Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-r5fsc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T19:55:53.042Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Chapter 10 - Phoenician and Related Canaanite Names

from Part II - Non-Babylonian Names

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2024

Caroline Waerzeggers
Affiliation:
Rijksuniversiteit Leiden, The Netherlands
Melanie M. Groß
Affiliation:
Rijksuniversiteit Leiden, The Netherlands

Summary

The Neo- and Late Babylonian text corpus, from the time of the Assyrian (Sargonid) rule until the Seleucid period, contains a very small number of Phoenician anthroponyms. Their patterns and theophorous elements generally correspond to those recorded in the general Phoenician–Punic onomasticon. They are discernible mainly by two criteria, namely theological – the typical Phoenician theophorous elements – and phonological – the Phoenician shift of á to ó. A hybrid Phoenician name is Aštartu-šezib, with the Phoenician–Punic theophorous element ˁAštart followed by an Aramaic–Akkadian predicative element. The identification of two individuals as Moabites and one as Ammonite is based on the fact that the theophorous elements of their names are Moabite (Kemosh) and Ammonite (Milkom). The Ammonite and one of the Moabites bear hybrid names, as their predicative element (in both cases) is Akkadian, viz. (DN-)šarru-uṣur, thereby being also basilophoric names, a fact betraying their link to the palatial sector. The occurrence of hybrid names is due to the Akkadian and Aramaic dominant linguistic milieu of Babylonia in the aforementioned periods.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Introduction

There is a very restricted number of anthroponyms which can be defined as Phoenician and fringe Canaanite (practically, Moabite and Ammonite) in Neo-Babylonian and Late Babylonian sources. Footnote 1 No more than twenty-three individuals bore Phoenician names, with various degrees of plausibility. There is only one individual among them whose name is not strictly speaking purely Phoenician, as it ends with the Akkado-Aramaic gentilic suffix (Ṣūrāya ‘Tyrian’, a man of undoubtedly Phoenician extraction; see [33]). In addition, there are two Moabites and one Ammonite.

The sample is not only very small but also very dispersed, as it covers over 300 years and originates from almost all the Babylonian regions and documentation centres.Footnote 2 Relying on such a limited sample, which is almost entirely reconstructed (the only person explicitly said to be Phoenician is the aforementioned Tyrian), necessitates maximum contextualisation – namely, thorough analysis and evaluation of the pertinent prosopographical pool.

The main criteria for distinguishing Phoenician names from other Canaanite corpora, in the first place the onomasticon of the Old Testament, are (1) phonological, viz. the shift of á to ó, and (2) theological: the Phoenician onomasticon preserved the old Canaanite theophoric elements (with several individual modifications), whereas most of the theophoric anthroponyms of the Old Testament contain Yhw and kinship terms. Like Hebrew, the residual onomastica of Moab and Ammon lack the shift of á to ó, whereas their main theophoric elements differ from the other Canaanite onomastica due to the popularity of their main local gods, viz. Moabite Kemosh and Ammonite Milkom. Of course, the distinction and delimitation among the various Canaanite dialects, as well as between Phoenician and Aramaic, is not always clear-cut. Cases where disambiguation is not possible are discussed where applicable.

Phoenicians in Babylonian Sources

The earliest Phoenician person attested in Babylonian sources is Ašid-rummu (Ia-šid-ru-um-mu, [9]). His three sons, viz. Nūr?-gumê, Iqīšāya, and Šūzubu, sold a palm grove in the Bīt-Dakkūri region at the end of 624 BCE.Footnote 3 It is not explicitly stated that the three sellers were his sons, but this is implied by the fact that they belonged to the ‘house’ (bītu) of Ašid-rummu and Kaššâ (Ikaš-šá-ˀ) < Kaššāya. The latter is preceded by a ‘Personenkeil’, which defines male names, but Kaššāya was a common female name in Babylonia. Therefore it is very likely that she was Ašid-rummu’s wife. From the fact that the alienation of the property was by his sons, it stands to reason that he had passed away some time before late 624 BCE. He or his ancestors were very probably deported to Babylonia by the Assyrians.

The next person with a Phoenician name, Ḫaru-Ṣapūnu (Idḫa-ru-ṣa-pu-nu, [15]), is recorded in 617 BCE (i.e., more than a decade before the campaigns of Nebuchadnezzar II to the Levant). The Akkadian name of his brother, Nabê-ṣīru, may be an indication that the family was established for at least two generations in Babylonia. Therefore, it can be hypothesised that his ancestors were deported to Babylonia by the Assyrians.

