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Kutha

Kutha, Cuthah, Cuth or Cutha (Arabic: كُوثَا, Sumerian: Gû.du8.aki, Akkadian: Kûtu), modern Tell Ibrahim (also Tell Habl Ibrahlm) (Arabic: تَلّ إِبْرَاهِيم), is an archaeological site in Babil Governorate, Iraq. The site of Tell Uqair (ancient Urum) is just to the north. The city was occupied from the Old Akkadian period until the Hellenistic period. The city-god of Kutha was Meslamtaea, related to Nergal, and his temple there was named E-Meslam.[1]

Tell Ibrahim
Kutha
Shown within Iraq
Alternative nameCuthah
LocationBabil Governorate, Iraq
RegionMesopotamia
Coordinates32°45′36.1″N 44°36′46.3″E / 32.760028°N 44.612861°E / 32.760028; 44.612861
Typetell
Site notes
Excavation dates1881
ArchaeologistsHormuzd Rassam

Archaeology edit

Kutha lies on the right bank of the eastern branch of the Upper Euphrates river, north of Nippur and around 25 miles northeast of the ancient cite of Babylon. The site consists of two settlement mounds. The larger main mound is 0.75 miles long and crescent-shaped. A smaller mound is located to the west, in the hollow of the crescent. The two mounds, as is typical in the region, are separated by the dry bed of an ancient canal, probably the Shatt en-Nil but possibly the Irninna, in any case leading from the Euphrates.[2][3]

The first archaeologist to examine the site, in 1845, Henry Rawlinson, noted a brick of king Nebuchadrezzar II of the Neo-Babylonian Empire mentioning the city of Kutha (Ku-tu), though it is not known with certainty that it was in situ. He returned to visit the site a number of times.[4] The site was also visited by George Smith in 1873 and by Edgar James Banks.[2] Tell Ibrahim was excavated by Hormuzd Rassam in 1881, for four weeks. Little was discovered, mainly some Hebrew and Aramaic inscribed bowls and a few tablets.[5] He found a neglected "mausoleum of Abraham" on the small mound and had it cleaned by his workers. Recording a few more bricks of Nebuchadrezzar II, he indicated the possibility that they were not originally from the site.[6][7]

While no cuneiform texts have been found at the site aside from the few excavated by Rassam and held in the British Museum (BM 42261, BM 42494, BM 42264, BM 42275, BM 42379, and BM 42295), noting that some of those may actually have come from the unlocated Tell Egraineh which Rassam also excavated in 1881, some have appeared for sale over the years, almost all from the Achaemenid period with three being from the Old Akkadian period and one from the Old Babylonian period.[8][9]

History edit

 
Basse Mesopotamie Ur3

In a contemporary inscription of Naram-Sin of Akkad (c. 2200 BC), after a number of cities rebelled he deified himself, mentioning Kutha.

"Naram-Sin, the mighty, king of Agade, when the four quarters together revolted against him, through the love which the goddess Astar showed him, he was victorious in nine battles in one in 1 year, and the kings whom they (the rebels[?]) had raised (against him), he captured. In view of the fact that he protected the foundations of his city from danger, (the citizens of his city requested from Astar in Eanna, Enlil in Nippur, Dagan in Tuttul, Ninhursag in Kes, Ea in Eridu, Sin in Ur, Samas in Sippar, (and) Nergal in Kutha, that (Naram-Sin) be (made) the god of their city, and they built within Agade a temple (dedicated) to him. ..."[10]

A foundation tablet (found in Nineveh) records that the second ruler of the Ur III empire, Shulgi, built the E-Meslam temple of Nergal at Kutha. He is not yet deified so it was early in his reign.

