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Cuneiform inscriptions, Akkadian --- Akkadian cuneiform inscriptions --- Babylonia --- Vavilonii︠a︡ --- Bavel --- Bābil --- Babylonien --- Sumer --- History --- Sources.
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Babylonia --- -History --- -Poetry --- Curse of Agade. --- Vavilonii︠a︡ --- Bavel --- Bābil --- Babylonien --- Sumer --- History --- Poetry.
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Economic history --- Babylonia --- Middle East --- Economic conditions. --- Vavilonii︠a︡ --- Bavel --- Bābil --- Babylonien --- Sumer
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Sumerian language --- Texts --- George Arents Research Library --- Babylonia --- Economic conditions --- -Texts --- Arents Research Library --- Syracuse University. --- -Economic conditions --- Texts. --- -Vavilonii︠a︡ --- Bavel --- Bābil --- Babylonien --- George Arents Research Library. --- Vavilonii︠a︡ --- Sumer --- Economic conditions. --- Sumerian language - Texts --- Babylonia - Economic conditions
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935.4 --- Geschiedenis van Babylonië --- Babylonia --- -Politics and government --- Politics and government. --- 935.4 Geschiedenis van Babylonië --- -Vavilonii︠a︡ --- Bavel --- Bābil --- Babylonien --- Politics and government --- Vavilonii︠a︡ --- Sumer
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Akkadian language --- -Accadian language --- Assyrian language --- Assyro-Babylonian language --- Babylonian language --- Texts --- Babylonia --- -Vavilonii︠a︡ --- Bavel --- Bābil --- Babylonien --- Commerce --- -History --- -Sources --- Akkadien (Langue) --- Textes --- Babylone --- Sources --- Vavilonii︠a︡ --- Sumer --- History --- Sources. --- Texts. --- Akkadian language - Texts
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Pottery dating --- Babylonia --- Iraq --- History. --- History --- Dating of pottery --- Pottery --- Marks --- Vavilonii︠a︡ --- Bavel --- Bābil --- Babylonien --- Sumer
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In 1914, William M. Nesbit published his dissertation at Columbia University on 30 archival texts from the Third Dynasty of Ur. Now, more than a century later, the remaining tablets in his collection have been recovered and, thanks to the generosity of the Nesbit family, were made available for publication by David I. Owen. The majority of texts published here is from Puzriš-Dagan (Drehem) with some from Nippur and Umma. They originate from the earliest clandestine finds at those sites. The 98 texts, including a re-edition of the previously published tablets, are provided with a catalogue, hand-copies, selected photographs, along with transliterations, translations and comments, thus providing an important addition to the extensive corpus of Ur III texts from this important period in Mesopotamian history.
Sumerian language --- Babylonia --- Vavilonii︠a︡ --- Bavel --- Bābil --- Babylonien --- Sumer --- Commerce. --- Commerce --- Sumerian language - Texts --- Babylonia - Commerce
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"In Study on the Synchronistic King List from Ashur, CHEN Fei conducts a full investigation into that king list, which records all the kings of Assyria and Babylonia in contemporary pairs from the 18th to the 7th century BC. The texts of all the exemplars of the Synchronistic King List are reconstructed anew by the existing studies and the author's personal collations on their sources, and part of the text of the main exemplar is thus revised. The author also looks into the format of the Synchronistic King List and draws the conclusion that the Synchronistic King List was composed by Ashurbanipal, king of Assyria, to support his Babylonian policy."--
Cuneiform inscriptions, Akkadian --- Akkadian language --- History --- Ashurbanipal, --- Babylonia --- Assyria --- Kings and rulers. --- Vavilonii︠a︡ --- Bavel --- Bābil --- Babylonien --- Sumer
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Hammurabi, --- Babylonia --- History. --- Kings and rulers --- Khammurabi, --- Hammurapi, --- Chammurapi, --- Hamurabi, --- Hammourabi, --- Hammu-rapi, --- חמורבי, --- حمورابي. --- Vavilonii︠a︡ --- Bavel --- Bābil --- Babylonien --- Sumer
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