The Cuneiform Tablet Collection of Florida State University

CDLJ 2009:2

Cuneiform Digital Library Journal (ISSN: 1540-8779)

Published on 2009-07-19

© Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative

Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License except when noted otherwise and in the case of artifact images which follow the CDLI terms of use.

Keywords 
Edgar Banks, Florida State, text edition, Ur III, administrative texts

 

§1. Tablet Catalogue
§1.1.
In late 1922 Edgar J. Banks sold twenty-five cuneiform tablets to the Florida State College for Women (now Florida State University) in Tallahassee. In early 2007, one of us (Kathleen Clark, Assistant Professor of Mathematics Education) rediscovered them in the Special Collections department of Robert Manning Strozier Library and arranged for them to be photographed and published.[1]

 

§1.2. The tablets are numbered according to Banks’ original inventory. The proveniences of seventeen of the tablets could be identified on internal grounds; all but one matched Bank’s given proveniences. Proveniences as given only by Banks, without independent confirmation, are marked with an asterisk in the table below (§6). The collection contains nineteen tablets from the Ur III period, mostly from Umma; five from the Old Babylonian period, including two inscriptions of Sînkāšid; and one illegible neo-Babylonian tablet.

 

§1.3. As well as the Banks collection, FSU owns a large round cuneiform tablet with about 30 lines of damaged first-millennium script (unnumbered, not edited here) and a drill-cut cylinder seal of grey semi-precious stone from the neo-Assyrian period, showing a hero clutching two four-legged animals, perhaps ibex.

 

§1.4. In the following, we first present the dated tablets from Umma in chronological order, then the undated tablets from the same city, followed by the remaining Ur III tablets. The Old Babylonian tablets are given at the end.

 

§2. Dated Ur III tablets from Umma
§2.1.
FSU 3: List of beer rations for high officials and priests (Šulgi year 44, ca. 2051 BC) This is a very unusual record, documenting the distribution of ‘good beer’ for a variety of priests and priestesses in Umma, who were perhaps attached to the temple of the city-god Šara.

 
obv. 1. 1(u)? sila3 kaš sag10 ˹ensi2˺ 10 ? sila of good beer for the city governor
  2. 3(diš) 1/2(diš) sila3 lu2-mah 3 1/2 sila for the lumah priest
  3. 2(diš) 2/3(diš) sila3 5(diš) gin2 egi-zi 2 2/3 sila, 5 shekels for the egizi priestess
  4. 1(diš) 1/2(diš) sila3 lagar3 gal 1 1/2 sila for the senior lagar priest
  5. 1(diš) 1/2(diš) sila3 ˹lukur?˺ gal 1 1/2 sila for the senior lukur priestess
  6. 1(diš) ˹sila3˺ ama-lal3-abzu 1 sila for Ama-lal-abzu
  7. [...] x e2 x (rest of obverse untranslatable)
  8. x [...] x x [...]  
  9. x x [...]  
  10. x [...]  
  11. 6(diš) [...]  
  12. [...]  
rev. 1. [...] x [...]  
  2. 3(geš2)? 3(u) 4(diš) x [...] 3.34 [...]
  3. x 1(u) 5(diš) x [...] ... 15 [...]
  4. [...] x [...]
  5. [...] x [...]  
  6. [mu] ˹lu˺-lu-bu-umki [a-ra2]
1(u) la1(diš)-kam si-mu-ru-um ba-[hul]
Year: Lullubum [for the] 9th time 
(and) Simurrum were [destroyed].

 

§2.1.1. obv. 1: One would expect the correct writing 1(ban2) rather than the notationally problematic 1(u) sila3 for the same quantity here.
obv. 2-5: On the cultic personnel of the god Šara at Umma see most conveniently Sallaberger and Huber Vulliet (2005: 638).
obv. 3: The egizi priestess is known at Umma in the Ur III period, attached to Iškur, Šulpae, Ninsumun, Ninurra, Šara, Nergal, as well as the egizi mah ‘high egizi-priestess’. She is also attested at Ur and Girsu (Steinkeller 2005).
obv. 4: The writing lagar3 (SAL+HUB2) for the lagar priest is to our knowledge otherwise unattested in Ur III; even lagar(1) is unusual, occurring just half a dozen times in tablets from Umma. We know of no instances of the lagar gal ‘chief lagar’.
obv. 6: Ama-lal3-abzu (also spelled Ama-lal3-ab-zu) is the name of a high ranking cultic official from Umma (e.g., AnOr 1, 226 obv. 4; BPOA 2, 2378 obv. 4).
rev. 2-3: These appear to be totals of the commodities distributed on the obverse.
rev. 6: The year name is uniquely (badly) written: it appears that the scribe added the city name of Simurrum as an afterthought, though it most properly occurs as the first word of the phrase.

 

§2.2. FSU 20: Sealed list of cattle and fodder (Amar-Suen year 3 = 2044 BC)
This document records calves and donkey foals destined to become plow animals and the grain they are fed.

 

obv. 1. 3(diš) amar [gu4 PN] 3 [bull] calves [for PN]
  2. 1(diš) amar gu4 [PN] 1 bull calf [for PN]
  3. 1(diš) amar anše x [...] 1 donkey foal ... [...].
  4. 1(diš) amar ˹anše˺ lu2-dutu 1 donkey foal for Lu-Utu.
  5. še-bi 1(aš) 3(barig) gur Its grain is 1 gur, 3 barig.
  6. ša3-gal amar gu4 apin Fodder for the calves of plow oxen
  7. ki-su7 gu-la a-ša3 la2-mah-˹ta˺ from the great threshing floor at Lamah field.
rev. 1. ˹ki˺ ARAD2-ta [...] From ARAD-[…]
  2. kišib3 i7-pa-e3 Sealed by Ipae.
  3. iti dli9-si4 Month of (the goddess) Lisi.
  4. mu gu-za ku3 den-lil2-la2 ba-dim2 Year: the holy throne of Enlil was built
     
seal 1. i7-pa-e3 Ipae,
  2. dumu lugal-ušur3 son of Lugal-ušur,
  3. nu-banda3 gu4 dšara2 oxen supervisor of the god Šara.

 

§2.2.1. obv. 1-4: Each group of calves seems to have been assigned to a different official, although their names are mostly no longer preserved.
obv. 6: The phrase ša3-gal amar gu4 apin ‘fodder for the calves of plow oxen’ is not, to our knowledge, found frequently in Ur III administrative records (NATN 451 obv. 10, Nippur, Šu-Suen 1; TMH NF 1-2, 316 obv. 3, Nippur, Šu-Suen 4; Zinbun 18, 100, 4 rev. i 11', Girsu, Ibbi-Suen 2; Nisaba 6, 9 obv. iii 18, Umma, undated).
obv. 7: This locus is a well-attested Umma toponym.
rev. 1: ARAD2(-mu) was in charge of the Umma granary from at least Šulgi year 33 (Dahl 2007, 115-121).
rev. 2 and seal (cf. MVN 14, p. 13 no. 35): Ipae son of Lugal-ušur is very commonly attested as an oxen supervisor in Ur III Umma, from at least Šulgi year 46 (OrSP 47-49, 236) to the year Šu-Suen 6 (CBCY 3, NBC 349).