As is expected, most Phoenician individuals are recorded in the long sixth century BCE, which has an abundant documentation, whereas only three are attested in the late-Achaemenid period, with its more restricted textual corpus [4, 5, 23], and just two in the dwindling documentation from the beginning of the Hellenistic period [28 and his brother].

Unfortunately, almost all the numerous Phoenician prisoners of war (mostly sailors) of Nebuchadnezzar II’s campaigns are recorded anonymously at the beginning of the sixth century BCE.Footnote 4 They are mentioned in the N1 archive which was unearthed in the Southern Fortress of Babylon and concerns the palatial sector.Footnote 5

Several of the few Phoenicians, who are recorded by name in later sources from the sixth century, belong to that same, palatial sector. One of them, Yatūnu (Iia-a-tu-nu, [17]), held the prominent position of royal resident (qīpu) of a Babylonian temple about 50 to 60 years later – that is, no more than two generations after the military campaigns which resulted in the deportation and resettlement of Phoenicians and other Levantines in Babylonia.Footnote 6 The Neo-Babylonian rulers and their Persian successors generally nominated individuals who were not members of the urban elite for inspecting the temples. This is a unique case where a person of foreign extraction was nominated to this office by the native rulers.

Itti-šarri-īnīa, who is mentioned a decade earlier, bore an anthroponym which is typical of members of the palatial sector (see Chapter 5). He was probably born in Babylonia to a father bearing the very common Phoenician name bˁlytn [1]. Itti-šarri-īnīa was a business partner of a royal courtier (ša rēš šarri).

Five to six individuals belonged to, or had links with, Babylonian temples rather than with the palace.Footnote 7 They might initially have been donated to the temples by the Neo-Babylonian rulers. On the whole, foreigners and outsiders were absorbed in the public rather than in the private sector in first-millennium Babylonia.

None of the very few named inhabitants of the Tyrian colony near Nippur bore a Phoenician anthroponym.Footnote 8 Even the only explicitly Tyrian filiation from there consists of an Akkadian paternal name and a common West Semitic given name (Reference Zadok, Stökl and WaerzeggersZadok 2015, 107–8).

The three (or four) named ‘carpenters of Lebanon’, who are mentioned in the archive of the Ebabbar temple, were sent from there to Mt. Lebanon in order to hew cedar wood and transport it to Sippar. Since they had Akkadian filiations as early as 582 BCE,Footnote 9 they were very probably Babylonians and not Phoenicians: if they were Phoenicians, one would expect their fathers, who lived around 600 BCE, when the Phoenician deportees arrived in Babylonia, to bear Phoenician names.

Ammonites and Moabites in Babylonian Sources

The only person with an Ammonite filiation and one of the two individuals with Moabite filiations were probably linked to the palatial sector in view of the predicative element of their names, viz. DN-šarru-uṣur, referring to an earthly king, in all likelihood their ultimate employer [35, 37; see Chapter 5 on this type of name]. Strictly speaking, both names are not purely Ammonite–Moabite but hybrid – that is, Ammonite/Moabite–Akkadian. Their characterisation as such is due to the fact that their theophoric elements are Ammonite (Milkom) and Moabite (Kemosh). Settlements named after Philistines are recorded in Neo- and Late Babylonian sources (Ḫazatu and Išqillūnu; i.e., Gaza and Ashkelon),Footnote 10 but no named Philistines appear in these texts.

Classification of the Phoenician Anthroponyms

Due to the limited number of Phoenician names attested in the Babylonian text corpus, we offer only a very basic classification of their structure here, viz. twenty-two compound and non-compound names (respectively, thirteen and nine names each). This sample represents the names with a high degree of plausibility; the maximum is thirty-four names, which are all classified herein. One of the simplex names can be regarded an isolated predicate [17]. Both members of the only purely Phoenician filiation (father and son [12, 13]) have the same initial component.

Compound Names

Verbal Sentence Names

The pattern subject + predicate (G perfect 3.sg. m.) is represented by [1] Bēl-yatūnu (IdEN-ia-a-tu-nu), father of Itti-šarri-īnīa, which renders the Phoenician name bˁlytn ‘Baal has given’.Footnote 11 The Akkadian scribe had no difficulty in identifying Akkadian Bēl (dEN) with his Phoenician divine cognate, seeing that the latter is transcribed not only ba-al (/baˁl/) but also ba-ˀ-il, even in the name of one and the same individual (see [8]).

