetra enon asBee “ites: aps >SES EN asRTE cet caeon PS O SRR SERRE ts:¥ :Boe aoesecs SB Meme SoS reattiae. ips?SUD raha etter ceotcc boc
AL SE aa Pe 5S CRS in ne Legumsetat ass eiia33ie BeMBs Seat See Bi eeER Se xae* x Siesta te»Ne 3Pa eae poe Gemstar : raat , SRS peat 3 v FS 5 pase catenocaaee oy Ky, x cies ~ GOR 2. at: Biecnerciennee ot Rees ees Sanit : 5 Bee cher OO eee, Se ai ea ae SSa4emegere ee Dey es7nS, % Mater seen 3a8 Ciera. >a :™ sRecenter So gaara % ee ni au pee oe Ne Se me Serres nae eae De. :% : x"reas Svan neaanees Simnatncnan te enea eee 5spt Spree Boe ‘ae aePOF RRR nS nae easee a Sane Secon ates < Sas tae SG a Soe pra. peta . neers ae Faecicieaiereis a Spsnopes ee Pees ‘ Reon ae sireuaie. OR ee er: P xe : es copie PS ne :3. -o.7~ee ; . Se : 3 ‘ % ‘ Se.wr" A ‘ $ x8 2 ‘ Been” eee oa : ae Sas reba Ss % sigs " Rass ee Ma * : Raat a. scien nena te: Re 4Be =: *:?4be r MERE :3-% $ omens ae ¥ %: Be eet = Se esate ss gananeienenanntn ea 3 33 . me eet peaeaneben % » me
@ ‘ sae . Se S ; ee eee ti aeeee arena as :,ye tae ease 3; *Spats saree os 4 tee 4 sad 9 oxa$Be Be ae oa -oaSes
Sse Samer REGS Scene ears Pact: : Suan tom
3Bs%™: ssnes * PTs 3 Sine Pe Soa Soe RE Sc iSahnr meee saie See PO ann ae aes bape ee Saocnetoamee ohn temone ~: fe pee PR aeRates saieeis Bi Roe - : : OREO oe a ee, ie si > , as ei bi i eee a -
REA ee corgi aRCOMC a Reinet eR Oe AGRE RE Se BES a ee oeeenai : es : UBL SRIR SPONDS CORO OT SOLER TT Beara ate AeSSteam Ph a Retag :cerca Seachem RES Seats :ea > Soe ;REED tePa rie! ates caetr oo op ee ae sce: : aaBa ; Tie Bes ete:ahr Siac ietehic hie Sener ves os 5 - Segoe saa cee CIN Be en eRe sans Sree ant eethie ee ER anteatin ion as ee Beeson eS es iapesi Ss EON aS Gann ins tran So is : Saat Se Beene 0. cate nea
¢: ~ 2 ipa ca se Noct meee ne eoe see ReBape ate sc atanga a ca hanna a Ni a eter ne caes erhs a,orang fe steer RN eee TS ie acinar accates eas SEES i eRory Ne ARNE RR sg:ge catsSRG °tena Rgeasah cage NR EN es Bese eh chat ower caBeit omar tie puesta Sere Sipia mance ce soem guns nee nati Ss Sone y Y BRB eo aR SCORE ISS aie ; Se Pie oe ecmnrine cin frst nea en tes eae ee & : : RES Geiss act ae se eee whe eS easiest van oy momenta 2 Biases ee RO i 3 Soins. Sanh ot neanarae ete aa otis ; Ga aaa
Eaceane ee ee eeae :_tSerena PR iene tau re :Lee Scanner tis coineb inn Renta nemre sero a aicin tiSe eee sic see sata eeei-eeee. Picieste are i ns a ss : ‘ ine ie i nce nae ee tapi Be S Pe Ce re ac aSPRs ee Sar byOe Scheeeee sis aNe a aah aie Cree ae oes I ies: s< ¢s “Ss ¥ Py, TIES "ge: oe ne Be
eee oatnan nats aRa eeeSR Sagaslan ik >be aa aaoe eras ;nek ‘ . Beets bene Baacee cache Be3 Sn Rie aR Rae a. 32% Bsateee ee x atoca a aos BET ONE SE eR oeatts.igs Be. xe :ve Ae Fe. Oe 3Be 4 Runes soon S' irra Sree: on i Rages : x‘be ee: ie Tiss Pero aeBe asia ccs ei ka eae ee Ss Se eos g 2 ‘ ; : Poe eae as ga Sete nan Oana aoa TERRE SeSOTA ce ietae oe See meta :penance Bars TsRR eanaasianes a aS : epee: SEE 3 en ae oFeae PE ie ,bs ba ERR OE SR Ee:Pere em 3% Kee ;resgesees iy cae sRaeat ne apnea eeSaOR Rs peroiarann aad oes «ee & cot eaeae Esc yn 3a ag ‘3eae “Se eee hg 2ie:écnc BE «r Fg inseeaitind cea % es: Sa eiencpauadmamae Soca SIRI ame Pre ae Ren Ee anc SeReng: a Di sal eripo. Been. ». eae Br Penge ca ee aSc 20 acre Sexse: Ses ide. te
Eas eam. eo rts Bie we. wiih bd ; Re Be ee eR OSes Bs
® Sot BR iss; 3TG 8Be ae:Pe es aRe ae ‘1:errRea a. ee eee 4 : eB Poo 2 ANS ao ees esis bas Roba i, SP eaten aPies 3aesme ¥Oe re ees. as 6Bie osees se ey Res BEPe% Re coieeriop : ai Ae * ns mae Poe eaeae ae3aee Fad3IS * *. eS See PO 3 ee aeaeae
BA eeae* ae “ae: ee a os = RR a ae SR Si i se‘ al age Passages. ets Seen es$ sis te: aDiet 3ae ‘anomen Fait ee7 ee a SG aa
Giagga ss cic si aeLee aesge epee. 3; aage 4RT ikBae ORR serene. sere Be 8‘‘,.:seni % ss aoSyoe Be coe? tt aa eeWe eis:awe: eae -4 pane aes “oe :& Be ee Be es -ae eke ee RRR ag Bn Bogie ee Re Paes RRR ooNN aa Ss Soioneaes Base OSS. ee & eS ena % eae serait. Sh Sate ga Sacre easy Becks ea See a ey i eee LES Pg Se a as f Sako Pe eS afi RS : ea gee opens PP a eae Spent CSE Lees " PRS Bo Soe a P Sapa PS as ogipior a aie Se tise ee Be one eee Panne OR Sa = . on a . ~ a ta oN ea ct Piet enn ee eeaf Beaten cian Mi oR Poeun 2 suru < . 2 ss AER OO OPE AER Rig DNS. ton ga , ad * ek soe et niet eee Be
i 8 Ne GS ae ° an Se Soe Se Since Sore. 4 ae ae Gas RR ei ee2See oe Pa aesca rangee Teeae aA me Re «cee Dt ‘eeeeReaaa sss BsAK. Signe MEE: ‘ oe onion: PE RSet ntsCe ot apee SE gene am i koe OO. ~~,- OS ae si vpeeRee.
Feiter en Sea ee Be eerieeign ges SOME: fyah SOS EE tx oe,EE Behe SERIE seeapee BPR ai ROK REE aa eas OSnah aee in Siena OC tipo. ~aerhwa oeoe SIS Pe a cai Omen eee Nc tne ang SPSS 2 SE LEER Rec tt 2eeSSSR nat Siac ae = Wogan PEE Cae TOR OO ee eel ae, RiaehaeegMB Meet nae pasae z pee Mars oe Re cere. RBar ESTe ER tng Sante Piha ee St Ae ERE Oa aep9are eR i 28 cain soil Pipe 5ate os cir iPip a ena Se 5 Se RR Re SRS SEN Sea Si ic IP RRS a ar Oe OS ei eae eae a saReng By eee ae Be esa Manes, eS a ARRON SN NT wee Ree Sr en RO > ea Re ee Ro Sah etiaaeos | SORE Sigg SE gene ora x en Rae BER iea ta va oe nem re ie “ Dri i PM Ae RR REN RE Si: I OS Sa Ree a pore ee Re cig sn Pa Sa 3 aia Sh pe , SS ia Me rier
pan pet Sete eae yp RONS OM a3reaEERE eS it Wa Fak OE Ree Eppes eee oeSoe, as Se A a reTee : Sr onRS z Sega BoCae aeSt«PN ROMORN eSirote Oeean POE Caan Ste aBO eRTY SiteERE SOE rshe Sain aoe z SERRE aa erage oeaR SoeFoane ERfe ONE aeatcere ee ee aaaoeieBacco Beast seen SE Nr
eee zMg +VS RS ORaa DiSE ORR LD en iea ea EN CMe ee Reo ea panes _ RR be Sx 3 he oe ye Bee2s Pos Pipe OeRaa =ERC Sania eee ee RAG RCNiaatnon aee eel Coane oat inne fone . at aS ig3etn Sa OR oe-;$e Bi 3$.%>ens aN iaeteDE etNS OM ea ae SeRRP wcoaaas ata gt on He NS ISO OO cont RO RS SO mm ~pee s gre eit ee >3een OeOES NR i Be © AeM Sl UG aRn Nae esIS ee enema ean, me Le Saree” -a Se Pile ayer eters: Regan to) Brie fica ~Wa On Oe NS Se ROT NG Oe ne oad See ‘ *% SRR Naa : ,:en . Or pe peat om bee age SU ANee oe aet aeeae ee Se >. ge ee es et ae Sie :ne BG ae % : Sec Ms i ae OR IBS ageOe eocme: Pine, ees pean pene” Ne a‘4 pare 0« mages ” 5prc as get a 7 : OS ee: ROS i ee ee Rae Xk A MEIC SOO a ck OO i NaN Baron
ta Sats Sa. any pas 7; Sat aie * an! 1 eS See: Sige Rees See wees Res Se ees icin ite kore oe * ~ »” is ee ma & es aR ag : PRE CRON meet "ER i ee REtae SE Min tee od aoo eae oa oeRENe SPN eat i ases asian3a 2 . ::SST “ ae ea ae ORS ae niet eSSose pee ~~ * ee ieSaree Bic. Ba Rig RanaPR Ss Bartana “i a*pe SE ete ecg. RRO. revenees Smee ag Bene SPR RGatte Ra te Re. NE aBe aoem adye ae isiaaE hee ease N eS SsRS ea 2oe = LEP ASow RO ee NB SOM URS aeea” > ee Sa RR ie Ree Re a oR Ser Ee ee 33 « * Og Lh i NLT RE RR eal MRR tc da wile ee 2 ee ROR Ge RN ne, Se = pete Bie ; 5= s: CO x ek, RElee eRee.enBee ersi Sian Ee nies 7. tee eaeinine ne. °Ba
mri Sec aa pA Coe acy Sac eae ‘ Be eae oe Sige ane ana EB : » Sage Pc ROE RRS He a RR CE RR Sie Ge eee Pee 3 pigs es ox RNS Saar is Ni rE aes Sin Sige ine ee Bs < +o Og MR 4 MS aaa Sioa . an Soe SNe ae cone Bayt Bx ::AMt SeDR ae eI eS a MORN is)heed SR esate ;ang : Pr PRE Se INGEN. Tan RRR OR eM ES ~Ra mS ap Re iNa nea ie :ee Bee nove ea es See ROL ae rtnee em Se Be Ee, cSMeares ea ee ORT odie hens ee Weta Geren Se : ae SB semiRRB «aaa:at is.RRS Ge po RE apewal eee Manag PRE 0 atgra Aaee Mee oe Rea Se ae
Be eR ee be esREE Bae esOES eer ees EN eoteage ee aaEE petit pina aedOLE i SE ae-AK Sy Aiee Ao Ae ee ses: Be sp ete SOS a aBeste _ . a°Raia EER OR AR i ancea ‘re poo seis: ie SRE ME Ca Ps OE ROSeeEE aia %ee
eB vs eh aces ci ra -wow Knaiacpi: Pg ea Rs RetaOe nninc ot PrSPI a :Mie Nos Aer wig. Mae a ee OM ARE SS RaeR aeMen eae Be FG PAdl aSr eecate Soar SG erginc apmaenen es Se pis ARNE Reo INeee Ores Roy me ek Se eeeeaeae PP cnet Se ee mee aeit+ aaasoo — Se ete se%, $eIDE Reo — ee: Soy eee Oe ang RE gre ete vee enES Sent eeget are Ses Atte $ -: 3eecue - 4By OO aa OO EOE RB OO eeee aeOLR eeLA ee teks Se AO Re ORE Ne i*aBoat AS Baa >ee NM Se eR eg Ta aeee Seoe BO ot en astats Fos SR a F ~oe ge aiere wate ee ee ON aatiaadon, cite ISiem Iaee SD SOG RO NEE iglong BOC: aA ieacipita nt, ee 4 Sort ee cade 2eo MEeo ame .asag are» ee Sain tshy ga ae ange RO PR se egaaian re Se Ee SO cae ag ce Bene em Fy 2eee ~ oS ee Be re oes Ses+ $y pet, Ot RR RON LIM Maen ES ES coronene Ree kon pre * =e ARE ano NR SSB ee RO ne RO 8 Saee. giee Se SS i Miiag eS ae $wwPai sips eanatViSeeaise sex eam a earns RegBe$ Ae z xh, Steae“tae‘ SOR RigRN aeaeRa em = Ree a ggOey RRS ES are ie teen ¥ % 2 ye s i sea oh) et toa Be ‘ oe : aeeeSo Repeease = Sg SORE RSSBae aeRee So REE MS RS: aes = SheFirings ne 3 Ee et et prarehees Pee Ree aa oor won ; os : es aspe: ane*onal She Ree ISPP e pbRR Reese: Se ESa ;a43 * GRRE cages Bnet ihe Teeeeeee naeke er ae
agi, -“ 4% gy feSe See eet RE Ee OeORR * *Sd: Sn aes ee 3: pe -Es 7 >tte yg hyxe nn ce OR Aeet OR Se. eae ah : eS PeUF 5 iaSen oe Se, rmWr. ‘ SA doy ; inie.He Pec 7te ens gerete a ge seo ae6g Rose Lea See Fp sea ne.FS ee ee Posed ee i oa AtMe Sets ates en ig es eeingee ee eA 7PER meheee: Sek Tee tetra: Sa aa eeom eeRee Se egOR tgSST ROO pe See Ne Ne ee 25eee aes RES meg eet % re on a» ,yy BFBig Soran ile, aSF_ Tagg nnne Nei ieee! oat Song On perp TeES at a$eeiFoeoe 2 prong “eee SesPr, xe Soe 5 Rote ta any nee Sa. Se aS%ee“
SARA sis Ce eR er,MR :ett a daPR nsapy eeEs Dane $ Bie Se tecgnseges
aeaBras “ Psa MPS! ret: CMR Ce a Meee Sees
ee Se ¢ ; 2% Be reenter: ee os ad St inal PaO 2 m Se Sete P ae a Sua oa < xs amen Rae a: iRee ete Ps pas ReaeAe LF, :Phane Ng ": j ape : bas Rea -3 ee FS Sgn gate. Core ogee ae‘caine Bes Reivers : Bae - Ree RC co ai yie ae aosoS ae oe arene eS ope Senge SRS eee wy bemoans inn - 7tess eee: 2 ee KSPOS §EE Le TS Se gen ie $ -“sa oc Seinen a3?ates SRS Se aeSS as secece ; Re Bet ag eas atbee = ne, :;Si Sse PRES: ee eoirate ee 7A & che ; nate Sees : 2; pce ae Rare ge ce Fog eegh aaaa Bios Be nana
SS eee SSC ae % woe ay s vd #oy PY = Beno 335 shee aS Ses : es . wy x re, aa £8 3 Sone a2 Be Saree ee ; F< we e be 5 : nd :SeBese 2 FS ete ae ie ee hi +" Ni ie 4Dy Bee eee Pe ag wie Be s -; Soi, dicen na Beets eo che et aeER ae =ea» - Ogee rare »> .:sie>As Rane aS at co: aie Paes ee % > ee g: oi CS ees .ee bo Fe a5288. x= ye or A - OS 4 re ee PS Teens. Aes 4rt te a =Pa itee anies - OS RS 3a ee See SS IES Sabie page os or tn Soa 4 ‘ “ee 5 TR On, Rs cS re ee : Rage ee ess Mo
