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Khafajah

Khafajah or Khafaje (Arabic: خفاجة), ancient Tutub, is an archaeological site in Diyala Governorate, Iraq 7 miles (11 km) east of Baghdad. Khafajah lies on the Diyala River, a tributary of the Tigris. Occupied from the Uruk and Jemdet Nasr periods through the end of the Old Babylonian Empire, it was under the control of the Akkadian Empire and then the Third Dynasty of Ur in the 3rd millennium BC. It then became part of the empire of the city-state of Eshnunna lying 12 miles (19 km) southwest of that city, about 5 miles (8.0 km) from the ancient city of Shaduppum, and near Tell Ishchali, both which Eshnunna also controlled. It then fell to Babylonia before falling into disuse.

Khafajah
Tutub
Shown within Iraq
Alternative nameKhafaje
LocationDiyala Governorate, Iraq
RegionMesopotamia
Coordinates33°21′16.83″N 44°33′20.71″E / 33.3546750°N 44.5557528°E / 33.3546750; 44.5557528
Typetell
History
PeriodsUruk, Jemdet Nasr, Early Dynastic, Akkadian, Isin-Larsa
Site notes
Excavation dates1930-1938
ArchaeologistsHenri Frankfort, Thorkild Jacobsen, Pinhas Delougaz

Archaeology edit

Khafajah was excavated for 7 seasons between 1930 and 1937 by an Oriental Institute of Chicago team led by Henri Frankfort with Thorkild Jacobsen, Conrad Preusser and Pinhas Delougaz.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8] For two seasons, in 1937 and 1938, the site was worked by a joint team of the American Schools of Oriental Research and the University of Pennsylvania led by Delougaz.[9] They worked primarily in the Nintu temple on mound A (along with the cemetery to the east and northeast of the temple) and with soundings on mound B.[10][11] Among the small finds at the site was an Akkadian period die.[12] and a terracotta incantation bowl written in "typical Jewish Babylonian Aramaic of the Sasanian period".[13]

 
Numerical tablet Khafaje OIM A21310

The site consists of four mounds, labeled A through D.

  • The main one, Mound A, extends back as far as the Uruk period and contained a large oval temple, a temple of the god Sin, and a small temple of Nintu (where a bearded cow statue was found), dating back to the Jemdet Nasr and Early Dynastic periods. An early radiocarbon date for the first level of the Sin Temple returned a corrected date of 4963 BC which is thought to be somewhat too early and possibly contaminated.[14] The mound was occupied through the Akkadian Empire period and then abandoned. Its name, Tutub, is not known before the Akkadian times. A number of vaulted tombs made out of plano-convex bricks were found.[15] About 70 Akkadian Period cuneiform tablets were found there. Most of the tablets were administrative in nature and were apportioned half to the Oriental Institute and half to the Baghdad Museum.[16][17] The other 3 mounds lie about half a mile west of Mound A.
  • The Babylonian Dur-Samsuiluna fort, built during the reign of ruler Samsu-iluna (c. 1750–1712 BC), was found on mound B with signs of Hurrian occupation also found there.[18] The fort is around 1000 square meters in area and is surrounded by a 4.7 meter wide fortification wall (with 6 meter wide buttresses every 10 to 12 meters) and was identified based on an inscribed cylinder found there. It is yet unclear if there was earlier occupation.
  • Only soundings were done on Mound C, which dates to the Uruk Period with a scattering of Old Babylonian and Kassite remains.
  • Mound D was surrounded by a 6.5 meter thick fortification wall (buttressed to 12 meters) with towers at inflection points and a fortified gate. A large number of baked clay mace heads were found in front of the gate. It is unknown if the mound was occupied before the Isin-Larsa period.[19] It contained a temple for the god Sin where the Old Babylonian archive tablets where found in two heaps. The temple had two building periods. The first being 45 by 75 meters and the later 28 by 45 meters within the earlier construction. It is not known if the newer construction replaced the earlier or was used simultaneously.[15][20]

History edit

 
Scarlet Ware pottery excavated in Khafajah. 2800-2600 BC, Early Dynastic II-III, Sumer. British Museum.[21]

Khafajah was occupied beginning in the Jemdet Nasr period and Early Dynastic Period. Naram-Sin of Akkad named his son Nabi-Ulmash governor of Tutub.[22] A fragment of a statue of the Akkadian ruler Manishtushu was found there.[23] Two stone bowl fragments with the name of the Akkadian ruler Rimush were found near the Temple of Sin.

