© Yale Babylonian Collection
Mesopotamian commentaries represent the world’s oldest cohesive group of hermeneutic texts. Numbering nearly 900, the earliest date to the eighth century and the latest to ca. 100 BCE. The purpose of this website is to make the corpus available both to the scholarly community and a more general audience by providing background information on the genre, a searchable catalog, as well as photos, drawings, annotated editions, and translations of individual commentary tablets. For the first time the cuneiform commentaries, currently scattered over 21 museums around the globe, will be accessible on one platform.
The Cuneiform Commentaries Project is funded by Yale University (2013-2016) and the National Endowment for the Humanities (Division of Research Programs “Scholarly Editions and Translations,” 2015-2018).
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Recent additions to the corpus
CCP 3.1.u7 - Enūma Anu Enlil (?) Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum
This fragment preserves the lower part of a four-column tablet with an unusual commentary text. The base text, which is hitherto unrecovered, is an astrological treatise containing cryptographically written omens. |
CCP 7.2.u27 - Uncertain Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum
The most arresting feature of this otherwise nondescript fragment is a quotation of a verse from the Epic of Creation (l. |
CCP 3.1.u40 - Enūma Anu Enlil (?) Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum
This small fragment belongs to the British Museum’s “Sippar Collection,” specifically to the 82-3-23 consignment, believed to stem to a great extent from the city of Dilbat. |
CCP 3.1.u42 - Enūma Anu Enlil (?) Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum
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CCP 3.1.u45 - Enūma Anu Enlil (?) Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum
This small fragment belongs to a commentary that appears to be concerned with constellations and gods. The exact base text on which the present piece comments is uncertain. As U. |
CCP 3.1.u5 - Enūma Anu Enlil 53 (?) This tablet preserves some fifty fragmentary lines of a commentary on the astrological series Enūma Anu Enlil, specifically on a section of the series that deals with the movement of planets and stars. |
CCP 3.1.55.B - Enūma Anu Enlil 55 B Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum
Large fragment in Neo-Assyrian script containing all or parts of the first twenty seven lines of a commentary on EAE 55 (according to the Nineveh numbering system) on its obverse, and parts of the commentary’s last seven lines on its revers |
CCP 3.1.55.G - Enūma Anu Enlil 55 G © Vorderasiatisches Museum
Although cited in secondary literature already in 1925,1 this is the first published text edition of this commentary. |
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