 

§2.3. FSU 19: Sealed note about reed bundles (Amar-Suen year 5 = 2042 BC)
Reeds were a staple crop of Umma, on the edge of the southern Iraqi marshes. They were used as building materials and to weave a variety of mats, baskets, and other everyday objects.

 

obv. 1. [...] sa ˹gi˺ [n] reed bundles,
  2. ˹ti˺-um sa ... bundles,
  3. ki-su7 e-še3 for the threshing floor by the levee,
  4. ki šeš-kal-la-ta from Šeškala.
rev. 1. kišib3 dingir-ra Sealed by Dingira.
  2. [iti] še-sag-ku5 Harvest [month,]
  3. mu en-˹unu6-gal˺-an-˹na˺ [ba-hun] year: En-unugal-ana [was installed]

  (as the en priest of Inanna in Uruk).

 

 

§2.3.1. obv. 2: ti-um as a designation of reed bundles is found exclusively at Umma in the Ur III period, but its meaning is unknown to us.
rev. 2: The spelling of this month name with sag instead of sag11 is found predominantly at Umma and also at Puzriš-Dagan. Seal: the seal legend is illegible to us.

 

§2.4. FSU 18: Sealed receipt of wood from bala labor (Amar-Suen year 7 = 2040 BC)
This tablet documents the delivery of large tree-trunks cut as part of the annual bala-labor service for the city of Umma.

 

obv. 1. 4(u) gu2 gešma-nu 40 bundles of willow wood,
  2. 2(diš) gešasalx(A.TU.NIR) 6(diš) kuš3-ta 2 poplar trunks, 6 cubits each:
  3. ki a-du-ta! From Adu ?.
  4. [kišib3] ˹ensi2˺-ka [Sealed by] the city governor.
rev. 1. ša3 bala-a Within the bala labor.
      (blank space)  
  2. [mu] hu-uh2-nu-riki ba-hul Year: Huhnuri was destroyed.
seal i 1. [damar-suen] [Amar-Suen,]
  2. nita kal-ga mighty male,
  3. lugal uri5ki-ma king of Ur,
  4. lugal an-ub-da limmu-ba king of the four quarters:
seal ii 1. [ur-dli9-si4] [Ur-Lisi]
  2. ˹ensi2˺ city governor
  3. ˹umma˺[ki] of Umma
  4. [ARAD2-zu] [your servant.]

 

§2.4.1. obv. 2: The spelling A.TU.NIR for asalx ‘poplar’ occurs almost exclusively on tablets from Ur III Umma. Here the trunks are said to be some 3 meters long.
obv. 3: Adu also delivers goods within the bala in BPOA 2, 2510 (Umma, Šu-Suen 2) and KM 89299 (Umma, Šu-Suen 5).

 

 

§2.5. FSU 23: Sealed account of agricultural labor (Amar-Suen year 8 = 2039 BC)
At Umma the management of state-owned land was contracted to teams of twenty or so agricultural laborers headed by an overseer. Running accounts were kept which recorded work owed and work performed year by year (Englund 1991). This tablet records weeding activities in three well known fields in the Umma district.

 

obv. 1. 5(geš’u) 6(geš2) 1(u) 5(diš) sar gešdih3 56.15 sar: cutting thorn weed at 15 sar (a day).
      ku5 1(u) 5(diš) sar-ta  
  2. a2-bi u4 3(geš2) 4(u) 5(diš)-kam Its work is 3.45 days,
  3. a-ša3 nin10-nu-du3 in the Ninnudu Field.
  4. 3(geš’u) 7(geš2) 3(u) sar u2 ku5 1(u) 5(diš) sar-ta 37.30 sar: cutting grass at 15 sar (a day).
  5. ˹a2˺-bi u4 2(geš2) 3(u)-kam Its work is 2.30 days,
  6. [a]-ša3 du6-ku3-ge ˹u3˺ a-ša3 pu2-si4-mu in the Field of the Holy Mound and Pusimu Field.
  7. [n] 5(geš2) sar u2GIR2gunû 1(u) 2(diš) sar-ta [n+] 5.00 sar: (cutting down) thorn bushes at 12 sar (a day).
  8. [a2]-bi u4 4(u) n-˹kam˺ Its [work] is 40+n days.
  9. [...] ˹sar˺ u2 [...] [...] sar [...]-grass
  (traces)  
rev. (start of reverse blank)  
  1. [kišib3 inim]-dšara2 [Sealed by Inim]-Šara.
  (several lines blank)  
  2. mu en eriduki ba-hun Year: the en(-priestess) of Eridu was installed.
seal 1. inim-dšara2 Inim-Šara,
  2. dumu ur-nigargar son of Ur-nigar.

 

 

§2.5.1. obv. 1-3: It has often been overlooked that agricultural labor accounts provide key evidence for the increasing sexagesimalization of the number system in the Ur III period. Normally, land measures were recorded in non-sexagesimal metrology: the value given here, for instance, 3375 sar, would conventionally be written as 1(bur3) 2(eše3) 5(iku) 1(ubu) GAN2 25 sar in the Ur III period. But here it is written in sexagesimal multiples of sar (though not yet in sexagesimal place value notation). In lines 2-3 that area is divided by a conventionalized daily work rate (here 15 sar a day) to find the official number of work-days the weeding should have taken (here 3.45 days). The simplest explanation for this nonstandard, sexagesimal notation is therefore that the calculation was performed sexagesimally as well. Where the work rate is in iku per day (as in FSU 22 below), the areas are given in standard metrology. See Robson (2008: 79-80) for more details of this argument. The earliest Ur III tablets to use this sexagesimalized notation for areas in the context of a division are, to our knowledge: ITT 3, 5225 (Šulgi 44, Girsu), SAT 2, 441 (Šulgi 45, Umma), BRM 3, 116, and TSU 57 (both Šulgi 46, Umma).
obv. 7: For the reading of u2GIR2gunû as ad2 ‘boxthorn’ or kiši17 ‘false carob?,’ see Molina and Such-Gutiérrez (2004: 9-10).
rev. 1 and seal: Both Lu-Šara, son of Iribare, and InimŠara, son of Ur-nigar, wrote and sealed records of agricultural labor for the city of Umma in this year. However, Lu-Šara was assigned to the Igi-emahše and Ninurra fields (BIN 5, 261, SACT 2, 128, UTI 3, 1690, UTI 4, 2850), while Inim-Šara is attested several times at the Ninnudu field, one of those mentioned here (e.g., UTI 3, 2094, UTI 4, 2996). Another Inim-Šara, son of Daga, also wrote and sealed agricultural labor tablets in the same year, but his seal is always described as namša3- tam ‘office of the provincial administrator’ (e.g., Syracuse 75, UTI 4, 2514) (see Dahl 2007: 64-65).