"T[o] the god S[in], RI[mus], ki[ng of] the wo[rld], wh[en he conquered Elam and Parahsum], [dedicated (this bowl) from the booty of Elam]" [24]

Some point after the fall of the Akkadian Empire, "Awal, Kismar, Maskan-sarrum, the [la]nd of Esnunna, the [la]nd of Tutub, the [lan]d of Simudar, the [lan]d of Akkad" briefly came under the control of Puzur-Inshushinak of Elam as the first Third Dynasty ruler, Ur-Nammu, reports liberating those cities.[25] was also reported to captured by ruler Shulgi (c. 2094 – 2046 BC) of the Third Dynasty in his 30th year. It then came under the control of Eshnunna in the Isin-Larsa period. The fifth year name for Eshnunna ruler Nūraḫum was "Year Tutub was seized". This was considered a significant event as the following year was named "Year after the year Tutub was seized".

A later ruler of Eshnunna, Warassa, had the cryptic year name "Year Tutub was restored". Later, after Eshnunna was captured by Babylon, a fort was built at the site by Samsu-iluna in his 24th year of rule (c. 1726 BC) of the Old Babylonian Empire and named Dur-Samsuiluna, his year name saying "he erected Dur-Samsu-iluna in the land of Warum on the banks of the canal (called) 'Turran (Diyala)'".[26]

 
Votive wall plaque from Khafajah showing a wine drinking scene, Iraq, 2600-2370 BC. Iraq Museum

The history of Khafajah is known in somewhat more detail for a period of several decades as a result of the discovery of 112 clay tablets (one now lost) in a temple of Sin. The recovered portion of the temple archive dates from roughly 1820 BC to about 1780 BC (based on rulers named) when Tutub was for the most part controlled by Eshnunna. The tablets constitute part of an official archive and include mostly loan (generally of barley or silver) and legal documents. The temple also purchased slaves, including self slaves and sales of children, as a result of loan defaults.

"17 shekel of silver for the redemption of Hlagalija, his father, Zagagum has received (as a loan). (But) he had no silver (with which to repay the loan), (so) he so[ld] himself to the enum-priest. [He (the seller) has transferred] the bukannum. [break of about three lines] Witnesses."

The Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures (formerly the Oriental Institute of Chicago) holds 57 of the tablets with the remainder being in the Iraq Museum.[27][28][29]