"Sulgi, the mighty, king of Ur and of the four quarters, builder of E-meslam ("House, Warrior of the Netherworld"), temple of the god [N]ergal, his lo[rd], in [Kuth]a."[11]

During his reign a large palace was built at Tummal. Building materials came from as far away as Babylon, Kutha, and Adab.[12]

A ruler of Kutha early in the Old Babylonian period was Ilum-nāsir.[13] Sumu-la-El, a king of the 1st Babylonian Dynasty, rebuilt the city walls of Kutha.[14] The city was later defeated by Hammurabi of Babylon in the 39th year of his reign with his year name reading "Year in which Hammu-rabi the king with the great power given to him by An and Enlil smote the totality of Cutha and the land of Subartu".[15] The 40th year name of Hammurabi mentions the Emeslam temple at Kutha.[16]

 
Incised stone plaque Cutha AN1933.1331

In the fragmentary Epic of Adad-shuma-usur, a Kassite dynasty ruler (c. 1200 BC), BM 34104+, he states:

"He made glad his face, his dwelling, the shrine of [... ] A full month, the name he spoke, his crescent [...] He builds up the city street(s) with fill, the beginning of the festival he [...] The king came out of Borsippa and hea[ded] toward Cuthah [...] He entered E[mesl]am, in/with the ground he constantly cov[ers...] ...Cuthah [...] '[...]your [help], O Nergal, [...]'"[17]

In a related, much damaged, text, BM 45684, Adad-shuma-usur states "at night-[tim]e I arrived, the wall of Cuthah ... I spoke greeting, to Emesl[am]".[18]

On the Neo-Assyrian Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III (859–824 BC), Kutha is mentioned on line 82 ie "I marched to the great cities (and) made sacrifices in Babylon, Borsippa, (and) Cuthah,(and) presented offerings to the great gods."[19]

The records of Neo-Assyrian ruler Ashurbanipal state that in 651 BC Šamaš-šuma-ukin captured Cuthah. Šamaš-šuma-ukin was the son of the Neo-Assyrian king Esarhaddon and the elder brother of Esarhaddon's successor Ashurbanipal.[20]

An inscription of Neo-Babylonian ruler Nebuchadnezzar II (605-562 BC), found in a columnar form and as a prism at Babylon, mentions Kutha.

"I established every day 8 sheep as regular offerings for Nergal (and) Las, the gods of the Emeslam and Cutha, I provided abundantly for the offerings of the great gods, I increased the regular offerings beyond the old offerings."[21]

Several governors are known from the time the city was under the control of Achaemenid Empire ruler Cyrus the Great during 539–530 BC. They are Nergal-tabni-usur, Nergal-sar-usur, and Nabu-kesir.[22]

According to the Diadochi Chronicle in the seventh year 7th year of seleucid ruler Alexander IV of Macedon, 311/310 BC, general Antigonus I Monophthalmus battled general Seleucus I Nicator after the latter revolted along with the temple administrator of Kutha.

"He said thus [to? Seleu]cus, "in the 7th year of Antigonus assigned/appointed [... ] to Seleucus the General". In the month o the administrator of the Emeslam temple [in Cuthah] rebelled [ Seleucus, [but... ] he did not capture the palace (i.e. the garrison). In that month forty talents of silver of... [...] In the month of Ab, because [he did not accomplish the] capture of citadel of Babylon .[...], Seleucus took flight and did not dam up Euphrates... [... ]"[23]

In Religious Tradition edit

The literary composition "Legend of the King of Cuthah", a fragmentary inscription of the Akkadian literary genre called narû, written as if it were transcribed from a royal stele, is in fact part of the "Cuthean Legend of Naram-Sin", not to be read as history, a copy of which found in the cuneiform library at Sultantepe, north of Harran.[24]

According to the Tanakh, Cuthah was one of the five Syrian and Mesopotamian cities from which Sargon II, King of Assyria, brought settlers to take the places of the exiled Israelites (2 Kings 17:24–30). II Kings relates that these settlers were attacked by lions, and interpreting this to mean that their worship was not acceptable to the deity of the land, they asked Sargon to send an Israelite priest, exiled in Assyria, to teach them, which he did. The result was a mixture of religions and peoples, the latter being known as "Cuthim" in Hebrew and as "Samaritans" to the Greeks.[25]

Josephus places Cuthah, which for him is the name of a river and of a district,[26] in Persia, and Neubauer[27] says that it is the name of a country near Corduene.

