Description (Catalog Card): Vase, fragment. Clay, unusual type. The clay is blackish grey (smother-kiln fired) & flakey, resembling rare specimens found e.g. in a late grave against the NW sie of the Temenos-wall. On the broad vertical rim are panels outlined with incised lines and the border filled in with red paint: bands of dotted hatching have the dots filled in with white and the incised lines are similarly filled: in one panel is an incised drawing of a duck. [drawing 1:1]1     
Find Context (Catalog Card): BC About on the level at the bottom of the Temenos-wall inside the intramural chamber     
U Number: 16225     
Museum: University of Pennsylvania Museum      
Object Type: Vessels/Containers >> Closed Forms >> Jars      
Season Number: 09: 1930-1931      
Description (Modern): Gray Ware. Incised and painted. Duck and geometrical pattern. White in the incisions. Flat red bands.2     
Museum Number (UPM Date Reg Number): 31-43-172     
Measurement (Diameter): 882     
Measurement (X): 502     
[1] Woolley's description
[2] Data collected during Penn Museum conservation review of ceramics.

Locations: 16225 | 31-43-172 Export: JSON - XML - CSV

Location Context Title Context Description Description (Modern)
Mausoleum Site | BC Woolley called the east corner of the Neo-Babylonian temenos the Bur-Sin Corner (area BC) because he found bricks of Bur-Sin (now read Amar-Sin or Amar-Suen) there in early season explorations. Area BC is particularly complex because it consists of substantial building in many periods. The largest building was of the Ur III period, and it is this building to which the abbreviation BC typically refers in field notes. It sits at the northeastern edge of the Royal Cemetery. The main Ur III building was 35 x 27m and its southwest wall was preserved two meters in height, while its northeast wall was largely destroyed. Its walls were built with inscribed bricks of Shulgi. The overall layout of the building is much like a courtyard house but on a large scale and with more ritual furnishings. Attached to this building were two annexes, one northwest and the other southeast, built with bricks of Shulgi's son, Amar-Sin (see context AD). Beneath the entire building were three very large vaults. All of them had been plundered in antiquity and only scattered fragments of artifacts and bones were discovered inside. Nonetheless, Woolley believed that these vaults originally held the remains of the Ur III kings. For this reason, area BC is sometimes referred to as the Mausoleum Site. The building was destroyed by Elamites, according to Woolley, and sometime thereafter houses of the Isin-Larsa/Old Babylonian period were constructed in the area (see House 30). Finally, the Neo-Babylonian Temenos wall was constructed over and through parts of the remains. (none)
  • 1 Location

Media: 16225 | 31-43-172 Export: JSON - XML - CSV

Media Media Title Title Label Author Omeka Label
Ur Excavations IX; The Neo-Babylonian and Persian Periods Ur Excavations IX; The Neo-Babylonian and Persian Periods 1962 Woolley, L. and Mallowan, Max (none)
Woolley's Catalog Cards Woolley's Catalog Cards Card -- BM ID:194 Box:64 Page:132 Card -- BM ID:194 Box:64 Page:132 (none)
  • 2 Media