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An Esarhaddon Cylinder from Nimrud
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 August 2014
Extract
This well-preserved cylinder, illustrated on Plate XIX, is reported to have been found by a ploughman about I mile west of the tall, not far from the east bank of the river Tigris and close to the modern village of Nimrud at a point where the ground bears traces of Assyrian debris. It is hoped later on that it may be possible to examine this ground in order to determine whether or no this inscription is likely to have originated there. The cylinder was brought by shaikh Abdullah Nejaifi to Miss B. Parker, the secretary-librarian of the British School of Archaeology in Iraq, in the spring of 1951. Miss Parker made a preliminary study of the text, and prepared a transliteration and translation of it. During the course of the season, while Miss Parker was fully occupied as photographer and assistant epigraphist, I was asked to prepare a final version and copy (Plates XX-XXI) for publication.
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- Copyright © The British Institute for the Study of Iraq 1952
References
page 54 note 1 C. J. Gadd, The Stones of Assyria, Appendix—Plan by W. K. Loftus.
page 54 note 2 Layard, A. H., Nineveh and Its Remains, Vol. I Plan 1, opp. p. 332Google Scholar.
page 54 note 3 For details of the excavation of the S.W. (Esar-haddon) Palace see A. H. Layard. op. cit. Vol. II, 25 ff.
page 55 note 1 e.g. l. 50, cf. Aššur-naṣir-pal in King, L. W.. A.K.A., 220, l. 17Google Scholar.
page 55 note 2 Essad Nassouhi, in M.A.O.G., III, 1/2. pp. 22–32Google Scholar.
page 55 note 3 R. Campbell Thompson, Prism of Esarhaddon and Assurbanipal. Cf. also the prism inscriptions in I.R. Pl. 45f. and V. Scheil, Prismes d'Assarkaddon.
page 55 note 4 It is also hoped that this may be a small contribution to the corpus of Esarhaddon inscriptions yet to be published (sec Steele, F. R., The University Museum Esarhaddon Prism in J.A.O.S., 71, 2, n. 10)Google Scholar.
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