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New light on North Mesopotamia in the earlier second millennium B.C.: metalwork from the Hamrin*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 August 2014
Extract
It is typical of Mesopotamian studies that periods well supplied with documentary evidence are frequently those for which archaeological evidence is least reliable. Such is the case with the earlier part of the second millennium B.C. (Porada et al. 1992: p. 119). While the situation has improved somewhat as a result of several recent publications (Gasche 1989; Hill et al. 1989; Kepinski-Lecomte 1992), many gaps remain. The paucity of reliable data from Mesopotamia has certainly hindered attempts to understand relationships between that area and the often better documented material cultures of neighbouring regions.
The present report represents an attempt to tackle one aspect of these problems by presenting a group of metal weapons of secure north Mesopotamian provenance, which can be reliably dated to the early second millennium B.C., the Old Babylonian period in particular. The material presented here is the first substantial assemblage of Mesopotamian weapons of this date to be published.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright © The British Institute for the Study of Iraq 1995
Footnotes
Note: Dating according to the Middle Chronology, Hammurabi 1792–1750 B.C.