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Old Babylonian Trade in Textiles at Tell al Rimah

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 August 2014

Extract

The archive of Iltani from Tell al Rimah in northern Iraq consists of 150 letters and fifty economic records. It almost certainly falls within the period of Cappadocian trade known as Kültepe Ib; one līmu name, Ṣabrum, is common to this archive and the texts of Kültepe Ib. This single name cannot be considered a certain link, since it has no patronymic in the records of Iltani; however, the name Kaneš occurs in two of the letters, and this gives support. The letters show that Hammurapi of Babylon was at that time the overlord of Iltani's people; Zimri-Lim's court at Mari is never mentioned, and so a date between Hammurapi's 32nd and 38th years is very probable. This is likely to be within the period of Kültepe Ib according to several scholars.

Of the forty letters between Iltani and her husband the ruler Aqba-hammu, ten are concerned with cloth, garments and workers in the local textile industry. A further eleven letters to Iltani from various different people are likewise concerned, and some mentioned textiles in fairly large amounts. Of the economic records, four concern textiles, two of them in large quantities, and the ration lists name groups of textile workers. From the letters alone one may deduce that textiles were important business at Rimah; compare the letters of Šibtu and her female contemporaries at Mari in which cloth and garments are mentioned usually as single items for personal use. Further comparison of the two groups of letters from Mari and Rimah makes it clear that the ruler and his wife were more closely concerned at Rimah than at Mari with making cloth and garments, and distributing them.

Type
Research Article
Information
IRAQ , Volume 39 , Issue 2 , Autumn 1977 , pp. 155 - 159
Copyright
Copyright © The British Institute for the Study of Iraq 1977

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References

1 The Old Babylonian Tablets from Tell al-Rimah, by Dalley, S., Walker, C. B. F. and Hawkins, J. D. (London, 1976), texts 19–219Google Scholar.

2 Garelli, P., Les Assyriens en Cappadoce, 79Google Scholar; and Buchanan, B., JAOS 89 (1969), 759Google Scholar.

3 170, 212, 215, 217.

4 ARM II, 112117Google Scholar; ARM X.

5 ARM X, 3:11, 17:9–13, 18:11–12, 19:6–8, 27(?), 123:17–19, 173:11–18Google Scholar; ARM II, 116:810Google Scholar.

6 Oates, D., Iraq 30 (1968), 135–6Google Scholar; Iraq 32 (1970), 18Google Scholar; Iraq 34 (1972), 7885Google Scholar.

7 For GÚ as an abbreviation for GÚ.È.A, see note on text 57: 4–5, op. cit.

8 Cf. TÚG ha-lu-ú-us-su-hu in ARM VII, 199:4Google Scholar, also IX 102:2, 13; and TÚG ha-li-ši-ik-num in RA 64 (1970), 33 25:1 ffGoogle Scholar; also perhaps ARM IX, 102:3Google Scholar.

9 Occurs also in an unpublished text from Mari; I am grateful to J.-R. Kupper for this information.

10 See AHw, s.v. raqqatu(m).

11 See AHw, s.v. parš/sīgu(m).

12 See MSL VIII/2, p. 109Google Scholar, note.

13 Andariq may have belonged to the state of Rimah at this time. See Dalley et al., op. cit, 36.

14 The city of Rimah, if it was not the city of Karana itself, certainly belonged to the state of Karana at this time. See Dalley, op. cit., 34–6.

15 See above, p. 157, concerning letter 57.

16 Published only in partial transliteration in RHA V/35 (1939). 70 ff.Google Scholar

17 Aškur-Addu was perhaps Iltani's brother, and was probably ruler of Karana immediately before Aqba-hammu. See Dalley, op. cit., 33.