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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 April 2014
A sequence of omens has puzzled Assyriologists since 1866, when Henry C. Rawlinson published the first copy of these peculiar divinatory texts. The omens have the structure DIŠ MUL ana … GUR, “If a star turns into …”, where the object into which the star changes can be an animal, metal, stone or some other item. Such a change has been held to belong to the field of dreams or, more generally, to terrestrial events rather than to astronomy. In fact, however, these omens refer to a specific celestial phenomenon, the transformation of a “star” into a meteorite that can be picked up from the ground, as can also be seen in the phrasing of the corresponding namburbi-ritual, which some scribes appended to their recension of this omen sequence.
I would like to thank the Trustees of The British Museum for allowing me to study and publish cuneiform texts in the Museum's collection. In addition, I would like to thank the staff of the Middle East department, especially Dr. Jon Taylor, for providing the best possible conditions for my research in the study room. I am especially grateful for the Visiting Research Fellowship of the Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten (NINO) that enabled me to complete the manuscript in the excellent library of this institute.