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Bad-tibira

Bad-tibira (Sumerian: 𒂦𒁾𒉄𒆠, bad3-tibiraki), "Wall of the Copper Worker(s)",[1] or "Fortress of the Smiths",[2] identified as modern Tell al-Madineh (also Tell Madineh), between Ash Shatrah and Tell as-Senkereh (ancient Larsa) and 33 kilometers northeast of ancient Girsu in southern Iraq,[3] was an ancient Sumerian city on the Iturungal canal (built by Ur III ruler Ur-Nammu), which appears among antediluvian cities in the Sumerian King List. Its Akkadian name was Dûr-gurgurri.[4] It was also called Παντιβίβλος (Pantibiblos) by Greek authors such as Berossus, transmitted by Abydenus and Apollodorus. This may reflect another version of the city's name, Patibira, "Canal of the Smiths".[5]

Bad-tibira
Shown within Iraq
Alternative nameTell Madineh
LocationDhi Qar Governorate, Iraq
Coordinates31°22′47″N 45°59′59″E / 31.37972°N 45.99972°E / 31.37972; 45.99972
Typesettlement
History
PeriodsEarly Dynastic, Ur III, Old Babylonian
Site notes
Excavation dates1927
ArchaeologistsRaymond P. Dougherty
ConditionRuined
OwnershipPublic
Public accessYes

There is known to be a temple of the deity Kittum at Bad-tibira.[6] It has been suggested that Ninsheshegarra, an aspect of the goddess Geshtinanna who is sister of Dumuzid, was worshiped in the temple Esheshegarra at Bad-tibira.[7][8]

Bad-tibira in Sumerian literature Edit

According to the Sumerian King List, Bad-tibira was the second city to "exercise kingship" in Sumer before the flood, following Eridu. These kings were said to be En-men-lu-ana, En-men-gal-ana and Dumuzid the Shepherd.

The early Sumerian text Inanna's descent to the netherworld mentions the city's temple, E-mush-kalamma(a temple to Lulal ). In this tale, Inanna dissuades demons from the netherworld from taking Lulal, patron of Bad-tibira, who was living in squalor. They eventually take Dumuzid, who lived in palatial opulence at Uruk. This Dumuzid is called "the Shepherd",[9] who on the King List resides at Bad-Tibira in contrast to the post-diluvian Dumuzid, the Fisherman, who reigns in Uruk.

History Edit

 
Foundation nail Entemena Louvre AO22934

A cone found at the site marked the construction by Ur-Nammu (c. 2100 BC), a ruler of the Ur III empire, of the Iturungal canal.

"For the goddess Inanna, [la]dy of Eanna, his lady, Ur-Nammu, mighty man, king of Ur, king of the lands of Sumer and Akkad, dug for her the Iturungal canal, her beloved canal"[10]

The "brotherhood text" in cuneiform inscriptions on a cone, of which there are many exemplars, from the site records the friendship pact of Entemena, governor of Lagash, and Lugal-kinishedudu, governor of Uruk. It identifies Entemena as the builder of the temple E-mush[11] to Inanna and Dumuzid, under his local epithet Lugal-E-mush.[12]

"For the goddess Inanna and the god Lugal-emush, En-metena, ruler of Lagash, Built the E-mush (“House — Radiance [of the Land]”), their beloved temple, and ordered (these) clay nails(?) for them. En-metena, who built the E-mush temple — is personal god is the god Sul-MUS×PA. At that time En-metena, ruler of Lagash, and Lugal-kinishe-dudu, ruler of Uruk, established a brotherhood (pact) (between themselves)."[13]

A foundation tablet of En-metena from the site, with multiple exemplars, also mentioned the building of E-Mush "... At that time, En-metena built for Lugalemush, the E-mush (“House — Radiance [of the Land]”) of Pa-tibira, his beloved temple, restoring it. ...". Pa-tibira appear to be an alternate spelling of Bad-tibira.[13]