anes nian a he MR near éeee Ps BataSee aeSepia PO ERE a - Ba aaah i a 2 rm 2 Bisco entcinntact g Reece oo BRE SURE Rteese So eee sonets Shootin : ierBsper
; Senn VR eSPeae SRS ;Nee pea ieeRe Fe BEentities Ra, Brees $iiiiSO Ro Drage ea ape Sesieos ae seas peste eS ie s sacs RS SCee RBee. coe ateagateane Sai Peachy ast: emma Be ee Se ie CaN Ceeceasencmnasanemmiinan sa:cenaenenrintenan Sa HERR, % gs 7a eto ecru Sect nes oie eee pistes i. Sot a Ra ae PS ee Sat nao pees BRS pabieenntieemcrneranns corescntsanemans 2 Tea” OS oe a CE OOS cs a Re ens r eee a o%. * Here eae heal See oah x wiphtiaely. Tahaan. ee See > . Sete Or, Ba pss: fiasco cee nnn ai ‘el Date) Se < Dae : cae oe 3 a oe, SEEGER OS sn gaa ee. Pe
| 7£7 Ses es 3 Rae sie eee a eT See bsio ae am ce aSaa SeSaa Sia pe me Me Gis. cme es Be BES CREaeoe. ORO RRS Ba Saeaee Seaneat Bg age Si anaaeecaamser oeas aegM. Se 2Sorta. Bah, Soatea. oeSes. eres Siero Soiree Oe Se a oe at. aNR. pan: ae Rienaammem aeaBe oni ncaa ema eee i TsNo eaBeRSS aSRR TRESS ¥ISime Ree Dit soaks oa se pence: Se cae aeBean Sees ee a ape b Soe. See. ae aSBees.” Re Pesan eaeoo 3conan ae SHS SSS Sc Sie Brn Baccara Beis rea RS 3) pt A SARS: Se RR * Di iische ame a aa$34 aed PSs ees See soi ae Soames ed s ss actaamuerntncn aioe SeeSaeed 3 Bataan Raeaeeae Bo. aaa: a Beh Ro. sf Ree 3 Passer c,h. Sameer eensTRace
aaa ammenities Sa Rites a4 Sica cc Ra a aaa Sy ora F . NR RO OR RC
ae Neheseee. aeCae. SaasSen ee ae a iguanas Reo ean nc $24 seca ok %can a 33 Seether peposers. Raimasks eeoea eae ae b Saag o Eo. a Sas eases eaegeeScena See Seas aaaae eae ey SRR Bese scammers en ee isi coeney Sema
pS. oa Se Sas Be BSSee Sore 3 Se Coe. Saaa oe sh eamSnsea eo2ies Ree sees SOS Rneae aean Re Paeae ee ae Ame ea,Kes, BM am oaeae Saar aaa 4 Rinone ee Rew eee a asSee = 3 BnSei Mm ge Ra Re, eat, Baron arms peer naene as game rt mami SN nea SR Se
Ba i aoe i.ee gee. aaaOR Be%iee a, Seas. enema Beececmec ee es Rages eee Ran Sea 44oe | ae & SS heoa ae‘Saas Bc§pene. ys Se iaeEy Beegil I eaaaa 3 sis 3 4aee Sat Sano ae thes,SOs “see a Se pied ‘ee Ea RRB oe Geee eS RMS > isect er aSee a oe eae ae oy BR erate seems Ooty SoeF: aia SeeaSS;Ee a te Nec Wie Seeae : Bn a%SAR RRS COS ncaa |ES UES RSeeRg, pSrerennsee seinen pee aeegees. eeaeSS i2ccm Pn Basson ON a CECE eas epee SRR cca SeRR RB as oh SER sR Oe eo Ea ame Raa Ca % eS ee Se 5 “Soguaguaanemsuena aac SR ede aN ee Bee, SRT I OES CO ORE me a 3 Fe ne I a a, Era Be a Ree a Beg Sabeacrogs5< Seren. S Cs = NCa c ceaa. meemmng ccss ete o Sec ach TREE SS PN One Seis a Eespike RE rae OEaeeeSSssuthnnr OSeceane OOSSERERTESR LL! COREL SRC EE a
Soman gaan -BE brah Ee aE oeoe Baca as aBec opechae Se oa Se sis Ss ead era 3 [Se oe pot Se Bac os, i ie 2 Ses 5 ae ag Ree aa BS x y 4 Bea, Brose Sa % Seas Se Se a ee aa 2 eta card ee 2. aes See SS Ne, Sa ae ae ee q ae: Se fei 2 ee aes Cccenemmamts. 5 eae co SPR tis ite Be Ae ae be sa . as f.aei SS 3 :eee iatPea BS- eat Bea ’%2B ‘= Gia : Bs ‘ pena tle Seek i: FE"
Se ae ats i Be Go aoe age aot NO een Be. Sr ‘Ss * Saas Sa ” Recs ae a Sess » See Se a tere Sg oe Sea Baa % :eames Besa ts ecRS ScTae Seer -otesos aa ome ane Beacons. aR oe a oY Ne oes RASS Sea areas es BeSEN “Stee ee Sane : De ic eae en anee ance ened ie aa So 3SosCROMER SS seeaes ae eg eee ane ee2 mance 2pects i pean fieeee BES Shs tiesa>3spies Basso mearens cra Beak cena erates seems conan nen a.SS ‘osBoos dpasaiinns evs cena seen Beveumin ovis scenes barn naan Biaeaeeaate. s% cemnenga Bisse aeae Bates Bains oeema 5 Sia ecm. aapm “SS asRRS SEeee Saati eet anaeemaapen . % LE”. aaa a a sa ae, ; 5S Sapte ameter coh Ween Becscsee ates: Sona Benson areca bs. Ba Bec SS a Be ees Bassin bates toys S CRRA Sea cae Saiemane sme Sarena He ae a ae eas se : a OAR ss en RR ae. poe piu sosamneiees ca
aeara IeShin = PaBae pp: “SS Ps i ees \eRe roo. >See. “ARR Ne Ln aRes a ae ace atremem CORR Re rs aS ES. ae aBae ee # Sen Se Seeman es[Sa a: Ls OL gee TER SS SSE Nis. SS .tin ee ecanS ea Sia aie ieanaeChipper earn ss‘ioe SiBe Soa RR Pent ma a-IRS Rene Sees Rk ee i Remco on 3an ahs; 5. Sa ‘ae aes es e eee gees
bias Zahara Pec. pi ee pe SE ERE pi Bess. ee cc Be ect Git ee
+ se ae: Sn ae So eSRees a ee cE eee ae"CER ERR ec SSRs oo eeeor ooSS Sanaa RECs aea aeaeShae ie Si. oeAS Bs aeta 1Been SS aee, 2: Eee SS aaae seoLee : See Soe eaeae - =oh ie emcee. A SOS eei ss. pe Sn TRE Ri aa coe 3. ei ; Sanne =Raa 3 ih Sabres oa neia “SRR. Sa eras a‘eas ge: ae eae : Ep aeae ae Sangean. en Re SR aeaeRe ee hysper Re ES RS SE Me ona vanene onsStae ceer 5 Be ee4tySS eee SOS. Beg baED, Seat Be oe caer S tsSa Ses ceer Speen Se Reon SaAe SoiaSacco Bas aca ge .eee Tees RES eaeyoSBera. Pe oni,oR nee - PS *% CPE iSaran Coa . Sen ae aaa See». Be. See Bf. Sa ea Reniinmnn. otter aN ete prensa oe Bes ae ii ep as Be Boat dwaRR, ESR ae So ee pre aSipps naan eaBaSe >cosSa aNR Se aeeSete «Ro. a EG SDR BSS aacs. Soak sas eee Se :3Bi sos toeres CRS no. Bee aS sea Se Co soKe Pe ay aRe ose Re oe3 aa Seay ese ceramic iaa oe REESE SS an RS aRSees | RRS See SS Bi Sey ec:Fs 2Bis ae §Seamer Saaee Sa SSS cee a co eSanatomic. eR Serine. ges eae.jo Sanaa SSR Ree ae aR, sonnei
ihennamaos Re oe See Scape a aeons aemeena aaee Ce a SES enon ose a3iscae Beco oa aaa geRosine ee ee Be Sacputee ‘% Sopa aeSeas Be aeSeen Sitiaencncneeanemetner Somme siehaas ae eSpees oe aeras ema BsSS s* a heen hae Span a aCe REN, cea Sees paren samen. aSe seakaes OO Samat ae z3SRORY Ome mR Seas => ee Be Fei ayStideere sa 2Ranieri RR aaRe 5 gaan eneBe whens Sterns hc ares Rae Sate ey Bean ere %Sct S35 CR mene ae aaaot peSe Reese $33ie aas ahah eaepean iBip Se,anaa seSee Be ed Bs aBea ‘ Be Siumane Ba ae ARR SOS SSnnn a ae a ion ae Kae Sees ba See ae > SR apices ea ire Ne PRIS ON oeLSS Sitar ceca Births net. en aaeSSeS aeaes aas Bc 3 Br 2Be SSS eam aa Scam wenocana naa Pirie ns omnes e SpeeSea tn: Bs Rt oe SM RS en Saran hn Se Sencn eeSocenoecn : a “Sherpas BeSee Risa oe a Sees aca ereeeteSS ie.Sigemet fe ee 2233: Sea ctee aa Sa as Se Nac : SEER die SAR rR Re Se SoaPee fk Esate Sisco atin ae ease oe
since Seco 2 [SOUS RRRE Eas ti mnemeercn ys SAen aa = ;“S pete SE Sate ee BE oc a, a San eats once aapunucne nt tenis tke toes pec ee fo oe PRS His:Se : arata : :. : arent eeae nat MeeSees: ee cera feinMime oe So: Su Spee Pig tose neat cease ¥ RENE Seve TRO eet non ag Dees gatas, ee % pegs
ee eg EEE Fra ame AT eABE ee, eke foe ee Ps PG ie A Spee i Bie Weert’ Ree es Ste So Ge bk. Pees Sree Fseae : : :#: Geta Beets Sete xe ER Nm BE ee Sie fs Ge dco Gace 5 8: Ge > SRS inc teat : aes $ :s Sas i eames ee SP Ee ae: ime a ; Beg ;
: pT3 op ln aS Repeat Or he eeime BS So cee eR horas Si nee eyoat Bree Benes We esLaeee ees oe Oe A ;s?a, ie ©
“ ‘ aan einen SincrBOER a OSS See fe - %Yoon. ¥ Neenge ei yz ¢SeasBehe eee) Oe Ste ERG he ise€:Seg naan ao ae = Sher Paes eae, 5. ae : 2
Bec hs RY an eeDe eeON BS Rane Me Sennen Naaseesti tegoes ; ee 58. Be EEE Pema Ree :ROE ee ature Rocce EO hee aeat Be te sk E Penman Sceen RR ea Dae apie i AS Se aa Nee PERE Gee ear etetaCleat 3 Ree ee ea 6BR REG Se gee ee Le Setar ieee Benn cab LF maan enMAM i Soeneem eng Pek MOSS ec a MeHa Pe: > Pin eel Drso a eeohn ° i:4* miata Sea te es peor sea ES oe oF: ef i or Se OPE eats : Beara 3 YF CREO Se eee Be ; mee Roe 2? : Fe x¥ Sie Pimbo dec mates 1% BENS fe é : ¥ #Fect pny eM fe A ee th = a4 Fs BR gt GRO Sa RNes
ae RRS? ene. aea >teen Bae par gtk a- : ty > oe < ol SR ee ae oe OPES. tebe ; Ben oe Sa SasSeas Beer 2: st pepe oe ‘afSES gee awed se ar OP SN eT MER Be BS Bo on OR ee ee oA ie. oo « 7
eee ret a a aatrtees res hed EE BEByOe ecire enact LE pee a geeeecaecees pod : :: : eR ae , a 5 : Saas maBack : 20% Ese Oh mere ps ieee neem A OS eS oN Re pies sions BS BE ea : Pia te Sia aa areneanscnttatnta ts ab ieee | pene PeSa f (oa Re,Be eetiisiaf PS RES ees-aS
3 ee ee _ Sete 3 sis i t Seen 5 ee % FR nn‘ 87 sacatear: seo me? eee $eheay OL eons » asx oe roncaee. ae ee ¢ 2Hs > 7Pe > Senn Sete OO Se sgl ‘ oe aa bc eee :; iySopa Pes Begars sccsan ceanoncn iene she 4soa Ess* ae . aee sai>. al a | Aieee % ‘eS aRe 3 Bs ‘ =F rca Bae >reatten Yenw +epS be3 of. oe, taa Sg paaezbec ga al. ba San SOE$F SENeeaaa ae SRR. enSore es site ee 2: ae Mw SS ae Ge Seae aa,ee no aa a 'e: aR SR aaaeae ORR - oe oo : EOP Bem ye TD ie ae3 Et Be ia aSn itesRR gla.ae secPete Pree POS Rape Re a tsCooma ed Se SFIS Aeterna ty Ree aee ES Bcaaa ORR 7a hg gene aaa athcosote amma ee ae Nagi >SS% ies eae Br ae Sgr a ALE ESR SOO ge ae= ete SeSO Bee aPeCia aRR aia#: PR aRe. RotaeR Rg gee: criteNAT ERaisReick e
ee. ee. PsSR ge. eee os Ri ER ie de oe Se ice pistes See” Ce eeHeme a esoon Beaeema ehoeair Carew, Peete. A weeny geReeat Se RO = Seeg atin IR ois sie ge awise ae cae te i OE RENEE page Soadete eee ie aea2° gee oes ce goSea FE. SAR Suri aagSSeneSSG Raaoe ag ea ER 4 $ss$ Be oF iia ine” ec ae SP BES Eein aRSES AMM as Sad a ei RNR Semesters Seas Bis SOEs Seer as Daca can Serie 8 Bde he teSe Soccer BORSA TEisRi eos CCR De espe Gian eo ;i aeiz See Be BR ERI CON aa ieCLM ee aFc oe Bee eeeeeOe Sees acne (ie yey a ieRRR OE i Pr: ERE RE gl : FOE li fe Rea Se SN ete Soe wae eae bie PP IE aes eR WRC eM a ake Ac Pee Fe 5 Pcie” Mea ea Ee BE a ae all Stes WO spi Pas ae ee x be 7 2 ee Pe ae ie Se 4 cae SFO SEES ot ey seamed ge ee Nae a eS a cae ae RSS Meee oe Shi ia ee eR a ee ~~ ad
nN as na See Baad eSaSa NNesi eS gc.esSh. reece es es: ees oa Ee Se: a ee heMeh SMe SeSpee I aSey So ad See eSoaSe: cae ateRe 8 Fbaa asee2 ee ay pS. aSos ae Sz roae a SDR Bees or SNRots A Bese Ree iia “ie ae ee Gace: 3 aeSe Sgpee Baty, Bess Seer Rigaee EE . Sa FTe “iSees ORR: 2 Pes i ‘SO weSees —_ SRE Seca ea eae, ste Re ae ae:Bee sa ae ONIN ES a. BS Ss Nee eeRa aeSRR easaeeS SR a TR nati Bots eeoie 4BRE Sak iege eeailies as Bene “ ty lia ae ie ie ames era ines i Si Ae aeSe OR Sasch: SP aa ere ae se PRR geRRR See ce er.Ss asa. MM. St Fe yO ies aaeee Re exeth z BS NS? ae
Re g Si ee Y #%, eae ae a aeisbyeszBr 2
Sees ee tee = ig, Re. a Se et sisi 8 ae - 2 2 Pig es os 2 & : F
Y FkF 36:SEER ae? eee,ope oo “-Sie Sx. aesaa Doc RR ‘ °Re Pe PshtSea in &= ra *is esaie aF at =- F63 a Sing. 2‘~€aKK, ,
Pe 3m itesrae F: 3Z es WP Pat aeas ; GE Z its Pe aah z K Se ms he cw ne, Me : zBPR, “F : ai 8 os $ it ee BP. se a fs, eo; Ps % sey at oi . = 2: Sia -
:.
