ANCIENT-BABYLONIAN TEMPLE RECORDS IN COLUMBIA EDITED WITH THE UNIVERSITY TRANSCRIPTIONS LIBRARY INTO NEO-ASSYRIAN CHARACTERS BY WILLIAM R. ARNOLD S U B M I T T E D IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF T H E R E Q U I R E M E N T S FOR T H E D E G R E E OF DOCTOR OF IN FACULTY OF COLUMBIA NEW PHILOSOPHY THE PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITY YORK 1896 492.19 Ar6a INTRODUCTION The inscriptions here published are part of a collection of between four and five hundred cuneiform documents purchased for Columbia College in the summer of 1895 from Mr. Daniel Z. Noorian of New York City, to whom they were consigned directly from Bagdad. The greater part, baked clay tablets, were reported to have been originally procured from the ruins at Tello. They vary in size from 2 cm. to 25 cm. square, and are for the most part in an excellent state of preservation. The collection includes about twenty casetablets and some fifteen tablets which, after being inscribed but evidently before baking, were curiously flattened generally by means of a seal, in some cases another instrument, rolled over their entire surface. The twenty tablets here published were selected almost at random and may be considered fair specimens, of the collection. Tello is the Arabic name for the site of one of the oldest centres of Babylonian civilization. The later Babylonian name of the city was Lagash, but originally, at the time to which our inscriptions belong, it was probably called Shirpurla. * Tello is situated on the left bank of the Shat-el-Hai, a * See, on t h e other hand, Winckler (jGeschichte Babyloniens und Assyriens p. 24 and note on p. 326) who t h i n k s t h a t Shirpurla was t h e name of some unknown city in Northern Babylonia from which inscriptions "bearing the name were t r a n s p o r t e d to Tello, IV canal connecting the Euphrates and the Tigris, and is about three days' journey from Bosrah. The modern name is generally supposed to be a popular abbreviation of Tell-el-Luhi i. e. mound of tablets. The ruins lay buried beneath a series of mounds .extending from N. W. to S. E. a distance of over four miles. They were first visited in 1854 by Hormuzd Rassam,but the first to undertake any systematic explorations on the site was M. de Sarzec, French consul at Bagdad. In 1877 M. de Sarzec began a series of tireless excavations and remarkable discoveries which have been continued, with intervals, to the present time. The results of his labors are still being published under the auspices of the French Government by M. Leon Heuzey under the title "Decouvertes en Chaldee par M. E. de Sarzec." In his last expedition, in 1894, M. de Sarzec came upon an immense deposit of cuneiform documents which evidently constituted the temple archives of Skirpurla. It contained over 30,000 clay tablets, consisting of inventories of temple properties, accounts of temple receipts and expenditures, records of gifts, etc.* The reputed origin of our tablets is confirmed by their contents and general character when compared with other documents from Tello. The tablets are all ruled, a peculiarity of Southern-Babylonian epigraphy, and resemble very closely the heliographic reproductions on PI. 41 of the "Decouvertes." Nos. 3-7 of the present publication seem to be records of particular gifts from one or more individuals. Nos. 1, 2, 8-20 are very probably general accounts of receipts or expenses of the temple establishment with record of apportionments * See Comptes Rendus des Seances de VAcademie des Inscriptions et BellesLettres. Vols. 22 and 23 Index; and articles "by Professor H, V. Hllprecht In The Sunday-School Times} Vol. 38, Nos, 1, 3, 7, V among the priest-companies of the several cults. No. 2 runs as follows :β€” 120 measures of wine of royal quality 60 measures of wheat-flour 1 measure of olive-oil to the god ID-N1-IK-MARTU (Ramman) total for 30 days month sacred to Bau (Tashritu) No. 14 is especially interesting: it appears to be an account in detail of feed consumed in keeping the flocks of the temple, or perhaps those of the pat est, the priest-king:β€” Ob. 1. 5. 8s sheep at 1% measures 6. 104 sheep at 1 measure 7. expended 2 JS measures 1. 13. 88 sheep at iT/z measures 14. p8 sheep at 1 measure 15. expended 230 measures Rev. 1. 6. 42 lambs at % measure 7. expended 21 measures 8. 10 head of cattle at 8 measures 9. is head of cattle at 6 measures 10. expended 1 jo measures 11. balance {?) 5 measures 12. month of SHU-ZIR (Du'ttzu) 13. total for so days In Obverse, 1. 3, 23s is evidently a clerical error for 22s. Note the Semitism SHA in 1. 4 when compared with 1. 8. The names of deities found on these tablets are for the most part those of the familiar gods and goddesses of Shirpurla:B AU, the sun-god BAR or BABBAR, E N L I L , ENZU, NINGIRSU, NIN-MAR(?)-KI (No. 5 Rev. 1. 1), NANA, NINA (No. 7), VI DUNGI (No. 8, Ob. 1. 5; No. 9, Rev., 1. 10), T U R Z I (No, 17 Rev., edge; No. 20 Ob., 1. 3), besides others less familiar.* Of equal interest and significance are the personal names :URBAU son of MA-AN-SE-NA (No. 7, Rev., 1. 1), UR-NINA (No. 7, Rev., 1,2), LU-KA-NI son of UR-BAU (No. 5, Rev., 1. 2; cf. No. 16, Ob., 1. 4), UR-NINGIRSU. The name Shirpurla does not occur on any of these inscriptions, and the wordpatesi occurs only once (No. 8, Rev., 1. 