Ashurbanipal 2007
| Obverse | ||
| Lines 1-28 [= col. i–iii], which contain an inscription of Amar-Suen, are not edited here. | | |
| Col. iv | ||
| 2929 | (29) Copy from a baked brick from the debris of Ur, the work of Amar-Suen, the king of Ur, (which) Sîn-balāssu-iqbi, the governor of Ur, had discovered while looking for the ground plan of Ekišnugal. Nabû-šuma-iddin, son of Iddin-Papsukkal, the lamentation-priest of the god Sîn, saw (it) and wrote (it) down for display. | |
| 3030 | ||
| 3131 | ||
| 3232 | ||
| 3333 | ||
| 3434 | ||
| 3535 | ||
| 3636 | ||
| 3737 | ||
| 3838 | ||
| Top | ||
| 3939 | (39) (No translation possible) | |
| 4040 | [...] ⸢AN⸣ ME | |
| 4141 | [...]-⸢ú?⸣ | |
| 4242 | [...] x |
1The sign at the end of the line cannot be lá (as tentatively proposed by H. Steible).
Based on Grant Frame, Rulers of Babylonia: From the Second Dynasty of Isin to the End of Assyrian Domination (1157-612 BC) (RIMB 2; Toronto, 1995). Digitized, lemmatized, and updated by Alexa Bartelmus, 2015-16, for the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation-funded OIMEA Project at the Historisches Seminar - Abteilung Alte Geschichte of Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. The annotated edition is released under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike license 3.0. Please cite this page as http://oracc.org/rinap/Q003846/.