j nacherib receiving
iving Figure 6.3. Sen Photo: onqaon. : Zainab Bahrani.
itishMuseum, Mm OO BC. the booty of Lachish, c. British
io an eee Sain ae ae “S i se - ae oe h ae. re ee
; We i Spteoors ¥,Maas ee nes ee ie ieogeee oeROO eeeae gtRn. eeBeagles se eegil ecieneae eat: Ree ee tS 8 "CE BEbi SaSick. ok RF : aS sa abaeeGiBia, er eo Pit ae aie ae ee eats aeSe ag ek Pe er, geaeeg BO meee ee FP “tag ee Sees ae eg BS. ss lena8ae ee coe pine oie 8 SeORE # % Ma 4La igen Meee ie ae Sc NRC ee ae He ccc S Mi, Re: SS teoF— Soe Ee eee£Saleh” Bo) Sees : - oF es eo gg fe a ips pox fed ee aie ‘ae ee Cetra ®she” IORR ie poe ae..ae gee Pe aepata *ee ae cigs BeRg Piae ee Foes Mee 9h seems 4 ce sae Se gis Be i igang ais Baa foie Seay oe Oe£2ee rsaASx A aPe3Sees ae eSfe: Se Sires sae ee ce ae SOS “x4 PE od= Bee et fo FeO Seas ee foe, , : al PEG ,es) Le ayfed - von Ye * FR. ile SOK td ot Hives Shy aes ere ae. s Bs a °
ae-& pitsas + SO of Fo aeee BsSe ES aes sia*ee ee atae ite or gine an eeSe Sige 2a eee ok ee“4ge oegin... ee DP Soh Be gett Deee ges aeReset 4ee Ege Pigeps Paes sty Stee or Pg OF Bo Ai. eeeiotk Sseo ee 3eeBo aCRE o. eae ey rot v4ee : Pg Z& . 3er Ee os ae NF Ps Sopa, ae aFS aaBe ks ee LER aR PEEP ng Pf dee aa oAaePeoS, tid PS RRO sg ae ee aie oe cae te lt ea gs: SF ee a eee soar eeeSS Papas. se peaae eeee ae: 3Saad See ass, he coe he eR aeesCoe Pea gi asbar ah £3 BeieSug eeSNe age Bate eeae eSPr Po bee Be a ae oe sas a tgs eeikSeca eg ee :‘ zaatneilges tes 5alc.spe se é4 hikes Be ae Se, eons BTSad at ee ee ps.aeSh aben SeFOR SRRh ireee I a3 Sa thee area Pe ae Pee RS .ee Pekee PoSeshoe Re ae Siecne 3Sees ona ge Spugeee oa a's,ee Ss 0 ae Poon ie Sit ~ pees: Sree eae saat ae — Bee” ae mae Pe Me tie a a ble ae cet "ll oe oo ee Sea scare re ee iy ee oe = ag. cs. : one Paige Sak ie gtr Re . Se a Se ROR als are ae a haa ei a Ps epee ee Se eee Fg ae Be aoe Bae ce Same Sat Seaccaeee GO gy Saas ie ~. | /axceé joe Wg! beige as pee SPP japaie bam $e ecceae - RES i seo . eS cram a mle Bie pe eeRearae pi:: bs Fag: Se a BS ceaeesaeRe2gees Be asBB 5 iwe ee aSa edESS EERPSone Be Bgtte ae oo Sash ee “: * aeroom oei .eee pSeeSe Se See eras PS. ; Glee as Seo oats Sea ED RPO spp aieesara ig i tiaePG Sap” Be OeBe gig Yaes a aeSora Bre Seis a eoee Seen: teee. se lle geie ae eener ise: OMe ekeLES eee aBs Fog Pee Bak sana aeee £2 See Bee Hg ees ae ie ; ieee Dama EeSe nae *et aaa paaae ES cn, Set Fe, Pte ossecs RS wes Rae Bee Sas ees Se ee meg th, by, Sa Sager? BS eda aesSe PaSee ee 8Be oeoe eePS eo2 Bred SR Be ae Hiroe Pe Rei Lana ee OE ssges: FeySoro ee Ses ee sae PEoeAIRE Big SF CS je oe4 SB fe ie "ee if ate leyae2A ae = = . ~ BE ~~ é *s < nes . Poa: pois eS pee Bee aoe as ss oes a oR se ie Pe a ba . Pte 3 SxS ae Bese: a sa oi ae i a ese fe ae me @ ait, eepete: aS ale Pee a as geeeePim ai Be gi Pg os es BeoePT pgs. Banas yo. “Ee VpMe Fae Rae: Be gscba a ftaegee a «Ss St hw glesge OyeWeg Son BS Fr gea ae ii shit hie 2oe Pscae ae BtPePieiegiewa ke ds edeRe ee acc? ae bia 2 eee S ie 7cat pe.eet OL o. ff f¢ ¥ vs '4
of Tee? 5 pe oe | Cj ieee od fs MAGA |g
éPEgespate, J ouBEoeeetaideES | i Gane GREethsee PESeeME PRES a8 5cam oe~Sein 4 ee esoySe BEE egeei Sage oescetfpsig 2 7SK Bee a oper eeeeaeaeos eecee: eeea 3 “a . - ia. Se EE Phin ee WES s: ee. aes Sm mS eePgs + ieai ee es Pe Png bie Ste. ; Pe;pace s seit HES as oe ae SESE Seees SSee . ee2%OP BI Bs Ps ae eg nt ORS CRE: garee ae ae
Fa i a Si neSs eees\slhinn™ 4 >Sea Ps aeotBe oat ESS SSEES acanis Cle oe eos Pc ee aBese eee 3 oes Bae SectSean ec nna aSae SES Sar. eS3ie oaDe ig ae PRS ARas BSoe bE zs Gap fe as 3pa oo ee - Leee oe PS tins Figen TB oe Yvkoeie pe3: Big OTe iS ig DPN oh ee e a cae tne nO EE =eeSe ee eas. ~Boma Pai aeBPR RS Bc pear seem eign ae Sea ie Spaaen esseee a| ORG ae cad Re co eeBZ BsSee Boe oe" is sO BY DS OIE Beee gti Yio Pee ae,p cea a Aoe eyeas Be #es gee eeaeeee
: | cig - > eo, ee es. ce ~een ,ae—Soe i eeooeewd eaeceofeSseBes eaede eeBee ate ers ee Pa Gogh heSF “esoe=fas a, & aseoefae PePa caeke5Ses oS ps fee of te aegee ee ofee &2oo ee Se eiKy was ,~~ e& Bs ot ie2aPe: A ae Sieg Bee Beoe Bie Boe aafSag :tama Fyx onx& oeFc Fe RE aeee ge ose as a,ERR i See 4tree es ga PES Fee Sie Ne F 522 tess bg ae goer Fae PE ee ue as‘ “ie foil ay WE Nps Z oe sel eae ne ee seat Saee ee ak: gfe &Ror See aeGEE BOS BRIER Re LEE pao eg Bs Se gens a £iivee .re. goer %eS - ee geEe Re ORR BtLe aHes aaa ee, = bite a? ease adBechigc Fo ARES neSe oeSe uf -os ~~ 4s, ‘’ ey. ‘ etee ‘- “ts “y‘ ‘A a 1ee Pes vece ote Re eee cae Pe come La ee ete See tie tom steS OES eee Cae A 59 sara aad MS 3ate fJe Sie i?2 Bae igSaas neESC “6 er os i.Ri lm ie Ress Seen» Psisee ge LEE Reon aoo esPike eeSac .Bie . J)Se pisBi * ny LV cy f
gall £a ee i FBS aperecs fgeSee Pe eS .%ie¥5ge pBaSoe Baek eee Mic a ee Loree ESoeFee oy ane 5 ees zoe RS aeseS Bieaeasg oi Sate %P Mi. ™ oe aes eeoe PcFree cuca Saati eaeMer * Biko B08" SRE Ree Spats os Pee ae & _ 3fo 3saeectererr gees cs eepi Shae See a TREES Ragas se ies eeiae 233 Serene Sie oe oe axass te® Be ee. Eee mes agme SR Re oe Sp alee ee eo a eSE Si Peon pane She ‘ Seite mates Missense ne eee SOR ROO OR TR Re TS pica nh ain onhcn aR So OP Se a ne ete ae Sn ee itt dd Ae m Siemens Dagan sion a Sy ata enc ae. an rer Cnet as See setae: Bre Sune Sik as es oe ‘ eae “ ROAR Loe Sage aati : etc es Ses = eo Daten tae nance eae > Renae si3Eas ~¥ ‘
me,seaZste = :aSe en PRONG a oo BRO Se oe aae am 5Sene ee ke SEN Sera os a Sea : ee ee Saas oes a :Se eae si ete Lene = Sta ene“Sn e %on : 2nae — RUG ES eRe oe ane RRR tia RS eee Ban ahos agSpe ae Re Pins Seti SnSeine ne taree Ss = Z-:cee rate Sain RE NRSS pa a ie teDRS rh RN laRES I ae ISO ET eSaaeae Sec mene . Re saan es % ia: Bs ane nae - Se *RS BRRenn BieROR, RR. MORE RAO SO RN Oe BE 2ARNO ir geesoaps, be ees See *aie Pence sce oe sNR ‘ kon Stine Aaaa RR a ny : een a ey: ieas baa re Rese cai Meet Bias fanC Sa aaOR Ra gala ae a aa RE adeta ieeeaa ec NR as we Sea ae SCothe BNE SSeS gE NOE 3om Sos 4 eae Fe = Sm PRO ie NS ap Ie Se ie oe a Es ‘ oe a z ot ‘ ede Se ie a conan 3 = is . Re. Sen Sc Se OM oa nO a TO eee. Re RE Tea Bisse Caetano encanta fase Sana sity fanart RRR PMR Dio ne AO I SS i nh uate: < s SR RO os os Pa Seni St asMamie 4 ye MaLR neseaoe ee eaeee pee RE GSE OR OE OLRO akeS:0eesae naa ~aEene Bec eee a Sa ea PR $capt Pe heeos taieRR Ia iee ata Baer Ssnaa mat. yaSME eaeMI peeIeae eee Rene a er se ies Rt IARR PN EI RR BRR SRS SEE PO Beas SePo a ooges antiacach MOD eo oanne canes AahGEN OSES. age See Saas cose OR ROE OE eae ODS einen eee i i EeOA EROP TOS BE gaan mene $ : SS Sa ss sneer Ra een. ein eh nn Rena Rate RRR oe : eh RSBeacon Bie oe Sas iator SeSe teREN ean.»nae a aSC P EE eae Peat. saa bese Pitica, seat FS concn IN x Pe‘Die eT EY Stee a RR SOS OeaMh, oyoan Si Se i aceasta 8 aR nee ae Seen Pptchore eM:Seo Racia m2 >isbe aN NR RMR ea Re aaotaea Sey De ache% aeeae csa oe a .araISTE aye sata Soe *: SES SRS ceca aCoane aRee BRR OR, EAR isSatin REN RRR saa tses Ripa narra J eos Se Le a Saces Be SP na sac: en ise pi tate Rs Sataneronnee eee ere eeschccmearnnt Ses cae ‘oeSatine a Sermoneenen hairne nein ae=ea Se Neaeke MN a. =Steinman Se Ae See ie RaRNY. hes Peer sae ont easnea saares dieet ee Be Bertone rata aa RY Conc eepena Oeaessoos ER. say aeteana eR Re i ea nate aOaPT ReSeIeree eben nee y LSet pais tance a aman an osaNaas Soar to Rtn sai aacs at tan NeSR mina en tiie * SaSee aseReus Porernnann Se eae ee can aaaaaI SARE aeeenSea =RR Lape eS Mies meRsee Senge Se ncn eR EN SR asain. ee Oe Speen Seen rs apyGeen ern eae ee ea renner NP doe aan ion sea Remeron sent tie Fi. NScnet le RR Sanne oe Renn om geet Sen eneamen ana aaee eetian 3 Seee nites cenrtntinepraspan ne owoatewiee omee er ISR .
