International audienceThe 614 Assyrian eponyms between the 1st year of Šamšî-Adad I and the 1st year of Tiglath-pileser I (1115–1076) allow us to date the reign of Šamšî-Adad I (1728–1695) approximately. As the Assyrian years were lunar before the reign of Ninurta-apil-Ekur (1192–1179), this makes it possible to slightly correct the reign of Šamšî-Adad I (1712–1680), yet as this Amorite king died in the 17th year of King Hammurabi, so this synchronism fixes the dating of this Babylonian king (1697–1654). This dating does not correspond to the Middle Chronology but, on the other hand, exactly satisfies the astronomical dating of the Ammisaduqa tablet on Venus, according to the Ultra-Low Chronology. In addition, one tablet of astronomical ome...
Sets of carbon-14 age determinations from well-stratified protohistoric contexts relevant to Mesopot...
This dissertation re-evaluates the reign of Tiglath-pileser I in light of new evidence provided by r...
International audienceThe Sabeo-Assyrian synchronism between Sargon II (722-705 BC) and “Ita’amra th...
International audienceThe 614 Assyrian eponyms between the 1st year of Šamšî-Adad I and the 1st year...
Recently much progress has been made in the absolute dating of the Old Assyrian and Old Babylonian c...
International audienceTexts from the Upper-Mesopotamian kingdom in the the time of king Samsi-Addu (...
This illustrated article represents a popular account of the study of the Babylonian astronomical re...
500 years of ancient Near Eastern history from the earlier second millennium BCE, including such piv...
500 years of ancient Near Eastern history from the earlier second millennium BCE, including such piv...
International audienceThe Old Assyrian private archives witness two different ways of measuring the ...
International audienceFrom the beginning of the 9th century BC to the middle of the 8th century, the...
500 years of ancient Near Eastern history from the earlier second millennium BCE, including such piv...
The recently shown two premises (Gurzadyan 2000), i.e. the absence of 56/64 year Venus cycle constra...
The region of Southern Mesopotamia, modern-day southern Iraq, saw a number of important socio-cultur...
Throughout the Late Babylonian Period, Mesopotamian astronomers made nightly observations of the pla...
Sets of carbon-14 age determinations from well-stratified protohistoric contexts relevant to Mesopot...
This dissertation re-evaluates the reign of Tiglath-pileser I in light of new evidence provided by r...
International audienceThe Sabeo-Assyrian synchronism between Sargon II (722-705 BC) and “Ita’amra th...
International audienceThe 614 Assyrian eponyms between the 1st year of Šamšî-Adad I and the 1st year...
Recently much progress has been made in the absolute dating of the Old Assyrian and Old Babylonian c...
International audienceTexts from the Upper-Mesopotamian kingdom in the the time of king Samsi-Addu (...
This illustrated article represents a popular account of the study of the Babylonian astronomical re...
500 years of ancient Near Eastern history from the earlier second millennium BCE, including such piv...
500 years of ancient Near Eastern history from the earlier second millennium BCE, including such piv...
International audienceThe Old Assyrian private archives witness two different ways of measuring the ...
International audienceFrom the beginning of the 9th century BC to the middle of the 8th century, the...
500 years of ancient Near Eastern history from the earlier second millennium BCE, including such piv...
The recently shown two premises (Gurzadyan 2000), i.e. the absence of 56/64 year Venus cycle constra...
The region of Southern Mesopotamia, modern-day southern Iraq, saw a number of important socio-cultur...
Throughout the Late Babylonian Period, Mesopotamian astronomers made nightly observations of the pla...
Sets of carbon-14 age determinations from well-stratified protohistoric contexts relevant to Mesopot...
This dissertation re-evaluates the reign of Tiglath-pileser I in light of new evidence provided by r...
International audienceThe Sabeo-Assyrian synchronism between Sargon II (722-705 BC) and “Ita’amra th...