Another instance of the same name pattern is possibly [2] Ab-ḫalalu (Iab-ḫa-la-lu4), recorded in the archive of the Eanna temple of Uruk, possibly at the end of the seventh or the beginning of the sixth century BCE.Footnote 12 His name is apparently identical to the Phoenician anthroponym ˀbḥll. The latter seems to consist of ˀb- ‘(divine) father’ and a form, apparently qatal (G perfect 3.sg. m.), deriving from Ḥ-L-L (eventually ‘to fear’).Footnote 13 However, doubt is cast on Ab-ḫalalu’s Phoenician descent in view of his milieu, viz. that of shepherds, who generally bore Akkadian and Arameo-Arabian names in first-millennium BCE Babylonia. Therefore, an identification with Safaitic ˀbˁll (two occurrences) is an alternative (Reference HardingHarding 1971, 14).

The pattern predicate + subject is presumably represented by [3] Azabtī-il (Ia-zab-tì-ìl), father of Gūsāya,Footnote 14 which ends with the theophoric element ˀl ‘god, El’ and begins with a G perfect 1.sg. of ˁ-Z-B, viz. *̔azab-tī- (i.e., ‘I have entrusted to god’).Footnote 15 Alternatively, this name may be Hebrew or Transjordanian. Another instance of this name pattern is [4] Ḫašb-ilīm, rendering Phoenician *ḥšb-ˀlm, contained in the toponym Bīt (É) Iḫaš-bi-il-li-im-ma in the Nippur region:Footnote 16 ‘The gods have thought, reckoned’ (Ḥ-Š-B with qátal- > qatl-; the subject is morphologically plural but syntactically singular, as it is a pluralis maiestatis).Footnote 17

The following name, borne by a slave of the Murašû firm of Nippur, is of the same pattern but uses a D short-imperfect 3.sg. m.: [5] Yāḫû-lūnu (Iia-a-ḫu-lu-ni/nu).Footnote 18 This name renders yḥw(ˀ)ln, extant in Punic,Footnote 19 ‘May god keep alive’.Footnote 20 The spelling ia-a- does not indicate a long /a/, as its -a is inserted in order to confirm the reading /ia/ of the polyphonic sign IA. This is the only attestation of ˀln outside Punic, and actually its earliest occurrence. Hence, Yāḫû-lūnu is a rendering of the Phoenician forerunner of the Punic anthroponym.

Nominal Sentence Names

Two names possibly display the pattern substantive + substantive. [6] Milki-izirî (Imil-ki-i-zi-ri!) ‘Milki is (my) support’ corresponds with the Phoenician name mlqrtˁzr.Footnote 21 The latter, like other names of the type DN-ˁzr, may alternatively be a verbal sentence name with a G perfect 3.sg. m. of ˁ-Z-R: ‘Milqart has helped’.Footnote 22 The Phoenician name mlkyˁzr consists of Mlk and an imperfect verb;Footnote 23 -y- as a plene spelling of a connecting vowel (-i-, the equivalent of Bibl. Heb. hiriq compaginis) is not recorded in the Phoenician onomasticon. The name is explicable also in Hebrew or fringe Canaanite – that is, Moabite or Ammonite, but not in Aramaic.

In the female name [7] fNīr-ˀimmî (fni-ri-ˀ-im-mi-ˀ),Footnote 24 the theophoric element is originally an epithet ‘light’ which is exclusively Canaanite–Hebrew (nyr). Its Aramaic equivalent nr (nūr) is paired with the sun god in the Sefire inscription (šmš wnr).Footnote 25 The second member of each preserved divine pair in that inscription from northern Syria (there are four such pairs in addition to damaged ones) is a female deity (at least in this Aramaic milieu). This accords well with the predicative element -im-mi-ˀ. Hence, this female name would denote ‘Nyr is my mother’. The predicative element ˀm ‘mother’ is recorded as the first component in Phoenician names.Footnote 26 A seemingly alternative interpretation, viz. ‘Nyr is with me’, is less likely if the name is Phoenician, as the preposition ˁm ‘with’ is not recorded in Phoenician–Punic.Footnote 27 This alternative interpretation is possible if the name refers to a Judean or a Transjordanian woman.