 

§2.6. FSU 17: Sealed summary of regular offerings over fourteen months (Šu-Suen years 3-4 = 2035-4 BC)
The statues of the gods were offered regular meals of grain and meat (which were then redistributed to temple personnel). This tablet summarizes the grain disbursed to Šara, the city-god of Umma, and Šulgi, the deified former king, since the last annual accounting.

 

obv. 1. 1(barig) 1(ban2) 5(diš) sila3 še 1 barig, 1 ban, 5 sila of grain:
  2. sa2-du11 iti ˹diri˺-ta? regular offerings of the extra month.
  3. mu ˹si-ma˺-num2 ki ba-˹hul˺ Year: Simanum was destroyed.
  4. 2(u) 4(aš) 1(ban2) 4(diš) 1/2(diš) sila3 ˹še˺ gur 24 gur, 1 ban, 4 1/2 sila of grain:
  5. sa2-du11 iti 1(u) 3(diš)-kam regular offerings of 13 months.
rev. 1. mu bad3 mar-tu ba-du3 Year: the wall against the Amorites was built.
  2. [sa2]-˹du11˺ [d]šara2 u3 ˹sa2-du11˺ dšul-gi-ra Regular offerings for the god Šara 
and regular offerings for the god Šulgi.
  3. ˹ki gu-du-du˺-ta From Gududu.
  4. kišib3 1(aš)-a ab-[ba]-gi-˹na˺ First seal of Abbagina.
seal 1. ab-ba-gi-[na] Abbagina,
  2. dumu inim-d[DN] son of Inim-[...],
  3. x x x ...

    

§2.6.1. obv. 2-3: The inclusion of grain from the final, intercalary month of the previous year suggests that the previous annual account had been prepared before the intercalation was declared.
obv. 4: The full year’s total implies a monthly disbursement nearly eight times greater than in the previous, intercalary month, suggesting that there was not the full complement of cultic priests and ceremonies in the extra month.
obv. 5: The calculation in this line recognizes that the annual account for Šu-Suen year 3 did not include the extra month, so that it has to be accounted for as part of Šu-Suen 4.
rev. 3: Gududu also delivers grain for regular offerings in this year (SAT 3, 1493 and 1513), Šu-Suen year 7 (MVN 21, 315), and Ibbi-Suen year 3 (e.g., MVN 15, 34, 39). The quantities vary from 2 barig as a month’s supply for the god Enki (MVN 13, 865) to over 45 gur of seed grain and 78 gur of normal grain for a whole year for an unspecified number of deities (SAT 3, 1513). He (or another Gududu) is also the sender of grain in FSU 21, below.
rev. 4: The expression kišib3 1(aš)-a ‘first seal’ also occurs on other tablets from Umma, e.g., SAT 2, 901. Abbagina is frequently attested as a scribe’s name in Ur III Umma (and elsewhere).
seal: The sealing otherwise unknown to us. It is in need of collation.

 

§2.7. FSU 4: Disbursement of garments (Šu-Suen year 5 = 2033 BC)
This rather difficult, damaged tablet records the disbursement of garments to prisoners from named individuals. Most extant lists of clothing rations record the weight of each length of cloth. This record, however, does not.

 

obv. 1. 1(diš) tug2 ˹u2˺ [...] 1 u garment [...] .
  2. hi-li2 [dumu ...] Hili, [son of ...]
  3. ki ur-[...] from Ur-[...].
  4. 1(diš) tug2 u2 ˹ge6˺ [...] 1 black u garment [...]
  5. a-du-du [dumu ...] Adudu, [son of ...]
  6. ki ur-sag10-[ta] from Ursag
  7. 1(diš) tug2 ˹u2˺ [...] 1 u garment [...]
  8. dšara2-x-[...] Šara-[...]
rev. 1. dumu ˹igi?˺-ni-da-[a] ad-KID son of Igi-nida’a the basket weaver,
  2. ki ARAD2 ugula-ta from ARAD the overseer.
  3. 1(diš) tug2 u2 ge6 kal x-banda3 da dumu ša3-ku3- ge dumu ba-ba6-za-ni nig2-ba 1 fine black u garment for ...banda, son of Šakuge, son of Baba-zani, ration.
  4. 1(diš) tug2 u2 kal giri3-˹ni˺-i3-dab5 1 fine u garment, Girini-idab,
  5. dumu a-hu-ni son of Ahuni:
  6. <geš>tukul-e dab5-ba-a under armed guard.
  7. tug2-ba ša3 en-nu-[ga2] Clothing ration in the prison
  8. u3 NI [...] and ... [...]
  9. mu us2-sa [dšu-dsuen lugal] bad3 mar-[tu mudu3] Year after [(the year): Šu-Suen the king built] the wall [against the] Amorites.

 

 

§2.7.1. obv. 1: The exact identity of the u garment is unknown, although relatively commonly attested at Umma (Waetzoldt 1972: 7, n. 61).
obv. 2: The name Hili (or perhaps Duni, reading du10- ni) is found on a few other administrative tablets from Ur III Umma and Girsu, for instance MVN 18, 605, in receipt of grain in Amar-Suen year 9.
rev. 3: This line is not entirely clear; although Šakuge is a well-known name in the administration of Umma, the name Baba-zani is not otherwise attested.
rev. 6: This expression, literally ‘seized by weapons’, is commonly found in relation to prisoners (e.g., MVN 7, 275; Waetzoldt 1972: 79, 88).
rev. 7: The restoration of the word ennuga here is based on Umma parallels such as BIN 5, 307, a record of a royal grain ration, še-ba lugal ša3 en-nu-ga2, in Amar-Suen year 2, and SAT 3, 1502, a grain ration ša3 en-nu-ga2 in Šu-Suen year 4. Civil (1993) gives a brief discussion of Sumerian terms for prison, including ennun/ga.

 

§2.8. FSU 21: Sealed receipt of fodder for sacrificial sheep (Ibbi-Suen year 3 = 2026 BC)
Animals were sacrificed daily to Šara, the city god of Umma. Although this tablet does not say so explicitly, this was probably also the fate of the sheep recorded here, given the recipient’s known connection to the temple household.

 

obv. 1. 1(barig) 5(ban2) še 1 barig, 5 ban of grain:
  2. ša3-gal udu niga fodder for fattened sheep
  3. ki gu-du-du-ta from Gududu.
  4. kišib ur-dma-mi Sealed by Ur Mami.
  5. giri3 gi-na Under the authority of Gina.
rev. 1. iti [...] Month [...]
      (sealing)  
  2. mu si-mu-ru-[umki] ba-hul Year: Simurrum was destroyed.
seal 1. ur-dma-mi Ur-Mami,
  2. dumu inim-dšara2 son of Inim-Šara,
  3. kurušda dšara2-[ka] the animal fattener [of ] the god Šara.