SasoriSORE sks ety A 2 id SR rE OE Sage aes eee cy Pon N Sen ennaone ene ges ota Re earn Re oe, saan eseOE Ln A RR Ren ER RRSirene aS a ae eon : as os anaes ee RO OEM ee ae ee ERE aieae? OR a RD ORSg gai ea iebntieaenan BconSain teaNy nh3oem NIN ROL oena RIter oP Csvbiigertys sensitanntennsmnennnna ean aecana ne Ae es oa Seine ea ORO Somme SERS Bi Rinna ear RS rama aaa eas Simao aneeausaiaameee Sree Mt mare SRNR Since eee aneoonce aoe Noe. “SRhaean” Sapna LOR SOeR RRnee LNeiRN ROCnie ELE RRS eR Biicienn commie cen aaianias cmanSiS abi seicsieaearnnersu i ciate menage. Saecoac ae aaeas a aRR ee nsOR hs Sea oN ee OE.ema Socamean caer ennnnncnencsnantn Sanna aie Gai Mactan geeicnde Saie RNsate RT RR ss Soe BRR RN cE RR RRteNR Seeagit ERR ON Be isa ana Byen$SEfrsee cache None eae esha Beng ageaan det iem4 fhe eseect ec ee meena cs spk Oi cuusiueecai rite, eae Ps esnarcease. sian. ee eee ananner pis ican cece cctacSyn nenae ‘ era Sapiens” Sameite nnaee Sees ti ate Soiwoe homme. aes ns tn BOE neene Sec ate ean caren eRe os a ncaa RRSea RRR z isce etsON ae Repeater bona aan aona Sateen apna a setae enn Co aranion seat sate nee Seton Pn oa, ce ae pees Seears hiaSainte catenin ar Pre Suen Siescp etnias eeeieaan RRRE panna ROnnn REEaNeas % See Seapets neeSeana te eamete - Sputen atop aca .at SESE BESS Pramas SEM oN OTT OR ER LT Nie LS SATAN RN ed SR Rae Nee eRe RETeeOE OR ae f 3Sean. RetaSR okie conn SeProne en y ata aenromen aoa sale aes mie aemmemee St ae ‘
one ph bane cy RR7 MR ae Ph KER ban tn MLNS Pee oh ieaeae eae esSic AER aece copes Seana Cenacapone a nee ae oe Sota Seeger tt :cen nee Ries ence treseen $ER Ses eisai RRR Tete eeRN ee an ORaai Pan a RRR aRR eneON eePsSenne PORES Se- ca oh gaara te ies i Spe ne eaeaston soSite Recanara Ba icone. cc :aan Sh aaa aaeteLR a I ea aaa SS Aaa reedteae =g£:. eee Se RRR See Ieines Se nn Nee Nae OR ILD SeSe eeRM otc ae erm Seis inion etnnnennne eeri an - pte,
PetaraeBR ce aa re aa ai LeeSS ogee ernie RR EOaN ES Cie ORT4... TOE EME ES Sy 37 Ree RisoDR nanaOc ae ii Cae arenBIOS oe nNRSS aN StssI aac Cee phe meaaani ae Ss MESSI aaoe Sgn eee tin iestearate a en nr spat a i ae er itis SERS a Rae 3st iaeR a Re Re ea .RRR SN LER Sec MMS nin, ee aeaSaat soe BS oe COP : we SasRN aaa ta aadoo iareR a ee aOR Ra RON oN RR RtSlain Re Ai eee RES agRAID eke on% Oeeae RRM aeeas ia RaRighnoe Seas are Rane ae aSe Rae Se 2Sx)SR . aSeeoe oP : ae re ra StRN SS ts ‘SO ROMS ROE ee; ORE adetian mee - Soar So ae Sieh en ay taN, a Se Rites gate rs: .ire xene -eePain acs nt Ne RS aeNS neence >Nr z .ESO a5. NR REN LE. SO RRS oe Seae ieneat, CoSIE RTanna. ne as aeSees See Seg ai naan Sir Be Ss ga recone ri Seca yee nen cameo ’ NR Se re aR oe SS epee tae ee Solem aana aceon ¥: :3 See Soe Pees ai mpueitinss ir SS POeae ee ER .PRN LEO IS ORNs RRR LRN TOE oO ER Oa 3a ME bik -% : SR rapa oteena Mla aR Ri Mi a Boat amene Panne Noy ek Sisson ae ¥ pee oo Fa SRE TER ee ae. Ne ee Siapanpaears yeas arn ae hare ES ‘ Sosa Nn Some Nia wae neers es meee mame emia nna ee eterno mis aa Svs canna se a ean pint Shar ct
Sere Racer sa es cae ite Ss ea Nar na ag se ea apne oe oe Rann eee = oe me Ste ep tne sie aabiar = Sa eran me Bi path nan on ea SF »< rs haat ee Ari - ne ey wy: RAD PORE opin oseWin oes «eeen a Sere Tuleh MRSS ete Nae nntetae”stehat rn niente RS Santen - ote en eens amen oomenn. oe ~ Ae. omeSewer eS ae a no ESSane SSwee gcd ¥ :aSicha aan " Pe eereign. Sis Rana Se EN Nee eetSeaED Se Le a5: moss oe a=ate aici ns ce SY Pct . acs See eee keenate 3 pM peter
Ge “ y nn ne na P Papa eaters Rn s : oe aie a na ne tea ee eh ia : “ SS San ospee se Sonn Sesaerate wane Prooo en Salen an Seer Se NC oe :See Shae ‘Peoe esSe oeRR SstesO ens aa Soe eeneenee aSa aera nes . Se= ore san taSite Si era aay Mite nem fo aePR ~ xe OTe RR. aRee Me ee aR Soa ahem. RS ae aoes a:IN RSSat sioat Nae » ee “sSoe ae =Ss oe ec setae SB FR Ln RR aso iOE a ge ROR ieeeae meaeSe SS etana ia 5anSRR Oa eeLance Se inpats Sanco Psin -ane Shy
Beaae aren Re a anne ie YS RR RaSere. i Ai ence. ge cae enaeParse ;aeGe neaene eaSRO : eRe aNoa een , Bee ace eoSp maa tateMis en Neeae a aenapa Ses ae nanos nae a sane naaRR eee Ne ae ape .oe nianaera ee oe eae : : ee en aan Reee Caen NNjPe ‘ Sea
% -rhe Peer RG Ee aE or Pe6wae Biss .: xes“tn -ioRR ees es SeSeatac Sei -=-ieSSC ‘= aah ° Nie eeaeaRe SCN ae Sak ee Ste a Lats he Ne eA ohMa ERO wn, WS, CER >SOL ib. eae oe 2oR . RSM ein = *e +: * ERE Se ae RES Sica “2FSS eSnaae apiataisac aeae tae caeR te ERC ce 5 ARRON. NeNae maaan : Ss cian Das aR i SON GR PSa= ee ay‘ae GSR Sete iar3eat iPa ps cn eR se carn SEBE Fe.aes ape Fs sRN eneaee : ree ee aeaaa sap Baar cance a a oR pioneer BeBe Paco ia coe ne ce RR RO AMR nh i HS SShe ne- ee Seinen aeOe vs og sien SS aE RRR RS RR ER : Senet nce.StSigne aie
Sra erecc ae sopmaaconneaan eeSaag Regrets Sik cen SE ea :iaaatees aacSac ie co See ae ee Re EOASR ESEStRR z Sh SRRSe CESenn ne eeSN a ae x ieee : . Meets Reeee SRR So a Maemeaean aaa a Boe sheeeeae ae ee eeCotene ot gs maaan enacen ovea 3aeRee a ae aren ee SaiRe sear RRaries ter eR a Sane eR a ee ae ae a eo eee Bie, GN dee ene eee GN ay Sogo Manet Nie em ine teens . a i nn Se RRR a a ee Siephaatnn ss stare ae Sarena ocean x tahrnn rong igen : Mame os y San ema ee Bein etic tan ca Bae cee ee Ps seer eaten enn ne eae 5 SoS ign eee ea tea nee ce aes ne ae a separ SN enema na ee a % So Pate See nee aR eh on RAT RO Rye ace ae aE ea cm a heen emgerec encase geiakees. oa ee er ess a , Be es Sees Niece Seti hai a mn deena eee ae nie reer et ey isda oan eget ie ciata seeae ‘ pun.» Su see hie gees cn ener a aR a Re ae sph athe eo anne on nS 3 tein ; Sa - siasonen aan Ren 2 SR sis cnc nr Dc hs ne ROR eo ote $ Romeeapree oe a aR
pe ton ches Kssueeetates OSSange eRehse i SSS heea aocean a ea Sey eesae BsON sg She ad poccacthaeansescs somtimes neiaeSoca Derncease cea : Ss ascae a a a iguana i ne a ae ee seamen se rae Rea a Soooche carmen ae Psaaa aay 3aarEN on apa 5 SSRN ERR eaee Se ma Nonae Bi cta7s =; surramen aa enc orSoe Oot a nae nc nee nema ann aesstain Sees. tas aDatei eR RE RI aaSEE aR pete Sisetecionnr nonce enaes 7sees See ent Dares SERS eeraat So nM RR ieee rece aea :xsae = eae RO, nnn ks cs sao oe naa a RES, Ssh ca aun centnmearcn canie neeaieo oe pits bein peees teSRR tateStee he sic aac PsRe Satur seat san ae«a Gist Monae RE Sie ak atrine eR DR RE aaes ai ees ocean aie ERE ee a aSpc : a ea : Se pis hen Renee RE ee TO SORES Se ssmaria Shen te sonenmanmn sae Sy: saae ee eae ninsae ante Renn age Re RR Ne acasio SOS etna sre % apnea Santen na a‘ iageno ea Lee ‘SS ee OR 3tne os SES eetthts a ime Ne RRR S RRS RR Ea aea RR Nrape ayaes si : :Sag cian tion ana ae ge RRR asSe ih ee weRey en ns ai nh nn a RRO tien RLS canes a as . soso sence aco aeeee aoeeeae ge stn esa Sites tein denny sagan ecient nnRR cheno 5oe 2 tts Seamepenan oaeR Sccane aaa Pade Oe a I a i a eS RR Me tN ‘ Se ae Ra RE TI RMR ee eS pm te oem BR ate en yn a ee Sah eR cy oe a ite BIB ose es stan ca sae ea oe RR RRBa eRa NN RCS RarScore SN aaSigns ORRSeen cB RE NCeer Sees Beet. Phoeepease Soa a CR es ae pen Se SSoscunseene aseSNR i a ee a he Ret RRR arenaaene geen seem ee see ee OE na homme Meie Rem ee 4 Sa apne SSaes IRsecre ae eecan OReR ea aN a RR NTR aRRittentesaae ea See peaneee de Steno ec tes RC se ote Bann ST in ane setae Res Shea ORna REECE cy See br eit SE SSRI PIR .s ema Sanne nae RE eecichnannn Se ‘ Mi Mar“%en v - oo a ERS sabe pean ae eigen : aeSee Se sian ea Annes :: ate : ane ‘ CRS >oe Sern NN anin aERE Ses 3UAcarat nsanab gg caee edn neNe aeee anna Seen ooeR*ae Sos : xaycine th atress eetrno aS Stee eae mee zn ne StME Sani otaIO, ann» aan oeaeae Sonar >teat seen pte orga eae acts ‘2eycae Bie Sone ‘=Speke pein ane ee axe - ee San ee Sonate a SMas eee ae ad Manomtncar tomoe ame. eriy eae Ee at See ems eer es asa SN aee RyaFor ae CN ene 2 ae:te3tae Sateen ee aks Oia Sie pacientes poes taenneecn caatans .Se Ree Bia ate : ae ySePee se cian cross staa=iE nine ate So Se Sas Bo ae atan Gee PSs cates tan 1Sea ies Se eees asSRN eee aehi aeNea Sensear RT Pass ee z MR eeSRR. Deacon oa sea Cann SR Ne-: seen % is ean acM SSaa a os Rn Fett ne astray Sir Ren: Soap ae Bis i patna See eae eeinte SSSaeLP PER RO BlaeSRR SES ‘ sss Lie osespen ecm sins bean ensea taieee nnn enoe saa
a% eesemen aeaaSeBrac isintaenconnct naei: Sees Rise eae eeSee Meee ae: :%: 7meee - oeennui oa encanto oa .a : peices Se ¢es > oie Wearbn, eatnoae ms patie inSSE ae eeas Si er Ra % apak ep eeee =Ss Bigs conte nn eeoe Bete co taAOR earntht eR i ae ags =aeae aeRSS es a=GR a Se ene. -eaOO can Sean oe ee i¥no naSR < .Se oe se cnc ARN teh ghee Rit ee ph eee Me See inee OO aSYSea teSeng a Ms se PA eee 8a ck gwen cae ne neoe ee neat Sue eae aeae %Ste SS eae aSO 4 ; ;.es . sien aBete ai Bhs oh a cs ar: ac2 aseas eeb ie ee pia shes aban a Peis ncene des nai ac See aoSe Ras aRo SRiOS ARE aaa so hcsai tn% Boh Poe: Shoe ah ae Sas tee et nama ce eena Be pia a eens Serna nna nk ec iasees eo eee egcaships Ss Boron ae ea Se a RN So Wins git hamarnnene. SSie ac. eae ke ee mp Buca tii ac nee Brees ate Samana acco oe Ban a ae ce i seABeaman aaa Ss Sa es cae ag eae SS 2Se aa ES SeREN SSRa aSSRE a | RR RR RRTeen Bagssme eaaeaeeePRS ONC ON NAM AES RD ORR Re Bane pats POE Pa POI DOR Sa Seeneeete otk aaa ee Re Sia ete ae ey ae SG Se RT se a SERCO A OPS PS in SRN RR RON sh hee ae x cee Be ¥ ORs ae ee a aS BP A et 5 ae ae ah Spe ana ae Sor Sei Seana SO ca aS SSRN OS RE CO RCO Sea Re Rc RN 5 Soa ARS So 53 3 oon Be cea ee RCI Re a Si ea ee ae os RR aks cue cree ance eee ray eos 35 3S eae ms Cee Pee Se 4 a Sy aero oe Shae ante Ste STN gece Sh aie aN, AMS SR2:aBee ERR ORIN eyAes ee :Fe aosse Sy%ai aa akFae So ee SR geeae 2 Regio. aexeI SR aee BO Bae ec Do eaeee SSSR gy,sis sunee nee eee iat ee ne amma tan Nee aaDS ieBe anna ee saeae ee ae ya fied Spe Sea i ha RE RRO OO co a = Se Sai: y pee ak Pst pe : Ba *a.BG . Sees o 2 SERS Sit a oeSaag en ie oe SaPee ye Rope ae a eeeSO ag RE Ps Spec: PRR. oSBe 2 See SiaSS Sai,ao ge“ix 3s Pm me ii ee ideROT SSee#ae Benno ae fee ay cee eee eeaaoe nas rnEn . ee hs ORSeats MR OE Ss RR RC eR NM ee On¥aeR SsaeRes eB RN a aRan ane es :S Se Z ER ace aoie ~‘pierce acne glee eg nc inns Se a a ESRC SSE. Sa tn ae ; Setanta en ea ee a ;.3se iSec e ae Pea Bae ncn Ce ike ee Pe a ee ee Re tan BS Sah oO scape ae > RC SRR Rr RRR FoR ane ee eee x sch ee RP eee APE eee ee ae ee ee. 2g RS ene RR SS sonete Re ES ; RRR i Rs SR a ieos pao eae na lh i ea TN RR RR Oe Oo a Sec SE Scere aS Meas rss es : Bape en tae an ee a am ee PS Pras tae en gs Le Dak eeSeoo eeFR Osae aaOR Se Soe aes So eai aaes Acaas AIR a Se aaa Sec alae ieSaEEO Ee Rn DieeS oeRte OS SAB Po Been hace ea NR oe Be ea aSa thae Uasri et ESBS aeem eiaontan Sa R Peiar aOe gat eSteRSE RNeat: RBSe RRR IRR TaaUR te ay ORT SRR US Becca aia agEES oss aa acca eee go ea aaaaae Ma . SR pans ea aE ge hn Rees
Bee = Kj ey a Bare ES ae OS ee ne Papal ey Sa ae eS
the me tee ac Ress Sigs toapammenar agi eaaah Soh pears Sasar; Bae é Dap Seeseam sae RR SRRi A a re RS ER at Se I2caRine oeRee ae sige catecanen G Pen Soea tan Maun onmne aos eae Soa rasa nea ‘Sete ES seameecaies eyemp Su Ps 3 Bsn atm ORaia a SR RRR Rrage ee a
be ei ei taa eR, es eer a eeeieae ms eS oseae te ee Roane aeeR 3 Sse ee oe SaRN RENE Mn A Se 3RR OO Sedge CS RRRAR SANE Sa*y‘ ee Aca sacSse NO ake 3 "4 eae Gita aes cos SEO IR naa Magers Be Bn So I Sa ORR ck REAN TS Ragen oa eR eR. SBR MTaSO NeNER ORR ORR SOR aaER
ase ie Rope ‘ 2 sa RSSe OR Saghiet caees a Oe iBes a Mess z 3Po Se ec Ep aie eS Stn a acer a artnama Ce Rneas TaeSarma a Rin apoeeines rk WEY Se Shen oe eae aeSORT ce cae enSISiN ei3 xcca ceaapcee fp ee keami secs i ORR a te bn ree Tags patie emma AaSn RRaORR ee agti eSSS Sin CNne RR 3aac StRSE sa Sapa Mae ORR eater oie ee ee = assi cr. iaBEE a>ae enn kag bse em Ss, ce SRO aepamiaeernrton gr aeati aeese x x RR eo agi ig, SS SOI i ok ae%Ae RN Ea. bet Sake. Se ike epee ae i Ree RO 3Oe sicSa eae oti 3ak eck ta a SE aeae es tO eSGRO ee Re iw ganar Re Rae soeSaas agg aeet geet pape Ssee teed ike ate te 3Bone see mae NE OS 5 #2 Oe eR pane a a; ER oe cys ‘ bse k eS lateBS cee aap >aE aei oR SOpak SN cg A ee 8 Rees eee Pea BS a Rea eS. ‘ ge ROR gee PES SRE ; Gn OY iat Ng a $ EPS rate CMe ie Be Sk Cee er ieEra ioROO iitSe $: $a cae Ro giatm SRoeRee Series Ses ‘ oa es BEBO SREtoe aia ee °= SN SR Breaes i, Bite ne a Baas a ea OSAe A ae teRE SnPpt SNaeeS ; Bie ee eae PRK :% ; oe : aAs es RE Ba OO er See ea peeae ae GO SReran RIEee Sea ne:oe Re SS RSgee ceap ye es : Sl PS EMM Os SctLS BL, Spates Rtas aaaER rs aRE asRts Sh as esRR Sane ReSan eee %BAS 3Ge ee oy Ee aeaIie SR cm hceSi ees Se wie aba -aia ae ee es#Serco: RS oad 2A SR DecEIS haeaSa >se .% eee Se iia tcc. RC tee $55: ossade Sasee ee RRB ee se SeNR igh. eae BS Ne SB ee es cc mS : ese aceon Beak SeePe Bae ee SRR ae aeOR SeOTE a.RRS } OB er Ps. ReRI Saaena De ReesPR RES Bses. SRE RE RR RE SRai ae ae eenee retea cate seasaeRRR es Sn cee eaeCR LRtteRO ERE ERI aa eis SUELO is RON LT pO aeR. RO” RRBao TN se SaSere Re eR MnpeRAN OR A Be ge RN yee eats Re Ss SR Se ea eR a ae oe Sart tn ne amas hone ga 2” Soames Sas Seattemnenny sins eet ah PRP RR Bae Me ie Me ea in i ee eee ats oh ieee ae at rs tone ne Rage Se Pe Ronen