The pattern substantive + adjective is represented by at least two names. [8] Baal-rūm (Iba-al-ru-um) ‘Baal is exalted’, referring to a Tyrian boatman (var. Iba-ˀ-i[l-r]u-um-mu),Footnote 28 is the same name as Phoenician bˁlrm.Footnote 29 Comparable is [9] Ašid-rummu (Ia-šid-ru-um-mu) ‘Aš(a)d is exalted’.Footnote 30 The theophoric element ˀšd ‘lion’ is recorded in Punic.Footnote 31 [10] Milki-rām ‘Milki is exalted’, the name of a boatman recorded in the Ebabbar archive from Sippar in the early Neo-Babylonian period,Footnote 32 can be either Phoenician or Aramaic.

Interrogative Sentence

[11] Ayy-mitūnu (Ia-a-mi-tu-nu) ‘Where is Mitōn?’, a shepherd of the Eanna temple, is recorded in Uruk in the fourteenth year of an unknown ruler – that is, either Nabopolassar, Nebuchadnezzar II, or Nabonidus (612, 591, or 542 BCE).Footnote 33 This name is recorded as Ia-a-mì-tu-nu in the Neo-Assyrian text corpus.Footnote 34

Genitive Compound

[12] Abdu-Ḫmūnu (Iab-du-uḫ-mu-nu), son of [13] Abdu-Milki (Iab-du-mi-lik), acted as the second witness in a deed of Sîn-qitri, son of a Moabite father [35], which was issued in Babylon in the sixth year of Cambyses (524 BCE).Footnote 35 Iab-du-uḫ-mu-nu renders Phoenician ˁbdḥmn ‘Servant of Ḥamōn’ with dropping of the short unstressed vowel of the theophoric element. The father’s name renders Phoenician–Punic ˁbdmlk ‘Servant of Milki’.Footnote 36 It is not necessarily an anaptyctic form, as the CVC-sign LIK is indifferent to vowel quality and may render CøC (i.e., <mi-lik> = /milk/).

The name spelled [14] Aḫ-ˀabi (IŠEŠ-ˀ-bu; i.e., ˀḥˀb ‘The father’s brother’) is not recorded in Phoenician–Punic, but it is explicable in Phoenician terms; cf. Phoen. ˀḥˀm ‘The mother’s brother’ (Pun. ḥˀm with aphaeresis).Footnote 37 This man is mentioned as the father of Nidintu, the fourth of six debtors in a receipt of 55 kors of barley delivered at Duqulān in the reign of Darius I (496 BCE).Footnote 38 The fifth debtor mentioned in this text is Aštartu-šēzib, son of Šillimu (Išil-li-mu), who was very probably of Phoenician extraction [26]. The second debtor bore a hybrid Akkadian–Aramean paternal name Rammān-šarru-uṣur – that is, with the Aramaic theophoric element Rammān (spelled dKURan) and an Akkadian predicative element linking him with some probability to the palatial sector (see Chapter 5). The guarantor bore a similar Akkadian–Aramaic paternal name: Rammān-(mu)kīn-apli. The creditor, a courtier who acted via his slave as proxy, belonged to the palatial sector. Three of the six debtors and two out of the six witnesses have Akkadian filiations. The fourth witness bears the paternal name Munaššê (Imu-na-še-e) which is common in Canaanite (Phoenician)–Hebrew [29]. It seems more likely that its bearer was a Phoenician, in view of the absence of recognisable Judeans in this deed. This is stated with all due reserve in view of the very restricted statistical pool of this isolated document. The remaining three witnesses have mixed Aramaic–Akkadian filiations. The fifth witness, Sūqāya, son of Iddin-Nabû, who follows Iddin-Nabû, son of Munaššê, was perhaps a son of the preceding witness. The place of issue, Duqulān (du-qu-la-an), is not recorded elsewhere and its location is unknown. It is apparently a rural settlement, whose name (written without a determinative) is explicable in Aramaic terms. As is typical of rural settlements, the only individual who bears a family name is the scribe. Hence, he was not necessarily a resident of this village, but originated from a town. He might have been brought by the creditor, who was in all probability external to the village.

