Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-09T13:00:26.520Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Loftus Hoard of Old Babylonian Tools from Tell Sifr in Iraq

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 August 2014

Extract

Although W. K. Loftus is best remembered today for his pioneer excavations at Susa and Warka, one of his most remarkable single discoveries was made in April, 1854, at Tell Sifr in Iraq. For the first three months of the year, accompanied by Boutcher as artist, he had been engaged on excavations at Warka sponsored by the Assyrian Excavation Fund. He then moved his expedition to Senkara (Larsa), a site fifteen miles south-east of Warka, called to his attention through a rapid visit there by Baillie Fraser in 1834. Among the large mounds visible from Senkara across the ancient canal, Shatt al Kar, is that of Tell Sifr, which promising local reports of its contents induced Loftus to explore. Indeed the mound had already been honey-combed by a notorious group of clandestine excavators searching for gold in Parthian graves. It was they who had named the site ‘Sifr’ after the numerous copper objects they discovered there, much no doubt to their chagrin. Within a matter of days the party of Arabs despatched by Loftus had “cut some enormous gashes into the little conical mound, which crowns a low platform nowhere exceeding forty feet above the desert”. The discovery with which this paper is concerned was made on the south-east side of the tell and may best be described in the excavator's own words:

“A trench was dug into the south-east side of the principal mound, according to instructions, and soon came against a brick wall, which, from its position, supported by a three-feet buttress, and its elevation in two-inch gradines, was evidently the exterior of a building. Its thickness was not ascertained, but it encased an internal mass of mudbrick, as explained by some other trenches. Following this wall for a distance of about six feet, the workmen discovered a number of copper articles arranged along it, which form a very curious and quite unique collection, consisting of large chaldrons, vases, small dishes and dice-boxes (?); hammers, chisels, adzes, and hatchets; a large assortment of knives and daggers of various sizes and shapes—all unfinished; massive and smaller rings; a pair of prisoner's fetters; three links of a strong chain; a ring weight; several plates resembling horses' shoes, divided at the heel for the insertion of a handle, and having two holes in each for pins; other plates of a different shape, which were probably primitive hatchets; an ingot of copper and a great weight of dross from the same smelted metal. (Here Loftus notes: ‘The whole of the articles obtained from Tell Sifr are deposited in the British Museum’). There was likewise a small fragment of a bitumen bowl overlaid with thin copper; and a piece of lead.” Loftus believed he had found the stock-in-trade of a copper smith, but was puzzled by their ‘connection with the public edifice, near which they were uncovered’. He inferred the date of this copper hoard from the Old Babylonian tablets and envelopes found close to them. This archive had been carefully stacked upon bricks with a cover of reed matting. Impending seasonal floods brought the work at Tell Sifr to a premature end. The site has never subsequently been scientifically examined.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The British Institute for the Study of Iraq 1971

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Loftus, W. K., Travels and Researches in Chaldaea and Susiana, (1857), 268Google Scholar.

2 Jean, C. F., Tell Sifr. Textes cunéiformes conservés au British Museum, 1931Google Scholar.

3 Outils, I, 172: Gp. B2bGoogle Scholar.

4 IM 10776: A Guide to the Iraq Museum Collections, (1942), pl. XXIV.

5 Outils, I, 158–9; II, 66–7Google Scholar.

6 Woolley, C. L., Ur Excavations, VII (forthcoming), pl. XCVIII, U. 3341Google Scholar.

7 Woolley, C. L., Museum Journal (Philadelphia), 16 (1925), 55Google Scholar: not a pick-axe as described here—figures facing pp. 50, 53; nor is the tool an adze as Legrain described it in Museum Journal, 18, (1927), 86Google Scholar.

8 Speleers, L., Bulletin des musées royaux d'art et d'histoire, Bruxelles, 1932, 61–2, fig. 8Google Scholar.

9 Outils, I, 234; II, 96–7Google Scholar.

10 Woolley, C. L., Ur Excavations, VIII, pl. 36, J. 6927Google Scholar.

11 II. Skinner, D., Antiquity, 22 (1948), 208–10CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

12 Barrelet, M. Th., Figurines et reliefs en terre cuite, (1968), nos. 778–9Google Scholar: not un outil double, à collet, avec trou cV emmanchement situé entre les deux parties; for an excellent illustration see Parrot, A., Sumer, 1960, fig. 359EGoogle Scholar.