aa iupernememS sates SR aa aea aCotati” ose aaa ees sh aa “ypc ecSiociaaieememmetan Sie eae Saastoes eo Doe aa iacececa ees canis peeSchis Pe: SON eae RRR aeeeEp aR Soe ng tae Dae ee aead As tip Rei. Sahat nee a ame aene asa fiSY OS ToS innaR heSRE nine ts iaaas Fe, SRE Bis Bicns ee aaa Bes: eee Sot Sakti Sotto ec tae as SAR SERA REYRS. kN” RRSerene ea. ara ee aSRS iaEO On eNUG Oe RR NE ReRR RRR RIC I ON saat era ieee Sssce ts aaac alba See SEER Ras Rae ae ae Dok ek aRaabe Saas: iSeaman ee antecna as as eeeSeOa Bg ena SREhanna ae zaaaa ae Seayogc Base ac Sg Be as So Np ee
es aas ea aangee acee Sksteers Sea 5 SO aee NNN tc. aN SEER Ne 5 Raa a SoS a ia: ac nh aay. RaCoRR eae sh psoeaeae nea nah naa hee ena Siguiente . Sox Baier eS SN See - pate Sh MN, ge con ae:eV ER Se RR SR a 5 a,eg tas BR ce PT OS :rs‘; pane RR cr aki se ois. anaSh eeee RR oo oe”ee eR ere pes Biter RN RE REeae ENSe Sete Bre Mince ae a oe Sag RS ees i Vs ae ae ance. Se ERR NR SS RRR Seant. 3Baar prtPe igs :4Re Soke Seen eee hea Gan ae Spee tet ie . Ss ae se Rae ROMS SR Rm eRe oS sdibamanen es omega seh Sn ea ga ea Hitec ce : a Bi wear a te +s eet ; Re SPR 5 ee os fia ; Be: oe: Seen ts % a sien eS eet aac Seen Sa ees Ro Be = ee sae as es pos eae Ba Ss ncannn ora ae pee Gi ian aa Re a re ee Wie Sar es Sa gee spades PERRY Re ike ean Rope seats Mpa Mage neue Seances aS ee ben isbnn conn oe: pera ini eters Sr ec TON 5 Race - a RCs! Pa ras ae Se oe ee Pee eae sean aR A . Bee NS SON i, IR RR en a Boom a * Dost asc amen acne ee Serene Rice fn bes on Soe Stas ae - NC, Sram pais ee So Sonam “ eae: : so Liars y Ba i Se a ge aaa Sapa SMM at 5 aac pete : ate men a te OU ; is ; : 3: ee B3aSee fae i os idee ae PRES eR Be Peis: ei,Be Bis ce RN seRega a ie a' See Ba Se eae: RR Pa Ma Ce MCfiBe “ee aaa : gar i eee Seagitar cer ORR, og ; Rare pc, :ta3aee Be Se ee . : : Soe: ponies ane NE Oc ae neane SNDSC a ae. aaee aRFee FO oo eee Oe ¢ Res -sae Zs oe eee he eS Ss ates gets. 3 ee ea of ee beget ee hess il sae aa 2 3 Bo eS as 3 POMC ne agi pot es tie aeS: a % ae - SE ASS aanaaBis RRagki¥.Rm a 2anT esaaaSa. ro : .ne Pagers aaa ee Be etn Stenace nk sees oFSinn Se Sis RrBE canes. Taare eee :gf pth BoRees: sat Be % Se ‘See ziSy UES sean cae rari ee aatthe BRSian Spent tea nM SnSER a aS RR ocraeSe Saag See bs see Soto oe rian SG aac oes Saeanigtaaecstnn nee -
ee a ee ee Se ee Oa es A Se pc eS ae /~ ee et (i ii Oe 2S : é ~— oe ee be i SR ENC i Bac
SotRecsnrosrnties Sesrseat Agar ite cit Pie: Fs grit RS aihieni oce cinaen aaacae re pe Sorc aaesetts a te Ben Roui Sacco ice Biss serie ee: SS pn essa Sassen a ae. asee Renae bPoe RE is oh Eege ieeS AaSe seoe aia Beet % seas ie: =Bo: Ses eee boiiRa ae Sorter eaeSaceea uA eneaoe re%Ge em Sea a ea peicesaenana eeeeeBs renee te cana Bieei “oes a cn ih naan Bias ceca t ; i accent sc hs oem a cco ee aBeret
Sa ee SO Nae RRR I ST CS ER ee ct i EE ee ee) BS a ee i Pe
Se IlRP eo eae z eames SERcacy iia, Tae Ste eey333 SS csRee Sa Ps BaeS RSee Bore 2 3Ra er oso eaeea ee ;ease ? Ree eeSeidman a soe ade for fey: MeBer SRaae PRR eh RReeen mga ae re aa res Baa 3ee‘SoBs Sees RoTeaaeee ene Bapiae;gc SS os Boss pe ete : RRR ee: 38. Sea%Be3 Be sgee tieMBE s ee RE ONScs7 ae es a: ie :Seance Seen! Bses: : ee eas eepRnaa seem san naa manent sau nan te eatae cs panama nro cea ne bn banNC enten aibnn nnectsrtec cnn sn ssa OacnSs ine RMDON Se % ‘a sti See Meco oa Se eeoccaneciata ee ES cn eS Ia SS RR eeORC: Baretta cena ince. seer ahe os)aaa eenaican tg aatie BoSse acamnmemaenrge > RR is aapSN meta tan BNSaunier Gadde RR antigen ec aan haem Bagptescesceatc tier aaSSSi Ss SerNa Sian ccc ciate arent ence deti, + agape aa eaSete naman eaDetention eee eee aperi eaneannn RR
Rea Secs patente : paSE ae RRC oe ses ania Se RRnO. SeSci anSoe Saag eas ee Ga eesonia SesnaSati ga een ae: BS 0Cana ine See Pg agama So Seas Pes SRR £5,AB pea aoa Bettina icons nahh aa NCEsean SSS Rie Moto ose aSeana Suen ges neh aR aeeeee Re 2See re a Sa a RRR atseiaieasce nar eae untncet Na on cS» RO a ins aesiemens Se Sees eee SS, Saki ten eeeSeance oe oeRN ea $e Ronee ae : Seti Since MM aeng Sa ati ay eees. aseSNe GR ennieng Sapient ee eae es aN a beniaanannaennenn nee Syrah aePRR semana ohSN ie ene serene aSge ene bee Spheres aNSa OR RAR. aee tiene a a ana nae Seemann seiPa on |catia opeae SScss OSeen Siena ee aeGoon ats Picante Bees ae Sep ra Sra be SnAg «a aN ANent SRR RON RR SOY ORS eames rein ne Sse SeSn Saneces
Paes MRE EeeaeET Ge in peo eee oe an SON RU RR a 2reoN dena Sareea mRROR i Sa a EE a eS Scceasaeromcnan waemans sss sra. ee eer.SE See é eeBoe. Se Maes aoa PR eneae SoiSo RRR: Deere aah eS Rae Sage GS: OS: Bes No Raven SRC ee eccrine a iain Beene fests Pa one aeacaa aBe ae3Peet ae ae Sees seas SE Ss ene ‘ REO i cnaes AIR gE SS aaRA aricigar NoRe cm rceen aateaoonas AR nate eae geone Hecare estates t0 Pc Sareea Sengecemmanemionan ee er ; Bg sites ee
bf geo Se ENS eoBER sataee ene oan Dee_soa eaerecena aeeee aeRS a aoeOn ieRR a aeSaia = he Repco aridRnsea ot ele anes oe a Serene Sarao gine Ca pee RR SSE ee a ae PS Bes BO i ee Cae %% : aa Re OE ie ae SRN gaLp Bi CR oNae Bata sales POF FEES Sees Sie ae=Somes. aeSe: oe EF Bsgene aa SOS SS ae Bee : “KAN SSS - ce POO re RE SgnCORE ON RE x aia8goRee Tae) Na Na BF case Spa. enpieeet Bp nae pawn sae sae Smee = Fe Se - ROO aR 4saieemaes> oo Be :aieena Se2asa patie ae SFRR, scRaen A OR eae BS Sete GO" Ne RR RE : Boies etic SEO ace Be ae Oca cai a A. ee ‘eae +a ;SoA rar xaBe a enema * ais SR. Petia Hane Se 3a ee Ne gies yenaniy umn ean PS ¢Ba Sop eae go ara ie & ‘ See. Sa pata ety ee aShatin arSRM Shiaseete eae Ace Sey. oa: ceSig RR ceSeria ranee SeRS ea iea depen CE OP Re neNie 2 fae to Se oe : :OCS LE ES KOE EES Uo Ce ee oe. Ssoseay SN Se ect: aR Ber. aRO eaten tae aaSARS ON NO, ge Sa ee >Re Seales asR Se my Sa :Beene: Site Boe ie Bes adrian Re ; é : Soe aaa te a se Pees ee oi Bs PRR mo cas CONG. le a Rn ee RS EE ae Cpesencene a | : 3 5 ; aera eam BRS iene Shenae % Raa ea es ae a Ga ae ee a ae a ae Sree eee i. sion: SOY ae ema One ree ae Co Re “3 3 ‘ Nos. nea See Pic emp comea eae ea Bp eS ot : Renn Nn ate Sone Sm adhe ec Meer een Sit eR eae ee cae aa Ste aes Re WE © Be aN i nh : Bs sre Lae Bagoo: Sea
,ioe Se%. Fs: - aRett ontine 3Soe SSpeg Spas Cottine chonSN SRERR ee -ee BeeR See Sa osen eeeSe Dad Sea ie Seok ataeek, spe SSSR neaRC aaSa aeaaaa aaBa1s a ES PRR RN ER * < % ac Daa a See co cea tinRaces egos CeOe aera aace Mn RRSe iii Mam Sapien Sennen Meera ge es aga Ge" PBs. RE Bi eeeSees savant fee aanna iReaeRR Seeeeecncmane aeOR ggaSn ae a— a cue 3 Haas : ‘cae eae a
oes. eRe &. Saaeeamammene Re Re Wien ION ance teenBER tin cS eaeseaca RRIOS. Be.Bete Se Tae ae Bees Beceeae ieee Sa ress SeeBee ge gn ee REO ee : aSg gage eggMSree 23 Seep Sea ce de SRS Se eae Bic:po ae autres: Seyeoon. Wiititiaeeaee ccRe eR SROR as =eee ge sae bs RO GtaBas ae3 OE Ree Sa oem ae: Ss 2: Seek segeeaS Sut. Sem enemeinacteer fe Pee ROR OOS LOOT Gi NIet: - ges Rast Sa eR SS 8PEL oo gO _ rts eisaeBOSE LEE se oehe 6 =RE See, MO ee Rg a eae scPrac a6Sak poet: aa ee EEitso aa apeialnn eecc CNet Bam re SOE IORI sitiiiag pga eae ‘isRO OORLAE a TE RNIRt anORE. sae eeaes a Set ’oS eee Se eS ee Sa aBig ee. eeeee | Wiese tae SEARO MER oe AOOE eaten 8AN 2a IIS RR noe ene ee aoe. nae ae ea eeites ; MOR sil... cipmeunceatee RE BOR Sy & oe BOR th: ae mae. ena 3 Sei mmm Speen see Baca Pea te: omar Se ew re ie Sr Re aie ee EN ACR cc I SENSO NS a See Ree Se al as aie aaa Saas ee: ae iis. ieee ig. te. ae Se pean ae Pe te Ra PY aan Sampaaas a SReRe ‘ieNR care eeAeeerent can eeseSan ane ene eRIRE Sener SR SE 7,erRe aBey Bran ie cgi a.) ee ogYi. gs5MRR td omens Bid sae fe Siaeeeaccs a ES a ye eK EES REO RSE a Siti RR RR ReCea RR Ride SERS SNE AAO BER RE IR sisemmncte.. cena . oRaae naar an Seis.” Snapp Mee ES ee ae eesiohme ete: see et Ae aleSRE ame Ba: . eeae CO SOON Sep oO eeaCay ne sl acs aBT sitesi: eeae Seger eae aieROO hes SR gseeaS YS cars shuemnrsms rs ae Seen ean. Geena sca aaac aasereeanaee ae eSRR is es SR NSI< RE ‘SORE : sist NET setae pie Oa Pi Bae OOM MM rN Rear. ROR Rs a,ee eae Gi:Se 8 Syn memos sear A. asa oe a.ciase Re sh Bisse Sate as eames notebi neRRR Ae 5ae SED Gs. SERRE SERB nS aR Re. 2 Re nena ae eeRete Sees aae ByBESS iterates cS Sep aege 37 sae Ra acca Roar BRon aiaRRR sangsoo peek aarea ;SE e rei hon ae, eee naman. Satecentin: ee Fs Base cpee sag zs PeSRS a Senin scse sso sane |See BECORP RE ESN OR SDS RT ieSenee RR Scie eerie: cnn ae Pee He aa cna ae aaetna SS Rta oneness aa ai«iseRR ae mac Me iassTemes Se a Sa eae. ce gro ESS Giaciiericigi ase “Bet Z eee space RRR : ee ee ke eR Soke Se Baa 3 ons ine ae SR as ag a Fo RR oh Betas rsa ea a eR 7 Se > Pee, Bs ee Baa Bir Scan Bee so
ne Pee oat PeeSS ee ae aa as : bEitRSS oe aR RLnS ReESOS oe SOS Ree Se Si Reema CO gaGS APere aeSRS orca Sh Bie Sena gape ce deen age RsBar 3...aaa tee ees aeaseee eeOD 5cost “age es ae RR ReAe ae SB RRR ee ios ;eRe >eeae $3 REL ORNS 5 CE aLGe aaiaaS SM cas: aei,eiems Saas “ee esSlee ars OR EE RR gee aSo i Be RR RE lg Se eeSee gees aBe #xce eae geo> oe Be gO ON aaNe a SESS ckae ee ci Mige oy ee EE tpeaieenema cc gauntemen agama ena;So Fee ins soaSRE a i WA Mig, i.ae Regions : aeEe a a ii ShSo ee See are Pp Rena ee Ps a ;RRR RR Fe SeSeca aanORO BSc tents SCR ; OREN ota sae Se Bae ee eae MRR Si ae es ity; sat ie sani thae sntin as en eae ae I ae Sr RE ROO ig GYR PRP ae Se oe pO ae 3 aaa. eee ae, eae Ps pe a sae a > Rees > sae Fae MEE ae ae SNS au ser cece Rea ie sn Siac eS a . ‘ Seca eae ; ey 3s ae : SRR: ee ae 2 ee % Be SB Sia Ba Be Re oe Rea o ig aioe panna a P 3 es : % 2 Wigan Se ae ie (Oe ee se SS = so ee
ze. Ps 3z m # Ps &gee Pt SeaBoca SestesRe aaa: es de SS ak So SNe OO Se Reece: >a. ORs Seer fect sa ge. Se eos a; Px Renee Riesee cca aeMe sn ee aOR snhee Rig, pe tet naNOR ON aaaE FeiOR éa:ae ome sea‘SOE: aryeae eae See Ba..BES Si tena ee okacre Soe . Ba stee So Se ‘ ve Sea ERE, SRS he eR ge Rc Le aate $s pox aeoe areSeb PRR oR RE aae ne RC Sere Bec -Re saasin oe arc paasega Shh ce 0 SIGs ae aS eas aeRate ae Pte oe ee ges Se Sa Sena nneK SosBe ee GAs eae na Sacae Seafaae 35 Saco soSer - Sean =.tig, eee ky Sin CRN Pe:tis Sees BS See ec ae ean a aCe eatin: aeRS ene, er: Seen, oe % »Be Soe is Sa ae LO Bite ct oa eS ee Sere eeu "3 ERs Rea Reis i ne Se aeSee OEE Cy orko MEE OS Sa Bee cis: Ria aS Bo me es Kee: Sa ames. Sek ae eee Lea Pees Sean he So a ec ar aks a Re Bin ia Aaa OS Ss eG SM ai a a . se BE Sera Ray : = a= Sa : 7, SS a A a acerca : : Bist son ake oe Roo OR Ree te Ce see : = é iS Son Ree. ae Re ne ae ae Shaye es saaatenens aes ; Sa | Rs : So. Seeman OR Sate pane te no oe sua on one cae hae Foe RE eng. TT era SMB a coe Roe anon % Oa oe. aa ee ? ae wo Sppeecsaie cs. Sate ea eas, Do ‘ :Se Sopa a en Rabies oieSeo on oe ea ccnaaBip :fire Beape Seea SaNR tena Sins. Seon Disa 3 geet PER eecotta esenee eeSo See page aeScam: 2 See Se :x:Sir aeaeBe aa RR aSinn Si temic Cage noe aRRRR si ig aaa o etna Ee gh pesche Sie Setar ie : saa Stese ane g Sse Sopa bsoSs os ;SERRE” wasn RE eae ORR RS Sot ate ane aaa aR gti: peaamns oase a sc eae 3Si erate %Srp Sci“eases SRSe ottSpee coe aes Soe CSSBR RR Te RR RR eeeeas ai ai Sa saan ee brcuSengrimnccesic 3 By sean eee FeBio 3¥Seana ee ees Spice temas Shae aoSsian enema Nn esBs NaS snare a Rain a sponta bes aesaan Sop eee saan sterner ‘ x Se ae sd iesMos Pest. yRca SOae a aeeSane: SSN ake. RABE ni eee eee RR taaaN aa tee SRS snes : a es PEC SMe ccna stpote en eae neecea a 3 Le LOgaara RE, Se ae eee ini at gi Sepia se irae Remit: SoSpinnate SNR Sacaper Nr. OR RaSn RReyRan RRR BRR SSona IS ateat. ansRRO SingeR 4, eM sca ee poste seas Bisa ae
EF: :ae satgases”. ; Santasieee See SEER seas RnSRR ans ae = ei nae nce - Sih cra aaa oRoe ie Re Sapien smn ene nnn iieshas sence sumanana anes. ene a eae a ceaaa ssouhpemenneies con geemaannrenn uie sain Se em haeneeaies. aaa.aa oS = aes: rRigaanesee ee Seen esSe nn Fs Peas agasco ataa Sap ce oe Ee ganas. SoSSea a so>aSeen we Sos. Po aa i aan es ‘See cese eaea eea de aS A eeea ten ss pon nSecon = psSo em picnic nape aeneB een ~ceins eae Neth. ae ae Sm ao eS ‘ Se Sobran oe Soon aeaatata ami aio aeRR Seeeats Seon eeeam es Seep: nenen ee So IRR aan er ca aOS ORES so on NS 4> ve asig‘Se ae oaeesiphon Se eee Pages one Sights ene. eae ie 3:$35 iraePineeeSa: : SE ST gee eter ta oa aam eese, iaeaeper caBSS ;a Bah. ORR eeeens eeSlo Se
7 pe Bre green aa Sarco Be pcan Sn asaan a Sc:EE Tareas oer “3 Sa a“te a Tei a Seagrcnne cae See et ia Bene Rag ee J: ie PO ae fot pePa sePisggecrscasci Be oO ssycae Be teeeas $aeSF - enemas shin 6s RE RD Sea parae ee a ee ge Rete -ae Dera. St es So ad4Sess. .adpay es tae CR Bie. See %aes fegets Ss Pe eo ape Se Se eae 4pene een aee ee aaa Soe ree ie eae sh He zs OT Oh Se es eae Sar RM OE: Satie .SRS phasic oN iia RS CORR aR San CRS spines oss ee bi asite aie Sa ySoke See, Sees ie Se eae ; oe Pescara ae ipa aeesate ce ee Sion commen :Pas eh in Same pink aes, Goes ;3Ps A a REOIO ES: Sage aaa SSC sie pi Sai ea eae sa itor oa pote siren Sas : eo oe Bre SSeS ers Re signa Pose oom Ry masa ae epee cee a os Sere ps oe : Se. os ;A F Ro Fes . ; Sas aa oe , Fg Ran Ara, cohen rea a eas cea SE Re : fee suis : ; Cea sea a Sg: ae ce ae Pe Re < eee SO i bs Rs Binnie Boies naan oon Raa Re Bi : Tei epee soe eae Pe Bie Bos ease $ menue ee: ; Pa : 2 7 es es oe Ss Fe pe SEES manera so SOON Sac a ea ‘ Pon ae os SA ae : pro aa os soa ‘ % =so ee os - ee £ Oe Se PGs gece a Bae SRS a ee ae serge papas: Se 33 “ Sera Bee paapa a a es =f Ss
