CCP 3.5.59 - Ālu 59
NBC 7696, housed in the Yale Babylonian Collection, is a fairly well preserved one-column tablet, probably from Nippur, with a commentary on the 59th Tablet (called malsûtu) of the terrestrial omen series Šumma ālu.
CCP 3.5.59 - Ālu 59© Yale Babylonian Collection NBC 7696, housed in the Yale Babylonian Collection, is a fairly well preserved one-column tablet, probably from Nippur, with a commentary on the 59th Tablet (called malsûtu) of the terrestrial omen series Šumma ālu. |
CCP 3.5.31 - Ālu 31 ("29")Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum This small and badly broken tablet preserves the beginning and end of a commentary. |
CCP 3.5.73 - Ālu 72-74Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum This tablet, which was found in Ashurbanipal’s libraries in Nineveh, contains a commentary on three or more chapters of the divinatory series Šumma Ālu. |
CCP 3.5.u3 - Ālu aḫû (43rd nisḫu)© Vorderasiatisches Museum This tablet, found at the “house of the exorcists” in Assur, represents the only commentary on Šumma Ālu from that city. It explains omens related to bathing. |
CCP 3.4.1.H - Bārûtu 1 Isru (?) HCourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum This tablet contains meager remains of a text classified in the rubric as a mukallimtu-commentary. Only the citations from the base text are preserved, and not a single explanation (with the possible exception of r 5').
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CCP 3.6.4.F - Šumma immeru (?)This small fragment contains meager remains of the lower right edge of a tablet. It probably belonged to the collection of tablets of Anu-ikṣur, from the sector Ue XVIII/1 in Uruk. Only seven lines of the obverse are preserved. |
CCP 3.5.21 - Ālu 21This small and badly damaged tablet preserves meager remains of a commentary on the 21st tablet of the divination series Šumma Ālu. |
CCP 3.5.25 - Ālu 25This tablet contains a commentary on Šumma Ālu 25, one of the tablets of terrestrial omens that deals with snakes. |