6359A
Description (Catalog Card): | Clay Cone of Nur Adad to Ningal. Rebuilds E-nun-azag. (A)[A and C-M] to B. H.C. (B)[B and N] and fragments to E. H.C. |
Find Context (Catalog Card): | KP J.7. (Kitchen) Room C 32. |
Material (Catalog Card): | Clay1 |
Text Genre: | Royal/Monumental |
Dates Referenced: | Nur-Adad |
U Number: | 6359A |
Object Type: | Architectural Elements >> Cones |
Museum: | The National Museum of Iraq |
Season Number: | 04: 1925-1926 |
Object Type: | Writing and Record Keeping >> Peg, Nail or Cone (inscribed) |
Culture/Period: | Ur III |
Description (Modern): | Object is not sealed. |
Material: | Inorganic Remains >> Clay >> Fired |
Museum Number (IM Number): | IM 92833 |
Tablet ID Number: | P270016 |
Tablet ID Number: | X005051 |
[1] Material as described by Woolley |
Files
Location | Context Title | Context Description | Description (Modern) |
---|---|---|---|
Giparu | KP | The excavation area given the abbreviation KP was eventually found to be the site of the ancient building known as the giparu (alternatively e-gig-par or gig-par-ku). Mostly dedicated to the goddess Nin-gal, Nanna's consort, it was also in various periods the residence of the entu priestess. The abbreviation KP, however, stands for King's Palace because Woolley initially thought this might be the site of Shulgi's palace, the ehursag. The giparu was a very long-lived building, though it underwent many changes over many centuries. Most striking were the changes in the Neo-Babylonian period when Woolley shows it combining with the dublalmah to the east. He believed that by this point the building was not sufficient to house the Ningal temple and the entu priestess together, and thus the so-called Palace of Belshaltinannar was constructed outside the temenos specifically to house the priestess herself. At times Woolley refers to the giparu as the Great Ningal Temple, which can be confusing as the Kassite and Neo-Bablyonian Ningal temples had moved onto the ziggurat terrace to the north of the giparu (Area HD). Furthermore, parts of the giparu were excavated under area abbreviations other than KP in season 3 when the full extents of the building were only just coming to light. The northern portion originally carried the abbreviation HDB and the southeastern portion, SF. | (none) | |
Room C32 | K-L 7-8 | Kitchen suite for all the inhabitants of the giparu, both human and divine | (none) |
- 2 Locations
Media | Media Title | Title | Label | Author | Omeka Label |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ur Excavations Texts I: Royal Inscriptions | Ur Excavations Texts I: Royal Inscriptions | 1928 | Gadd, C.J., Legrain, L., Smith, S., Burrows, E.R. | (none) | |
Ur Excavations Texts VIII.2: Royal Inscriptions Part II | Ur Excavations Texts VIII.2: Royal Inscriptions Part II | 1965 | Sollberger, E. | (none) | |
Woolley's Catalog Cards | Woolley's Catalog Cards | Card -- BM ID:194 Box:32 Page:72 | Card -- BM ID:194 Box:32 Page:72 | (none) |
- 3 Media
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Context
Ur >> Giparu | KP
Excavation Context: Ur >> Giparu | KP >> Ningal Temple | Unit C | A-P 1-8 >> Room C32 | K-L 7-8