This study edits BM 48053, a newly identified Late Babylonian manuscript of the epic poem Lugal-e in the British Museum collection. This tablet, which is likely to come from Borsippa, contributes towards the reconstruction of Tablet IV of the epic in its late bilingual form. It is also of interest for its colophon, which specifies the swift return of the tablet following a same day loan, using the phrase ina mišil ūmīšu “in half a day” or perhaps “at midday”
SAACT 7 presents a new edition of Ludlul Bēl Nēmeqi: The Standard Babylonian Poem of the Righteous S...
In the final tablet of Ludlul bēl nēmeqi lines 42–53 Šubši-mešrê-Šakkan passes through twelve gates ...
Among its rare book collections, the George Arents Research Library at Syracuse University has 489 c...
This study edits BM 48053, a newly identified Late Babylonian manuscript of the epic poem Lugal-e in...
The article presents a discussion of the reconstruction of Tablet IV of the six-column Babylonian ta...
The short article offers an updated transliteration, along with a commentary and a photograph, of an...
Suffering in Babylon comprises a series of studies on Ludlul bēl nēmeqi. Part One examines the moder...
The tablet edited here was catalogued in CBT 3 as an Ur III document from Ĝirsu/Lagaš recording a “...
This paper is an edition of a learned Babylonian text in which the ritual attire of a cultic officia...
The book contains first editions of thirty-three cuneiform tablets from the Frau Professor Hilprecht...
I. The reader will find here a study of a new Sumerian tablet probably coming from Umma and dated fr...
"This review article of the editio princeps of the OB texts found at Rimah concentrates on the arch...
The volumes listed below in the contents are the only ones of this series published by the universit...
The article is the edition of a new Old Babylonian loan of barley from the Gula temple in Larsa
Although M. Sigrist and others spent some time in translating cuneiform texts at the Siegfried Horn ...
SAACT 7 presents a new edition of Ludlul Bēl Nēmeqi: The Standard Babylonian Poem of the Righteous S...
In the final tablet of Ludlul bēl nēmeqi lines 42–53 Šubši-mešrê-Šakkan passes through twelve gates ...
Among its rare book collections, the George Arents Research Library at Syracuse University has 489 c...
This study edits BM 48053, a newly identified Late Babylonian manuscript of the epic poem Lugal-e in...
The article presents a discussion of the reconstruction of Tablet IV of the six-column Babylonian ta...
The short article offers an updated transliteration, along with a commentary and a photograph, of an...
Suffering in Babylon comprises a series of studies on Ludlul bēl nēmeqi. Part One examines the moder...
The tablet edited here was catalogued in CBT 3 as an Ur III document from Ĝirsu/Lagaš recording a “...
This paper is an edition of a learned Babylonian text in which the ritual attire of a cultic officia...
The book contains first editions of thirty-three cuneiform tablets from the Frau Professor Hilprecht...
I. The reader will find here a study of a new Sumerian tablet probably coming from Umma and dated fr...
"This review article of the editio princeps of the OB texts found at Rimah concentrates on the arch...
The volumes listed below in the contents are the only ones of this series published by the universit...
The article is the edition of a new Old Babylonian loan of barley from the Gula temple in Larsa
Although M. Sigrist and others spent some time in translating cuneiform texts at the Siegfried Horn ...
SAACT 7 presents a new edition of Ludlul Bēl Nēmeqi: The Standard Babylonian Poem of the Righteous S...
In the final tablet of Ludlul bēl nēmeqi lines 42–53 Šubši-mešrê-Šakkan passes through twelve gates ...
Among its rare book collections, the George Arents Research Library at Syracuse University has 489 c...