 

 

§2.8.1. obv. 3-4: UTI 6, 3832 records Gududu giving Ur-Mami at least 2 gur 1 barig of grain for fattening animals, measured gur zabar-ta ‘by the bronze gur-vessel’, in month 9 (dLisi) of the same year. Ur-Mami’s seal describes his father as kurušda dšara2 ‘animal fattener of the god Šara’. That is, he husbanded the livestock destined for the god’s table. Whether Ur-Mami inherited his father’s title is not known, but in AnOr 1, 279 (undated) he is documented as receiving some 7 gur 3 barig for regular sa2-du11 offerings to Šara.
obv. 5: Gina is not, to our knowledge, a well-known authorizing official at Umma, although he is attested on an undated transfer of grain from that city’s governor to the city governor of Marad (SAT 3, 2114 obv. 4).
Seal: It is certain from the visible remains on the tablet that this is the same seal as that which appears, e.g., on UTI 6, 3832.

 

§3. Undatable Ur III tablets from Umma
§3.1.
FSU 13: A list of goods for scribes (date illegible)
Most of the obverse of this tablet is too damaged to read, but the reverse suggests that it is a list of items handed out to personnel, at least some of whom were scribes. The fact that the distributed items were weighed suggests that they were not grain rations but rather metals or wool.

 

obv. 1. x x x ˹da˺ x
  2. [...] x am3 x nu x [...] …
  3. [...] ˹šeš˺-kal-˹la˺ [...] Šeškala
  4. [...] x x x [...] …
  5. [...] x x [...] …
  6. [...] x x [...] …
rev 1. 5(diš) ˹gin2 ša3-ku3-ge˺ dumu dšara2-ga2 5 shekels for Šakuge, son of Šaraga.
  2. 2(diš) gin2 ur-d˹šara2˺ dumu šeš-˹kal-la˺ 2 shekels for Ur-Šara, son of Šeškala.
  3. 1(diš) gin2 en x x 1 shekel for En... [son of ...].
      (1 line blank)  
  4. ˹mu˺ x x x Year: ...
  5. x  
  6. x x x x  

 

 

§3.1.1. rev. 1: The restoration of the name Šakuge here is based on some seven Umma parallels from the period Amar-Suen 7 to Šu-Suen 4, four of which are sealed by ša3-ku3-ge dumu dšara2-ga2 (e.g., UTI 3, 1741 and MVN 16, 1359).
rev. 2: ur-dšara2 dumu šeš-kal-la is also known as a scribe at Umma; for instance he sealed MVN 21, 213, an account of workmen, in Amar-Suen year 5.

 

§3.2. FSU 1: Delivery of sheep and goats (date missing)
This tablet summarizes the delivery of various sheep and goats recorded by at least two different scribes (the beginning and end of the document are missing), but most of the livestock noted by Giri-Šara-idab have since died.

 

obv. 1. [n] 1(u) 7(diš) ˹u8˺ 1(u) [kir11] [n+] 17 ewes, 10 [female lambs],
  2. 2(u) 1(diš) udu nita2 1(u) sila4 ˹ga˺ 21 rams, 10 suckling male lambs,
  3. 1(u) 3(diš) ud5 13 nanny goats,
  4. 1(diš) maš2 nita2 1 billy goat,
  5. 1(diš) munus2-gar3 DU 1 female kid …:
  6. mu-DU delivered;
  7. gub-ba-am3 they are available.
  8. 1(diš) udu nita2 1 ram,
  9. ˹7(diš)˺ munus2-gar3 7 female kids:
  10. kišib3 dšara-a-mu-DU sealed by Šara-amu-DU.
  11. ˹8(diš) u8˺ 6(diš) udu nita2 8 ewes, 6 rams,
rev. 1. 3(diš) ud5 3 nanny goats:
  2. kišib3 giri3-dšara2-i3-dab5 sealed by Giri-Šara-idab.
  3. 2(u) 4(diš) u8 3(diš) kir11 aš-ur4 24 ewes, 3 female lambs, plucked once,
  4. ˹7(diš)˺ udu nita2 6(diš) sila4 aš-ur4 7 rams, 6 male lambs, plucked once,
  5. 3(diš) ud5 3 nanny goats:
  6. ri-ri-ga kišib3 nam-ša3-tam giri3-dšara2-i3-dab5 carcasses, sealed by the administration, Giri-Šara-idab.
      (1 line blank)  
  7. ˹ŠU+LAGAB˺ 1(geš2) 3(u) 5(diš) u8 1(u) 3(diš) ˹kir11˺ Total 1.35 ewes, 13 female lambs.
  8. [ŠU+LAGAB] ˹2(u)˺ 8(diš) udu nita2 1(u) sila4 [Total] 28 rams, 10 male lambs.
  9. [ŠU+LAGAB 1(u)] ˹6(diš)˺ ud5 8(diš) munus2- ˹gar3˺ [Total] 16 nanny goats, 8 female kids.
  10. [ŠU+LAGAB 1(diš)] maš2 nita2 [Total 1] billy goat.
  (rest of reverse missing) [...]
l.e. 1. [...] tu […] born.

 

 

§3.2.1. obv. 5: the meaning of DU in this line is unclear to us.
obv. 10: The name dšara2-a-mu-DU is recorded several times at Umma, but mostly as someone who delivers grain (e.g., MVN 10, 180, Ibbi-Suen year 3) and never in the context of cattle. However, one dšara2-a-mu is attested as a kurušda ‘animal fattener’ at Umma in UTI 3, 1872 and UTI 6, 3695 (both Šulgi year 35).
rev. 2, 6: Giri-Šara-idab also receives sheep and goats in AUCT 3, 476, Šu-Suen year 5, from Puzriš-Dagan.

 

§3.3. FSU 22: Sealed account of agricultural labor (date missing)
Like FSU 23, above, this tablet records an agricultural labor team’s maintenance work on fields in which crops are growing. It calculates the theoretical labor expended on the basis of standardized workrates, distinguishing between regular team members (erin2) and hired labor (lu2 hun-ga2). The partially preserved toponym and overseer’s names to help identify its provenience as Umma, where almost all such accounts originate.