13 Petrie, W. M. F., Tools and Weapons (1917), pl. XVIII, 123–5, 132Google Scholar.

14 Outils I, 295ffGoogle Scholar; II, 122.

15 Deshayes, J., Syria, 35 (1958), 284ffCrossRefGoogle Scholar.

16 Hillen, C., Bi. Or. 10 (1953), 214, no. 34–5Google Scholar; Outils, I, 244–5Google Scholar.

11 McCown, D. E., Nippur, I, 112Google Scholar.

19 Outils, I, 245Google Scholar.

19 de Hemmer Gudme, , ‘Workmen and Tools at Excavations in Iraq and Syria’, Report of the XIXth International Congress of Orientalists, (1935), 581 ffGoogle Scholar.

20 Outils, I, 244Google Scholar; II, pl. XXXIII, 1968.

21 Werth, E., Grabstock, Hacke und Pflug, (1954), fig. 20–1Google Scholar; for an extensive study of the north European evidence see Gailey, A. and Fenton, A. (Ed.), The Spade, 1970Google Scholar.

22 Catling, H. W., Cypriot Bronzework in the Mycenean World, (1964), 78–9Google Scholar.

23 Sahnen, 122–3.

24 ZA, 38 (1927), 93, n. 2Google Scholar.

25 Van Buren, , Symbols of the Gods in Mesopotamian Art, (1945), 14ffGoogle Scholar.

26 Mecquenem, de and Dossin, G., RA, 35 (1938), 129ft., fig. IGoogle Scholar.

27 Outils, I, 303; II, 123Google Scholar.

28 Mccquenem, R. de, MDP, XXV (1934), 227, fig. 75.23Google Scholar.

29 McCown, D. E., Nippur, I, pl. 154.1,2Google Scholar; Starr, R. E., Nuzi, II, pl. 124C,D,EGoogle Scholar; Langdon, S., Excavations at Kish, I, pl. XX.5, topGoogle Scholar; Koldewey, R., The Excavations at Babylon, (1914), 263, fig. 183, 2nd. from the bottomGoogle Scholar.

30 Frankfort, H.The Gimilsin Temile and the Palace of the Rulers at Tell Asmar (1946), fig. 1061Google Scholar.

31 Steensberg, A., Ancient Harvesting Implements, (1943)Google Scholar.

32 Speiser, E. A., Excavations at Tepe Gawra, I, 107, pl. XLVIII.1Google Scholar; Mallowan, M. E. L., Iraq, 9 (1947), 165, pl. XXXI.1Google Scholar.

33 Salonen, 165.

34 Gordon, E. I., Sumerian Proverbs, (1959), 211CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

35 Aitchison, L., A History of Metals, I, (1960), fig. 10, left: BM 118058Google Scholar.

36 Layard, A. H., Nineveh and its Remains, II, 376, figureGoogle Scholar.

37 Boardman, J. and Hayes, J., Excavations at Tocra 1963-6) the Archaic Deposits, I (1966), 160, fig. 77.71Google Scholar.

38 Moorey, P. R. S., Catalogue of the Ancient Version Bronzes in the Ashmolean Museum, no. 143 (1971) with referencesGoogle Scholar.

39 Salonen, 37ff.

40 Turkowski, L., PEQ, (1969), 28–9, fig. 2–3Google Scholar.

41 Moorey, P. R. S., Iraq, 32 (1970), 41Google Scholar.

42 Sollberger, E., JCS 22 (1968), 30ffGoogle Scholar. for a contemporary Elamite mug with handle inscribed for Atta-hušu.

43 Langdon, S., Excavations at Kisb, I, pl. XX.5Google Scholar: top centre, centre right, lower left and right: HMR 1239–1244.

44 Watelin, L. Ch., Excavations at Kisb, IV, pl. XXXIII.2,3,5Google Scholar.

45 McCown, D. E., Nippur, I, pl. 59: Tb. 206N1Google Scholar; Tb. 216IV1, pl. 154.

46 Outils, I, 136–8Google Scholar; II, 62: Type B.2a.

47 Outils, II, 7071 lists themGoogle Scholar.

48 H. Frankfort, Cylinder Seals, pl. XVIf.

49 Ibid., pl. XXVf.

50 Encyclopédie photographique de l'Art; Musée du Louvre, II, (1936), 73, no. 42Google Scholar.

51 Bass, G., Cape Gelidonya: A Bronze Age Shipwreck (1967), fig. 101 for a good selectionGoogle Scholar.

52 Salonen, pl. II-III; van Buren, , Symbols of the Gods in Ancient Mesopotamia (1945), 20ffGoogle Scholar.

53 Outils, I, 142Google Scholar.

54 Mallowan, M. E. L., Iraq, 9 (1947), 213, pl. LIII.30 with reference to two from UrGoogle Scholar.

55 Salonen, 77ff.

56 Recently see Finklestein, J., JAOS, 90, (1970), 247ftGoogle Scholar.