3$ rs gh ealSeater z ‘Se Tee se Po a: Peo canes Sona ae ae as Sesi,Sioa ae ses Se th teSe eae " aSe Bs Jsae :éFP & 4ee;GN | Sage ¥are ats & gs aaa ; 2B ok Geen age BP Sia eg = ES aotze: y Pad aaa osPsa ss: hese: soe Sa as?ee ake J F:SORE oe ee ae 3 :ABs ea Faae > ae “es Res ii ;Se Mee 4 F P : Remon 9 ; ae eS Re ie PES aR : ee “i SRR a a ; ce 52:3ae oe éSo 5 “f fi ; pes tae Oe ee ee 2 aa gree: on er ge j ; Reece ne A | s : 5 eS 5 b -qiecnlate er ; # is ty gee Sid ger eee sateen oe $ oe Sarena Stn Ranma saci aaa ge SS Rea ho 3 S eS Fe : Gage reeds nee o Bes Sore Bo Pg % eee Bie a i ee ae $ ss ae SES : ie ¥ Sane oe . a a Se en 4 Po * Oe pee * ae sto oceania senate. ‘ Sa sees : Beene mae esaaoa Sees Biaan SS pen SS se ae ae Os, iae i soem ace cir Nae 7Se SSee RePo Seco aeMeeeer eat . pi eh. ease. Bsc ene ei" . CoRR SoaeSoeen ss agin Serna ices cone RRS es Pe in ae os ae See oe poesia :ee Sea Ses¢Sa pica aeoe .pia soc Sigh traePo ne me ec it: eas Pi ce Sas poRRR aes Re = seach oesoame =f Siok. esa pateSeheaeSree :ace Be ace. re ; eeaiej Oe SR SM aes Mercia aaah eGsme i PCO ae. oho Sc TS Bis:: og
BS. Se iia te se aasBee reaks, ga Seo ae eee RO akeER Saaassis SRS Se gage Pics tiigacnahe encanta eae tam ae : aie OO Bile eBat og:ki“Sea ee - Sega eae Se ri ges aston cane sn ee erenoseae Peer ee aeeaRash etreeae asommes Bee paige ae e2Geis Sites Seeea% eeSager aac a geen suey nen Ne Seo oan, Nan tener Remco Spats eta Poanaes Sance pineae asema Rage aes ae3ee 4 Sm,
bd . . .e ..
’’.’
Figure Ashurna im C..Briti Pree 7.5. Ssifpa War relle Iimrui—859 BC. British Museum onaon oto: Zainab Bahrani
’
| OMENS OF TERROR
dragon-headed and bird-headed protomes. These types of emblems appear not only on chariots but also on the standards that are rep-
_resented in battle reliefs.’ The gods traveled in chariots. When the cult statues were transported by land, it was in special vehicles, and some references to the gods’ accompanying the troops at war may mean that the cult statue was taken into the battle.'* The
chariots of the gods were part of a military display that made a spectacle of power, which was integral to the tactics of war. The gods mediated the decisions of war by means of the omens, and they provided the vehicles and the weapons, which had to be purified (elélu) before and after battle.!’ As in the Roman postbattle rituals, the expiation of the blood of battle was a concern, just as the defensibility of the campaign as a just war was of the greatest
| importance to the king and court. When battles were lost, troops killed, or home cities destroyed, these disasters only occurred because the gods had decreed them as just decisions.
Scapegoats and Substitute Kings The king was the commander in chief, the leader of the army, but he followed the decrees of the gods, whose will was made known through omens and oracles. At least one barii-priest marched in the vanguard with the troops, and every military plan was checked against the omens before being put into effect. The omens were
taken and corroborated by means of other omens in a series of observations and repetitive queries. The corroborating omens were taken from other forms of portents — from Astronomical observations, from dream interpretation, chance portents, and so on.
It is clear that the omens were taken seriously; they were not propagandistic acts for repression or coercion of the people but part of a religious ideology to which the king himself submitted. The same system of belief resulted in the ritual of the substitute 197
RITUALS OF WAR
king, in which violence and evil were localized into the body of the substitute as scapegoat. In this distinctively Mesopotamian ritual, the king was provided with a substitute (Sar-pahi) when astronomical omens spoke of an evil fate for the king that would affect
the entire kingdom. :
The substitute king was a citizen carefully chosen for this role by the priests. He was never a prisoner or a slave. He was dressed in the king’s regalia and made to submit to a series of ritual incantations naming him as the king in an incantational utterance, and also by means of inscribing the name of the king onto his person. The name was either written onto something that was attached to
his garment, or alternatively, the name was written onto something that could be ingested by the substitute. In either case, in order to be incorporated, it appears to have been important that the name was both uttered and written into the body of the substitute king. When the imminent evil finally came, it was expected to leave the previous-real king unharmed, the substitute king having become the decoy that would absorb the evil fate in his place. In some cases, it appears that the substitute was in fact killed as the final part of this ritual, but the texts are unclear on the matter, and the question of sacrificial death remains open. In one instance, which occurred in the nineteenth century Bc, the (first) king, Erra-imitti (1868-1861 Bc), seems to have died while the substitute, Enlil-bani (1860-1837 sc), was still functioning in his place as the virtual monarch, so that the substitute continued as king, taking the place of the deceased original." Whether the substitute king was — occasionally or usually — ritually killed or not, there was certainly a human sacrifice here, even if it need not have resulted in death in every case. The sacrifice of the substitute, who is also referred to as the body-double (salmu) in the ancient texts, is clear because it was nevertheless the sacrifice of a life, a submission of a life before destiny and the 198
OMENS OF TERROR
gods that entailed the possibility of death. Whatever the total process may have been, this was not a rite to which the Mesopotamians often turned. It had no regular or repeated place in the Babylonian or Assyrian ritual calendar of feast days, nor was it a standard feature of war ritual, like the queries to the sun god. It seems to have been a last resort in the attempt to avoid the portentous terror read primarily in the astronomical omens. While the violence was to some extent predicted for the king himself and his reign, it also concerned the entire land. As we have seen in our discussion of the seventh Elamite campaign in Chapter One, Teumman’s reign ended after a lunar eclipse, but the eclipse specified the defeat of the land of Elam, not only the death of the king. This conception of the king’s possible demise, as predicted in omens, recalls the logic of the sacrifice of scapegoats as described in anthropological theories of sacrifice. In this logic, guilt is projected onto and localized in the scapegoat, whose sacrifice then allows the reestablishment of social order. According to this explanation of sacrifice, the victim is never killed as something horrible. Rather, he gains some aura of sanctity. The victim, therefore, has to be acceptable to the gods.” In the Mesopotamian ritual, it was especially important that the substitute king be suitable for this critical replacement since the process could have great consequences for the land.
When the Assyrian letters mention this substitution ritual, there seems to be some anxiety about the correct procedure for enthroning the substitute and the exact reading of the omens that called for the substitution in the first place. In one case, the scribe Balasi writes to the king Ashurbanipal regarding the difficulties of interpretation. In another case, the court exorcist asks for additional scholars, philologists who were expert in the Sumerian language in order to read and interpret the omens as accurately as
possible. The question arises whether the substitute should be 199
RITUALS OF WAR
enthroned or not. And when the decision is taken, there is still a procedure to follow: Concerning the substitute king of Akkad, the order should be given
to enthrone him. Concerning the clothes of the king, my lord, and
| the garments for the image of the substitute king, concerning the necklace of gold, the scepter and the throne.2°
The court maintained scribes and scholars, diviners, and exorcists whose names and activities we know rather well for the Assyrian period. These experts were employed for the preservation of historical knowledge and for the development of scientific inquiry. Neo-Assyrian sources record that court scholars were involved in activities that were both religious and political. During the height of the empire, these scholars were responsible for celestial obser-
vation and research. They had to know what to watch for and when, as well as how to find the corresponding prognostication in the scholarly texts. Then they had to decide which would be the best course of action to follow in terms of ritual and magical procedures. Another group of scholar-priests was in charge of sacrifices and extispicy on behalf of the king. But the expert scholars were not just responsible for astronomical and divinatory omens. They were scholars who were broadly trained in the sciences and
the scribal arts. In addition, they held important advisory positions to the king.*! These activities appear to have been more distinctive at the height of the Neo-Assyrian empire than any other period in Mesopotamian history. In the later Babylonian period, for example, the center of astronomical scholarship moved away
from the palace to the temple, in separate academies called bit mummu. It seems still to have been based close to the temple during the Achaemenid period, although the records from this era are
few, but the temple reemerged as the scholarly center in post200
OMENS OF TERROR
Achaemenid Babylonia. This change of scribal workplace from palace to temple did not end the rituals of political divination, even if it did allow scholarship to develop in other directions at the same time.??
The Image of War, Severed Heads, and Sacrifice The practices of omen reading, ritual substitution of organic body or image, the theft and mutilation of images and ancient monuments, and, consequently, the reliance on curse formulas as a de-
terrent all carry a sense of profound anxiety. In observing the composition and pictorial imagery of the Til-Tuba battle relief as a work of art (see Chapter One), we can see a similar sense of anxiety like that which can be observed in a reading of the queries to
the sun god. The repetition of elements within the composition, the interweaving of the head within the scenes of battle in the midst of the narrative, and the constant reemergence of the decapitated head seem almost compulsive. The relief depicts the historical Battle of Til-Tuba, but the primary subject of the composition is no less the king’s severed head than the battle. Or perhaps it is better to say that the battle, as a narrative, was about the king’s head; the king’s head was its target, and the battle can be described as a head-hunt.?> The parallel with the animal sacrifice is drawn in Ashurbanipal’s remark likening the head to an offering before the city and in the libation to be poured over the head, the severing of which Ashurbanipal claims to have been decreed in a historical omen: I, Ashurbanipal, King of Assyria, presented the head of Teumman, King of Elam, as an offering in front of the gate inside the city. As it has been said of old by the oracle, “You will cut off the heads of your enemies; you will pour wine over them.?2+
201
RITUALS OF WAR
The presentation of Teumman’s head described here — its submission as an offering — parallels the treatment of animals captured in the royal hunt. Hunting panels with scenes of libations poured by
the king over the killed animal were also depicted on the palace walls of the Assyrian kings. Written accounts described similar events. A poorly preserved scene from Nineveh that has been identified as taking place outside the temple of Ishtar in Arbil may be an image of a libation ritual in which Ashurbanipal pours wine over the head of Teumman, just as libation offerings were poured on dead lions.?°
The narrative theme of the head-hunt and the sacrifice of Teumman of Elam is interesting. This cannot have been the standard practice for prisoners of war or even the normal treatment for enemy kings, despite Ashurbanipal’s remarks regarding the oracle that predicted, “You will cut off their heads; you will pour wine over them.” Defeated enemies were pitilessly relocated, tortured in heinous acts of revenge, and violently killed; their bodies were desecrated and denied proper funeral rites; but sacrifice is different. Sacrifice has an overtly religious character. A text of ASSur-nirari V of Assyria (754-745 Bc) concerning a treaty with a Syro-Hittite ruler contains evidence of a remarkable ritual that enacts the threat of a curse that will operate if the oath and treaty are broken. The ritual, which is in some sense one of substitution, seems to have been carried out during an animal sac-
rifice. It has the performative quality of an incantational utterance: “This head is not the severed head of a ram but the head of
Mati’ilu...should Mati‘ilu break these agreements, his head should be cut off, just as this head of the ram has been cut off.”
