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Kur (The Sumerian word) --- Sumerians --- Inanna (Divinité sumérienne) --- Kur (le mot sumérien) --- Sumériens --- Religion --- Religion --- Inanna
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Sumerian literature --- Littérature sumérienne --- History and criticism. --- Histoire et critique --- Inanna and Shukallituda (Sumerian poem) --- -History and criticism --- Littérature sumérienne --- History and criticism --- Inanna und Šukaletuda (Sumerian poem) --- Inanna and Shukalletuda (Sumerian poem)
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Inanna (Sumerian deity) --- Assyro-Babylonian religion --- Inanna (Divinité sumérienne) --- Sources --- -Ishtar (Assyro-Babylonian deity) --- -Religion, Assyro-Babylonian --- Religions --- Rituals --- -Texts --- -History and criticism --- Cult --- Ishtar (Assyro-Babylonian deity) --- Texts --- History and criticism. --- Cult. --- -Rituals --- Inanna (Divinité sumérienne) --- Religion, Assyro-Babylonian --- Rituals&delete& --- Texts&delete& --- History and criticism --- Inanna
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Inanna (Sumerian deity) --- Hymns, Sumerian. --- Mythology, Sumerian. --- Poetry. --- Nippur (Extinct city) --- Nippur (Extinct city).
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Temple of Inanna (Nippur) --- Sumerians --- Temples --- Religion. --- -Temple of Inanna (Nippur) --- -Architecture --- Church architecture --- Religious institutions --- Accadians (Sumerians) --- Akkadians (Sumerians) --- Civilization, Sumerian --- Civilization, Assyro-Babylonian --- Ethnology --- Religion --- -Religion --- Temple of Inanna (Nippur). --- Architecture --- Religious architecture --- Inanna --- Temples assyro-babyloniens --- divinité sumérienne --- Irak --- Nippour (ville ancienne) --- divinité sumérienne
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Inanna (Sumerian deity) --- Sumerian poetry --- History and criticism. --- History and criticism --- Sumerian literature
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The kings of the III. Dynasty of Ur (2112-2004 BC) were always married with several women at a time, of which only one woman took the position of a queen. Among the large number of economic documents of that period, which give a detailed insight into the state economy and administration, more than 1,000 articles relating to transactions of the royal consorts can be assigned. All women of the rulers of Ur were active in business and administration, they were involved in the cult on several occasions and involved in the complex structures of court life. This work investigates in the sources in which functions and activities the royal women were involved and by which degree the posts of a Queen of Ur were different from that of a concubine. In four discurses the situation of the royal women of the Ur III period is compared with the women of the ruling houses in Ebla and the Early Dynastic Akkade (Akkadezeit).
Women --- Ancient Orient --- Sumerians --- Mesopotami --- Abi-simti --- Dagan --- Ebla --- Inanna --- Nippur --- Ritus --- Šulgi --- History. --- Iraq --- Ur (Extinct city) --- Babylonia --- Civilization --- Kings and rulers. --- Kings and rulers. --- Ancient Orient --- Sumerians --- Mesopotami --- Abi-simti --- Dagan --- Ebla --- Inanna --- Nippur --- Ritus --- Šulgi
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Ishtar (Assyro-Babylonian deity) --- Goddesses --- Glyptics --- Iconography --- Goddesses, Assyro-Babylonian --- Astarte (Phoenician deity) --- Inanna (Sumerian deity) --- Ishtar (Assyro-Babylonian deity).
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Laments --- Inanna (Sumerian deity) --- Elegiac poetry, Sumerian. --- Poetry. --- -Inanna (Sumerian deity) --- -Elegiac poetry, Sumerian --- Sumerian elegiac poetry --- Sumerian poetry --- Goddesses, Sumerian --- Venus deities --- Ishtar (Assyro-Babylonian deity) --- Complancha --- Lamentations --- Elegiac poetry --- Mourning customs --- Poetry --- Elegiac poetry, Sumerian --- Laments - Iraq - Babylonia. --- Inanna (Sumerian deity) - Poetry.
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