In the Isin-Larsa Period possession of the city passed between Larsa and Isin. Larsa ruler Sin-Iddinam (c. 1785- 1778 BC) claimed, on a cone thought to be from the site, to have built the great wall of Bad-tibira "by means of his triumph he built in a grand fashion the great wall of Bad-tibira".[14] Isin ruler Lipit-Ishtar, "the shepherd of Nippur", claimed to have built the "House of Righteousness" there.[15] The city was under the control of Larsa during the long reign of Rim-Sîn I.[16] During the reign of Rim-Anum, a ruler of Uruk during the Old Babylonian period, a šagina-official of Bad₃-tibira is recorded as being received by military scribes at Uruk.[17]

Archaeology Edit

The site was visited in 1927 by Raymond P. Dougherty for a day. He reports that the site covered about a square mile with the western mound being the largest with low extensions bearing off a mile to the north. Numbers baked bricks were seen along with door sockets, flint saw blades, and a bronze needle.[18] Some badly effaced half-bricks on the surface of the mound bore the inscription of Amar-Sin, of the Third Dynasty of Ur. Pieces of vitrified brick scattered over the surface of the large mound bore witness to the city's destruction by fire.[19]

In 1965 Vaughn E. Crawford of the Metropolitan Museum of Art visited the site, noting that surface pottery indicated occupation until about 1500 BC.[20]

