Description (Catalog Card): Stone weight(?) grey-black stone. Flattened on underside. Incised marks (possibly Aramaic letters) Type I. P. [drawing].1     
Find Context (Catalog Card): Diqdiqqa     
Measurement (Catalog Card): Length M. 0.043 breadth M. 0.021 depth M. 0.016     
U Number: 1504     
Object Type: Weights and Measures >> Balance Pan Weights >> Ovoid Weights      
Museum: University of Pennsylvania Museum      
Season Number: 02: 1923-1924      
Object Type: Weights and Measures >> Balance Pan Weights      
Description (Modern): Ovoid weight. Green stone with light and dark speckling. Large flat base, ends round. 3 vertical lines are carved in the upper surface, with 2 more next to them carved later in a different manner, more curved. Another vertical line stands above these 5, but very lightly incised.     
Material: Inorganic Remains >> Stones and Minerals >> Stone >> Igneous >> Gabbro      
Museum Number (UPM B-number): B15729     
Tablet ID Number: P467970     
Measurement (Weight): 24.5     
Measurement (X): 43     
Measurement (Y): 21     
Measurement (Z): 16     
[1] Woolley's description

Locations: 1504 Export: JSON - XML - CSV

Location Context Title Context Description Description (Modern)
Diqdiqqeh | DQ Essentially a suburb of the ancient city, this area is located about 2 km to the northeast of the ziggurat of Ur. The precise extents of Diqdiqqeh were never defined, but Woolley referred to it as the low ground between the main railway line and the branch that went to Nasiriyeh. The train lines no longer run in the same place they did in Woolley's day, but Corona images allow us to recreate their paths. This makes the general boundaries west, south, and east somewhat known but how far it stretched north is not completely clear. From the first season workers walking across this area picked up surface finds and brought them to Woolley. At that time the location did not have a fixed name in Woolley's mind and thus first season references sometimes say 'near the railway' or 'near Munshid's water engine.' In the second season Woolley decided to investigate more systematically, but after two days of excavation he decided there was not enough remaining architecture to reward further work. Instead, he continued to allow the workers to gather finds over the next ten seasons, and many later catalog cards state "brought in: Diqdiqqeh" The finds from Diqdiqqeh indicate that the ancient suburb played a role in manufacturing and perhaps in commerce. Canals seem to have met in the area and boats may have unloaded goods here. Many figurines, tools, moulds and other crafting items are among the finds, suggesting that Diqdiqqeh may have been an industrial area away from the main habitation. The so-called Treasury of Sin-Iddinam was also excavated in this general area in season 5. In the Antiquaries Journal of January 1925, Woolley described Diqdiqqeh as follows: “A mile and a half NE. of the ziggurat, between the main railway line and the Nasiriyah branch, there is a patch of low-lying ground, occasionally cultivated, which the natives call Diqdiqqeh... a happy hunting-ground for treasure-seekers, and I took advantage of this fact to collect from the natives the scattered antiquities which they might bring to light.” (none)
  • 1 Location

Media: 1504 Export: JSON - XML - CSV Woolley's Catalog Cards

Media Media Title Title Label Author Omeka Label
Woolley's Catalog Cards Woolley's Catalog Cards Card -- BM ID:194 Box:26 Page:177 Card -- BM ID:194 Box:26 Page:177 (none)
  • 1 Media

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Context

Ur Hinterland >> Diqdiqqeh | DQ


References

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