The sovereign’s right to manage and direct violence and his power over the lives of others are god-given. Mystical and military effectiveness are linked. Teumman’s head may have been treated like a sacrifice, offered to the gods and dowsed with liba202
OMENS OF TERROR
tions, but this was no favored victim given the honors of a proper animal offering or even a substitute king. This is not a typical sac-
rifice in which, to render the victim sacred, “it is necessary to separate it from the realm of the living; it is necessary that it cross
a threshold that separates the two universes.’?’ That definition applies to the substitute king but does not seem to apply to the severed heads and other body parts of the defeated enemies that were displayed on city walls and gates. Was Teumman’s head presented to the gods differently from those of other victims of war?
Beyond the narrative of the historical event of the defeat of
Teumman, the head and its repetition in the Nineveh panels become signifiers in the economy of sovereign power and bare life. In Giorgio Agamben’s philosophical analysis of power Homo Sacer, sovereign power founds itself on bare life; “sovereign violence is in truth founded not on a pact but on the exclusive inclu-
sion of bare life in the state.’2° It is the dimension of absolute violence over bare life that is the immediate referent of sovereign power. The ability to control the means of violence over bare life outside the juridical boundaries that apply to common man constitutes sovereign power as exceptional (see Chapter Four). The head’s reemergence across the relief becomes such an image-sign, a referent for sovereign violence by means of the dimension of bare life. The relief’s account of the Battle of Til-Tuba is unusual in that both the written narrative and the pictorial image focus on Teumman’s head. Such close parallels are not generally found in Neo-
Assyrian sculpture. In the Assyrian war reliefs carved on the palace walls, the king does not dominate the battle scenes by his size, action, gesture, or position within the narrative.’? Ashurnasirpal II says that his conquests are his simtu, the destiny allotted to him at birth. When a city was devastated by war, that too was explained as the result of a divine decree, even if that city was 203
RITUALS OF WAR
Mesopotamian, and the divine decree was acknowledged in a lament sung after its destruction (see Chapter Six). While the Assyrian historical texts and palace reliefs do not depict a defeated Assyria, it is not the case (as one often reads) that the Mesopotamians never acknowledged defeat in war. Some of the most moving literary texts that survive from Antiquity address
the aftermath of a defeat in war, the chaos that ensues when a government has fallen and the land remains lawless. The Assyrian palace reliefs that depict wars do not glorify the king as an individual in any obvious way. It is the Assyrian army that is victorious and heroic. The Assyrian king is not singled out as Naramsin was distinguished in his victory stele as the divine warrior king, or
as Hammurabi was singled out as the one who controlled and directed the law on behalf of the gods. Without some proficiency in the iconography of Neo-Assyrian art, it is difficult to locate the
king in narrative scenes of battle. Pictorial images of Assyrian wars thus differ from the written accounts, in which the king, in a
first-person narrative, takes credit for the main events of each campaign. What explains this divergence? The function of each, the text and the palace relief, was different. The written accounts of the campaign are known primarily from inscriptions on clay documents known as historical prisms. These texts were written and buried as foundation deposits for posterity. The palace reliefs were visible to the members of the Assyrian court and to visiting foreign dignitaries. The reliefs also bore inscriptions, but these were not copies of the buried historical prisms made public and visible.
The reliefs are architectural sculpture. They are part of the fabric of the elaborate construction of the palaces, a process that
included consultations with exorcists and diviners as well as
. architects and engineers (see Chapter One). Architectural rituals for palace construction required the use of bitumen at thresholds, 204.
OMENS OF TERROR
the burial of magical figurines, and the incorporation of protec-
tive demons into the structure. Clay figurines, sometimes inscribed, were buried in corners and protective beings were carved onto walls.°° In the first Assyrian royal buildings bearing sculpted reliefs — the Northwest Palace of Ashurnasirpal II and the temple of Ninurta at Nimrud — protective images appear: anthropomorphic figures in fish clothes, human- and eagle-headed figures, and
multiwinged anthropomorphic figures. The placement of these figures on the walls was more than decorative. In Sennacherib’s palace, they were also placed on the doorjambs. These images of supernatural protective creatures are the same type of apotropaic image as the foundation figurines. Their positioning in passageways seems to have been as important as it was in threshold areas. Fish- and eagle-headed apkallu appeared across walls, as well as in foundations. Lahmu and ugallu figures appeared on doorjambs, and the seven Sebitti identified with fate and the Pleiades stood in
an entrance from Court O to Room I in at the North Palace of Ashurbanipal at Nineveh. None of these was simply decorative or narrative in function. All the figures were carefully placed in specific positions in relation to the architecture and the image of the king. They had magical and apotropaic functions beyond the narrative.*' At the same time, as Mehmet-Ali Atag rightly points out, their appearance on the palace walls was also a way for the elite to surround itself with the otherworldly.°? In Ashurnasirpal II’s first palace at Nimrud, his standard inscription was repeated on every slab and in several rooms. Some slabs even have inscriptions on their backs. The inscriptions condensed the accounts of his conquests, prowess, and lineage into a repetitive formulation. This kind of repetition has generally been dismissed as public aggrandizement of the king, but this interpre-
tation disregards both the reliefs’ pictorial methods and their function, which worked with the architectural fabric in ways that 205
RITUALS OF WAR
made the building a palace not just in external appearance, as a symbol of power, but technologically, for the internal performative logic of the building. The historical accounts of the campaigns of war inscribed onto prism texts that were created in order to be interred as foundation deposits are also often described by modern scholarship as being primarily propagandistic in function.*? This limited, restrictive interpretation is inadequate. It does
not consider the nature of the historical source material. It does not take into consideration the text as an artifact, its archaeological context, or its ancient function and use. As a result, the rela-
tionship of ritual and politics in Mesopotamian Antiquity has been understood as an interaction between two completely and logically unrelated areas of social behavior.°* | The magic of the state, especially during the Neo-Assyrian Empire, was a significant dimension of the functions of political power and military practices. It allowed for the authority of the king as sovereign, with a liminal character beyond the common man, sanctioned by the divine, and sometimes even a king who was himself divine in nature. It allowed the king as a biopolitical category marked by somatic signs. It also permitted the casus belli and validated the war as defensible and just in every case, a bellum justum for the sake of civilized order and peace. But these notions of sovereignty and bellum justum are not expressed in the text solely or primarily for coercive propaganda, nor did these ideas rest on the religious alone. They depended on a combined juridicopolitical and biopolitical structure of power. The records of war and its rituals are not documentary historical accounts, if by that we mean truthful, objective descriptions of an event. Yet they are
documentary in that they are primary sources for the processes of power in Antiquity and for the way in which state violence, the biological, the law, omens, and the divine come together in the service of the war machine.*» 206
CHAPTER EIGHT
The Essence of War You (have become) master of all the earth, lord in the land,
You convulse the sea, (you) obliterate mountains, You rule over humans and herd beasts. The primeval sanctuaries are now in your hands. You (have taken) control of Babylon and command
(its most sacred precinct) E-sagila. You have gathered to yourself all authority. — Kabti-ilani-Marduk*
In every respect the war machine is of another
species, another nature, another origin, than the state apparatus. — Deleuze and Guattarit
One of the epic texts of Mesopotamian literature is the Erra and Ishum epic, a narrative poetic portrayal of violence written in the Akkadian language. This epic, like the tradition of the city lament, is an early philosophical contemplation of the nature of violence and the force of war. The author, who signs his work with his name Kabti-ilani-Marduk of the family of Dabibi, lived in the eighth century Bc and wrote about the horrors and violence of war that he must have seen and experienced and which he portrayed “Foster, Before the Muses, p. 900 (translation emended). tA Thousand Plateaus, p. 352.
207
RITUALS OF WAR
not as a contemporary account of Assyrian warfare but by means of allegories and the mythological tradition.! He attempts to come to terms with and to explain the force of violence and the desolation wrought by war. In this way, the epic explains war as a force more powerful than any other, a mechanism which is a brute compulsive drive that destroys everything in its wake; showing that all creation — the world, every human or divine thing, the organic and inorganic — falls victim to its destructive power. Erra, the war god, takes over the land and wreaks senseless havoc, sparing nothing and no one from his violence and desolation. The technological force of violence in war is described as belonging to the realm of seven powers, “The Seven,” mythical creatures created by Anu,
the sky god, and the earth. Anu calls the Seven before him to ordain their destinies: He summoned the first to give him instructions: “Wherever you go and spread terror, have no equal.” He said to the second, “Burn like fire, scorch like flame.” He commanded the third, “Look like a lion, let him who sees you be paralyzed with fear.’
He said to the fourth, “Let a mountain collapse when you present your fierce arms.” To the fifth, he said, “Blast like the wind, scan the circumference of the earth.”
one.” ,
To the sixth, he said “Go out everywhere like a deluge and spare no The seventh he charged with viperous venom, saying, “Slay whatever lives.”
After Anu (the sky god and a prime mover in the creation) had ordained the destiny of the Seven, he gave them to Erra, warrior of the gods, saying, “Let them go beside you. When the clamor of 208
THE ESSENCE OF WAR
human habitation becomes noisome to you and you resolve to wreak destruction, to massacre the black-headed people (the Mesopotamians) and fell the livestock, let these be your fierce weaponry, let them go beside you.” The Seven are weapons, but they are not simply blades or bows. They are the technologies of war through which the war machine
becomes materialized; they are thus fundamental to Erra, who clearly embodies the abstract force of war and violence. Perhaps the passage that most effectively portrays the mythic dimension of war is the first-person self-praise of the war god: I obliterate the land and reckon it for ruins, I lay waste to cities and turn them into open spaces, I wreck the mountains and fell their wildlife, I convulse the sea And destroy its increase.
I bring the stillness of death upon swamp and thicket, Burning like fire. I fell humankind, I leave no living creatures.... I make omens unfavorable,
I turn holy places into foraging grounds, I let the demon “upholder of evil” into the dwelling place of the gods, Where no evil should go, I devastate the king’s palace and turn it into a ruin.
Ishum, an adviser, tries to reason with the war god by pointing out his terrible acts: They have torched the sanctuaries of Babylon Like marauders of the land,
209
RITUALS OF WAR
You (Erra), the vanguard, took their lead. You aimed your shaft at the innermost wall. Woe, my heart, it exclaims. You flung the seat of Muhra, its gatekeeper, Into the blood of young men and girls. *
War, the main subject of the narrative, is depicted as a force that can destroy civilizations and even the universal order decreed by the gods. But war takes over order, stealing in through the legal system of rule. The epic relates how the war god takes the supreme throne as substitute ruler when the mighty Marduk, patron god of Babylon, must leave it temporarily. But this was Erra’s plan. He finds a way to make Marduk leave his dwelling place in Babylon, an act that will inevitably bring about desolation for his people. This usurpa-
tion of the throne works according to the formal procedure of ceremonial royal substitution, a well-known ancient Mesopotamian rite. As shown in the previous chapter, in times of crisis,
the king relinquished the throne and a substitute king, chosen from among the people, was crowned in his place, so that the king would not be harmed by the evil portents predicted by the omens. The substitute became a decoy into which the evil omens would manifest. This event was always a state of exception. Erra “remorselessly plotted evil, to lay waste to the lands and decimate the people” for the sake of violence itself. War, then, is its own end, not a means to anything else. It is portrayed as a selfperpetuating machine that is in some sense in opposition to the urban state and civilized life yet comes to be annexed into state violence nevertheless. Early in the epic, Marduk’s cult statue is damaged and must be repaired. During that time, the vacuum in rule is filled by the war god. In this section, the poet beautifully describes the exceptional 210
THE ESSENCE OF WAR
situation that leads to war. In the Erra epic, it seems clear that it is a state of exception that permits war to take over the city and the
land. War, then, is described as outside the normal situation of civil order. It is a phenomenon in itself, like the war machine. Marduk knows that the war god is going to wreak havoc and desolation, and Marduk remains a deity, albeit in occultation and out of commission for a time, but somehow the power of war is able to threaten even the realm of the gods. War is abstracted and personified as a god who is supremely powerful, even beyond the pantheon of the gods. When Marduk sees what war has done to his land, he weeps: Alas for Babylon,
Whose crown I fashioned, luxuriant as a palm’s, But which the wind has scorched.
Alas for Babylon, That I had laden with seed, like an evergreen, But of whose delights I could not have what J hoped for.
Alas for Babylon, : That I tended like a thriving orchard, But whose fruit I could not taste. Alas for Babylon,
That I suspended like a gemstone seal On the neck of the sky.°
The cult statue of Marduk figures quite prominently in the narrative. It is directly due to its removal and damaged condition that war is able to take over the land of the civilized — the cities and
urban centers. This poem is usually described as a hymn to the war god or an epic about the dichotomy of chaos and civilization,
the destruction of urban life by the uncivilized. However, it is 211
RITUALS OF WAR
fundamentally about the force of war. It is not a glorification of war but an expression of a fear of war, and a lamentation over its terrible and relentless force which spares nothing and no one in its path. It is in the tradition of the ancient Sumerian lamentations for cities, but it is even more worldly than those, because of the force of its descriptions of how the havoc of war destroys everything in its wake, how even the gods fall before the relentless march of the war machine.®
The Paradox of the War Machine The war machine — to borrow a term from Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, in order to elucidate the abstraction of the essential force of war as it was understood in Mesopotamian Antiquity — is directly linked to all the political institutions, cultural beliefs,
and ritual practices discussed so far. These practices and rituals of war and violence are the ontotheological domain of war. In Deleuze and Guattari’s terms, this machine is nomadic, in that it is outside the state order. The state sometimes appropriates or annexes it into the state’s violence or into Repressive State Apparatuses.’ The war machine and its rituals remain in a separate space and time. That is, war is outside daily life; it belongs to a time like that of ritual and festival.’ But even if the war machine is
a “pure form of exteriority” and must not be confused with the repressive violence of the state, it is nevertheless an exteriority or
transgression that supplements the violence of the state. This relationship of exteriority is difficult to conceptualize. It has the same paradoxical formulation as that of sovereign power, in that it is both inside and beyond the law. War is appropriated as a Repressive State Apparatus but remains outside state power proper and outside the law. To kill in war is appropriate and sanctioned. It is not a punishable act. It is a transgression that forms an exception to the normal order of things and to the law. The war machine 212
THE ESSENCE OF WAR
falls between the juridical and the theological; it intersects with and connects them. But it exists only in its own metamorphoses, in industrial and technological inventions, in religious and militaristic rituals.’ It exists in its own strategies and logistical needs. The Assyrian kings of the early first millennium Bc not only annexed the war machine into the Repressive State Apparatus, but also appropriated it into the state in ways that were extensive. The war machine of the Assyrian empire became the armature of absolute sovereign power. Visual images of violence, rather than expressing this power as the sovereign’s ability to deal the death blow, that is, his right to determine the life or death of the other, showed the king as no longer performing such acts. This is a subtle but significant change from the images of earlier times, such as the Victory Stele of Naramsin. At first, it may seem to be a less powerful message for the Assyrian king not to be depicted as personally defeating his enemy or trampling the bodies of the dead. The king was depicted as expressing his prowess and virility by hunting
lions or wild horses, not by torturing or executing prisoners of war. He was not shown standing on the corpses of his enemies like
Naramsin. In the most egregious images of violence and torture,
of tearing apart limbs and impaling and flaying the bodies of defeated, the Assyrian king relied on the military to torture, to deal the blows, to move populations, to destroy or relocate monuments, and to reconfigure space. It was through his military corps that he wielded the weapon and dealt the blow: the military had become a weapon in the hand of the king. Yet the weapons of the war machine are both destructive and productive. They destroy, obviously, but they also produce victory and absolute power.