 

obv. 1. [...] x x [...] ...
  2. [1(bur3) 2(eše3) GAN2 geš a-ra2] 3(diš) 1(eše3) GAN2-ta [1 bur, 2 eše of harrowing], 3 [times], at 1 eše (a day):
  3. [a2 erin2-na-bi] u4 4(u) 5(diš) [its workers’ work is] 45 days.
  4. [2(eše3) GAN2 geš a]-˹ra2˺ 3(diš) 1(eše3) GAN2-ta [2 eše of harrowing], 3 times, at 1 eše (a day):
  5. [a2] ˹erin2˺-[na-bi] ˹u4˺ 1(u) 8(diš) [its] workers’ [work is] 18 days.
  6. [1(eše3)] GAN2 [ge˺ a]-˹ra2˺ 4(diš) 1(eše3) GAN2-ta [1 eše of harrowing], 4 times, at 1 eše (a day):
  7. ˹a2˺ erin2-˹na-bi˺ u4 1(u) 2(diš) its workers work is 12 days.
  8. a2 geš ur3-ra Work of harrowing.
  9. 4(geš2) sar gi zix(SIG7)-a 2(u) sar-ta 4.00 sar of picking reeds, at 20 sar (a day):
  10. a2-bi u4 1(u) 2(diš) its work is 12 days.
  11. 4(u) 5(diš) sar gi zix(SIG7)-a 1(u) 5(diš) sar-ta 45 sar of picking reeds, at 15 sar (a day):
  12. a2-bi ˹u4˺ 3(diš) its work is 3 days.
  13. a2 lu2 hun-ga2 Work of hired men.
  14. 8(geš2) 4(u) sar gi ku5-ra2 2(u) sar-ta 8.40 sar of cutting reeds, at 20 sar (a day):
  15. a2-bi u4 2(u) 6(diš) its work is 26 days.
  16. 3(geš2) 1(u) 2(diš) sar al 4(diš) sar-ta 3.12 sar of hoeing, at 4 sar (a day):
rev. 1. a2-˹bi˺ u4 4(u) 8(diš) its work is 48 sar a day.
  2. [1(geš2) 6(diš)] ˹sar˺ al 3(diš) sar-ta [1.06] sar of hoeing at 3 sar (a day):
  3. [a2-bi] ˹u4˺ 2(u) 2(diš) [its work is] 22 days.
  4. [2(geš2) 3(u) sar ...] x 5(diš) sar-ta [2.30 sar of ...] at 5 sar (a day):
  5. ˹a2˺-[bi] ˹u4˺ 3(u) [its] work is 30 days.
  6. ˹giri3˺ [...]-la? nu-banda3 gu4 Under the authority of [...]-la, the oxen supervisor.
      (blank space)  
  7. [a-ša3-ge] kin ak Doing [field] labor
  8. [a-ša3 la2]-tur [in the La]-tur [field].
  9. [ugula ur?]-˹geš?gigir nu˺-[banda3] gu4 [Overseer Ur]-gigir, the oxen supervisor.
  10. [kišib3] lugal-[e2-mah-e] [Sealed by] Lugal-[emahe.]
  11. [iti] ˹RI˺ [Month] RI,
  12. [mu ...]ki ba-[x] [Year: …] was [...].
seal 1. [lugal]-˹e2-mah˺-e [Lugal]-emah-e,
  2. [dub]-sar scribe,
  3. [dumu] ˹lugal˺-ku3-˹ga˺-[ni] [son of ] Lugal-kugani.

 

§3.3.1. Obv. 9, 11. On the reading SIG7 = zix, see Molina and Such-Gútierrez (2004, 4-5), who show that it is an Umma variant of zi2, to cut or uproot.

 

§3.4. FSU 12: List of sheep and goats (undated)
This fragmentary tablet assigns livestock (as rations?) to senior members of the Umma administration.

 

obv. 1. ˹1(diš)?˺ udu lu2-d[x] gudu4 d[...] 1 sheep: Lu [x], the gudu priest of the god [...]
  2. 1(diš) udu da-ri2-[ša?] 1 sheep: Dariša ( ?)
  3. 1(diš) udu a-kal-la x 1 sheep: Akala …
  4. 1(diš) ˹udu˺ ma-an-ba? sagix(SILA3.GAB) 1 sheep: Manba the cup bearer
  5. 1(diš) ˹maš2˺ er2-dingir 1 goat: Er-dingir
  6. 3(diš) ˹udu˺ x x 3 sheep: …
  7. x [...] ...
  8. sukkal-mah the chief minister.
rev. 1. 1(diš) [...] 1 [...]
  2. 1(diš) x [...] 1 [...]
  3. 1(diš) x x-dsuen 1 ...-Suen
  4. 1(u) 4(diš) udu 4(diš) maš2 x x 14 sheep, 4 goats ...
  5. 1(u) 2(diš) x x x x 12 ...
  6. 1(diš) ˹udu˺ ka-a-dx 1 sheep: Ka ...
  7. 1(diš) ˹udu?˺ x A AN x [...] 1 sheep: ... [...]
  8. i3-du8 the door-keeper.
l.e. 1. ˹ŠU+LAGAB˺ 3(u) 5(diš) Total: 35.

 

§3.4.1.obv. 1: Only two names beginning with lu2 are recorded as gudu priests in Ur III Umma; and since Lu-Utu and Lu-Šara are both known to have received sheep (MVN 16, 683; NYPL 49), either of them could be meant here.
obv. 2: The name Dariša is restored here on the basis of several attestations at Girsu and Umma.
obv. 4: The name Manba the cupbearer is also attested in Rochester 108 and MVN 15, 78, both from Umma, in Šu-Suen years 2-3.
obv. 5: Er-dingir is a commonly occurring administrator’s name in Ur III Umma.

 

§4. Ur III tablets from Girsu, Puzriš-Dagan, and elsewhere
§4.1.
FSU 2: Note about grain (undated, but probably Šulgi year 37 = 2058 BC)
This undated, unsigned note records over 100,000 liters of grain entering a store room. The erased numerals on the reverse suggest it was written in the process of drawing up a more formal record of account. Identical quantities of grain are mentioned in BIN 5, 113, a grain account of one Ur-saga from Puzriš-Dagan (Šulgi year 37).

 

obv. 1. 5(u) 7(aš) še gur lugal numun 57 royal gur of seed grain,
  2. 5(geš2) 5(u) 5(aš) 3(barig) gur 5.55 gur, 3 barig:
  3. e2 ˹kišib3-ba˺-še3 to the sealed warehouse.
      (rest of obverse blank)  
rev. 1. 7(diš) 5(diš) 7 , 5 (and traces of other numbers)

 

 

§4.1.1. Obv. 1: The sign numun seems to have been written over an erasure, as an afterthought; the word order is unusual. BIN 5, 113 obv. 7, rev. 4 read: 5(u) 7(aš) še numun gur … e2-ki-bi šu ba-ti ‘E-kibi received 57 gur of seed grain’ (and three further amounts).
obv. 2-3: BIN 5, 113
obv. 5-6 read: 5(geš2) 5(u) 5(aš) 3(barig) // še gur e2 kišib3-ba-še3 ba-an-ku4, ‘5.55 gur, 3 barig of grain were entered into the sealed warehouse.’
rev. 1: These numbers are presumably the remains of calculations made in the process of drawing up this record.

