Von Göttern und Menschen
Beiträge zu Literatur und Geschichte des Alten Orients. Festschrift für Brigitte Groneberg
Edited by Dahlia Shehata, Frauke Weiershäuser, and Kamran Vincent Zand
Biographical note
Dahlia Shehata, PhD (2004) in Ancient Near Eastern Studies, University of Göttingen, is
research associate for Assyriology at the University of Freiburg, Germany. She has published on different topics dealing Mesopotamian music. Since 2008 she holds a research and teaching scholarship dealing with the Akkadian Anzu-Myth and the concept of demonic creatures in the Ancient Near East.
Frauke Weiershäuser, PhD (2004) in Ancient Near Eastern Studies, University of Göttingen, is research associate at the Institute for Assyriologiy at the University of Heidelberg. She worked on The Royal Women of the Ur III-Dynasty (published 2008 in Göttingen). Since 2004 her main field of research has been the lexical texts from Assur.
Kamran V. Zand, PhD (2009) in Ancient Near Eastern Studies, is research associate at the Institute for Languages and Cultures of the Near East, Department of Assyriology at the University of Jena. His main fields of research are the earliest known Sumerian literature and the orthographic traditions of the third millennium B.C. (Standard Orthography/UD.GAL.NUN).
research associate for Assyriology at the University of Freiburg, Germany. She has published on different topics dealing Mesopotamian music. Since 2008 she holds a research and teaching scholarship dealing with the Akkadian Anzu-Myth and the concept of demonic creatures in the Ancient Near East.
Frauke Weiershäuser, PhD (2004) in Ancient Near Eastern Studies, University of Göttingen, is research associate at the Institute for Assyriologiy at the University of Heidelberg. She worked on The Royal Women of the Ur III-Dynasty (published 2008 in Göttingen). Since 2004 her main field of research has been the lexical texts from Assur.
Kamran V. Zand, PhD (2009) in Ancient Near Eastern Studies, is research associate at the Institute for Languages and Cultures of the Near East, Department of Assyriology at the University of Jena. His main fields of research are the earliest known Sumerian literature and the orthographic traditions of the third millennium B.C. (Standard Orthography/UD.GAL.NUN).
Readership
All those interested in history, culture, religion, languages and archaeology of the Ancient Near East and Mesopotamia
Table of contents
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Peut-on comprendre le Silbenvokabular?
Antoine Cavigneaux/Margaret Jaques
Un édit du roi Ammi-ditana de Babylone
Dominique Charpin
„ina ištarāte ul ibašši kīma šāšu“
Reinhard Dittmann
Des dieux, un ministre et un coquina
Jean-Marie Durand
Ištar und die Ehekrise. Bemerkungen zu STT 257, RA 18, 21ff. („Tisserant 17“), und ST 249
Walter Farber
Zur Begründung der Missachtung der „Weisen Ordnung“ im Keret-Epos
Thomas R. Kämmerer
Uruk in Babylon. Eine Inschrift Nebukadnezars II. für Ischtar von Uruk
Joachim Marzahn
Aleuromantie. Von der altorientalischen Kunst, mit Hilfe von Opfermehl das Maß göttlichen Wohlwollens zu ermitteln
Stefan M. Maul
Bildhaftigkeit und Bildlosigkeit im Alten Orient: ein Widerspruch?
Astrid Nunn
Schlangenauge
Rosel Pientka-Hinz
Immer nur Söhne und keine Töchter? Zu einem Familienrelief des Ur-Nanše (Urnanše 20 = RIME 1 E1.9)
Gebhard J. Selz
Selbstbewusste Dichter der Hammurabi-Dynastie
Dahlia Shehata
Ninpumuna, die Herrin des Salzbrunnens
Annabelle Staiger
Der Schlaf im Licht der altmesopotamischen Überlieferung
Ulrike Steinert
Feminine Gender of Old Babylonian Nouns
Michael P. Streck
The Ugaritic suffixes -āyu and –ānu
Wilfred van Soldt
From the Notebook of a Professional Exorcist
Nathan Wasserman
Weiser Išum, der du den Göttern vorangehst
Frauke Weiershäuser
Ninkarrak – an Akkadian goddess in Sumerian guise
Joan Goodnick Westenholz
Dogs, Pigs, Lamaštu, and the Breast-Feeding of Animals by Women
Frans A. M. Wiggermann
Zu den Schreibungen des Anzud-Vogels in der Fāra-Zeit
Kamran V. Zand
monumentum aere perennius – Mauerring und
Ringkomposition im Gilgameš-Epos
Annette Zgoll
monumentum aere perennius – Dichtung als achtes
Weltwunder bei Horaz (carm. 3,30)
Christian Zgoll
Peut-on comprendre le Silbenvokabular?
