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Cylinder Seals from Tell al Rimah

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 August 2014

Extract

This is a catalogue of the cylinder seals and jar sealings from the excavations at Tell al Rimah during the years 1964–1971. Theresa Carter is publishing a complete catalogue of the small finds, in which the few early stamp seals will be included. The seal impressions on the Middle Assyrian business economic archive published by H. W. F. Saggs and D. J. Wiseman in Iraq 30 (1968) will be published later in one group, as there are too many for this article.

The majority of the cylinder seals in the catalogue are representative of the main historical levels which were excavated; these are: (1) Old Babylonian from about the time of Šamši-Adad, Phase 3 in the Temple (Area A) and Level 6 in the Palace mound (Area C); (2) Mitannian, Phase 2 in the Temple, and Level 5 in the Palace mound, (house levels overlying the O.B. Palace); (3) Middle Assyrian, Phase 1 in the Temple and Levels 2–4 in the house levels of the Palace mound. There is a meagre Late Assyrian occupation on the Temple mound, on the Palace mound below, and Area D, but the only considerable structure was the shrine built on to the north side of the Ziggurat, from which most of the Late Assyrian seals came. The only seals from Area D came from a tomb of the Mitannian period.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The British Institute for the Study of Iraq 1975

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References

1 The inscribed Old Babylonian sealings are published by J. D. Hawkins in S. M. Dalley, J. D. Hawkins and C. B. F. Walker, Old Babylonian Texts from Tell al Rimah (forthcoming).

2 See the summary by Oates, D., Iraq 29 (1967), 71CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

3 For the palace see Oates, D., Iraq 34 (1972), 78 ffGoogle Scholar.

4 Oates, D., Iraq 30 (1968), 122Google Scholar

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7 Weitemeyer, M., Porada, E., Lampi, Paul, Some Aspects of the Hiring of Workers in the Sippar Region (Copenhagen, 1962), 110Google Scholar.

8 Hawkins, loc. cit. (note 1), no. 8.

9 Oates, D., Iraq 27 (1965), 74Google Scholar.

10 Porada, E., AASOR 24 (19441945), 12Google Scholar.

11 This information has been given by Mr. Henry Hodges of the Laboratory of the Institute of Archaeology, who examined the faience seals in the Rimah collection.

12 Porada, E., Tchoga Zanbil IV (Memoires de la Délégation archaéologique en Iran XLII, 1970), 5 ffGoogle Scholar. (hereafter abbreviated Porada, , Tchoga Zanbil IV)Google Scholar.

13 Nissen, Hans, in Heidelberger Studien (Festschrift A. Falkenstein; Wiesbaden, 1967), 111 ffGoogle Scholar.

14 Moortgat, A., ZA 47 (1942). 85Google Scholar.

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17 Oates, D., Iraq 32 (1970), 1920CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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21 Frankfort, H., OIP 72, no. 238Google Scholar.

22 Frankfort, H., OIP 44, Plate 112aGoogle Scholar.

23 In the Assyrian royal ritual, the sukkallu rabû and sukkallu šanû lay down their staffs (GIŠ.PA.MEŠ = haṭṭāti) before the king, MVAG 41/3 (1937), 15, 8–9Google Scholar, (CAD, Ḫ, 155). The staff here depicted is exactly like that held by Ur-ša6-ga, the sukkallu of Ibbi-Suen, on his seal impression (Legrain, L., Ur Excavations, X, no. 438)Google Scholar.

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28 R. Boehmer, ibid., Abb. 369, 372, 373.

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36 R. Boehmer, op. cit., Abb. 392.

37 van Buren, E. D., Ar Or 27 (1949), 434 ffGoogle Scholar. She is right in saying that the Ur-Nammu stele shows both the measuring line and rod and the staff and ring; she also refers to an Agade seal on which a goddess (Istar?) holds a ring, (Frankfort, H., Cylinder Seals (London, 1939), Plate XVIII, j.)Google Scholar.

38 Barrelet, M-T., in Studia Mariana (Leiden, 1950Google Scholar; ed. A. Parrot), 18; here the King grasps the sceptre and only touches the ring.

39 Sollberger, E., Iraq 36 (1974), 238CrossRefGoogle Scholar. The sceptre cannot be seen but the ring is being grasped.

40 Dangin, F. Thureau, La huitième campagne de Sargon, 59, note 9Google Scholar.

41 Thureau-Dangin, F., Rit. Ace, 144Google Scholar. See also CAD, s.v. kippatu 398, c., where it is translated loop-shaped symbol, but the ring depicted in the hands of the god on the Bavian relief must be made of metal or ivory, although for the latter material it would be rather too big. Meissner, B., Babylonien und Assyrien II (Heidelberg, 1925), Tf.-Abb. 14Google Scholar.