Gallery edit

The Iraq Museum's Sumerian Gallery displays several Sumerian statues from the Temple of Sin and the Temple of Nintu (V and VI), including part of a hoard found at the Nintu Temple. Some finds are also housed at the Sulaymaniyah Museum.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ [1] The Diyala Project at the University of Chicago
  2. ^ [2] OIC 13. Tell Asmar and Khafaje: The First Season's Work in Eshnunna 1930/31, Henri Frankfort, Thorkild Jacobsen, and Conrad Preusser, 1932
  3. ^ [3] OIC 16. Tell Asmar, Khafaje and Khorsabad: Second Preliminary Report of the Iraq Expedition, Henri Frankfort, 1933
  4. ^ [4] OIC 17. Iraq Excavations of the Oriental Institute 1932/33: Third Preliminary Report of the Iraq Expedition, Henri Frankfort, 1934
  5. ^ [5] OIC 19. Oriental Institute Discoveries in Iraq, 1933/34: Fourth Preliminary Report of the Iraq Expedition, Henri Frankfort with a chapter by Thorkild Jacobsen, 1935
  6. ^ [6] OIC 20. Progress of the Work of the Oriental Institute in Iraq, 1934/35: Fifth Preliminary Report of the Iraq Expedition, Henri Frankfort, 1936
  7. ^ [7] OIP 44. Sculpture of the Third Millennium B.C. from Tell Asmar and Khafajah, Henri Frankfort, 1939
  8. ^ [8] OIP 53. The Temple Oval at Khafajah, Pinhas Delougaz, with a chapter by Thorkild Jacobsen. 1940 (also as ISBN 0-226-14234-5)
  9. ^ Speiser, E. A., "New Discoveries at Tepe Gawra and Khafaje", American Journal of Archaeology, vol. 41, no. 2, pp. 190–93, 1937
  10. ^ Speiser, E. A., "Progress of the Joint Expedition to Mesopotamia", Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, no. 70, pp. 3–10, 1938
  11. ^ Speiser, E. A., "Excavations in Northeastern Babylonia", Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, no. 67, pp. 2–6, 1937
  12. ^ Shafer, Glenn, "Marie-France Bru and Bernard Bru on Dice Games and Contracts", Statistical Science, vol. 33, no. 2, pp. 277–84, 2018
  13. ^ Cook, Edward M., "An Aramaic Incantation Bowl from Khafaje", Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, no. 285, pp. 79–81, 1992
  14. ^ [9]Lawn, Barbara, "University of Pennsylvania radiocarbon dates XV", Radiocarbon 15.2, pp. 367-381, 1973
  15. ^ a b [10]H.D. Hill, T. Jacobsen, P. Delougaz, .A. Holland, and A. McMahon, "Old Babylonian Public Buildings in the Diyala Region: Part 1 : Excavations at Ishchali, Part 2 : Khafajah Mounds B, C, and D", Oriental Institute Publication 98, Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, 1990 ISBN 0-918986-62-1
  16. ^ [11] I.J. Gelb, "Sargonic Texts from the Diyala Region", Materials for the Assyrian Dictionary, vol. 1, Chicago, 1961
  17. ^ Sommerfeld, W., "Die Texte der Akkade-Zeit. 1. Das Dijala-Gebiet: Tutub", (IMGULA 3). Münster: Rhema, 1999
  18. ^ Speiser, E. A., "Mesopotamian Miscellanea", Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, no. 68, pp. 7–13, 1937
  19. ^ Allen, Francis O., "The Oriental Institute Archaeological Report on the Near East: Fourth Quarter, 1935", The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures, vol. 52, no. 3, pp. 201–14, 1936
  20. ^ Hansen, Donald P. (2002). Leaving No Stones Unturned: Essays on the Ancient Near East and Egypt in Honor of Donald P. Hansen. Eisenbrauns. ISBN 978-1-57506-055-2.
  21. ^ "Khafajeh jar". British Museum.
  22. ^ Sharlach, Tonia, "Princely Employments in the Reign of Shulgi", Journal of Ancient Near Eastern History, vol. 9, no. 1, pp. 1-68, 2022
  23. ^ Thomas, Ariane, "The Akkadian Royal Image: On a Seated Statue of Manishtushu", Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und vorderasiatische Archäologie, vol. 105, no. 1-2, pp. 86-117, 2015
  24. ^ Frayne, D. R., "The Sargonic and Guti Period", RIME 2. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1993
  25. ^ Frayne, Douglas, "Ur-Nammu E3/2.1.1". Ur III Period (2112-2004 BC), Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1997, pp. 5-90, 1997
  26. ^ Ebeling,E. and Meissner,B., "Reallexikon der Assyriologie (RIA-2), Berlin, 1938
  27. ^ Harris Rivkah, "The Archive of the Sin Temple in Khafajah (Tutub)", Journal of Cuneiform Studies, vol. 9 no. 2, pp. 31-55, 1955
  28. ^ Harris, Rivkah, "The Archive of the Sin Temple in Khafajah (Tutub)(Continued)", Journal of Cuneiform Studies 9.3, pp. 59-88, 1955
  29. ^ Harris, Rivkah, "The Archive of the Sin Temple in Khafajah (Tutub)(Conclusion)", Journal of Cuneiform Studies 9.4, pp. 91-120, 1955