Ibn Sa'd in his Kitab Tabaqat Al-Kubra writes that the maternal grandfather of Abraham, Karbana, was the one who discovered the river Kutha.[28]

In The Last Pagans of Iraq: Ibn Waḥshiyya and His Nabatean Agriculture, Jaakko Hämeen-Anttila says:

"One might also mention the rather surprising story, traced back to 'Ali, the first Imam of the Shiites, where he is made to identify himself as “one of the Nabateans from Lutha” (see Yaqut, Mu'jamIV: 488, s.v. Kutha). It goes without saying that the story is apocryphal, but it shows that among the Shiites there were people ready to identify themselves with the Nabateans. Thus it comes as no surprise that especially in the so-called ghulàt movements (extremist Shiites) a lot of material surfaces that is derivable from Mesopotamian sources (cf. Hämeen-Anttila 2001), and the early Shiite strongholds were to a great extent in the area inhabited by Nabateans.

"Yaqut also notes, "the identification of Kutha as the original home Shiah Muslims believe to be the Abrahamic roots of Islam. Yet the identification of Kutha, and by extension also Abraham, with the Nabateans is remarkable."[29]

Al-Tabari says in The History of Prophets and Kings that the prophet Ibrahim was the son of his mother Nuba or Anmatala, who was the daughter of Karita who dug the river Kutha, named after his father Kutha.[30]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Jacobsen, Thorkild and Moran, William L, "Mesopotamian Gods and Pantheons". Toward the Image of Tammuz and Other Essays on Mesopotamian History and Culture, Cambridge, MA and London, England: Harvard University Press, pp. 16-38, 1970
  2. ^ a b [1] Edgar James Banks, Cutha, The Biclical World, sol. 22, no. 1, pp. 61–64, 1903
  3. ^ Thorkild Jacobsen, "The Waters of Ur", Toward the Image of Tammuz and Other Essays on Mesopotamian History and Culture, Cambridge, MA and London, England: Harvard University Press, pp. 231-244, 1970
  4. ^ Rawlinson, H. C., "On the Inscriptions of Assyria and Babylonia", The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, vol. 12, pp. 401–XXI, 1850
  5. ^ [2] Ford, James Nathan, "Another Look at Mandaic Incantation Bowl BM 91715", Journal of the Ancient Near Eastern Society 29.1, 2002
  6. ^ [3] Hormuzd Rassam, Asshur and the Land of Nimrod: Being an Account of the Discoveries Made in the Ancient Ruins of Nineveh, Asshur, Sepharvaim, Calah, [etc]..., Curts & Jennings, 1897
  7. ^ J. E. Reade, Rassam's Excavations at Borsippa and Kutha 1879-82, Iraq, vol. 48, pp. 105–116, 1986
  8. ^ "SCD 253 Artifact Entry", 2017. Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative (CDLI). June 16, 2017. https://cdli.ucla.edu/P500470
  9. ^ Jursa, Michael, "Spätachämenidische Texte aus Kutha", Revue d'assyriologie et d'archéologie orientale, vol. 97, no. 1, pp. 43-140, 2003
  10. ^ Douglas R. Frayne, The Sargonic and Gutian Periods (2334–2113), University of Toronto Press, 1993 ISBN 0-8020-0593-4
