CCP 3.5.49 - Ālu 49
This tablet preserves one of the latest datable commentaries. According to its colophon, the tablet was copied by Nabû-šumu-līšir son of Nabû-balāssu-iqbi, grandson of Marduk-zēru-ibni, of the Egibatila family.
CCP 3.5.49 - Ālu 49Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum This tablet preserves one of the latest datable commentaries. According to its colophon, the tablet was copied by Nabû-šumu-līšir son of Nabû-balāssu-iqbi, grandson of Marduk-zēru-ibni, of the Egibatila family. |
CCP 2.1.D - Maqlû 1-3, Šurpu 3 DThe tablet Ass. 13955dq (VAT 8928), copied as KAR 94, comments on Maqlû I-III (lines 1’-45’) and Šurpu III (lines 46’-61’). |
CCP 3.1.41 - Enūma Anu Enlil 41-43 (?)Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum The one-column tablet 81-2-4,206 preserves commentaries on three tablets of the meteorological part of Enūma Anu Enlil. |
CCP 3.7.2.J - Alamdimmû 9-12 JCourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum This hitherto unpublished tablet from Babylon contains a short but complete commentary on the last four chapters of the physiognomic divinatory series Alamdimmû. |
CCP 7.1.6.A.b - Divine names ACourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum This previously unpublished tablet contains a highly interesting commentary on a ritual that seems to have taken place during the month of Simānu. The commentary is preserved in two duplicating manuscripts. |
CCP 7.2.u103 - Ritual TextCourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum The present text contains what appears to be a commentary on a ritual, which seems to have taken place during the month of Simānu. The tablet consists of two pieces, joined by I.L. |
CCP 4.2.Q - Therapeutic (šumma amēlu qāt eṭemmi iṣbassū-ma), bulṭu bīt Dābibi QCourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum A one-column tablet containing a commentary on If the hand of a ghost has seized a man, part of the poorly known therapeutic series Cures from the House of Dābibī. |
CCP 4.2.R - Therapeutic (ana antašubba nasāḫi u [pašāri]) RCourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum This tablet contains a commentary in Late Babylonian script whose subscript describes itself as “Lemmata and oral explanations relating to (the work) ana antašubbâ nasāhi u pašāri, ‘In order to tear out and disperse antašubbû(-diseas |