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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 --- Akkadien (Langue) --- Texts --- Textes --- Gilgamesh --- Texts. --- Gilgamesh. --- Akkadian language - Texts
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Akkadian language --- Texts. --- Mari (Extinct city) --- Language --- Civilization --- Sources. --- Akkadian language - 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
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This book contains the full edition of 165 Late Babylonian texts written in cuneiform script that provide new information regarding the short and long-distance trade in Mesopotamia in the 6th century BC. The texts belong to the Eanna temple archive of Uruk. The author discusses all aspects of trade in this period that can be gained from this perspective, such as gold, precious stones, tools and weapons, and incense, as well as shepp, wool, garments and grain.
Akkadian language --- Babylonia --- Commerce --- History --- Akkadian language - Texts --- Babylonia - Commerce - History - Sources
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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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Law --- Akkadian language --- Cuneiform inscriptions. --- Texts. --- Cuneiform inscriptions --- Ashur (Extinct city) --- History --- Law - Assyria - Sources. --- Akkadian language - Texts. --- Akkadian language - Texts --- Droit assyro-babylonien --- Assyrie --- Inscriptions cunéiformes --- Akkadien (langue) --- Sources --- Administration --- Histoire --- Catalogues --- Textes
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Akkadian language --- Akkadien (Langue) --- Texts --- Textes --- Mari (Extinct city) --- Civilization --- Sources --- History --- Akkadian language - Texts --- Mari (Extinct city) - History - Sources
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L’Exorciste... un terme qui évoque à lui seul tout l’univers magico-religieux de la lutte éternelle des forces du Bien et du Mal. Mais qui était réellement l’a-šipu, l’exorciste mésopotamien? Quelles tâches devait-il accomplir au quotidien? Quel type de connaissances et de savoir-faire devait-il acquérir? Comment collaborait-il avec ses collègues et avec les autres savants du palais royal? Que sait-on de sa vie privée?Cette étude fait le point sur cette profession et cherche à répondre à ces questions en se basant sur le vaste corpus de textes de l’époque néo-assyrienne. L’ouvrage présente une vue d’ensemble des activités des exorcistes d’après la correspondance que ces savants entretenaient avec le roi et d’après les tablettes retrouvées dans leurs bibliothèques privées. Les différentes facettes du métier d’exorciste sont également illustrées en détail grâce à l’analyse du texte connu sous le nom du “Manuel de l’exorciste” et grâce aux textes littéraires, épistolaires et administratifs.
Magic, Assyro-Babylonian --- Akkadian language --- Magie assyro-babylonienne --- Akkadien (Langue) --- Texts --- Textes --- Magie assyro-babylonienne. --- Exorcisme --- Akkadian language - Texts
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