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result(s) for
"Sumerians"
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Elementary Education in Early Second Millennium BCE Babylonia
2021
No detailed description available for \"Elementary Education in Early Second Millennium BCE Babylonia\".
The Sumerians : lost civilizations
2021
The Sumerians are widely believed to have created the world's earliest civilisation on the fertile floodplains of southern Iraq from about 3500 to 2000 BCE. They have been credited with the invention of nothing less than cities, writing, and the wheel, and therefore hold an ancient mirror to our own urban, literate world. But is this picture correct? Paul Collins reveals how the idea of a Sumerian people was assembled from the archaeological and textual evidence uncovered in Iraq and Syria over the last 150 years. Reconstructed through the biases of those who unearthed them, the Sumerians were never simply lost and found, but reinvented a number of times, both in antiquity and in the more recent past.
The Lamentation over the Destruction of Ur
The goal of this book is to present a revised edition of the Sumerian Lamentation over the Destruction of Ur, a lament bewailing the fall of the glorious Ur III kingdom in 2004 B.C.E.
Lamentation is a well-known genre in world literature. Laments of various types are part of the cultural legacy and literary corpus of many societies, from ancient to modern times, and Sumerian literature is no exception. However, Mesopotamian lamentation literature includes a significant body of laments belonging to a unique and almost unparalleled genre—the genre of lamentations over the destruction of cities and temples. This genre has no known ancient parallel outside the ancient Near East; more specifically, it is almost exclusively attested in Sumerian and biblical literature. The Lamentation over the Destruction of Ur is the most famous and important exemplar of the city-laments.
In this updated and revised publication of the Lamentation over the Destruction of Ur, Samet provides an introductory discussion of Sumerian city-laments in general; a full presentation of the text of the Ur Lament, including transliteration, translation, and an extensive philological commentary; and an accounting of the extant textual witness in score format. Plates with color photos of many texts are included.
Daily life in ancient Sumer
by
Hunter, Nick, author
in
Sumerians Social life and customs Juvenile literature.
,
Sumerians Social life and customs.
,
Iraq Civilization To 634 Juvenile literature.
2016
\"Enter the world of ancient Sumer and find out what daily life was really like. Discover what Sumerians learnt at school, how people paid for things in the market, what jobs people did, and much more!\"--Back cover.
The First Ninety Years
by
Rubio, Gonzalo
,
Feliu, Lluís
,
Karahashi, Fumi
in
Civil, Miguel
,
General history of Asia Middle East (Near East)
,
History
2017
Studies in Ancient Near Eastern Records (SANER) is a peer-reviewed series devoted to the publication of monographs pertaining to all aspects of the history, culture, literature, religion, art, and archaeology of the Ancient Near East, from the earliest historical periods to Late Antiquity. The aim of this series is to present in-depth studies of the written and material records left by the civilizations and cultures that populated the various areas of the Ancient Near East: Anatolia, Arabia, Egypt, Iran, the Levant, Mesopotamia, and Syria. Thus, SANER is open to all sorts of works that have something new to contribute and which are relevant to scholars and students within the continuum of regions, disciplines, and periods that constitute the field of Ancient Near Eastern studies, as well as to those in neighboring disciplines, including Biblical Studies, Classics, and Ancient History in general. All submissions to SANER are thoroughly reviewed by scholars with acknowledged expertise in the subject matter. Once a manuscript is accepted for publication, it goes through the careful production process that has characterized books published by Walter De Gruyter since 1749. General Editor:Gonzalo Rubio, Pennsylvania State University, Department of Classics and Ancient Mediterranean Studies and Department of History, University Park, PA, USA. Editors:Nicole Brisch, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.Petra Goedegebuure, University of Chicago, USA.Amélie Kuhrt, University College London, UK. Peter Machinist, Harvard University, USA.Piotr Michalowski, University of Michigan, USA.Cécile Michel, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, France.Beate Pongratz-Leisten, New York University, USA.D.T. Potts, New York University, USA.Kim Ryholt, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
The correspondence of the kings of Ur : an epistolary history of an ancient Mesopotamian kingdom
2011
The Correspondence of the Kings of Ur is a collection of literary letters between the Ur III monarchs and their high officials at the end of the third millennium B.C. The letters cover topics of royal authority and proper governance, defense of frontier regions, and the ultimate disintegration of the empire and represent the largest corpus of Sumerian prose literature we possess. This long-awaited edition, based on extensive collation of almost all extant manuscripts, numbering more than a hundred, includes detailed historical and literary analyses, and copious philological commentary. It entirely supersedes the Michalowski's oft-cited unpublished Yale dissertation of 1976.
The edition is accompanied by an extensive analysis of the place of the letters in early second-millennium schooling, treating the letters as literature, followed by chapters that contextualize the epistolary material within historical and historiographic contexts, utilizing many Sumerian archival, literary, and historical sources. The main objective here is to try to navigate the complex issues of authenticity, authority, and fiction that arise from the study of these literary artifacts. In addition, Michalowski offers new hypotheses about many aspects of late third-millennium history, including essays on military history and strategy, on frontiers, on the nature and putative character of nomadism at the time, as well as a long chapter on the role of a people designated as Amorites.
The included DVD includes various photographs at high resolution of most of the tablets included in the study.
Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two
2021
No detailed description available for \"Cuneiform Texts from the Folios of W. G. Lambert, Part Two\".