Further reading edit

  • Ch. P., "Les Fouilles de Khafaje", Revue Archéologique, vol. 11, pp. 90–90, 1938
  • Ch. P., "Fouilles de Khafaje", Revue Archéologique, vol. 13, pp. 262–262, 1939
  • [12] Pinhas Delougaz, "Pottery from the Diyala Region", Oriental Institute Publications 63, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1952, ISBN 0-226-14233-7
  • Edzard, D. O., "ITU-Tubki = Tutub", Archiv Für Orientforschung, vol. 20, pp. 152–152, 1963
  • Evans, J., "Thinking through assemblages: donors and the Sin Temple at Khafajah", in Ancient Near Eastern Temple Inventories in the Third and Second Millennia BCE: Integrating Archaeological, Textual, and Visual Sources (Münchener Abhandlungen zum Alten Orient 4), Gladbeck, pp. 13-26, 2019
  • Henrickson, Elizabeth F., "Functional Analysis of Elite Residences in the Late Early Dynastic of the Diyala Region: House D and the Walled Quarter at Khafajah and the Palaces at Tell Asmar", Mesopotamia Torino 17, pp. 5-33, 1982
  • [13] Pinhas Delougaz and Seton Lloyd with chapters by Henri Frankfort and Thorkild Jacobsen, "Pre-Sargonid Temples in the Diyala Region", Oriental Institute Publications 58, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1942
  • [14]Henri Frankfort, "Stratified Cylinder Seals from the Diyala Region", Oriental Institute Publications 72, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1955
  • [15]Henri Frankfort., "More Sculpture from the Diyala Region", Oriental Institute Publications 60, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1943
  • [16] Henri Frankfort, "Sculpture of the Third Millennium B.C. from Tell Asmar and Khafajah, Oriental Institute Publication 44, 1939
  • Henri Frankfort, "The Oldest Stone Statuette Ever Found in Western Asia, and Other Relics of Ancient Sumerian Culture of a Period Probably before 3000 B.c.: Earliest Temple at Khafaje", The Illustrated London News, pp. 524-526 and col. pl. I, September 26 1936
  • Henri Frankfort, "Two Iraq Sites over 5000 Years Old: Fresh Discoveries at Tell Asmar, Source Of First-known Sumerian Cult-Statues, and at Khafaje, Which Later Yielded Similar Types of Early Religious Sculpture", The Illustrated London News, pp. 726-32 and col. pl. I, September 14 1935
  • Henri Frankfort, ""A Moon-God's Temple with Art Relics of about 3000 BC : New Discoveries at Khafaje, Mesopotamia", The Illustrated London News, pp. 840-841, November 13 1937
  • Kempinski, A., "The Sin Temple at Khafaje and the En-Gedi Temple", Israel Exploration Journal, vol. 22, no. 1, pp. 10–15, 1972
  • Luce, Stephen B., and Elizabeth Pierce Blegen, "Archaeological News and Discussions", American Journal of Archaeology, vol. 43, no. 2, pp. 310–45, 1939
  • Margueron, Jean-Claude, "Notes d’archéologie et d’architecture orientales 16. De la strate à la couche architecturale : réexamen de la stratigraphie de Tuttub/KhafajéI - L’architecture civile", Syria, vol. 89, pp. 59–84, 2012
  • Meijer, Diederik J.W., "The Khafaje Sin Temple Sequence: Social Divisions at Work?", in Of Pots and Plans: Papers on the Archaeology and History of Mesopotamia and Syria Presented to David Oates in Honour of His 75th Birthday, ed. L. al-Gailani Werr, J.Curtis, H.Martin,A.McMahon, J.Oates and J.Reade. London: NABU, pp. 218–26, 2002
  • Quenet, Philippe, "Reconstructing the Temple Oval of Khafajah. Insight into the Emergence of Multi-Stepped Terraces", in The Old Babylonian Diyala: Research since the 1930s ans Prospects, 2018.
  • A. Skaist, "The Sale Contracts from Khafajah", in Bar-Ilan Studies in Assyriology (ed. J. Klein and A. Skaist; Ramat Gan), Bar-Ilan University Press, pp. 255–58 and 263, 1990

