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This volume contains transliteration, translation, and copy of Ur III and Old Babylonian texts, with a few Middle Babylonian and Neo-Babylonian texts.
Sumerian language --- Akkadian language --- Sumerian language - Texts --- Akkadian language - Texts
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Akkadian language --- Texts. --- Texts --- Catalogs. --- -Akkadian language --- -Accadian language --- Assyrian language --- Assyro-Babylonian language --- Babylonian language --- Semitic languages --- -Catalogs --- Ashmolean Museum --- -Oxford. --- University of Oxford. --- Catalogs --- -Texts --- Accadian language --- Texts&delete& --- Akkadian language - Texts --- Akkadian language - Texts - Catalogs.
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Akkadian language --- Sumerian language --- Cornell University. --- Adab (Extinct city) --- Umma (Extinct city) --- Texts --- Akkadian language - Texts --- Sumerian language - Texts
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Akkadian language --- Sumerian language --- Texts --- British Museum. --- British Museum --- Catalogs --- British museum (Londres) --- Akkadian language - Texts - Catalogs. --- Sumerian language - Texts - Catalogs --- Sumerian language - Texts - Catalogs. --- Texts.
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Hittite culture of the second millennium B.C.E. was strongly influenced by Mesopotamian culture, in part through the mediation of the peripheral cuneiform civilizations of northern Syria, in part through direct contact with Babylonia and Assyria. The text edited here (CTH 718) presents an extreme example of this cultural impact, featuring incantations in the Akkadian language (Hittite babilili) embedded within a ceremony set forth in the Hittite tongue. This ritual program has therefore become known to scholars as the “babilili-ritual.”With almost 400 preserved lines, this ceremony is one of the longest religious compositions recovered from the Hittite capital, and there are indications that a significant additional portion has been lost. The divine figure to whom the rite is addressed is Pirinkir, a variety of the well-known Ishtar of Mesopotamia. Its purpose seems to be the elimination of the sins of a member of the royal family.Many of the ritual activities and offering materials employed here are characteristic of the cult practice of the Classical Cilician region known as Kizzuwatna, which was introduced into the central Hittite realm during the final two centuries of the state’s existence. Nonetheless, the Akkadian of the incantations is neither the Akkadian employed in the Hurrian-influenced area of Syria and eastern Anatolia nor that otherwise known from the Hittite royal archives; rather, it is closer to the language of the later Old Babylonian period, even if no precise Mesopotamian forerunners can yet be identified.
Hittites --- Religion. --- Kizzuwatna (Cilicia) --- Akkadian language --- Religion --- Hittites - Religion --- Kizzuwatna (Cilicia) - Religion --- Akkadian language - Texts --- Texts. --- Kizzuwatna (royaume) --- Kizzuwatna (Kingdom) --- Histoire --- Sources.
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Akkadian language --- Texts --- Nippur (Extinct city) --- Niffer (Iraq) --- Nippur (Ancient city) --- Nuffar (Iraq) --- Iraq --- History --- Sources. --- Antiquities --- Texts. --- Akkadian language - Texts
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Akkadian language --- Kanesh (Extinct city) --- Kaneş (Extinct city) --- Kaniş (Extinct city) --- Kanish (Extinct city) --- Karum Kanesh (Extinct city) --- Kültepe Mound (Turkey) --- Kültepe Site (Turkey) --- Turkey --- Antiquities --- Akad dili --- Akkadian language. --- Quelle. --- Tontafel. --- Çivi yazısı tabletler, Akad. --- Kappadokische Tafeln. --- Kanesch. --- Kanesh (Extinct city). --- Cuneiform inscriptions, Akkadian. --- Cappadocian language. --- Akkadian language / Texts --- Akkadian language - Texts
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