  11. ^ "Frayne, Douglas, Šulgi E3/2.1.2", Ur III Period (2112-2004 BC), Toronto: University of Toronto Press, pp. 91-234, 1997
  12. ^ Steinkeller, Piotr, "Corvée Labor in Ur III Times", From the 21st Century B.C. to the 21st Century A.D.: Proceedings of the International Conference on Neo-Sumerian Studies Held in Madrid, 22–24 July 2010, edited by Steven J. Garfinkle and Manuel Molina, University Park, USA: Penn State University Press, pp. 347-424, 2013
  13. ^ Rients de Boer, "Beginnings of Old Babylonian Babylon: Sumu-Abum and Sumu-La-El", Journal of Cuneiform Studies, vol. 70, pp. 53–86, 2018
  14. ^ Year Names of Sumulael at CDLI
  15. ^ Year Name 39 of Hammurabi at CDLI
  16. ^ Matthew Rutz, and Piotr Michalowski, "The Flooding of Ešnunna, the Fall of Mari: Hammurabi’s Deeds in Babylonian Literature and History", Journal of Cuneiform Studies, vol. 68, pp. 15–43, 2016
  17. ^ Grayson, Albert Kirk, "Adad-shuma-usur Epic", Babylonian Historical-Literary Texts, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, pp. 56-77, 1975
  18. ^ Grayson, Albert Kirk, "A Babylonian Historical Epic Fragment", Babylonian Historical-Literary Texts, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, pp. 93-98, 1975
  19. ^ A. Kirk Grayson, "Shalmaneser III (858-824 BC) A.0.102". Assyrian Rulers of the Early First Millennium BC II (858-745 BC), Toronto: University of Toronto Press, pp. 5-179, 1991
  20. ^ Grayson, A. K., "The Chronology of the Reign of Ashurbanipal", vol. 70, no. 2, pp. 227-245, 1980
  21. ^ Da Riva, Rocio, "Nebuchadnezzar II’s Prism (EŞ 7834): A New Edition", Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und vorderasiatische Archäologie, vol. 103, no. 2, pp. 196-229, 2013
  22. ^ Dandamayev, M. A., "Neo-Babylonian and Achaemenid State Administration in Mesopotamia", Judah and the Judeans in the Persian Period, edited by Oded Lipschits and Manfred Oeming, University Park, USA: Penn State University Press, pp. 373-398, 2006
  23. ^ Geller, M. J., "Babylonian Astronomical Diaries and Corrections of Diodorus", Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, vol. 53, no. 1, pp. 1–7, 1990
  24. ^ O. R. Gurney, The Sultantepe Tablets (Continued). IV. The Cuthaean Legend of Naram-Sin, Anatolian Studies, vol. 5, pp. 93–113, 1955
  25. ^ Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews ix. 14, § 3
  26. ^ Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews, ix. 14, § 1, 3
  27. ^ Adolf Neubauer, La Géographie du Talmud, p. 379, 1968
  28. ^ Ibn Sa'd. "Abraham, the friend of God". Kitab Tabaqat Al-Kubra الطبقات الكبرى [The Book of the Great Classes] (in Arabic). Vol. 1. قال نهر كوثي كراه كرنبا جد إبراهيم من قبل أمه وكان
  29. ^ Hämeen-Anttila, Jaakko (2006). The Last Pagans of Iraq: Ibn Waḥshiyya and His Nabatean Agriculture. p. 35. ISBN 90-04-15010-2.
  30. ^ William M., Brinner (1989). The History of al-Tabari Vol. 2: Prophets and Patriarchs (SUNY series in Near Eastern Studies). pp. 127–128. ISBN 08-87-06313-6.