Tell Jidr (Tall Ǧidr) Edit

The site, in the Tigris Rviver in modern Al-Qādisiyyah Governorate in Iraq, lay on the ancient Iturungal canal which also connected Adab, Umma, Zabalam, and Bäd-tibira.[21] In particular it lies between Adab and Zabalam.[22] At it's maximum extent it covered an area of 130 hectares.[23] In 1967 a survey (generally known as the Warka Survey) was conducted the region, marking Tell Jidr as site WS-004. The ancient city of Adab lay just to the northwest. Two inscribed bricks of Gudea, ruler of Lagash were found at the site.[24] The surface of the main two mounds is dominated with the remains from the Parthian and Sassanian periods. The northeast mound is 1300 meters by 1000 meters and the somewhat lower southeast mound is 1400 meters by 700 meters. At various locations around the site remains of the Ubaid, Uruk, Early Dynastic I, Kassite, and into the Sassanian period (without evidence of Neo-Babylonian or Achaemenian on the surface). The ruins of the Early Islamic site of Imam Dhahir lies adjacent.[25] At various times a number of city names have been proposed for the site including Karkar, Irisaĝrig, KI.AN, Kesh, and Dabrumki.[26][27][28][29] The primary evidence for Karkar is an itinerary of the Uruk ruler Utu-hengal in his campaign against the Gutian ruler Tirigan and the fact that during the Ur III empire Karkar was part of the province of Umma (the city of Umma lies 17 kilometers northwest of Tell Jidr).[30] From 2016 to 2018 the QADIS regional survey conducted satellite, drone, surface survey, soundings, and geoarchaeological boring at Tell Jidr (QD013). It found that the extended site covered 430 hectares.[31] Two inscribed bricks of the Ur III ruler Ur-Nammu were found which contained a dedication to Ishkur which would support the identification of the location as Karkar. It is difficult to confirm at this point if the bricks have not been re-used from another location, especially in the case of the Gudea bricks.[32] The site is heavily pitted from robbers looking for coins, glass, and jewelry.[33]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ W.F. Albright and T.O. Lambdin, "The Evidence of Language", in The Cambridge Ancient History I, part 1 (Cambridge University Press), 1971, ISBN 0-521-07051-1, page 150.
  2. ^ Hallo, William W. and William Kelly Simpson, The Ancient Near East: A History, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc., New York, 1971, p. 32
  3. ^ Vaughn E. Crawford, "The Location of Bad-Tibira", Iraq 22 "Ur in Retrospect. In Memory of Sir C. Leonard Woolley" (Spring - Autumn 1960:197-199); the secure identification is based on the recovery at the pillaged site of fragments of a known inscription of Entemena that had surfaced in the black market without provenance. Earlier excavations at a mound called Medain near the site of Lagash, following a report of a vendor of one of the inscriptions, had proved fruitless: see H. de Genouillac, Fouilles de Telloh, ii:139 (noted by Crawford 1960:197 note 7).
  4. ^ Collection of taxes from Dûr-gurgurri features in correspondence of Hammurabi (first half of the 18th century BCE) noted in L. W. King and H. R. Hall, Egypt and Western Asia in the Light of Recent Discoveries (New York, 2005) p. 306f; it remained a city of metal-workers and the principal settlement of the guild of gugurrē, "metalworkers" (L. W. King, The Letters And Inscriptions Of Hammurabi, King Of Babylon About B.C. 2200 vol. III, p. 21, note 2.).
  5. ^ Hallo, William W. and William Kelly Simpson, The Ancient Near East: A History, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc., New York, 1971
  6. ^ Frayne, Douglas R. and Stuckey, Johanna H., "K", A Handbook of Gods and Goddesses of the Ancient Near East: Three Thousand Deities of Anatolia, Syria, Israel, Sumer, Babylonia, Assyria, and Elam, University Park, USA: Penn State University Press, pp. 158-174, 2021
  7. ^ George, A. R., "House Most High. The temples of ancient Mesopotamia", Winona Lake, 1993 ISBN 978-0931464805
