Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 August 2014
During the spring of 1957, the British School of Archaeology in Iraq carried out a second short season of excavations at Balawat, ancient Imgur-Bel. The excavation of the temple of the god Mamu was continued and to the east of the cella two small rooms were uncovered. In one of these was found a collection of forty tablets, in varying state of preservation. Of this collection I publish twenty-nine, the others being too badly preserved to give a useful text.
The majority of the tablets were written between 697 and 671 B.C., during the reigns of Sennacherib and Esarhaddon. There are three isolated documents of earlier date: BT.101, 710 B.C.; BT.106, 734 B.C.; BT.131, 719 B.C. There is one isolated tablet of much later date, belonging to the reign of Sin-šar-iškun, BT. 105. It is noticeable that these tablets do not contain any of the names familiar from the transactions of the main group of documents.
1 Mallowan, M. E. L., Twenty-five years of Mesopotamian Discovery, p. 79Google Scholar.
2 BT. 136
3 From the well-known Balawat characters Mamu-iqbi and Šumma-ilu.
4 L.A.K. I, § 715Google Scholar.
5 It had a rab alāni, BT. 107, 2 in 671 or 666 B.C.
6 The copy should read 15.
7 This should read XXX.
8 Line II should be inserted here: (n). ŠE.PAD DÙ?-e ša AN. .
9 tabru has recently been discussed by Cassin, E.R.A. LVI (1962). pp. 72–75Google Scholar.
10 The sign kil has not been completed by the copyist.