Further reading edit

  • Julian Reade, Hormuzd Rassam and His Discoveries, Iraq, vol. 55, pp. 39–62, 1963

External links edit

  • Digital Images of Tablets from Kutha/Cuthah
  • Temple Hymns at ETCSL
  • Objects from Kutha - British Museum

kutha, cuthah, cuth, cutha, arabic, وث, sumerian, akkadian, kûtu, modern, tell, ibrahim, also, tell, habl, ibrahlm, arabic, اه, يم, archaeological, site, babil, governorate, iraq, site, tell, uqair, ancient, urum, just, north, city, occupied, from, akkadian, p. Kutha Cuthah Cuth or Cutha Arabic ك وث ا Sumerian Gu du8 aki Akkadian Kutu modern Tell Ibrahim also Tell Habl Ibrahlm Arabic ت ل إ ب ر اه يم is an archaeological site in Babil Governorate Iraq The site of Tell Uqair ancient Urum is just to the north The city was occupied from the Old Akkadian period until the Hellenistic period The city god of Kutha was Meslamtaea related to Nergal and his temple there was named E Meslam 1 Tell IbrahimKutha 1 Shown within IraqAlternative nameCuthahLocationBabil Governorate IraqRegionMesopotamiaCoordinates32 45 36 1 N 44 36 46 3 E 32 760028 N 44 612861 E 32 760028 44 612861TypetellSite notesExcavation dates1881ArchaeologistsHormuzd Rassam Contents 1 Archaeology 2 History 3 In Religious Tradition 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksArchaeology editKutha lies on the right bank of the eastern branch of the Upper Euphrates river north of Nippur and around 25 miles northeast of the ancient cite of Babylon The site consists of two settlement mounds The larger main mound is 0 75 miles long and crescent shaped A smaller mound is located to the west in the hollow of the crescent The two mounds as is typical in the region are separated by the dry bed of an ancient canal probably the Shatt en Nil but possibly the Irninna in any case leading from the Euphrates 2 3 The first archaeologist to examine the site in 1845 Henry Rawlinson noted a brick of king Nebuchadrezzar II of the Neo Babylonian Empire mentioning the city of Kutha Ku tu though it is not known with certainty that it was in situ He returned to visit the site a number of times 4 The site was also visited by George Smith in 1873 and by Edgar James Banks 2 Tell Ibrahim was excavated by Hormuzd Rassam in 1881 for four weeks Little was discovered mainly some Hebrew and Aramaic inscribed bowls and a few tablets 5 He found a neglected mausoleum of Abraham on the small mound and had it cleaned by his workers Recording a few more bricks of Nebuchadrezzar II he indicated the possibility that they were not originally from the site 6 7 While no cuneiform texts have been found at the site aside from the few excavated by Rassam and held in the British Museum BM 42261 BM 42494 BM 42264 BM 42275 BM 42379 and BM 42295 noting that some of those may actually have come from the unlocated Tell Egraineh which Rassam also excavated in 1881 some have appeared for sale over the years almost all from the Achaemenid period with three being from the Old Akkadian period and one from the Old Babylonian period 8 9 History edit nbsp Basse Mesopotamie Ur3 In a contemporary inscription of Naram Sin of Akkad c 2200 BC after a number of cities rebelled he deified himself mentioning Kutha Naram Sin the mighty king of Agade when the four quarters together revolted against him through the love which the goddess Astar showed him he was victorious in nine battles in one in 1 year and the kings whom they the rebels had raised against him he captured In view of the fact that he protected the foundations of his city from danger the citizens of his city requested from Astar in Eanna Enlil in Nippur Dagan in Tuttul Ninhursag in Kes Ea in Eridu Sin in Ur Samas in Sippar and Nergal in Kutha that Naram Sin be made the god of their city and they built within Agade a temple dedicated to him 10 A foundation tablet found in Nineveh records that the second ruler of the Ur III empire Shulgi built the E Meslam temple of Nergal at Kutha He is not yet deified so it was early in his reign Sulgi the mighty king of Ur and of the four quarters builder of E meslam House Warrior of the Netherworld temple of the god N ergal his lo rd in Kuth a 11 During his reign a large palace was built at Tummal Building materials came from as far away as Babylon Kutha and Adab 12 A ruler of Kutha early in the Old Babylonian period was Ilum nasir 13 Sumu la El a king of the 1st Babylonian Dynasty rebuilt the city walls of Kutha 14 The city was later defeated by Hammurabi of Babylon in the 39th year of his reign with his year name reading Year in which Hammu rabi the king with the great power given to him by An and Enlil