This article brings together evidence from both documentary texts and royal inscriptions from Susa in order to develop a chronological and historical perspective on the transitional period between the loss of control of the Ur III empire and the institutionalization of the Sukkalmah. regime. A study of the archaeological and archival context of the administrative texts resulted in a new chronology for the beginning of the Sukkalmahat, the basic argument for which is the early dating of the rule of Atta-husu. Newly discovered inscriptions and new interpretations of existing inscriptions serve not only to adjust this chronology, but also to pave the way for an innovative and coherent socio-economic history of the early Sukkalmahat
Translation of a treaty between Suppiluliuma I (circa 1344-1322 BC) with Hukkanna, king of Hayasa. I...
Translation of a treaty between Suppiluliuma I (circa 1344-1322 BC) with Hukkanna, king of Hayasa. I...
This dissertation examines the structure and function of a unique corpus of cylinder seal imagery us...
This article brings together evidence from both documentary texts and royal inscriptions from Susa i...
This article focuses on ten hitherto unpublished Ur III administrative and legal tablets belonging t...
none1noThe article provides a reconstruction of the various dynasties who ruled the principal Mesopo...
The present paper addresses a subgroup of cuneiform documents from the so-called Archaic Texts from ...
The Ur III period (2110-2003 BC) is documented through an imposing corpus of administrative cuneifor...
Owing to systematic mutilation, sculpture in the round is poorly represented. The obelisk of Manisht...
This dissertation re-evaluates the reign of Tiglath-pileser I in light of new evidence provided by r...
The present article revisits the Urartian inscriptions concerning granaries and discusses them in a ...
This book provides the edition of 298 cuneiform tablets: 277 of them from the Umma region and can b...
The "Nairi land(s)" (KUR.KUR Na-i-ri) was first mentioned in the inscriptions of the Middle Assyrian...
The region of Southern Mesopotamia, modern-day southern Iraq, saw a number of important socio-cultur...
Translation of a treaty between Suppiluliuma I (circa 1344-1322 BC) with Hukkanna, king of Hayasa. I...
Translation of a treaty between Suppiluliuma I (circa 1344-1322 BC) with Hukkanna, king of Hayasa. I...
This dissertation examines the structure and function of a unique corpus of cylinder seal imagery us...
This article brings together evidence from both documentary texts and royal inscriptions from Susa i...
This article focuses on ten hitherto unpublished Ur III administrative and legal tablets belonging t...
none1noThe article provides a reconstruction of the various dynasties who ruled the principal Mesopo...
The present paper addresses a subgroup of cuneiform documents from the so-called Archaic Texts from ...
The Ur III period (2110-2003 BC) is documented through an imposing corpus of administrative cuneifor...
Owing to systematic mutilation, sculpture in the round is poorly represented. The obelisk of Manisht...
This dissertation re-evaluates the reign of Tiglath-pileser I in light of new evidence provided by r...
The present article revisits the Urartian inscriptions concerning granaries and discusses them in a ...
This book provides the edition of 298 cuneiform tablets: 277 of them from the Umma region and can b...
The "Nairi land(s)" (KUR.KUR Na-i-ri) was first mentioned in the inscriptions of the Middle Assyrian...
The region of Southern Mesopotamia, modern-day southern Iraq, saw a number of important socio-cultur...
Translation of a treaty between Suppiluliuma I (circa 1344-1322 BC) with Hukkanna, king of Hayasa. I...
Translation of a treaty between Suppiluliuma I (circa 1344-1322 BC) with Hukkanna, king of Hayasa. I...
This dissertation examines the structure and function of a unique corpus of cylinder seal imagery us...