CCP 3.1.24.E - Enūma Anu Enlil 24(25) E
[Reproduced from
CCP 3.1.24.E - Enūma Anu Enlil 24(25) ECourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum [Reproduced from |
CCP 3.1.26.A - Enūma Anu Enlil 26(27) AThe present tablet, which stems perhaps from the library of the Uruk scholar Anu-ikṣur, preserves the upper part of a commentary on the astrological divinatory text Enūma Anu Enlil 26(27).
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CCP 2.2.1.A.b - Marduk’s Address, Muššuʾu, and Udughul AThis small landscape-oriented tablet from Assur contains commentarial notes on two lines of the incantation Marduk’s Address to the Demons, a line of an incantation so far attested only in Muššu’u, and a line of Udugḫul III. |
CCP 4.1.34 - Sagig 34The present tablet, copied by [Iqīšāya son of Ištar-šumu-ēreš], of the Ekurzakir family, is according to its rubric a ṣâtu-commentary on a tablet whose incipit is šumma amēlu ana sinništīšu libbašu inaššīšū-ma, “If a man has desire f |
CCP 2.2.1.B - Marduk’s Address BCourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum This large tablet contains a commentary on a section of the exorcistic text known as “Marduk’s Address to the Demons.” Only a few lines (ll. 60-74) are commented upon in the tablet. |
CCP 2.2.2 - Udug-hul 2-4© Vorderasiatisches Museum This small one-column tablet, Ass. 13955ao (VAT 8286, LKA 82), contains a commentary on selected lines from Udug-ḫul II, III and IV. |
CCP 2.3 - NamburbiCourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum According to its rubric, this tablet contains a series of “questions” (mašʾaltu) on a ritual against the “evil signs that are seen against a man and his house.” The base text of the commentary is preserved in a tablet from Assur, LKA |
CCP 1.3 - LudlulCourtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum |