The majority of currently known Neo-Babylonian legal and administrative documents from Kish come from excavations held on this site by the joint expedition of Oxford – Field Museum (Chicago) between 1923–1933. They are now housed in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. However, ca. 40 Neo-Babylonian ‘Kish’ tablets, i.e., written in Ḫursagkalamma or Kiš, are present in other collections. How did they end up in these museums assuming that most of them was acquired in the last quarter of the 19th century, 30–50 years before the expedition mentioned above? I suppose that they were not found in Kish, even though their Ausstellungsort indicates quite the opposite. They instead come from nearby Babylon or Borsippa cities. The analysis conducted in the ar...
In this article, two early Old Babylonian text groups are published. One group has Ea-dāpin as its p...
International audienceIn this article are published three clay tablets kept in the Lloyd Cotsen Cune...
International audienceIn this article are published three clay tablets kept in the Lloyd Cotsen Cune...
The majority of currently known Neo-Babylonian legal and administrative documents from Kish come fro...
For the understanding of any society it is vital to have a grasp of the key principles of its econom...
Over the last century, scholars have intensively discussed the provenance of the Elamite Nineveh Let...
The tablet edited here was catalogued in CBT 3 as an Ur III document from Ĝirsu/Lagaš recording a “...
The tablet edited here was catalogued in CBT 3 as an Ur III document from Ĝirsu/Lagaš recording a “...
The tablet edited here was catalogued in CBT 3 as an Ur III document from Ĝirsu/Lagaš recording a “...
The tablet edited here was catalogued in CBT 3 as an Ur III document from Ĝirsu/Lagaš recording a “...
This article publishes ten of the eleven inscribed Mesopotamian artefacts in the Brighton Museum and...
This article publishes ten of the eleven inscribed Mesopotamian artefacts in the Brighton Museum and...
This article publishes ten of the eleven inscribed Mesopotamian artefacts in the Brighton Museum and...
This article publishes ten of the eleven inscribed Mesopotamian artefacts in the Brighton Museum and...
This article publishes ten of the eleven inscribed Mesopotamian artefacts in the Brighton Museum and...
In this article, two early Old Babylonian text groups are published. One group has Ea-dāpin as its p...
International audienceIn this article are published three clay tablets kept in the Lloyd Cotsen Cune...
International audienceIn this article are published three clay tablets kept in the Lloyd Cotsen Cune...
The majority of currently known Neo-Babylonian legal and administrative documents from Kish come fro...
For the understanding of any society it is vital to have a grasp of the key principles of its econom...
Over the last century, scholars have intensively discussed the provenance of the Elamite Nineveh Let...
The tablet edited here was catalogued in CBT 3 as an Ur III document from Ĝirsu/Lagaš recording a “...
The tablet edited here was catalogued in CBT 3 as an Ur III document from Ĝirsu/Lagaš recording a “...
The tablet edited here was catalogued in CBT 3 as an Ur III document from Ĝirsu/Lagaš recording a “...
The tablet edited here was catalogued in CBT 3 as an Ur III document from Ĝirsu/Lagaš recording a “...
This article publishes ten of the eleven inscribed Mesopotamian artefacts in the Brighton Museum and...
This article publishes ten of the eleven inscribed Mesopotamian artefacts in the Brighton Museum and...
This article publishes ten of the eleven inscribed Mesopotamian artefacts in the Brighton Museum and...
This article publishes ten of the eleven inscribed Mesopotamian artefacts in the Brighton Museum and...
This article publishes ten of the eleven inscribed Mesopotamian artefacts in the Brighton Museum and...
In this article, two early Old Babylonian text groups are published. One group has Ea-dāpin as its p...
International audienceIn this article are published three clay tablets kept in the Lloyd Cotsen Cune...
International audienceIn this article are published three clay tablets kept in the Lloyd Cotsen Cune...