The texts presented here were discovered by a German expedition to Ashur, capital of the Assyrians, more than half a century ago. They have remained in Istanbul, largely uncatalogued and unedited, until this publication, the first in a series to be prepared under the auspices of the Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia Project. The inscriptions speak of the building by the kings of palaces and temples in various parts of Assyria, of the god who were invoked to bless the enterprises, and at times of military campaigns and victories. Transliterations, commentaries, notes, and hand-copies for the indiviaul texts are provided along with the requisite indexes to make the volume a basic research tool for assyriologists.
Veysel Donbaz Livres



Middle Assyrian texts from Assur at the Eski Şark Eserleri Müzesi in Istanbul
- 74pages
- 3 heures de lecture
The volume contains autographs of 131 Middle Assyrian documents dating from the time of Enlil-nērārī (1327–1318), Adad-nērārī (1305–1274), Salmanassar I (1273–1244), Tukultī-Ninurta I (1243–1207), Aššur-rēšī-iši (1132–1115 BC), and Tiglat-Pileser (1114–1076). They are presented together with an extensive catalog on the content of the texts and indexes of geographical names, names of gods and persons, as well as a list of the annual eponyms mentioned in the documents. The texts are mainly administrative documents related to the palace. They concern deliveries of and to the palace or contracts for work and services. As responsible officials, Aplīja, major domus (abarakku rabi’u) of the royal palace in Assur, and Samnuḫa-ašarēd, also major domus, played an essential role. Aplīja, Samnuḫa-ašarēd and other high officials are mentioned in other archives as well. Therefore, the documents published here complete our information on the royal palace administration.