Sumerian·Book

The corpus

All tablets.

Every tablet in the corpus — sortable by date, title or period; filterable by theme and period. Use the controls below or change the URL parameters directly.

43,437 of 102,927 tablets · 4 filters activeClear filters

1751–1800 of 43437

Page 36 / 869

~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

A-Ane-pada 4

(1') ... when he built ..., he šarried a holy šhariot to .... Inim-zid and Nanna-ursag dedišated this (bowl) for the well-being of Aya-Ane-pada.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

A-Ane-pada 6

(1) To Ninazu, Luduga dedicated this for the well-being of Aya-Ane-pada.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

A-Ane-pada 7add

(i 1) The dwelling AB.IGI.BUR, the sanctuary, the mountain of snakes, where? Inana ..., the Abzu (whose) god no crown (i.e., ruler) would disobey, its owner, the god of Aya-ane-pada, Enki, the father who created him, made his (= Aya-ane-pada’s) lordship apparent. (ii 1) He (= Aya-ane-pada) (then) established the AB.IGI.BUR for him (= Enki), called its name for him, and fashioned his crown for him.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

A-KALAM-du 1 / CDLI Seals 001440 (CDLI Seals 001440 (physical))

(1) Aya-kalam-dug, king of Urim: Aya-šusikil-Ana is his spouse.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

A-kurgal 1

(1) For Ninĝirsu, Aya-kurgal, ruler of Lagaš. child of Ur-Nanše, king of Lagaš, built the Antasura.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

A-kurgal 3

(1) Aya-kurgal, ruler of Lagaš.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Abzu-kidu 2

Dedicatory bowl inscription naming Abzu-kidug and her spouse: one of the sparse Early Dynastic records attesting elite women by name in Sumerian royal dedicatory practice, c. 2450 BCE.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

An(u)bu 3

Dedicatory inscription naming Nin-meta-bare, child of Anbu, as donor to the deity Asum — a rare personal-name attestation anchoring prosopography at an Early Dynastic Sumerian cult site c. 2450 BCE.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous 06 (FAOS 05/2, Anonym 06) (FAOS 05/2, Anonym 06)

(1) To Ninšubur of Bad, Enzid, the shepherd, and Amar-kikug, child of Enzid, dedicated this (statuette).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous 10 (FAOS 05/2, Anonym 10) (FAOS 05/2, Anonym 10)

(1) To Lugal-ega, Ursaĝ-Utu, child of Lugal-pada, the gusur, fashioned this (statuette).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Adab 07 (FAOS 05/2, AnAdab 07)

(1) E-kiri, Ama-ana-ak, spouse of Inim-Utu-zid.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Ešnuna 1 (FAOS 05/2, AnEshn 01)

(1') To ..., ... dedicated this (object) for his own well-being and for the well-being of his spouse and children.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Ešnuna 2 (FAOS 05/2, AnEshn 02)

(1) To Abu, Lugal-kisale-si, child of Ardu, dedicated this (vessel).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Khafaje 11 (FAOS 05/2, AnHaf 11)

(1) Ur-Ninkilima, the overseer.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Lagaš 01 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 01)

(1') ..., he displayed his booty for Bau.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Lagaš 02 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 02)

(1) For Bau, the kind woman, Luma-mešni, scribe of the granary supervisor, ... for his well-being.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Lagaš 04 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 04)

(1') ... dedišated this (vessel) for ... to Ninĝirsu.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Lagaš 05 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 05)

(1') ..., ruler of Lagaš, ....

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Lagaš 06 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 06)

(1') ... Lugal-mudakuš fashioned ... for Lugal-Uruba. ....

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Lagaš 07 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 07)

(1) To Ninĝirsu, Dudu, the scribe, and Aya-anzud dedicated this (statue).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Lagaš 13 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 13)

(1) To Ninĝirsu of the Bagara, Udbikura, the envoy, dedicated this (bowl).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Lagaš 14 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 14)

(1) To Ninĝirsu of the Bagara, ... dedicated this (bowl).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Lagaš 15 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 15)

(1) To Ninĝirsu of the Bagara, ... the stone-cutter, child of Ama-abzu-si, the stone-cutter, dedicated this (mace).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Lagaš 16 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 16)

(1) To Ninĝirsu of the Bagara, ....

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Lagaš 17 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 17)

(1) To Inana of the Ebgal, ....

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Lagaš 19 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 19)

(i 1) ... king of Lagaš .... ... gold ....

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Lagaš 20 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 20)

(1) Lugal-uma, child of ..., ....

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Lagaš 25 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 25)

(i 1') ... Enki .... .... Nanše ....

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Lagaš 31add

Dedicatory inscription naming the goddess Lama as owner of a votive bowl: early evidence of object consecration practice in Early Dynastic Lagaš.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 01 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 01)

(1) For Inana of Eden, Ur-Enlil, the chief merchant, dedicated this (plaque).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 02 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 02)

A votive dedication from Nippur naming a royal spouse, Aya-barag-ana — one of the rare Early Dynastic inscriptions to record a woman's active role in dedicating cult objects.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 04 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 04)

A votive dedication to Nintinuga, goddess of healing, from ~2450 BCE Nippur — attesting her cult and the practice of consecrated vessel offerings a century before Sargon unified Mesopotamia.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 05 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 05)

Dedicatory inscription naming Puzur-Mama, a merchant, before the healing goddess Nintinuga — early evidence that commercial figures, not only kings or priests, commissioned votive texts at Nippur around 2450 BCE.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 06 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 06)

A votive dedication to Ninlil by a ruler named Enlila, attesting the practice of offering consecrated vessels for the welfare of family members at Nippur a full century before the Akkadian Empire.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 07 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 07)

Votive dedication naming Saĝ-diĝir-tuku and Lugal-ennu preserves personal names and the practice of interceding for named individuals before the gods in Early Dynastic Nippur.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 09 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 09)

(1') ..., the child of Lugal-aĝi, dedicated this (vessel) for the well-being of his spouse and child.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 10 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 10)

(1) To Inana, Me-niĝarta, the spouse of ..., dedicated this (vessel) for her well-being.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 11 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 11)

(1) To Inana, Urur, the land recorder, child of ..., and ..., his spouse, dedicated this (vessel).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 12 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 12)

(1) To Inana, Gan-Utu, the spouse of Pa-a-nukuš, the ..., dedicated this (vessel).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 14 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 14)

(1) To Inana, Gan-ezen, the spouse of ..., child of Gunidu, dedicated this (vessel).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 21 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 21)

Preserves a dedicatory inscription naming a midwife as the dedicant — one of the earliest textual attestations of that profession in ancient Mesopotamia.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 22 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 22)

(1) To Inana, Ur-Inana, the overseer.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 24 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 24, B)

(1) To Ninnisig, Luma, the chief stone-cutter, dedicated this (vessel/plaque).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 25 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 25)

(1) Lugal-hursaĝ, the temple administrator of Enlil.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 26 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 26)

(1) To Inana, ..., the couriers' overseer, dedicated this (statue).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 27 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 27)

(1) To Inana, Gan-Enlila, the spouse of Utum, dedicated this (vessel).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 28 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 28)

(1) To Inana, ..., ..., dedicated this (vessel).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 29

(1) To Inana, Ak-Enlila, the chief merchant, child of ..., dedicated this (vessel).

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 35 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 35)

(1) To Inana, the singular woman.

Law
~2450 BCE·Early DynasticETCSRI

Anonymous Nippur 37 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 37)

(1) Idilum, the temple administrator of Enlil.

Law