CCP 4.2.G - Therapeutic (bulṭu bīt Dābibi 2) G
This tablet preserves a commentary on an unidentified therapeutic text.
CCP 4.2.G - Therapeutic (bulṭu bīt Dābibi 2) GThis tablet preserves a commentary on an unidentified therapeutic text. |
CCP 4.2.I - Therapeutic (skin diseases) IThis fragment contains a commentary on a medical text dealing with skin diseases and materia medica to treat them. |
CCP 3.8.1.D - Iqqur īpuš, série génerale D© Vorderasiatisches Museum This small and badly broken tablet from Assur contains, on its obverse, a series of protases from the menological series Iqqur īpuš. Several explanations are appended to the protases in a second column. |
CCP 3.7.2.E - Alamdimmû ECourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum This fragment of a four-column tablet belongs to a commentary on physiognomic omens. Whereas the exact identity of its base text remains uncertain, many of its entries are paralleled in the physiognomic corpus. |
CCP 3.6.2.D - Izbu 5 DCourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum |
CCP 3.6.3.D - Izbu 14 D© Royal Ontario Museum The following tablet is a Late Babylonian commentary on the 14th tablet of the teratological divination series Šumma Izbu. |
CCP 3.8.1.C - Iqqur īpuš, section 87: 7 C© Yale Babylonian Collection The small tablet NBC 6197 is remarkable in several ways. First, it contains a commentary on a single word from a single omen. |
CCP 7.1.8.A.a - Elamite Calendar ACourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum This small tablet found in Nineveh contains a unique commentary on the Elamite names of the months. It is uncertain whether the text is a text commentary or an independent etymological treatise. |