  8. ^ Metcalf, Christopher, "A Poem about Ĝeštinana (“Dumuzi-Inana J”)", Sumerian Literary Texts in the Schøyen Collection: Volume 1: Literary Sources on Old Babylonian Religion, University Park, USA: Penn State University Press, pp. 76-78, 2019
  9. ^ Inanna's descent to the netherworld - ETCSL
  10. ^ Frayne, Douglas, "Ur-Nammu E3/2.1.1", Ur III Period (2112-2004 BC), Toronto: University of Toronto Press, pp. 5-90, 1997
  11. ^ Presumably the same temple as E-mush-kalamma, according to Crawford.
  12. ^ Crawford 1960:197.
  13. ^ a b Frayne, Douglas, "LAGAŠ", Presargonic Period: Early Periods, Volume 1 (2700-2350 BC), Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2008, pp. 77-292, 2008
  14. ^ Frayne, Douglas, "Larsa", Old Babylonian Period (2003-1595 B.C.): Early Periods, Volume 4, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, pp. 107-322, 1990
  15. ^ Ferris J. Stephens, "A Newly Discovered Inscription of Libit-Ishtar" Journal of the American Oriental Society 52.2 (June 1932):182-185) p. 183.
  16. ^ Van De Mieroop, Marc, "The Reign OF Rim-Sin", Revue d’Assyriologie et d’archéologie Orientale, vol. 87, no. 1, pp. 47–69, 1993
  17. ^ Seri, Andrea, "The military, messengers and foreign officials". The House of Prisoners: Slavery and State in Uruk during the Revolt against Samsu-iluna, Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 2013, pp. 214-236, 2013
  18. ^ Dougherty, Raymond P., "An Archæological Survey in Southern Babylonia (Continued)", Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, no. 25, pp. 5–13, 1927
  19. ^ Crawford 1960:198.
  20. ^ Harper, Prudence O. "Tomorrow We Dig! Excerpts from Vaughn E. Crawford’s Letters and Newsletters from al-Hiba", Leaving No Stones Unturned: Essays on the Ancient Near East and Egypt in Honor of Donald P. Hansen, edited by Erica Ehrenberg, University Park, USA: Penn State University Press, pp. 89-102, 2002
  21. ^ [1]Marchetti, N., Gallerani, V., Luglio, G., Valeri, M., "Tell Jidr: A Late antique Megacity in Central Mesopotamia", Poster presented at the 11th International Congress on the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East, Munich, 2018
  22. ^ Jacobsen, Thorkild, "The Waters of Ur", Iraq, vol. 22, pp. 174–85, 1960
  23. ^ van Driel, G., "The Size of Institutional Umma", Archiv Für Orientforschung, vol. 46/47, pp. 80–91, 1999
  24. ^ “RIME 3/1.01.07.003, Ex. 18 Artifact Entry.” (2003) 2023. Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative (CDLI). June 14, 2023. https://cdli.ucla.edu/P232331
  25. ^ [2]R. McC. Adams and H. Nissen, "The Uruk Countryside: The Natural Setting of Urban Societies", Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1972 ISBN 0-226-00500-3
  26. ^ Falkenstein, A., "Sumerische religiöse Texte", Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und Vorderasiatische Archäologie, vol. 55, no. Jahresband, pp. 11-67, 1962
  27. ^ [3]H. J. Nissen, "Sumerological Studies in Honor of Thorkild Jacobsen on His Seventieth Birthday", 7 June 1974, Assyriological Studies 20, Chicago, 1976, ISBN 978-0-22-662282-8
  28. ^ Powell, Marvin A., "Karkar, Dabrum, and Tall Ǧidr: An Unresolved Geographical Problem", Journal of Near Eastern Studies, vol. 39, no. 1, pp. 47–52, 1980
  29. ^ Zomer, Elyze, "An Uprising at Karkar: A New Historical-Literary Text", Journal of Cuneiform Studies 71.1, pp. 111-120, 2019
  30. ^ Steinkeller, P., "New Light on the Hydrology and Topography of Southern Babylonia in the Third Millennium", ZA 91,no. 1, pp. 22–84, 2001
  31. ^ Marchetti, Nicolò, Al-Hussainy, Abbas, Benati, Giacomo, Luglio, Giampaolo, Scazzosi, Giulia, Valeri, Marco and Zaina, Federico, "The Rise of Urbanized Landscapes in Mesopotamia: The QADIS Integrated Survey Results and the Interpretation of Multi-Layered Historical Landscapes", Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und vorderasiatische Archäologie, vol. 109, no. 2, pp. 214-237, 2019
  32. ^ [4]Marchetti, Nicolò, and Federico Zaina, "Rediscovering the Heartland of Cities", Near Eastern Archaeology 83, pp. 146-157, 2020
  33. ^ Hamdani, Abdulamir al., "Protecting and Recording Our Archaeological Heritage in Southern Iraq", Near Eastern Archaeology, vol. 71, no. 4, pp. 221–30, 2008