External links edit

  • Plaque decorated with three registers of relief, showing banquet scene with musicians - ca. 2600 B.C at Oriental Institute
  • Sumerian Temple Architecture in Early Mesopotamia. Rice University (OpenStax Project)

khafajah, khafaje, arabic, خفاجة, ancient, tutub, archaeological, site, diyala, governorate, iraq, miles, east, baghdad, lies, diyala, river, tributary, tigris, occupied, from, uruk, jemdet, nasr, periods, through, babylonian, empire, under, control, akkadian,. Khafajah or Khafaje Arabic خفاجة ancient Tutub is an archaeological site in Diyala Governorate Iraq 7 miles 11 km east of Baghdad Khafajah lies on the Diyala River a tributary of the Tigris Occupied from the Uruk and Jemdet Nasr periods through the end of the Old Babylonian Empire it was under the control of the Akkadian Empire and then the Third Dynasty of Ur in the 3rd millennium BC It then became part of the empire of the city state of Eshnunna lying 12 miles 19 km southwest of that city about 5 miles 8 0 km from the ancient city of Shaduppum and near Tell Ishchali both which Eshnunna also controlled It then fell to Babylonia before falling into disuse KhafajahTutub 1 Shown within IraqAlternative nameKhafajeLocationDiyala Governorate IraqRegionMesopotamiaCoordinates33 21 16 83 N 44 33 20 71 E 33 3546750 N 44 5557528 E 33 3546750 44 5557528TypetellHistoryPeriodsUruk Jemdet Nasr Early Dynastic Akkadian Isin LarsaSite notesExcavation dates1930 1938ArchaeologistsHenri Frankfort Thorkild Jacobsen Pinhas Delougaz Contents 1 Archaeology 2 History 3 Gallery 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksArchaeology editKhafajah was excavated for 7 seasons between 1930 and 1937 by an Oriental Institute of Chicago team led by Henri Frankfort with Thorkild Jacobsen Conrad Preusser and Pinhas Delougaz 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 For two seasons in 1937 and 1938 the site was worked by a joint team of the American Schools of Oriental Research and the University of Pennsylvania led by Delougaz 9 They worked primarily in the Nintu temple on mound A along with the cemetery to the east and northeast of the temple and with soundings on mound B 10 11 Among the small finds at the site was an Akkadian period die 12 and a terracotta incantation bowl written in typical Jewish Babylonian Aramaic of the Sasanian period 13 nbsp Numerical tablet Khafaje OIM A21310The site consists of four mounds labeled A through D The main one Mound A extends back as far as the Uruk period and contained a large oval temple a temple of the god Sin and a small temple of Nintu where a bearded cow statue was found dating back to the Jemdet Nasr and Early Dynastic periods An early radiocarbon date for the first level of the Sin Temple returned a corrected date of 4963 BC which is thought to be somewhat too early and possibly contaminated 14 The mound was occupied through the Akkadian Empire period and then abandoned Its name Tutub is not known before the Akkadian times A number of vaulted tombs made out of plano convex bricks were found 15 About 70 Akkadian Period cuneiform tablets were found there Most of the tablets were administrative in nature and were apportioned half to the Oriental Institute and half to the Baghdad Museum 16 17 The other 3 mounds lie about half a mile west of Mound A The Babylonian Dur Samsuiluna fort built during the reign of ruler Samsu iluna c 1750 1712 BC was found on mound B with signs of Hurrian occupation also found there 18 The fort is around 1000 square meters in area and is surrounded by a 4 7 meter wide fortification wall with 6 meter wide buttresses every 10 to 12 meters and was identified based on an inscribed cylinder found there It is yet unclear if there was earlier occupation Only soundings were done on Mound C which dates to the Uruk Period with a scattering of Old Babylonian and Kassite remains Mound D was surrounded by a 6 5 meter thick fortification wall buttressed to 12 meters with towers at inflection points