smote the totality of Cutha and the land of Subartu 15 The 40th year name of Hammurabi mentions the Emeslam temple at Kutha 16 nbsp Incised stone plaque Cutha AN1933 1331 In the fragmentary Epic of Adad shuma usur a Kassite dynasty ruler c 1200 BC BM 34104 he states He made glad his face his dwelling the shrine of A full month the name he spoke his crescent He builds up the city street s with fill the beginning of the festival he The king came out of Borsippa and hea ded toward Cuthah He entered E mesl am in with the ground he constantly cov ers Cuthah your help O Nergal 17 In a related much damaged text BM 45684 Adad shuma usur states at night tim e I arrived the wall of Cuthah I spoke greeting to Emesl am 18 On the Neo Assyrian Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III 859 824 BC Kutha is mentioned on line 82 ie I marched to the great cities and made sacrifices in Babylon Borsippa and Cuthah and presented offerings to the great gods 19 The records of Neo Assyrian ruler Ashurbanipal state that in 651 BC Samas suma ukin captured Cuthah Samas suma ukin was the son of the Neo Assyrian king Esarhaddon and the elder brother of Esarhaddon s successor Ashurbanipal 20 An inscription of Neo Babylonian ruler Nebuchadnezzar II 605 562 BC found in a columnar form and as a prism at Babylon mentions Kutha I established every day 8 sheep as regular offerings for Nergal and Las the gods of the Emeslam and Cutha I provided abundantly for the offerings of the great gods I increased the regular offerings beyond the old offerings 21 Several governors are known from the time the city was under the control of Achaemenid Empire ruler Cyrus the Great during 539 530 BC They are Nergal tabni usur Nergal sar usur and Nabu kesir 22 According to the Diadochi Chronicle in the seventh year 7th year of seleucid ruler Alexander IV of Macedon 311 310 BC general Antigonus I Monophthalmus battled general Seleucus I Nicator after the latter revolted along with the temple administrator of Kutha He said thus to Seleu cus in the 7th year of Antigonus assigned appointed to Seleucus the General In the month o the administrator of the Emeslam temple in Cuthah rebelled Seleucus but he did not capture the palace i e the garrison In that month forty talents of silver of In the month of Ab because he did not accomplish the capture of citadel of Babylon Seleucus took flight and did not dam up Euphrates 23 In Religious Tradition editThe literary composition Legend of the King of Cuthah a fragmentary inscription of the Akkadian literary genre called naru written as if it were transcribed from a royal stele is in fact part of the Cuthean Legend of Naram Sin not to be read as history a copy of which found in the cuneiform library at Sultantepe north of Harran 24 According to the Tanakh Cuthah was one of the five Syrian and Mesopotamian cities from which Sargon II King of Assyria brought settlers to take the places of the exiled Israelites 2 Kings 17 24 30 II Kings relates that these settlers were attacked by lions and interpreting this to mean that their worship was not acceptable to the deity of the land they asked Sargon to send an Israelite priest exiled in Assyria to teach them which he did The result was a mixture of religions and peoples the latter being known as Cuthim in Hebrew and as Samaritans to the Greeks 25 Josephus places Cuthah which for him is the name of a river and of a district 26 in Persia and Neubauer 27 says that it is the name of a country near Corduene Ibn Sa d in his Kitab Tabaqat Al Kubra writes that the maternal grandfather of Abraham Karbana was the one who discovered the river Kutha 28 In The Last Pagans of Iraq Ibn Waḥshiyya and His Nabatean Agriculture Jaakko Hameen Anttila says One might also mention the rather surprising story traced back to Ali the first Imam of the Shiites where he is made to identify himself as one of the Nabateans from Lutha see Yaqut Mu jamIV 488 s v Kutha It goes without saying that the story is apocryphal but it shows that among the Shiites there were people ready to identify themselves with the Nabateans Thus it comes as no surprise that especially in the so called ghulatmovements extremist Shiites a lot of material surfaces that is derivable from Mesopotamian sources cf Hameen Anttila 2001 and the early Shiite strongholds were to a great extent in the area inhabited by Nabateans Yaqut also notes the identification of Kutha as the original home Shiah Muslims believe to be the Abrahamic roots of Islam Yet the identification of Kutha and by extension also Abraham with the Nabateans is remarkable 29 Al Tabari says in The