Further reading Edit

  • W.F. Leemans, "Tablets from Bad-tibira and Samsuiluna's Reconquest of the South", JEOL, vol. 15, pp. 214–218, 1957/58

External links Edit

  • Translation of Inana's descent to the nether world
  • Foundation Peg of Entemena found at presumed site of Bad-tibira - British Museum

tibira, sumerian, 𒂦𒁾𒉄𒆠, bad3, tibiraki, wall, copper, worker, fortress, smiths, identified, modern, tell, madineh, also, tell, madineh, between, shatrah, tell, senkereh, ancient, larsa, kilometers, northeast, ancient, girsu, southern, iraq, ancient, sumerian, . Bad tibira Sumerian 𒂦𒁾𒉄𒆠 bad3 tibiraki Wall of the Copper Worker s 1 or Fortress of the Smiths 2 identified as modern Tell al Madineh also Tell Madineh between Ash Shatrah and Tell as Senkereh ancient Larsa and 33 kilometers northeast of ancient Girsu in southern Iraq 3 was an ancient Sumerian city on the Iturungal canal built by Ur III ruler Ur Nammu which appears among antediluvian cities in the Sumerian King List Its Akkadian name was Dur gurgurri 4 It was also called Pantibiblos Pantibiblos by Greek authors such as Berossus transmitted by Abydenus and Apollodorus This may reflect another version of the city s name Patibira Canal of the Smiths 5 Bad tibira 1 Shown within IraqAlternative nameTell MadinehLocationDhi Qar Governorate IraqCoordinates31 22 47 N 45 59 59 E 31 37972 N 45 99972 E 31 37972 45 99972TypesettlementHistoryPeriodsEarly Dynastic Ur III Old BabylonianSite notesExcavation dates1927ArchaeologistsRaymond P DoughertyConditionRuinedOwnershipPublicPublic accessYesThere is known to be a temple of the deity Kittum at Bad tibira 6 It has been suggested that Ninsheshegarra an aspect of the goddess Geshtinanna who is sister of Dumuzid was worshiped in the temple Esheshegarra at Bad tibira 7 8 Contents 1 Bad tibira in Sumerian literature 2 History 3 Archaeology 4 Tell Jidr Tall Ǧidr 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Further reading 8 External linksBad tibira in Sumerian literature EditAccording to the Sumerian King List Bad tibira was the second city to exercise kingship in Sumer before the flood following Eridu These kings were said to be En men lu ana En men gal ana and Dumuzid the Shepherd The early Sumerian text Inanna s descent to the netherworld mentions the city s temple E mush kalamma a temple to Lulal In this tale Inanna dissuades demons from the netherworld from taking Lulal patron of Bad tibira who was living in squalor They eventually take Dumuzid who lived in palatial opulence at Uruk This Dumuzid is called the Shepherd 9 who on the King List resides at Bad Tibira in contrast to the post diluvian Dumuzid the Fisherman who reigns in Uruk History Edit nbsp Foundation nail Entemena Louvre AO22934A cone found at the site marked the construction by Ur Nammu c 2100 BC a ruler of the Ur III empire of the Iturungal canal For the goddess Inanna la dy of Eanna his lady Ur Nammu mighty man king of Ur king of the lands of Sumer and Akkad dug for her the Iturungal canal her beloved canal 10 The brotherhood text in cuneiform inscriptions on a cone of which there are many exemplars from the site records the friendship pact of Entemena governor of Lagash and Lugal kinishedudu governor of Uruk It identifies Entemena as the builder of the temple E mush 11 to Inanna and Dumuzid under his local epithet Lugal E mush 12 For the goddess Inanna and the god Lugal emush En metena ruler of Lagash Built the E mush House Radiance of the Land their beloved temple and ordered these clay nails for them En metena who built the E mush temple is personal god is the god Sul MUS PA At that time En metena ruler of Lagash and Lugal kinishe dudu ruler of Uruk established a brotherhood pact between themselves 13 A foundation tablet of En metena from the site with multiple exemplars also mentioned the building of E Mush At that time En metena built for Lugalemush the E mush House Radiance of the Land of Pa tibira his beloved temple restoring it Pa tibira appear to be an alternate spelling of Bad tibira 13 In the Isin Larsa Period possession of the city passed between Larsa and Isin Larsa ruler Sin Iddinam c 1785 1778 BC claimed on a cone thought to be from the site to have built the great wall of Bad tibira by means of his triumph he built in a grand fashion the great wall of Bad tibira 14 Isin ruler Lipit Ishtar the shepherd of Nippur claimed to have built the House of Righteousness