and a fortified gate A large number of baked clay mace heads were found in front of the gate It is unknown if the mound was occupied before the Isin Larsa period 19 It contained a temple for the god Sin where the Old Babylonian archive tablets where found in two heaps The temple had two building periods The first being 45 by 75 meters and the later 28 by 45 meters within the earlier construction It is not known if the newer construction replaced the earlier or was used simultaneously 15 20 History edit nbsp Scarlet Ware pottery excavated in Khafajah 2800 2600 BC Early Dynastic II III Sumer British Museum 21 Khafajah was occupied beginning in the Jemdet Nasr period and Early Dynastic Period Naram Sin of Akkad named his son Nabi Ulmash governor of Tutub 22 A fragment of a statue of the Akkadian ruler Manishtushu was found there 23 Two stone bowl fragments with the name of the Akkadian ruler Rimush were found near the Temple of Sin T o the god S in RI mus ki ng of the wo rld wh en he conquered Elam and Parahsum dedicated this bowl from the booty of Elam 24 Some point after the fall of the Akkadian Empire Awal Kismar Maskan sarrum the la nd of Esnunna the la nd of Tutub the lan d of Simudar the lan d of Akkad briefly came under the control of Puzur Inshushinak of Elam as the first Third Dynasty ruler Ur Nammu reports liberating those cities 25 was also reported to captured by ruler Shulgi c 2094 2046 BC of the Third Dynasty in his 30th year It then came under the control of Eshnunna in the Isin Larsa period The fifth year name for Eshnunna ruler Nuraḫum was Year Tutub was seized This was considered a significant event as the following year was named Year after the year Tutub was seized A later ruler of Eshnunna Warassa had the cryptic year name Year Tutub was restored Later after Eshnunna was captured by Babylon a fort was built at the site by Samsu iluna in his 24th year of rule c 1726 BC of the Old Babylonian Empire and named Dur Samsuiluna his year name saying he erected Dur Samsu iluna in the land of Warum on the banks of the canal called Turran Diyala 26 nbsp Votive wall plaque from Khafajah showing a wine drinking scene Iraq 2600 2370 BC Iraq MuseumThe history of Khafajah is known in somewhat more detail for a period of several decades as a result of the discovery of 112 clay tablets one now lost in a temple of Sin The recovered portion of the temple archive dates from roughly 1820 BC to about 1780 BC based on rulers named when Tutub was for the most part controlled by Eshnunna The tablets constitute part of an official archive and include mostly loan generally of barley or silver and legal documents The temple also purchased slaves including self slaves and sales of children as a result of loan defaults 17 shekel of silver for the redemption of Hlagalija his father Zagagum has received as a loan But he had no silver with which to repay the loan so he so ld himself to the enum priest He the seller has transferred the bukannum break of about three lines Witnesses The Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures formerly the Oriental Institute of Chicago holds 57 of the tablets with the remainder being in the Iraq Museum 27 28 29 Gallery editThe Iraq Museum s Sumerian Gallery displays several Sumerian statues from the Temple of Sin and the Temple of Nintu V and VI including part of a hoard found at the Nintu Temple Some finds are also housed at the Sulaymaniyah Museum nbsp Female worshiper Sin Temple Khafajah Iraq Museum nbsp Female worshiper Sin Temple Khafajah Iraq Museum nbsp Statue from the Sin Temple Khafajah Iraq Museum nbsp Statue from the Temple of Sin at Khafajah Iraq Museum nbsp Statue from the Hoard of Nintu Temple V at Khafajah Iraq Museum nbsp Statue from the Hoard of Nintu Temple V at Khafajah Iraq Museum nbsp Male statue from Hoard in Nintu Temple V at Khafajah Iraq Museum nbsp Statue from Nintu Temple VI at Khafajah Iraq Museum nbsp Male statuette Nintu Temple VI Khafajah Iraq Museum nbsp Male statuette Sin