42 Leemans, F., Ishtar of Lagaba and Her Dress (Leiden, 1952), 11Google Scholar.

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44 CAD, K, ibid.

45 Porada, Corpus, no. 884, e.

46 Özgüç, N., The Anatolian Group of Cylinder Seal Impressions from Kültepe (Ankara, 1965), 6, Fig. 3, 50Google Scholar.

47 Ibid., Plate V, 14; Plate VI, 17.

48 Ibid., Plate XVII, 50.

49 Küpper, J-R., L'iconographie du dieu Amurru, (Brussels, 1961), 50Google Scholar.

50 Ibid., 46.

51 Ibid., 32.

52 Delaporte, L., Catalogue des cylindres orientaux dans le Musée du Louvre I (Paris, 1923), pl. 53, fig. 2Google Scholar.

53 Oates, D., Iraq 32 (1970), 5, Plate ICrossRefGoogle Scholar; J. D. Hawkins, loc. cit. (note 1), no. 11.

54 E.g. V R, 352; and L. Delaporte, op. cit., II, A. 304.

55 I am indebted to Olga Tufnell for this information.

56 H. Frankfort, Cylinder Seals, Plate XXVIII, m; XXIX, m.

57 Böse, J., AfO 22 (1965), 30 ffGoogle Scholar.

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62 J. D. Hawkins, loc. cit., no. 5.

63 H. Frankfort, Cylinder Seals, Plate XXIX, i, BN. 445.

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65 An Ur workshop text, UET III, no. 1612, is a receipt for ha-um cloth for the front of the throne and 4 royal ha-um cloths for the whole of the throne; probably shaggy cloth, ibid., 365.

66 Porada, E., AASOR 24 (19441945), Plate XXVIII, no. 554, p. 39Google Scholar.

67 H. Frankfort, Cylinder Seals, Plate XL m (BM 89518) and n (De Clercq, 284).

68 Özgüç, N., The Anatolian Group of Cylinder Seal Impressions from Kültepe, 67Google Scholar. The unattached human head is not used at Kültepe, except in the hand of god; Özgüç, N., Kültepe Kazısı (Ankara, 1949), no. 696Google Scholar.

69 In all other examples the kneeling manikin touches the tree; see AASOR 24 (19441945), Plates XIV–XVGoogle Scholar.

70 Ibid., 101; and Özgüç, N., Anatolian Group of Cylinder Seal Impressions from Kültepe, 66Google Scholar.

71 AASOR 24 (19441945), Plates XXVIII–IX, 567 and 587Google Scholar.

72 Ibid., Plate X, 163, 164.

73 AASOR 24 (19441945), Plate XXIII, 459Google Scholar.

74 Ibid., Plate XXXII, 637.

75 Ibid., Plate V, 71.

76 Oates, D., Iraq 29 (1967), 86CrossRefGoogle Scholar, Plate XXXVII.

77 AASOR 24 (19441945), Plate II, 27Google Scholar.

78 Ibid., Plate V, 79.

79 AASOR 24 (19441945), Plate XIII, 220 and 221, p. 23Google Scholar.

80 Ibid., Plate XLII; Porada, Corpus, no. 1061.

81 Iraq 11 (1949), 25, and Plate XVI no. 107Google Scholar.

82 AASOR 24 (19441945), 82Google Scholar.

83 AASOR 24 (19441945), 3940, Plate XXVIII, nos. 560–566Google Scholar.

84 Ibid., nos. 17–19 and 560–566.

85 Ibid., no. 566.

86 Ibid., no. 710.

87 Porada, , Tchoga Zanbil IV, 36, nos. 27 and 37Google Scholar.

88 AASOR 24 (19441945), Plate XXI, no. 414, and pp. 30 and 112Google Scholar.

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95 CAD, 1/J, 103.

96 Porada, Corpus, Plates 160–161; B. Buchanan, Catalogue of Ancient Near Eastern Seals in the Ashmolean Museum, Plate 57, no. 918.

97 Porada, Corpus, no. 1061.

98 AASOR 24 (19441945), Plates II–IIIGoogle Scholar.

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106 AASOR 24 (19441945), Plate XI, no. 186Google Scholar.

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110 Negahban, E., Marlik (Tehran, 1964), Fig. 109Google Scholar.

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114 Porada, Corpus, Plate 664.

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