 

§4.2. FSU 10: Delivery of dead sheep and goats (Šulgi year 42 = 2053 BC)
This tablet contains a brief record of livestock that were dead on arrival at their destination (or that died shortly thereafter). Living animals from the same herd would have been accounted for on a separate tablet.

 

obv. 1. 2(diš) maš2 2 goats,
  2. maš2 < u2>šim-ma pastured goats.
  3. 2(diš) u8 gukkal 2 fat-tailed ewes
  4. ba-ug7 died.
rev. 1. giri3 dnin-gir2-su-ka-˹i3-sa6˺ Under the authority of Ningirsuka-isa
  2. zi-˹ga˺ they were removed.
  3. iti še-il2-la Month of Carrying Grain
  4. mu ša-aš-ru-umki ba-hul Year: Šašrum was destroyed.

 

§4.2.1. Obv. 2: maš2 < u2>-šim-ma ‘pastured goats’ are attested on other tablets from Girsu, always as offerings to Ningišzida (DAS 50, Ibbi-Suen 3; ITT 3, 5027], Šu-Suen 1; MVN 6, 142; and TCTI 2, 2815, both undated).
rev. 1-4: The name Ningirsu-isa is quite well attested at Girsu. However, a man with this name takes responsibility for dead livestock in only four other tablets, all from late in the reign of Šulgi, which are currently assigned to a variety of proveniences: KM 89012 (Girsu?, Šulgi 40); KM 89273 (no provenience, Šulgi 42/Amar- Suen 6); KM 89324 (Girsu, Šulgi 42/Amar-Suen 6); Nebraska 12 (Puzriš-Dagan, Šulgi 43). Given that the month name on this tablet was only ever used at Girsu, it would be reasonable to reassign those tablets to the same city too.
rev. 4: This year name was used by Šulgi (year 42) and by his successor Amar-Suen (year 6). Given the dates of KM 89012 and Nebraska 12 mentioned above, the earlier year is the most likely here.

 

§4.3. FSU 9: Receipt of sheep and goats (Amar-Suen year 1 = 2046 BC)
This tablet, from the state livestock collection center at Puzriš-Dagan, documents the birth of lambs and kids to animals that were under the center’s administration, and hands them to a named individual for rearing.

 

obv. 1. 1(u) 5(diš) sila4 ga 15 unweaned male lambs,
  2. 2(diš) kir11 ga 2 unweaned female lambs,
  3. 4(diš) maš2 ga 4 unweaned male kids,
  4. 1(diš) munus2-gar3 ga? 1 unweaned ? female kid
  5. u3-tu-da have been born.
rev. 1. u4 2(u) 4(diš)-kam 24th day.
  2. dšul-gi-a-a-mu Šulgi-ayamu
  3. i3-dab5 received (them).
  4. iti še-KIN-ku5 Harvest Month
  5. mu damar-dsuen lugal Year: Amar Suen became king.
l.e. 1. 2(u) 2(diš) 22

 

§4.3.1. Obv. 5: The phrase u3-tu-da was used almost exclusively at Puzriš-Dagan.
rev. 2: The name Šulgi-ayamu is very well attested at Puzriš-Dagan, receiving and sending livestock, and very rarely elsewhere.
left edge: This number represents the total number of animals accounted for.

 

§4.4. FSU 5: List of sheep and goats for sacrifice (Amar-Suen year 3 = 2044 BC)
This tablet allocates differing numbers of animals for sacrifice to (the statues of ) several major deities, male and female, in the god Iškur’s temple, as well as to the goddess Allatum.

 

obv. 1. 5(diš) udu an 5 sheep for the god An
  2. 5(diš) udu diškur 5 sheep for the god Iškur
  3. 2(diš) maš2 den-ki 2 billy goats for the god Enki
  4. 3(diš) udu den-lil2 3 sheep for the god Enlil
  5. [n] udu dnin-lil2 [n] sheep for the goddess Ninlil
  6. [n udu] dnin-hur-sag [n ovids] for the goddess Ninhursag:
  7. ˹siskur2 ki˺ diškur offerings at the place of the god Iškur.
  8. 2(diš) sila4 dal-la-tum 2 lambs for Allatum,
  9. a-ra2 2(diš)-kam for the second time.
  10. en-dnanše-ki-ag2 sagi maškim En-Nanše-kiag, the cup-bearer, officer
  11. ˹ša3 e2 PU3.ŠA-iš-dda-gan˺ from in the temple of Puzriš-Dagan.
rev. 1. 1(diš) sila4 d[en-lil2] 1 lamb for [Enlil]
  2. 1(diš) sila4 [hur]-˹sag-ga?˺-[lam]-˹ma?˺ 1 lamb for Hursag-galama ?
  3. 1(diš) sila4 dgu-za den-lil2-[la2] 1 lamb for Enlil’s throne
  4. 1(diš) sila4 […]-lil2 ? 1 lamb for […]
  5. x […] x x ... […] …
  6. x […] ˹maškim˺ … […] officer.
  7. x […] x ... […] …
  8. u4 1(u) […]-˹kam?˺ Day 10+[…]
  (1 line blank)  
  9. ŠU+LAGAB 2(u) ˹udu?˺ […] maš2 Total: 20 sheep ?, […] goats
  10. x PA x […] x x … […] …
  11. giri3 x […] a x x Under the authority of […] …
  12. ki in-ta-[e3-a-ta] From Inta[ea]
  13. ba-zi removed.
  14. [giri3 ...] [Under the authority of ...]
  15. ˹mu˺ dgu-za [mah den-lil2-la2] ba-dim2 Year: the [majestic] divine throne [of Enlil] was constructed.
l.e. 1. 2(u) 4(diš)? 24 ?

 

 

§4.4.1. Obv. 1-7: SACT 1, 172 obv. 1-12 records a substantially larger number of sacrificial animals for exactly the same set of deities on the occasion of a royal visit to Iškur’s temple in the first regnal year of Šu-Suen.
obv. 10: En-Nanše-kiag the cup-bearer is also attested as the maškim officer for sheep-offerings to deities in ten other accounts from Puzriš-Dagan, ranging in date from the last years of Šulgi to the end Amar-Suen’s reign (Šulgi 41: TCL 5, 6053, Šulgi 46: PDT 1, 136, Šulgi 47: TCL 2, 5501, Ontario 1, 40, Šulgi 48: MVN 15, 146. Amar-Suen 1: Akkadica 13, 28, OIP 121, 434, Trouvaille 3, Amar-Suen 3: OIP 121, 41, Amar-Suen 8: SAT 2, 1081). However, all are to deities in different temples.
obv. 11-rev. 3: The restoration of these lines is based on SACT 1, 172 obv. 18-21.
Left edge: This number seems to be less than the total number of animals recorded on the tablet, but is perhaps equal to the first total given in reverse 9.