there 15 The city was under the control of Larsa during the long reign of Rim Sin I 16 During the reign of Rim Anum a ruler of Uruk during the Old Babylonian period a sagina official of Bad tibira is recorded as being received by military scribes at Uruk 17 Archaeology EditThe site was visited in 1927 by Raymond P Dougherty for a day He reports that the site covered about a square mile with the western mound being the largest with low extensions bearing off a mile to the north Numbers baked bricks were seen along with door sockets flint saw blades and a bronze needle 18 Some badly effaced half bricks on the surface of the mound bore the inscription of Amar Sin of the Third Dynasty of Ur Pieces of vitrified brick scattered over the surface of the large mound bore witness to the city s destruction by fire 19 In 1965 Vaughn E Crawford of the Metropolitan Museum of Art visited the site noting that surface pottery indicated occupation until about 1500 BC 20 Tell Jidr Tall Ǧidr EditThe site in the Tigris Rviver in modern Al Qadisiyyah Governorate in Iraq lay on the ancient Iturungal canal which also connected Adab Umma Zabalam and Bad tibira 21 In particular it lies between Adab and Zabalam 22 At it s maximum extent it covered an area of 130 hectares 23 In 1967 a survey generally known as the Warka Survey was conducted the region marking Tell Jidr as site WS 004 The ancient city of Adab lay just to the northwest Two inscribed bricks of Gudea ruler of Lagash were found at the site 24 The surface of the main two mounds is dominated with the remains from the Parthian and Sassanian periods The northeast mound is 1300 meters by 1000 meters and the somewhat lower southeast mound is 1400 meters by 700 meters At various locations around the site remains of the Ubaid Uruk Early Dynastic I Kassite and into the Sassanian period without evidence of Neo Babylonian or Achaemenian on the surface The ruins of the Early Islamic site of Imam Dhahir lies adjacent 25 At various times a number of city names have been proposed for the site including Karkar Irisaĝrig KI AN Kesh and Dabrumki 26 27 28 29 The primary evidence for Karkar is an itinerary of the Uruk ruler Utu hengal in his campaign against the Gutian ruler Tirigan and the fact that during the Ur III empire Karkar was part of the province of Umma the city of Umma lies 17 kilometers northwest of Tell Jidr 30 From 2016 to 2018 the QADIS regional survey conducted satellite drone surface survey soundings and geoarchaeological boring at Tell Jidr QD013 It found that the extended site covered 430 hectares 31 Two inscribed bricks of the Ur III ruler Ur Nammu were found which contained a dedication to Ishkur which would support the identification of the location as Karkar It is difficult to confirm at this point if the bricks have not been re used from another location especially in the case of the Gudea bricks 32 The site is heavily pitted from robbers looking for coins glass and jewelry 33 See also EditList of cities of the ancient Near EastNotes Edit W F Albright and T O Lambdin The Evidence of Language in The Cambridge Ancient History I part 1 Cambridge University Press 1971 ISBN 0 521 07051 1 page 150 Hallo William W and William Kelly Simpson The Ancient Near East A History Harcourt Brace Jovanovich Inc New York 1971 p 32 Vaughn E Crawford The Location of Bad Tibira Iraq 22 Ur in Retrospect In Memory of Sir C Leonard Woolley Spring Autumn 1960 197 199 the secure identification is based on the recovery at the pillaged site of fragments of a known inscription of Entemena that had surfaced in the black market without provenance Earlier excavations at a mound called Medain near the site of Lagash following a report of a vendor of one of the inscriptions had proved fruitless see H de Genouillac Fouilles de Telloh ii 139 noted by Crawford 1960 197 note 7 Collection of taxes from Dur gurgurri features in correspondence of Hammurabi first half of the 18th century BCE noted in L W King and H R Hall Egypt and Western Asia in the Light of Recent Discoveries New York 2005 p 306f it remained a city of metal workers and the principal settlement of the guild of gugurre metalworkers L W King The Letters And Inscriptions Of Hammurabi King Of Babylon About B C 2200 vol III p 21 note 2 Hallo William W and William Kelly Simpson The Ancient Near East A History Harcourt Brace Jovanovich Inc New York 1971 Frayne Douglas R and Stuckey