History of Prophets and Kings that the prophet Ibrahim was the son of his mother Nuba or Anmatala who was the daughter of Karita who dug the river Kutha named after his father Kutha 30 See also editCities of the Ancient Near East Short chronology timelineReferences edit Jacobsen Thorkild and Moran William L Mesopotamian Gods and Pantheons Toward the Image of Tammuz and Other Essays on Mesopotamian History and Culture Cambridge MA and London England Harvard University Press pp 16 38 1970 a b 1 Edgar James Banks Cutha The Biclical World sol 22 no 1 pp 61 64 1903 Thorkild Jacobsen The Waters of Ur Toward the Image of Tammuz and Other Essays on Mesopotamian History and Culture Cambridge MA and London England Harvard University Press pp 231 244 1970 Rawlinson H C On the Inscriptions of Assyria and Babylonia The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland vol 12 pp 401 XXI 1850 2 Ford James Nathan Another Look at Mandaic Incantation Bowl BM 91715 Journal of the Ancient Near Eastern Society 29 1 2002 3 Hormuzd Rassam Asshur and the Land of Nimrod Being an Account of the Discoveries Made in the Ancient Ruins of Nineveh Asshur Sepharvaim Calah etc Curts amp Jennings 1897 J E Reade Rassam s Excavations at Borsippa and Kutha 1879 82 Iraq vol 48 pp 105 116 1986 SCD 253 Artifact Entry 2017 Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative CDLI June 16 2017 https cdli ucla edu P500470 Jursa Michael Spatachamenidische Texte aus Kutha Revue d assyriologie et d archeologie orientale vol 97 no 1 pp 43 140 2003 Douglas R Frayne The Sargonic and Gutian Periods 2334 2113 University of Toronto Press 1993 ISBN 0 8020 0593 4 Frayne Douglas Sulgi E3 2 1 2 Ur III Period 2112 2004 BC Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 91 234 1997 Steinkeller Piotr Corvee Labor in Ur III Times From the 21st Century B C to the 21st Century A D Proceedings of the International Conference on Neo Sumerian Studies Held in Madrid 22 24 July 2010 edited by Steven J Garfinkle and Manuel Molina University Park USA Penn State University Press pp 347 424 2013 Rients de Boer Beginnings of Old Babylonian Babylon Sumu Abum and Sumu La El Journal of Cuneiform Studies vol 70 pp 53 86 2018 Year Names of Sumulael at CDLI Year Name 39 of Hammurabi at CDLI Matthew Rutz and Piotr Michalowski The Flooding of Esnunna the Fall of Mari Hammurabi s Deeds in Babylonian Literature and History Journal of Cuneiform Studies vol 68 pp 15 43 2016 Grayson Albert Kirk Adad shuma usur Epic Babylonian Historical Literary Texts Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 56 77 1975 Grayson Albert Kirk A Babylonian Historical Epic Fragment Babylonian Historical Literary Texts Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 93 98 1975 A Kirk Grayson Shalmaneser III 858 824 BC A 0 102 Assyrian Rulers of the Early First Millennium BC II 858 745 BC Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 5 179 1991 Grayson A K The Chronology of the Reign of Ashurbanipal vol 70 no 2 pp 227 245 1980 Da Riva Rocio Nebuchadnezzar II s Prism ES 7834 A New Edition Zeitschrift fur Assyriologie und vorderasiatische Archaologie vol 103 no 2 pp 196 229 2013 Dandamayev M A Neo Babylonian and Achaemenid State Administration in Mesopotamia Judah and the Judeans in the Persian Period edited by Oded Lipschits and Manfred Oeming University Park USA Penn State University Press pp 373 398 2006 Geller M J Babylonian Astronomical Diaries and Corrections of Diodorus Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London vol 53 no 1 pp 1 7 1990 O R Gurney The Sultantepe Tablets Continued IV The Cuthaean Legend of Naram Sin Anatolian Studies vol 5 pp 93 113 1955 Josephus Antiquities of the Jews ix 14 3 Josephus Antiquities of the Jews ix 14 1 3 Adolf Neubauer La Geographie du Talmud p 379 1968 Ibn Sa d Abraham the friend of God Kitab Tabaqat Al Kubra الطبقات الكبرى The Book of the Great Classes in Arabic Vol 1 قال نهر كوثي كراه كرنبا جد إبراهيم من قبل أمه وكان Hameen Anttila Jaakko 2006 The Last Pagans of Iraq Ibn Waḥshiyya and His Nabatean Agriculture p 35 ISBN 90 04 15010 2 William M Brinner 1989 The History of al Tabari Vol 2 Prophets and Patriarchs SUNY series in Near Eastern Studies pp 127 128 ISBN 08 87 06313 6 Further reading editJulian Reade Hormuzd Rassam and His Discoveries Iraq vol 55 pp 39 62 1963External links editDigital Images of Tablets from Kutha Cuthah Temple Hymns at ETCSL Objects from Kutha British Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kutha amp oldid 1217954864, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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