 

§4.5. FSU 8: Record of withdrawals from a sealed warehouse (probably Šulgi 42 = 2053 BC)
Two substantial quantities of dairy products are apparently transferred from a sealed warehouse to the temples of Enlil and Ninlil in this rather damaged document. However, it can be restored on the basis of the parallel tablet MVN 15, 340, which was written in Puzriš-Dagan in Šulgi year 44.

 

obv. 1. 2(aš) ˹i3-nun gur˺ 2 gur of ghee
  2. 2(aš) [ga?-ar3 ? gur] 2 [gur of cream ( ?)]
  3. e2 d[en-lil2] the temple of [Enlil (and)]
  4. dnin-˹lil2˺-[la2-še3] Ninlil
  5. ba-an-kux(LIL) entered.
  6. kišib3 ur-den-lil2-la2 Sealed by Ur-Enlila.
rev. 1. e2 kišib2-ba-ta From the storeroom
  2. ba-zi removed.
      (blank space)  
  3. iti šu-eš5-ša Šu-eša Month.
  4. mu ša-aš-ruki ba-hul Year: Šašrum was destroyed.

 

§4.5.1. Rev. 4: the year name could equally be Šulgi 42 or Amar-Suen 6, but given the parallel text from Šulgi 44 the former is to be preferred.

 

§4.6. FSU 7: Receipt of sheep and goats (Šu-Suen year 1 = 2037 BC)
An administrator receives small numbers of sheep and goats destined for various senior officials.

 

obv. 1. 4(diš) gukkal 1(diš) udu a-[lum] 4 fat tailed sheep, 1 alum-sheep,
  2. 3(diš) maš2 gal 3 large billy goats:
  3. ir-du10-dmar-tu Irdu Martu.
  4. 1(diš) sila4 lugal-a2-zi-da šabra 1 lamb: Lugal-azida the administrator.
  5. 1(diš) sila4 ri-ib-hu-ti 1 lamb: Ribhuti.
  6. 1(diš) sila4 en-dinanna 1 lamb: the en priest(ess) of Inana.
rev. 1. u4 1(u) 2(diš)-[kam] On day 12
  2. mu-˹DU˺ delivered.
  3. in-ta-˹e3˺-[a] Intaea
  4. i3-dab5 received (them).
  5. giri3 dnanna-ma-ba dub-sar Under the authority of Nanna-maba, scribe.
  6. iti a2-ki-ti Month of the New Year Festival
  7. mu dšu-dsuen lugal Year: Šu-Suen became king.
l.e. 1. 1(u) 1(diš) 11

 

 

§4.6.1. obv. 3: The name Irdu-Martu is not otherwise attested to our knowledge, but its reading here is very clear. The seniority of the other individuals named here suggests that this person was also relatively high ranking.
obv. 4: Lugal-azida the šabra administrator is well attested at Ur III Puzriš-Dagan.
obv. 5: A sukkal official by the name of Ribhuti is documented in 5 other tablets from Puzriš-Dagan, written in the two years immediately preceding this one (Amar- Suen 8: BIN 3, 173, OIP 121, 553, OIP 121, 555; Amar-Suen 9: OIP 121, 572; undated: JAOS 108, 119 2).
obv. 6: This individual (or office) is always given by title at Puzriš-Dagan, not by the name of the holder (e.g., AUCT 2, 241).
rev. 3, 5: Both Intaea, the receiving officer, and Nannamaba the scribe are very well documented in these roles at Puzriš-Dagan (e.g., AnOr 7, 38, where they work together in Šu-Suen year 4).
left edge: This notation equals the total number of animals accounted for (cf. FSU 9 above).

 

§4.7. FSU 16: Damaged sealed letter order (undated)
This small sealed letter order is too damaged to identify its original message or provenience.The seal suggests that it was written during the reign of Šulgi.

 

obv. 1. da-da (To) Dada
  2. u3-na-du11 speak:
  3. 5(diš) ˹sa?˺ [...] 5 ... [...]
  4. d˹nanna-ki-ag2˺ Nanna-kiag
rev.     (apparently blank)  
seal i 1. dšul-gi Šulgi,
  2. nita kal-ga mighty male,
  3. lugal ˹uri5ki˺-ma king of Ur,
  4. lugal an-[ub-da limmu-ba] king of the four quarters,
seal ii      (illegible)  

 

 

§5. Old Babylonian tablets
§5.1.
FSU 6: Record of grain (Rīm-Sîn year 35 = 1788 BC)
A small, rather damaged tablet recording the disbursement of grain for various purposes.

 

obv. 1. […] (traces)
  2. x […] x  
  3. ša [...]-x-mu  
  4. a-hu x ir [d]˹suen˺-mu-˹ba˺-li2-iţ il-li-ku … (and) Sn-muballiţ went.
  5. 2(ban2) še-ga 6(diš) sila3 še ši-lu-tum ARAD2 tuum 2 ban of ... grain, 6 sila of … grain for the slave of ...
  6. 4(diš) sila3 šuku a ARAD2 lu-ur-da [...] 4 sila of rations for the slave of ... [...]
rev. 1. 1(barig) 2(ban2) 6(diš) 1/2(diš) sila3 [...] 1 barig, 2 ban, 6 1/2 sila [...]
      (1 line blank)  
  2. 2(barig) 2(ban2) 8(diš) 1/2(diš) sila3 2 barig, 2 ban, 8 1/2 sila
      (some lines blank)  
  3. [iti x]-ka u4 1(u) 8(diš)-kam [Month of ...], 18th day.
  4. [mu geštukul] 6(diš) us2-sa [Year: weapons], the 6th time after.

 

 

§5.2. FSU 11: Administrative note (Rīm-Sîn year 33 = 1790 BC)
Another badly damaged administrative record, apparently noting the distribution of grain to a single individual.

 

obv. 1. 8(diš) sila3 dlu2-il-[...] 8 sila, Lu-il...
      (rest of obverse fake)  
rev. (start of reverse fake)  
  1. 8(diš) sila3 ninda gur al na x 8 sila of bread ...
      (ruling)  
  2. iti NE-NE-gar u4 2(u) 9(diš) Month of the festival of Abu, day 29.
  3. mu ki-4(diš) geštukul i3-si-inki ba-dab5-ba Year: the fourth time after Isin was destroyed with weapons. ...

 

 

§5.3. FSU 14: Damaged administrative document (undated)
Almost nothing except the date survives of this small administrative record, but the morphology of the tablet and the style of hand-writing suggest that it was probably an early 18th century administrative record like FSU 6 and FSU 11.

 

obv.     (traces, badly abraded)  
rev. 1. iš? ti bi? za x iš-šu-u2  
      (single ruling)  
  2. iti gu4-si-sa2 Month of Plowing,
  3. u4 2(u) 5(diš)-˹kam˺ ba-zal-la the 25th day has passed.