Johanna H K A Handbook of Gods and Goddesses of the Ancient Near East Three Thousand Deities of Anatolia Syria Israel Sumer Babylonia Assyria and Elam University Park USA Penn State University Press pp 158 174 2021 George A R House Most High The temples of ancient Mesopotamia Winona Lake 1993 ISBN 978 0931464805 Metcalf Christopher A Poem about Ĝestinana Dumuzi Inana J Sumerian Literary Texts in the Schoyen Collection Volume 1 Literary Sources on Old Babylonian Religion University Park USA Penn State University Press pp 76 78 2019 Inanna s descent to the netherworld ETCSL Frayne Douglas Ur Nammu E3 2 1 1 Ur III Period 2112 2004 BC Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 5 90 1997 Presumably the same temple as E mush kalamma according to Crawford Crawford 1960 197 a b Frayne Douglas LAGAS Presargonic Period Early Periods Volume 1 2700 2350 BC Toronto University of Toronto Press 2008 pp 77 292 2008 Frayne Douglas Larsa Old Babylonian Period 2003 1595 B C Early Periods Volume 4 Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 107 322 1990 Ferris J Stephens A Newly Discovered Inscription of Libit Ishtar Journal of the American Oriental Society 52 2 June 1932 182 185 p 183 Van De Mieroop Marc The Reign OF Rim Sin Revue d Assyriologie et d archeologie Orientale vol 87 no 1 pp 47 69 1993 Seri Andrea The military messengers and foreign officials The House of Prisoners Slavery and State in Uruk during the Revolt against Samsu iluna Berlin Boston De Gruyter 2013 pp 214 236 2013 Dougherty Raymond P An Archaeological Survey in Southern Babylonia Continued Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research no 25 pp 5 13 1927 Crawford 1960 198 Harper Prudence O Tomorrow We Dig Excerpts from Vaughn E Crawford s Letters and Newsletters from al Hiba Leaving No Stones Unturned Essays on the Ancient Near East and Egypt in Honor of Donald P Hansen edited by Erica Ehrenberg University Park USA Penn State University Press pp 89 102 2002 1 Marchetti N Gallerani V Luglio G Valeri M Tell Jidr A Late antique Megacity in Central Mesopotamia Poster presented at the 11th International Congress on the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East Munich 2018 Jacobsen Thorkild The Waters of Ur Iraq vol 22 pp 174 85 1960 van Driel G The Size of Institutional Umma Archiv Fur Orientforschung vol 46 47 pp 80 91 1999 RIME 3 1 01 07 003 Ex 18 Artifact Entry 2003 2023 Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative CDLI June 14 2023 https cdli ucla edu P232331 2 R McC Adams and H Nissen The Uruk Countryside The Natural Setting of Urban Societies Chicago University of Chicago Press 1972 ISBN 0 226 00500 3 Falkenstein A Sumerische religiose Texte Zeitschrift fur Assyriologie und Vorderasiatische Archaologie vol 55 no Jahresband pp 11 67 1962 3 H J Nissen Sumerological Studies in Honor of Thorkild Jacobsen on His Seventieth Birthday 7 June 1974 Assyriological Studies 20 Chicago 1976 ISBN 978 0 22 662282 8 Powell Marvin A Karkar Dabrum and Tall Ǧidr An Unresolved Geographical Problem Journal of Near Eastern Studies vol 39 no 1 pp 47 52 1980 Zomer Elyze An Uprising at Karkar A New Historical Literary Text Journal of Cuneiform Studies 71 1 pp 111 120 2019 Steinkeller P New Light on the Hydrology and Topography of Southern Babylonia in the Third Millennium ZA 91 no 1 pp 22 84 2001 Marchetti Nicolo Al Hussainy Abbas Benati Giacomo Luglio Giampaolo Scazzosi Giulia Valeri Marco and Zaina Federico The Rise of Urbanized Landscapes in Mesopotamia The QADIS Integrated Survey Results and the Interpretation of Multi Layered Historical Landscapes Zeitschrift fur Assyriologie und vorderasiatische Archaologie vol 109 no 2 pp 214 237 2019 4 Marchetti Nicolo and Federico Zaina Rediscovering the Heartland of Cities Near Eastern Archaeology 83 pp 146 157 2020 Hamdani Abdulamir al Protecting and Recording Our Archaeological Heritage in Southern Iraq Near Eastern Archaeology vol 71 no 4 pp 221 30 2008Further reading EditW F Leemans Tablets from Bad tibira and Samsuiluna s Reconquest of the South JEOL vol 15 pp 214 218 1957 58External links EditTranslation of Inana s descent to the nether world Foundation Peg of Entemena found at presumed site of Bad tibira British Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bad tibira amp oldid 1171214296, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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