Temple IX Khafajah Iraq Museum nbsp Male statuette Nintu Temple VI Khafajah Iraq Museum nbsp Limestone human head found at Khafajah Early Dynastic II c 2700 BC nbsp Cylinder seal found at Khafajah Jemdet Nasr period 3100 2900 BC nbsp Three Sumerian statues Early Dynastic Period 2900 2350 BC from Khafajah Iraq The Sulaymaniyah Museum nbsp Head of a Sumerian female from Khafajah excavated by the Oriental Institute Early Dynastic III c 2400 BC The Sulaymaniyah Museum nbsp Headless statue of a Sumerian man from Khafajah Early Dynastic Period 2900 2350 BC The Sulaymaniyah MuseumSee also editTell Ishchali Cities of the ancient Near EastReferences edit 1 The Diyala Project at the University of Chicago 2 OIC 13 Tell Asmar and Khafaje The First Season s Work in Eshnunna 1930 31 Henri Frankfort Thorkild Jacobsen and Conrad Preusser 1932 3 OIC 16 Tell Asmar Khafaje and Khorsabad Second Preliminary Report of the Iraq Expedition Henri Frankfort 1933 4 OIC 17 Iraq Excavations of the Oriental Institute 1932 33 Third Preliminary Report of the Iraq Expedition Henri Frankfort 1934 5 OIC 19 Oriental Institute Discoveries in Iraq 1933 34 Fourth Preliminary Report of the Iraq Expedition Henri Frankfort with a chapter by Thorkild Jacobsen 1935 6 OIC 20 Progress of the Work of the Oriental Institute in Iraq 1934 35 Fifth Preliminary Report of the Iraq Expedition Henri Frankfort 1936 7 OIP 44 Sculpture of the Third Millennium B C from Tell Asmar and Khafajah Henri Frankfort 1939 8 OIP 53 The Temple Oval at Khafajah Pinhas Delougaz with a chapter by Thorkild Jacobsen 1940 also as ISBN 0 226 14234 5 Speiser E A New Discoveries at Tepe Gawra and Khafaje American Journal of Archaeology vol 41 no 2 pp 190 93 1937 Speiser E A Progress of the Joint Expedition to Mesopotamia Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research no 70 pp 3 10 1938 Speiser E A Excavations in Northeastern Babylonia Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research no 67 pp 2 6 1937 Shafer Glenn Marie France Bru and Bernard Bru on Dice Games and Contracts Statistical Science vol 33 no 2 pp 277 84 2018 Cook Edward M An Aramaic Incantation Bowl from Khafaje Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research no 285 pp 79 81 1992 9 Lawn Barbara University of Pennsylvania radiocarbon dates XV Radiocarbon 15 2 pp 367 381 1973 a b 10 H D Hill T Jacobsen P Delougaz A Holland and A McMahon Old Babylonian Public Buildings in the Diyala Region Part 1 Excavations at Ishchali Part 2 Khafajah Mounds B C and D Oriental Institute Publication 98 Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago 1990 ISBN 0 918986 62 1 11 I J Gelb Sargonic Texts from the Diyala Region Materials for the Assyrian Dictionary vol 1 Chicago 1961 Sommerfeld W Die Texte der Akkade Zeit 1 Das Dijala Gebiet Tutub IMGULA 3 Munster Rhema 1999 Speiser E A Mesopotamian Miscellanea Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research no 68 pp 7 13 1937 Allen Francis O The Oriental Institute Archaeological Report on the Near East Fourth Quarter 1935 The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures vol 52 no 3 pp 201 14 1936 Hansen Donald P 2002 Leaving No Stones Unturned Essays on the Ancient Near East and Egypt in Honor of Donald P Hansen Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1 57506 055 2 Khafajeh jar British Museum Sharlach Tonia Princely Employments in the Reign of Shulgi Journal of Ancient Near Eastern History vol 9 no 1 pp 1 68 2022 Thomas Ariane The Akkadian Royal Image On a Seated Statue of Manishtushu Zeitschrift fur Assyriologie und vorderasiatische Archaologie vol 105 no 1 2 pp 86 117 2015 Frayne D R The Sargonic and Guti Period RIME 2 Toronto University of Toronto Press 1993 Frayne Douglas Ur Nammu E3 2 1 1 Ur III Period 2112 2004 BC Toronto University of Toronto Press 1997 pp 5 90 1997 Ebeling E and Meissner B Reallexikon der Assyriologie RIA 2 Berlin 1938 Harris Rivkah The Archive of the Sin Temple in Khafajah Tutub Journal of Cuneiform Studies vol 9 no 2 pp 