Ur Online A collaboration between the British Museum and the Penn Museum made possible with the lead support of the Leon Levy Foundation.
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  • U Number : 12474.2
    Museum Number (UPM Date Reg Number) : 30-12-567

    Description (Catalog Card) : [.1-.2] Beads. A very long chain composed of large and small jasper, chalcedony, agate, sard, marble, carnelian and other stones, cut as bugles, lentoids, barrels and flattened square-ended lentoids, alternating with gold balls, some plain, some ribbed, and one with relief pattern. These seem to have formed one chain but it must have passed two or three time round the neck: the beads covered a considerable area but lay very thickly under the head. Restrung on original pattern but not in original order. [additional drawing on back of catalog card] [drawing]

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  • 1Dress and Personal Ornaments +
    • 1Neckwear +
      • 1Necklaces
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  • 107: 1928-1929
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  • 1University of Pennsylvania Museum
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  • 2Inorganic Remains +
    • 1Metal +
      • 1Gold
    • 1Stones and Minerals +
      • 1Mineral +
        • 1Semi-precious +
          • 1Chalcedony +
            • 1Sard

Ur Online

Ur Online offers an insight into the unique site of Ur, near Nasiriyah in southern Iraq, and one of the largest and most important cities of ancient Mesopotamia. Excavations at Ur between 1922 and 1934 by Sir Leonard Woolley, jointly sponsored by the British Museum and the Penn Museum, uncovered Ur’s famous ziggurat complex, densely packed private houses, and the spectacular Royal Graves. Half the finds from Woolley’s excavations are housed in the Iraq Museum in Baghdad, with the other half shared equally between the British Museum and the Penn Museum. Through the generosity of the Leon Levy Foundation, lead underwriter, the Kowalski Family Foundation and the Hagop Kevorkian Fund, Ur Online preserves digitally and invites in-depth exploration of the finds and records from this remarkable site. Learn more about the project.

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