CCP 6.7.A - Weidner’s God List A
Neither rubric nor colophon are preserved on this cola-type commentary from the British Museum’s Sippar Collection. The fragment is rather thick.
CCP 6.7.A - Weidner’s God List ACourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum Neither rubric nor colophon are preserved on this cola-type commentary from the British Museum’s Sippar Collection. The fragment is rather thick. |
CCP 3.5.22.A.b - Ālu 22-23 ACourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum This commentary is preserved in two virtually identical manuscripts from two different cities. The first one, SpTU 5 259 (CCP 3.5.22.A.a), was found during the German excavations at Uruk. |
CCP 3.6.3.A - Izbu 7 AThis almost perfectly preserved tablet contains a thirty-four line commentary on the 7th tablet of the teratological series Šumma Izbu. |
CCP 6.1.13.B.b - Aa II/5 (pirsu 13) BCourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum The present text, a small fragment in the British Museum’s “Sippar Collection,” but possibly originating from Babylon, contains short comments on entries from Aa II/3, II/4 and II/5. |
CCP 6.2.5 - Diri 5 (?)Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum This small fragment, which probably originates from Babylon, appears to contain entries of the fifth tablet of the supplemental syllabary Diri. |
CCP 3.1.5.D - Enūma Anu Enlil 5, 17-23(24) DCourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum |
CCP 4.3.u4 - Sagig 14 (?)Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum This small fragment contains meager remains of a commentary on a medical text. |
CCP 3.5.30 - Ālu 30-32 (“27-30”)Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum This almost entirely preserved tablet written in Babylonian script was the first tablet accessioned in the Kuyunjik collection (K.1). It contains a commentary on four chapters of the series of terrestrial omens Šumma Ālu. |