31 55 1955 Harris Rivkah The Archive of the Sin Temple in Khafajah Tutub Continued Journal of Cuneiform Studies 9 3 pp 59 88 1955 Harris Rivkah The Archive of the Sin Temple in Khafajah Tutub Conclusion Journal of Cuneiform Studies 9 4 pp 91 120 1955Further reading editCh P Les Fouilles de Khafaje Revue Archeologique vol 11 pp 90 90 1938 Ch P Fouilles de Khafaje Revue Archeologique vol 13 pp 262 262 1939 12 Pinhas Delougaz Pottery from the Diyala Region Oriental Institute Publications 63 Chicago The University of Chicago Press 1952 ISBN 0 226 14233 7 Edzard D O ITU Tubki Tutub Archiv Fur Orientforschung vol 20 pp 152 152 1963 Evans J Thinking through assemblages donors and the Sin Temple at Khafajah in Ancient Near Eastern Temple Inventories in the Third and Second Millennia BCE Integrating Archaeological Textual and Visual Sources Munchener Abhandlungen zum Alten Orient 4 Gladbeck pp 13 26 2019 Henrickson Elizabeth F Functional Analysis of Elite Residences in the Late Early Dynastic of the Diyala Region House D and the Walled Quarter at Khafajah and the Palaces at Tell Asmar Mesopotamia Torino 17 pp 5 33 1982 13 Pinhas Delougaz and Seton Lloyd with chapters by Henri Frankfort and Thorkild Jacobsen Pre Sargonid Temples in the Diyala Region Oriental Institute Publications 58 Chicago The University of Chicago Press 1942 14 Henri Frankfort Stratified Cylinder Seals from the Diyala Region Oriental Institute Publications 72 Chicago The University of Chicago Press 1955 15 Henri Frankfort More Sculpture from the Diyala Region Oriental Institute Publications 60 Chicago The University of Chicago Press 1943 16 Henri Frankfort Sculpture of the Third Millennium B C from Tell Asmar and Khafajah Oriental Institute Publication 44 1939 Henri Frankfort The Oldest Stone Statuette Ever Found in Western Asia and Other Relics of Ancient Sumerian Culture of a Period Probably before 3000 B c Earliest Temple at Khafaje The Illustrated London News pp 524 526 and col pl I September 26 1936 Henri Frankfort Two Iraq Sites over 5000 Years Old Fresh Discoveries at Tell Asmar Source Of First known Sumerian Cult Statues and at Khafaje Which Later Yielded Similar Types of Early Religious Sculpture The Illustrated London News pp 726 32 and col pl I September 14 1935 Henri Frankfort A Moon God s Temple with Art Relics of about 3000 BC New Discoveries at Khafaje Mesopotamia The Illustrated London News pp 840 841 November 13 1937 Kempinski A The Sin Temple at Khafaje and the En Gedi Temple Israel Exploration Journal vol 22 no 1 pp 10 15 1972 Luce Stephen B and Elizabeth Pierce Blegen Archaeological News and Discussions American Journal of Archaeology vol 43 no 2 pp 310 45 1939 Margueron Jean Claude Notes d archeologie et d architecture orientales 16 De la strate a la couche architecturale reexamen de la stratigraphie de Tuttub KhafajeI L architecture civile Syria vol 89 pp 59 84 2012 Meijer Diederik J W The Khafaje Sin Temple Sequence Social Divisions at Work in Of Pots and Plans Papers on the Archaeology and History of Mesopotamia and Syria Presented to David Oates in Honour of His 75th Birthday ed L al Gailani Werr J Curtis H Martin A McMahon J Oates and J Reade London NABU pp 218 26 2002 Quenet Philippe Reconstructing the Temple Oval of Khafajah Insight into the Emergence of Multi Stepped Terraces in The Old Babylonian Diyala Research since the 1930s ans Prospects 2018 A Skaist The Sale Contracts from Khafajah in Bar Ilan Studies in Assyriology ed J Klein and A Skaist Ramat Gan Bar Ilan University Press pp 255 58 and 263 1990External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Khafajah Plaque decorated with three registers of relief showing banquet scene with musicians ca 2600 B C at Oriental Institute Sumerian Temple Architecture in Early Mesopotamia Rice University OpenStax Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khafajah amp oldid 1175042228, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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