Antoine Cavigneaux/Margaret Jaques
Un édit du roi Ammi-ditana de Babylone
Dominique Charpin
„ina ištarāte ul ibašši kīma šāšu“
Reinhard Dittmann
Des dieux, un ministre et un coquina
Jean-Marie Durand
Ištar und die Ehekrise. Bemerkungen zu STT 257, RA 18, 21ff. („Tisserant 17“), und ST 249
Walter Farber
Zur Begründung der Missachtung der „Weisen Ordnung“ im Keret-Epos
Thomas R. Kämmerer
Uruk in Babylon. Eine Inschrift Nebukadnezars II. für Ischtar von Uruk
Joachim Marzahn
Aleuromantie. Von der altorientalischen Kunst, mit Hilfe von Opfermehl das Maß göttlichen Wohlwollens zu ermitteln
Stefan M. Maul
Bildhaftigkeit und Bildlosigkeit im Alten Orient: ein Widerspruch?
Astrid Nunn
Schlangenauge
Rosel Pientka-Hinz
Immer nur Söhne und keine Töchter? Zu einem Familienrelief des Ur-Nanše (Urnanše 20 = RIME 1 E1.9)
Gebhard J. Selz
Selbstbewusste Dichter der Hammurabi-Dynastie
Dahlia Shehata
Ninpumuna, die Herrin des Salzbrunnens
Annabelle Staiger
Der Schlaf im Licht der altmesopotamischen Überlieferung
Ulrike Steinert
Feminine Gender of Old Babylonian Nouns
Michael P. Streck
The Ugaritic suffixes -āyu and –ānu
Wilfred van Soldt
From the Notebook of a Professional Exorcist
Nathan Wasserman
Weiser Išum, der du den Göttern vorangehst
Frauke Weiershäuser
Ninkarrak – an Akkadian goddess in Sumerian guise
Joan Goodnick Westenholz
Dogs, Pigs, Lamaštu, and the Breast-Feeding of Animals by Women
Frans A. M. Wiggermann
Zu den Schreibungen des Anzud-Vogels in der Fāra-Zeit
Kamran V. Zand
monumentum aere perennius – Mauerring und
Ringkomposition im Gilgameš-Epos
Annette Zgoll
monumentum aere perennius – Dichtung als achtes
Weltwunder bei Horaz (carm. 3,30)
Christian Zgoll
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Luis Robert Siddall, Shore School
In The Reign of Adad-nīrārī III, Luis Siddall examines and re-evaluates the records, events and representations of the Assyrian king who ruled from 810-783 BCE.
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Ulrike Steinert, University College London
Rooted in Assyriology with a strong interdisciplinary outlook, this book offers the first comprehensive study of ancient Mesopotamian notions of the human person, including semantic analyses of Akkadian terms for body parts and multiple aspects of the self.
€105.00$144.00
Erlend Gehlken, University of Frankfurt/Main
This book presents the second half of the weather section of Enūma Anu Enlil, a Mesopotamian omen series dealing with the stars, sun, moon, and weather. It attained particular importance when scholars used it to explain phenomena to Assyrian kings.
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Alexandra Kleinerman
This book examines a collection of twenty-two literary letters and related compositions, the Sumerian Epistolary Miscellany, studied as part of the Old Babylonian Sumerian scribal curriculum, in an attempt to better understand the nature of the curriculum as a whole.
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Michel Tanret
The study of these seals complements our meagre textual documentation. The first sangas in particular offer a unique opportunity to assemble a consistent corpus from a single family holding the same title throughout the Old Babylonian period.
€98.00$127.00
Daniel E. Fleming and Sara J. Milstein
Based on contrasting characterization and narrative logic between the central Huwawa episode and the remaining material for the earliest Akkadian Gilgamesh, this book challenges the accepted notion that the famous epic was composed without recourse to a previous Akkadian narrative.
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Shalom E. Holtz
This book presents a text-typology of Neo-Babylonian litigation records in order to describe the adjudicatory process.
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edited by Annie Attia and Gilles Buisson, with the collaboration of Markham J. Geller
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Edited by Irving L. Finkel and Markham J. Geller
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Edited by Piotr Michalowski and Niek Veldhuis
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