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2501–2550 of 95873
Page 51 / 1918
Anonymous Lagaš 07 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 07)
(1) To Ninĝirsu, Dudu, the scribe, and Aya-anzud dedicated this (statue).
LawAnonymous Lagaš 13 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 13)
(1) To Ninĝirsu of the Bagara, Udbikura, the envoy, dedicated this (bowl).
LawAnonymous Lagaš 14 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 14)
(1) To Ninĝirsu of the Bagara, ... dedicated this (bowl).
LawAnonymous 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).
LawAnonymous Lagaš 16 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 16)
(1) To Ninĝirsu of the Bagara, ....
LawAnonymous Lagaš 17 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 17)
(1) To Inana of the Ebgal, ....
LawAnonymous Lagaš 19 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 19)
(i 1) ... king of Lagaš .... ... gold ....
LawAnonymous Lagaš 20 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 20)
(1) Lugal-uma, child of ..., ....
LawAnonymous Lagaš 25 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 25)
(i 1') ... Enki .... .... Nanše ....
LawAnonymous Lagaš 26 (FAOS 05/1, AnLag 26)
(i 1') ..., whose name was proclaimed by Enlil, chosen by Nanše in the heart, who makes the foreign lands submit to Ninĝirsu, ..., (when Ninĝirsu) placed all lands in his hand, and placed the rebellious lands at his feet, ....
Law
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.
LawAnonymous Nippur 01 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 01)
(1) For Inana of Eden, Ur-Enlil, the chief merchant, dedicated this (plaque).
Law
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
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
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
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
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
Anonymous Nippur 08 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 08)
Dedicates a vessel to the goddess Ninlil on behalf of a named field surveyor's family — attesting private votive practice by a mid-level administrative official at Nippur during the Early Dynastic III period.
LawAnonymous 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.
LawAnonymous Nippur 10 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 10)
(1) To Inana, Me-niĝarta, the spouse of ..., dedicated this (vessel) for her well-being.
LawAnonymous Nippur 11 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 11)
(1) To Inana, Urur, the land recorder, child of ..., and ..., his spouse, dedicated this (vessel).
LawAnonymous Nippur 12 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 12)
(1) To Inana, Gan-Utu, the spouse of Pa-a-nukuš, the ..., dedicated this (vessel).
LawAnonymous Nippur 14 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 14)
(1) To Inana, Gan-ezen, the spouse of ..., child of Gunidu, dedicated this (vessel).
Law
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.
LawAnonymous Nippur 22 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 22)
(1) To Inana, Ur-Inana, the overseer.
LawAnonymous Nippur 24 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 24, B)
(1) To Ninnisig, Luma, the chief stone-cutter, dedicated this (vessel/plaque).
LawAnonymous Nippur 25 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 25)
(1) Lugal-hursaĝ, the temple administrator of Enlil.
LawAnonymous Nippur 26 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 26)
(1) To Inana, ..., the couriers' overseer, dedicated this (statue).
LawAnonymous Nippur 27 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 27)
(1) To Inana, Gan-Enlila, the spouse of Utum, dedicated this (vessel).
LawAnonymous Nippur 28 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 28)
(1) To Inana, ..., ..., dedicated this (vessel).
LawAnonymous Nippur 29
(1) To Inana, Ak-Enlila, the chief merchant, child of ..., dedicated this (vessel).
LawAnonymous Nippur 32 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 32)
(1) To Inana, Barag-ene, the spouse of Mašda, (and) Amar-ezida dedicated this (stone plate).
LawAnonymous Nippur 35 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 35)
(1) To Inana, the singular woman.
LawAnonymous Nippur 37 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 37)
(1) Idilum, the temple administrator of Enlil.
Law
Anonymous Nippur 38 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 38)
Dedicatory inscription naming Munus-šume, child of Ur-šubur, as donor of a vessel to Inana — one of the few Early Dynastic records attesting private dedicants by personal and patronymic name at Nippur.
LawAnonymous Nippur 39 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 39)
(1) Di-abgal, the herdsman, dedicated (this) bowl to Inana.
LawAnonymous Nippur 41 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 41)
(1) To Inana, Inimani-zid, ..., and Inana-ursaĝ dedicated this (vessel).
LawAnonymous Nippur 42 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 42)
(1) To Inana, Ama-azu, spouse of Lugal-urin, the scribe, dedicated this (bowl).
LawAnonymous Nippur 43 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 43)
(1) To Inana, ..., the smith, dedicated this (bowl).
LawAnonymous Nippur 44 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 44)
(1) Lugal-urin dedicated this (vessel) to Inana.
LawAnonymous Nippur 46 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 46)
(1) To Inana, Ilum-alsu, the temple administrator, and Aka, his spouse, dedicated this (vessel).
LawAnonymous Nippur 47 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 47)
(1) To Inana, Sumu, spouse of Enlil's temple administrator, dedicated this.
LawAnonymous Nippur 50 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 50)
(1') ... for the well-being of his spouse and šhildren.
Law
Anonymous Nippur 53 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 53)
One of the surviving Early Dynastic votive dedications from the Nippur tradition, attesting the formula by which a ruler sought divine favour through temple offering a century before the Akkadian Empire.
Law
Anonymous Nippur 54 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 54)
A child of a Nippur ruler dedicates a votive vessel circa 2450 BCE, attesting the practice of elite dynastic piety through object dedication in the Early Dynastic temple economy.
Law
Anonymous Nippur 57 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 57)
A Nippur dedicatory inscription naming Ĝirini and her husband Lugal-lu: one of the rare Early Dynastic texts that preserves a private person's cultic relationship with Ninlil outside the royal sphere.
Law
Anonymous Nippur 60 (FAOS 05/2, AnNip 60)
Attests the Early Dynastic Sumerian formula linking a ruler's personal welfare to that of his household — one of the earliest epigraphic anchors for the ideology of dynastic continuity at Nippur.
Law
Anonymous Nippur 65add
A fragmentary Early Dynastic royal inscription from Nippur, one of the earliest attestations linking royal authority to the office of chief governor of Enlil — evidence of how Sumerian kingship was legitimised through priestly-administrative titles c. 2450 BCE.
LawAnonymous Sippar 3 (FAOS 05/2, AnSippar 03)
(1) To ..., Men, ..., dedicated this (statuette) ..., and for the well-being of his spouse and children.
LawAnonymous Ur 16 (FAOS 05/2, AnUr 16)
(1) To Ama-ĝeštin, Ninam, spouse of ..., dedicated this (vessel) for her (own) well-being, and for the well-being of her spouse and child.
Law