13). The type of the characters on these tablets would assign them to a period subsequent to Gtcdea, yet the fact that the Gudea inscriptions are engraved on very hard, diorite stone while these are on clay may account for the more archaic linear forms on the former. Certainly these tablets date from a time not later than 2700 B. C , and they may be much older. Nos. 3-7 bear the date of the year in which they were written, but altogether too indefinitely to be of any service to us, "the year in which such an event took place/'β€”an event of which we know nothing. No. 7 has the month in addition. Nos. 1, 2, 8-20 have only the month, which would indicate that these are specimens of immense systematic accounts regularly kept. The month is inscribed either on the lower edge at the extreme end of the reverse side or preferably by itself on the left edge; so that it could be plainly seen when the tablets were piled one upon another. The tablets are all small. A glance at the measurements given at the head of each will show that the representations magnify them a good deal, and that no attempt has been made to render the length and breadth in due proportion. Nos. 1-7 are very nearly square; the rest are oblong. When these facts are * Cf. Davis : The Gods ofShirpurla in the Proceedings of the American Oriental Society, April, 1895. VII considered one will readily see that the characters are by tio means so distinct or so widely separated from each other on the originals as they are in the copies. To reproduce the tablets exactly would have been useless. Even where they are in perfect condition the signs are badly run into each other, in some cases one character completely overlapping another, and one line completely coinciding with another. No little amount of comparison and study, occasionally some conjecture, has been necessary in merely copying the original. The ruling of the tablets is another source of constant confusion in identifying signs, often rendering it impossible to determine the presence or absence of horizontal wedges; especially is this so at the beginning of lines. The transcriptions into Neo-Assyrian characters, which will be found immediately opposite the originals, are based largely on paleographic considerations. I have made no systematic attempt to read the inscriptions. Nevertheless, as anyone acquainted with this sort of work will readily apprehend, I have often been obliged to assume a reading, and in some few cases identifications of signs have been based on reading alone, no approximately similar signs having been found in any published inscriptions. On the other hand, in all cases where the signs are plainly visible I have rigidly refrained from emendations and insertions where they seem to be required. The usual paleographic difficulties have been encountered. K U and SHU can often be distinguished only by the context. So too, perhaps, ZI and GI, although I have in general transcribed the signs with only two double wedges in the lower row GI, and those with more than two ZI. If this be correct, the frequent writing of S H E with only two wedges in the VIII lower row and various numbers in the upper is remarkable. UR, owing to the ruling, is sometimes hard to distinguish from K U with one enclosed horizontal stroke, often from MA, and sometimes from BA. In this connection it may be observed that the sign for K U with three enclosed horizontal strokes (Amiaud, No. 287) is not in these inscriptions the exclusive form for "flour." It occurs in that signification with two and with four strokes. KI and DI are hard to distinguish, and in a crowded passage even K I and NA are easily confused. Occasionally it has been difficult to determine whether a group of wedges constitutes one sign or two, and this will doubtless prove to have been the source of some errors. I would further call attention to the fact that the scribes seem to have known no distinction between double and oblique wedges. The Sign-list at the back of the book will be seen to contain many new and interesting forms. The whole is what the late M. Amiaud would have called an "Essai." I do not doubt that it will be shown to> contain numerous errors. Such things must be done so or not at all. I shall be well satisfied if I have placed before competent Assyriologists some new material for their study, and some few additional data which, in their hands, shall contribute to the better understanding of Ancient-Babylonian life and history. It only remains for me here to express my sense of lasting obligation to my teacher and friend, Professor R. J. H. Gottheil, whose valuable assistance in the preparation of this work is only one of many kindnesses extending over several years of special study. During these years his library, time, and scholarship have been most generously at my disposal. W. R. A. Columbia University, April 23, 1896. The author was born in Beyrouth, Syria, on Nov. 14, 1872. He received his elementary education at various private schools in the East. In September 1888 he entered the pre- paratory school of the Ohio Weslevan University at Delaware, Ohio, and in 1889 the college, from which he was graduated with the degree of A. B. in 1892. During the years 1892- 1895 he held a Prize Scholarship in the Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York, graduating from the regular course in Divinity in 1895. At the present time he is Fellow in Semitic Languages in Columbia University.