The Body and Power In the first volume of The History of Sexuality, Michel Foucault formulates a theory of biopolitics as the very essence of the form 213
RITUALS OF WAR
that state power takes in the modern era. Organic life is annexed into the machinery of power; life itself becomes amalgamated into the repressive and ideological apparatuses of the state. Foucault presented a case for distinguishing sovereign power based on juridical models and repressive state apparatuses from biopolitics, as a calculated control of organic life within the processes of power. In the Foucauldian analysis of biopolitics as the modern form of power, the docile body and technologies of self-discipline
are forms of voluntary servitude that are separable from the model of sovereign power as embodied in the king. Giorgio Agamben reconceptualizes Foucault’s division of sovereign power and biopower (or “anatomopolitics”) into one realm, arguing that the juridico-institutional and the biopolitical cannot
be separated. Agamben looks at the point of intersection of the two to investigate the workings of power. For Foucault, these divisions can be charted in time. They become markers of the premodern and modern workings of state power. Agamben states that the line of thinking that leads to the intersection of the two is logically implicit in Foucault’s work; in his own treatise on power, he argues that the two analyses cannot be separated and that “the inclusion of bare life into the political realm constitutes the original — if concealed — nucleus of sovereign power. It can even be said that the production of a biopolitical body is the original activity of sovereign power. In this sense, biopolitics is at least as old
as the sovereign exception.” The magician-king and the jurist-king are the two ancient and mythical poles of political sovereignty defined by Georges Dumeézil."' In Mesopotamian Antiquity, sovereign power is formulated and expressed in a number of monuments that move back and forth between these two formulations of kingship, taking up one strand or another of the hybrid substance of sovereignty. The development of the public monument in Mesopotamia 214
THE ESSENCE OF WAR
in the third millennium Bc coincides with these formulations of sovereign power and its dependence on the juridical, the biopolitical, and the performative magic of ritual. Life, the body, and violence sanctioned by the letter of the law intersect most obviously in two of the best-known monuments of ancient Mesopotamia: the Codex Hammurabi and the Victory Stele of Naramsin. Monuments such as these outline the relationships between the law and the body and between the king and power — relationships defined by means of the lives of others. Just as the tortured body somehow produces the text of the law or its capabilities as
an assertion of rule, the king’s head in the Battle of Til-Tuba relief produces the text of Assyrian imperial power. As in the images of torture, there is a transformation of the body into the sign of the potentialities of power.
Just War and Monuments The right to punish in torture and execution is an extension of the sovereign’s right to wage war.'* War is portrayed as an exceptional, if necessary, activity. In Antiquity, even when the war machine was annexed as a juridical instrument in the service of sovereign power, it always had to be carefully considered and jus-
tified. No hard-and-fast rules permitted war in Mesopotamian Antiquity. Each case was reasoned as a just war for moral and ethical reasons. That is why the gods were consulted to justify wars and plan strategies. Omen reading was calculated as part of the logistics of war. Priests were taken into battle, animals were sacri-
ficed,.and their entrails were read. These rituals were meant to magically ensure victory and protect and strengthen the king’s simtu, his destiny. But the rituals were also the basic mechanisms of the war machine and state violence. Sovereign power and the power of the state were not just formulated in the realm of what
we might consider the rational. Archaeological theories have 215
RITUALS OF WAR . emphasized bureaucratic rationality as what defines the formation of the state, but state and sovereign power also base themselves in their own supernatural rituals. The quintessence of sovereign power was captured magically in the public monument. That is why wars were waged over those monuments. The capture or destruction of monuments was stra-
tegic to warfare. These psychological operations rested on the magical or supernatural. The semiotics of war and power are fundamental to the war machine. The monuments are invested with political power — but that is not all. They have to be seen in time,
as marking the space-time of the Mesopotamian world. They mark the passage of time. Standing public monuments, as well as the interred foundation inscriptions, the cylindrical texts on which the Assyrian kings at the height of the empire wrote their
| histories, are essentially historical artifacts. Public monuments and foundation inscriptions are artifacts of time. In Antiquity, there was a real, visceral fear of the recon-
figuration of history or destruction of historical time through the destruction of the monument and the text. That is why the ancients wrote curses and pleas that the future king maintain the foundation deposits and respect the sacrosanct nature of the historical artifact and its relationship to the land by not moving a monument from its place. That is why temple renovations and the restoration of sculptures and monuments were seen as pious acts that could bring about a propitious destiny, while the reverse was applicable to the deliberate destruction and obliteration of earlier works. The series Summa Glu contains a set of omens concerned with temples, monuments, and sculpture restoration: If a man repairs a sanctuary: he will have luck. If a man tears down a sanctuary: the river will swallow him. If someone relocates a chapel: that man will go to ruin. 216
THE ESSENCE OF WAR
If a man repairs something old: the man’s god will come to him. If a man repairs a figure of Gilgamesh: the anger of the gods will be released.
, If a man repairs a new-moon emblem: his god will shepherd him
| aright. If a man repairs a sun-disk emblem: his god will shepherd him aright.
If he repairs a divine standard: he will (successfully) confront his adversary.
If he repairs a divine weapon: his days will be long (and) his misdeeds will be absolved.
If he repairs a statue: his adversary will kneel before him."
The text is long and lists a series of objects from the image of the god or goddess to architectural repairs and the repairs of private votive statues or other objects. It lists the outcomes for if the conservator is a private person or if the patron of the conservation is the king. A list covers the possibility of various instances in which
“a king is repairing (a place) and discovers (something).” The many things one might encounter in the course of making architectural repairs are listed in a series, and these things are to be preserved. There is always a concern for the relationship between the interred artifact and its ancient place. The deportation of populations and the theft of monuments were part of the reconfiguration of space in territorial expansion.
If territory or space is marked by people and monuments, that space is reconfigured when these are moved, shifted, destroyed, or relocated. That this process is turned into a ritual or a performative magical act is not surprising. During his campaign into southern Mesopotamia, Sennacherib conquered Babylon and not satisfied with conquest and destruction or the removal of booty and people from the city, he also took a handful of earth and hurled
217 :
it into the Euphrates, in an act of magical destruction that, via
- PO RS Pe RRR LE aan 2 Bee x,
: SES ae%RR betasPR He OEE SREER EE Os eae eeeas. Be: RCS PMS oS He Si: Se ReRR a iSoop TaNC neatRR tae ae an so nae ‘i on Stan Oe cra ¥% Sen Sowa ane een aes ee SR csSerres ieeae SS naeBoia See ONO Regt Ray arama eae = RGR 3gi ae kaaoe Be Sem seis ceca er cay, = esSa Ee : Ee ee pom Se ee eeaeSeae ae aes aE Ba is.‘aeaigRigg eae Bence 8oes PSE le eeSe ee ae
SEDARIS ERNE ge neh NNR Sar oy ent >cmy cd % ai Ss cc @aen Sn.Res enRage Se RS SK om “ : - pan sansa Rie neaS eae eae ition a aSe aana beae se samme. ipsBere oe See sgOS. ee A ote Re Sai iel Sa ae ae a Se a a ee oe ie RS I ee TS ORES ae es ae Se il a ein aaa lene on Pg er ae ee Fea aaa 2ee Oo aa Z i aR te a “Si ahaa EOaaR ee pe a TS Se er ee a ee 2° ge, RRR eae ¢ es ai ae aa, $e ae eae SP oe Sai Be ee eas Ra Sad aa ees SRE aeaBe i ae ae bse Bi Besa ss, TR SaaS cae Se Ee ES ee Se Hie: fa ee AM ea Papebeeaiaisi csc scree RR ee aS og Se a : Pes ie cae Beemer. ape oa ae ge gee Roe See Pi ciara Oe cmd Ria iP RR eee ae a a ae a aise: BR. a ee Ei °C ha os 4a = ySe Z # ee a Se Bes fo a aa Sia SR i NOR Se na SSR pia Csi acs. ae Sas. nn me a oY ea ben Becks enone ic ot. Saas Gina PR eo % Se ae ee ae ae a ee Rar es Pe oe ts as itis “ ae er a a. sae Bee OSS ae ee sa 79 i EE re eR Dee mame a Soe a e eaten Bop a eee2PO I. Se: See See Bee OR See ite S, GRRL SP inn a a oyaa pox SEO 3 Seana TRIS NEES Oo meet inc” Seam eet eS. Resi i Re. rad oaIO Bccaiatans sseens smegigen ck tage SEIS: SERS aseeBane cts % Se SES aeae eeBe aaa ##Pi eng? Sisa no “CANS aearmmerantiy "ieFa aac aeSai fest Rignahi EFgee Sa, eSn ssex he oar 2oe iae;aeRe 3 i :ate ae eae Se i OT TS aieGi aa pieiN iyaecuca ae be RE RNa oe oe eBt tei ae2g etgee Ses aaa reBe94Eotez‘oa& $e aeeae ae eth, ae aeae ESere Sees 3ons iaegd aEEE aa 4eos SRD EO
# Bee Me 2 oe . Pe eee gee gt a a ae ae am Se a
‘3 .ge" eMeee Pieeesge aaeeeon ee eae Re = SR Mie emi Pe. aaa ee er*3PLEE Bs«a id - Sees asaame aze ®, Dios BS OO SaSSyy aRRS eRSU «> on ine neg Cite SeeSe OA Ragusts ean en Sinica ee.ii as aa seseoa SS RR Beet ines wo ea aaed mR aaeee gg aaa coo at ae RR aaiaShs ? ee ok 3Re ze ciS aeSo‘eie paca 3oem eee.Se SE a tae Pet i mS ie” ees See aa cas eteerraat a.arRE SERS Seema ae Pees Ss eo ssa 2 ‘ SNR ‘ paste cnc i spre i. RRR aR a ee Soy Bae oS ea As aera ar SE SR rea Se aR ae year a oe 2 ‘ a ee aie A ei a PB ie Se Pier RD aa aN Rae ian ee ae: ae sae aa ti on Soe ee «cata Pec ame. = RR s: % saat Pe. Raeae a sstougiet Re 3aeeeieaoioa : Senin tteRR RS SeBE ae ae * oon gare : BSP :Bie ee attic Sean aeeae aaeaececa Bess See go.Be a Be aaere £33 e¥éSe & - inc, oe :oe eaCM Coes I ee See a aR. Resco ¥CR osaSeoeee: Ss nereaR an, ae aie ae inne SRR Rg ci eee ca ae se eee: Bere aeSN iscaaa” RR i ee reMa ee a ae Rane mea aie aaSa See. emeeonmens ne: 3ea BSS aaaaa RR aga eSateens iano ee OR aaa SeBets eo ”ssaaa oe tiss-cee See Ba ee en iaRe caSie. bee se eae eae ee sang oe Be ie ae ee SO a aaeSaeed sai ?x$es$e gern Eo ys ssc gate Bacco aeigen SES cas aSee Bs SESE SSpie Seca eeaeaeee a aPE eS goa ie ee see aaa pane = ig he eee * ae Be yr eae ssaShaa re agate a) Beso Seg . cala"ee eeSe Sp aama Ses allme i RS i So -RRR Ss Btn a aea .ZweSE y5sci 4oa rg‘ ¥ apig Rd al Se el ih. ae$isis Ga Se, eae See isPSfie sca ce a.ae es Bi ae cs Sregresto® agile 7 ROR san =-ss iee aie ie. Fee ee Ell ie iBo en aa a3 Bs ie ee ee Ra peo ae atte tS eres a RE ae aaa a Rc ca eR Ti : i Sy Ra BOR eee Bee Be eae Pie nc Se a Nae i rer a aie = ge sea Rito ee ‘Sage Bt See & x 2 Ra ae a eee : Sa ts gt i oie 3 Pe3nyiss = ER 2 naan Settee neue ang scr age ge es poate é: RES x Ss aos| “oe RRR ae Bie csarenas cet oe:Be aaa Fs % yo eae Se 3a nin OR BI aBe ‘aRea :: Sa Sapte eetre oa fohoomnien nanan Beste ser ean aSanat oeae cae Biase #rc Cia ee a ecg SSI aN Some nee Baie i Be ee z eee ;cee sce sy :ee, rs es ee 8ZxBs ge Scere am ota ae Bil ee adi NG er aPP ;ee See ae ee gs see vie.me SS a et spam a en Ree =seen Soe a Pe Se sir Sea aire Se"5 ee
»
Sioe Pe ORR eIRR, i seee Sirsa %* SoS ae i. oe Se 0. -OOO i 8gern aeBaten oc eeeee ep 5ons eae . 4z|aes Se ee eepet aeia tae :oR i ae Pe ssBenen sabe RE si ees Se ee sages x:soe se: BS eae ee . Fe Se me suaSag RO ee es spn ats Ee i aeae aag SAis ” cca < e Roe ae sa stan Sea ete 5 A eee See Gres 3 sible. Pcs — " ® x Ry . a Pe sc y: Some Be Bee Se RBS i ae " : Py . hin’, Se osa. siti .Eg ,BtNR Bib: eee ape =se wi aRae aie ie. RE s ee . .eae eo % = Br Pe oe :: ARES: is eran ° . nee as atts Mina hs ing, OR eae ae ee Be Bo % Boy. ee ae =. Fi & gs see x ae ee . > ON, te ae: Fo oe rec Be oo ca al : Br ne “« 4 ba me o : ig : Sea coe a gees 3 pe ee Sees y: D3 pe ctEas Se Sigh. eae : Pa Be ate aes yeeae Se co Ssooeenaee se oe ot ire i,ss ee Sc Caan: #3Soman tzRN sei $s at aete hie eeBe otePe ePE Be eo acnz oe Sot ini ae eepe een ee ‘Saeeas aaee ae . ad ., z: : %am2 :“ pe oe Ba Samcncna =ee : faSoe Bree atae = Pe ee oe ete .oa OT .5me .a*a“aes aéSite pater se eee aBs SEO SRO SRR aaan seo Beira a£ai2Pea a.;6 TB < . a™ RE Ks roe Ri aa Se ae ae Se sai inaa Ca 2oe pas be Bo sme de ee ” 3 = es Sot aa ae Seas ee Se $e Mie, See roe Bee ME 2Sg 3rs %cn aes Ray ot ac Oe ¥ si Km a: = See = sosnee a gaits Re Pcs eo % pore eet : ae Re 2 aR A ae i Ra ae Bio eee ae a “0% ae 5 S ae ae RE: Bere age a ay a Z ite a is Rg ee aee
" Fe PO Ue ca acco sess ‘a r . ee, : ar
’e°.
Figure 1c Assyrian archers in tne Battie of Lacnisn, Nineven, c. : rluis Museum, London. Photo: Zainab Bahrani
eet>yeAS Se RES iho conpecaannmmms amet” co gaa ‘ ppeonncnenccnnne cst geyser i Be? CoBsieih aR ae a. Ry OM SS SRR. ceSee aaame. oh: it- eS eres eepromi aeeewee Rs a ONT fe: geIO Soggmnge SoRE ate gearing ce ie iMean OS pe ESS % aecae See MR.‘3 MRAM cts icc RM a ,=$3é=“4 OORT a Oe, gS orig oa in ee ocBe i. ‘a~— co Na sage : ee inetFR eemT renee Seer g Sgee OeFra ARm —Sia a nanan ny & ~isly Wee:=
Ee :kxraeLO —_aa & -BiiOe See tg “eos - s:i,oeregspatig 1iaritaPE sga ,agee =cool ae ae eos#Pre gneee eSaSia. ‘ ce.eT, apeFa r Oe io ge €wes aon eeSze : £5 iSRies, ee ee - ~. ~a ms eeagonsin .Se = Ber ene loom,” aes ees! = ae siees Po gaa aoe oe2 Gee ae ‘atte