 

§5.4. FSU 24: Royal inscription of Sîn-kāšid on a votive cone
This clay cone bears a well-known votive inscription for Sîn-kāšid, king of Uruk, commemorating the (re)building of the goddess Inanna’s temple Eanna at Uruk. The text, a variant of FSU 25, is published as RIME 4.4.1.3.

 

Cylindrical surface 
  1. d˹suen˺-[ka3-ši]-˹id˺ Sîn-kāšid, ,
  2. ˹nita2 kal˺-ga mighty male,
  3. lugal unuki-ga king of Uruk,
  4. lugal am-na-nu-um king of the Amnānum tribe,
  5. ˹u2˺-[a] provisioner
  6. ˹e2˺-an-[na] of the Eanna temple
  7. ˹e2˺-[gal] (this) palace
  8. nam-lugal-la-˹ka˺-[ni-še3] for his kingship
  9. mu-˹du3˺ he built.

 

§5.5. FSU 25: Royal inscription of Sîn-kāšid on a votive tablet
This tablet bears a well-known votive inscription for Sîn-kāšid, king of Uruk, commemorating the (re)building of the goddess Inanna’s temple Eanna at Uruk. The text, a variant of FSU 24, is published as RIME 4.4.1.4.

 

obv. 1. dsuen-ka3-ši-id Sîn-kāšid,
  2. nita2 kal-ga mighty male,
  3. lugal unuki-ga king of Uruk,
  4. lugal am-na-nu-um king of the Amnānum tribe,
  5. u2-a ˹e2-an-na˺ provisioner for the Eanna temple:
  6. u4 e2-an-na when the Eanna temple
rev. 1. mu-du3-˹a˺ he had built,
  2. ˹e2-gal˺ (this) palace
  3. ˹nam-lugal˺-la-˹ka˺-[ni-še3] for his kingship
  4. ˹mu-du3˺ he built.

 

 

§6. Catalogue of the FSU inscriptions

 

Tablet Date Contents Provenience Dimensions (mm)
FSU 1 Ur III, date missing Delivery of sheep and goats Umma 67* x 58 x 24
FSU 2 Ur III, undated Note about grain for interest Puzriš-Dagan? 62 x 47 x 24
FSU 3 Ur III, Šulgi 44 List of beer rations for high officials and priests Umma 67* x 48 x 24
FSU 4 Ur III, Šu-Suen 5 Disbursement of garments Umma* 54 x 44 x 19
FSU 5 Ur III, Amar-Suen 3 List of sheep and goats for sacrifice Puzriš-Dagan 59 x 39 x 20
FSU 6 OB, Rīm-Sîn 35/ [x]/18 Note about grain Larsa* 47 x 38 x 22
FSU 7 Ur III, Šu-Suen 1/ vi/12 Receipt of sheep and goats Puzriš-Dagan 38 x 34 x 19
FSU 8 Ur III, Šulgi 42/viii Record of withdrawals from warehouse Puzriš-Dagan 37 x 33 x 16
FSU 9 Ur III, Amar-Suen 1/xii/24 Receipt of sheep and goats Puzriš-Dagan 28 x 27 x 16
FSU 10 Ur III, Šulgi 42/xii Delivery of dead sheep and goats Girsu 32 x 27 x 16
FSU 11 OB, Rīm-Sîn 33/v/29 Administrative note Larsa* 30 x 35 x 16
FSU 12 Ur III, undated List of sheep and goats Umma 47* x 39 x 20
FSU 13 Ur III, date illegible List of rations for scribes Umma 44 x 39 x 23
FSU 14 OB, -/iv/25 (damaged) Larsa* 42 x 49 x 21
FSU 15 Neo-Babylonian (too illegible to edit) Babylon* 35 x 42 x 20
FSU 16 Ur III, undated Sealed letter order Umma* 48 x 45 x 20
FSU 17 Ur III, undated Sealed annual summary of regular offerings made in Šu-Suen 3–4 Umma* 49 x 48 x 19
FSU 18 Ur III, Amar-Suen 7 Sealed receipt of wood from bala labor Umma* 46 x 44 x 17
FSU 19 Ur III, Amar-Suen 5/i Sealed note about reed bundles Umma 41 x 41 x 17
FSU 20 Ur III, Amar-Suen 3/ix Sealed list of cattle and fodder Umma 46 x 41 x 15
FSU 21 Ur III, Ibbi-Suen 3 Sealed receipt of fodder Umma 40 x 47 x 20
FSU 22 Ur III, –/v Sealed account of agricultural labor Umma 80 x 55 x 24
FSU 23 Ur III, Amar-Suen 8 Sealed account of agricultural labor Umma 75 x 50 x 25
FSU 24 OB, reign of Sînkāšid Royal inscription, RIME 4.4.1.3 Uruk 70 x 33 (diam)
FSU 25 OB, reign of Sînkāšid Royal inscription, RIME 4.4.1.4 Uruk 80 x 65 x 23

 

 


Note

[1] We detail their purchase and rediscovery in Clark and Robson (2008). We are very grateful to Bob Englund, Steve Garfinkle, Denise Giannino, John Larson, Lucia Patrick, Plato L. Smith II, and Giesele Towels for their help in the research and writing of both articles. We are also indebted to our two anonymous CDLJ referees, whose careful and knowledgeable interventions produced numerous improvements to the reading of the tablets presented here.The reader is directed to the pages of the CDLI for an online photographic documentation of the inscriptions edited here.

 


Bibliography

 

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Clark, Kathleen & Robson, Eleanor
  2008 “Ancient accounting in the modern mathematics classroom,” BSHM Bulletin: Journal of the British Society for the History of Mathematics 23, 129–142.
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  2005 “The priestess égi-zi and related matters,” in Y. Sefati et al., eds., “An experienced scribe who neglects nothing”: Ancient Near Eastern Studies in Honor of Jacob Klein. Bethesda, MD: CDL Press, pp. 301-310.
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Version: 19 July 2009  

Cite this Article
Robson, Eleanor, and Kathleen Clark. 2009. “The Cuneiform Tablet Collection of Florida State University.” Cuneiform Digital Library Journal 2009 (2). https://cdli.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/articles/cdlj/2009-2.
Robson, Eleanor, & Clark, Kathleen. (2009). The Cuneiform Tablet Collection of Florida State University. Cuneiform Digital Library Journal, 2009(2). https://cdli.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/articles/cdlj/2009-2
Robson, Eleanor and Clark, Kathleen (2009) “The Cuneiform Tablet Collection of Florida State University,” Cuneiform Digital Library Journal, 2009(2). Available at: https://cdli.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/articles/cdlj/2009-2 (Accessed: March 19, 2024).
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	address = {Oxford; Berlin; Los Angeles},
	author = {Robson,  Eleanor and Clark,  Kathleen},
	journal = {Cuneiform Digital Library Journal},
	number = {2},
	year = {2009},
	publisher = {Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative},
	title = {The {Cuneiform} {Tablet} {Collection} of {Florida} {State} {University}},
	volume = {2009},
}

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