Toponym

The name [15] Ḫaru-Ṣapūnu (Idḫa-ru-ṣa-pu-nu) is an oronym, viz. ‘Mt. Zaphon’ (*Harr-Ṣapōn, on the north Syrian coast where Phoenician colonies were located), used as an anthroponym.Footnote 39 The interpretation of Reference LipińskiLipiński (1995, 247, n. 184) – namely, that this anthroponym consists of two theophoric elements (Horus and Zaphon) – seems less likely. Ḫaru-Ṣapūnu belonged, together with his father Uggâ (Iug-ga-a) and brother Nabê-ṣīru, to a group of nine individuals of the same profession (presumably MUŠEN.[DÙ.MEŠ] ‘bird-catchers’). They are subsumed as ten individuals and probably formed a decury, a unit which by definition consisted of ten people, but exceptionally it may include slightly fewer or more individuals. In addition to Uggâ and his sons, the decury included two more individuals with two-tier filiations and two individuals without filiations. Six out of the nine individuals, including Nabê-ṣīru, bear Akkadian names, and one has an Aramaic anthroponym (Reḫīm-Adad). Ḫaru-Ṣapūnu’s paternal name (Uggâ) is explicable in West Semitic terms,Footnote 40 but is not exclusively Phoenician. Still, in view of his son’s name there is no doubt about the father’s Phoenician connection. The document was issued in the ninth year of Nabopolassar (617 BCE). The place of issue is not indicated, but from the format of this administrative record it may be surmised that it belongs to the archive of the Ebabbar temple of Sippar. However, so far, no prosopographical links with the rich documentation of this archive can be demonstrated.

Compound or Simplex Names

[16] Šalūma-x ([…] Išá-lu-ma-x-([…]) was in charge of sailors from Maḫazīn on the North Syrian coast, where some Phoenician colonies and outposts were located.Footnote 41 It is based on Canaanite šlm ‘peace’; cf. Phoenician–Punic šlm.Footnote 42 The context strongly suggests that he was a Phoenician.

Simplex Names

Isolated Predicate

[17] A man named Yatūnu served as the royal resident (qīpu) of a Babylonian temple.Footnote 43 His name renders Phoenician ytn ‘He has given’. This is a short version of names of the type DN-ytn,Footnote 44 as seen in name [1].

qatl (optional)

[18] Abdūnu (IAD-du-ú-un, Iab-du-ú-nu) ‘Little slave, servant’, son of Abī-râm, was either a Phoenician/Philistine or a Judean.Footnote 45 He collected the annual rent of a house, apparently acting as co-agent of an Assyrian house owner (Kīnāya, son of Tarībi-Iššar or Erība-Aššur). The first witness of the deed is Šalam-aḫi, son of Dūrāya, perhaps originally from Dor (or the patronym may be understood as a gentilic based on Dūru, which is common in Mesopotamian toponymy). A homonymous individual (Iab-du-nu) is the father of a certain Nabû-nāṣir from Ālu-ša-xx[x].MEŠ.Footnote 46

qitl (optional)

[19] The name Izirî (Ii-zi-ri-ˀ, son of Ibi-ˀ-ú-e),Footnote 47 which ends in the hypocoristic suffix -ī, derives from Canaanite–Hebrew ˁ-Z-R ‘to help, to support’; cf. OT ˁzry and related names.Footnote 48 Ii-zi-ri-ˀ is with anaptyxis; its bearer may alternatively be a Judean or a Transjordanian.

[20] A woman named fḪilb/punnu (fḫi-il-b/pu-un-nu), whose father bore the Egyptian name IPA-TAR-de-si, adopted a three-month-old female baby fLillidu (flil-li-di) in the city of Borsippa in 489 BCE.Footnote 49 The baby’s mother had died and she was given up for adoption by her grandmother, fAmtia, who belonged to the Borsippean clan of Bāˀiru. The adoptive mother fḪilb/punnu was married to Bēl-ēṭir, a member of the Itinnu family and likewise an urbanite Borsippean, as can be inferred from his family name. fḪilb/punnu herself bore in all probability a West Semitic name which is explicable in Phoenician, Transjordanian, or Levantine Aramaic terms, since it ends with -ōn < -ān and is based on Ḫ-L-P ‘to substitute’ (common West Semitic).Footnote 50 Typically, a woman of foreign extraction, married to an urbanite Borsippean, was of lower status. This impression is strengthened by the fact that two of the five witnesses to the deed are oblates of Nabû (i.e., of the Ezida temple of Borsippa), including one with an Egyptian name like that of fḪilb/punnu’s father. As is well-known, Babylonian urbanites married foreign women, but did not give their daughters in marriage to men who did not belong to their constituency.

qatal (optional)

[21] A man called Amanūnu (Iam-ma-nu-nu), son of Marduk-ibni, is attested as a witness in the time of Nabonidus.Footnote 51 His name, ending in the adjectival suffix -ōn < -ān, derives from ˀ-M-N,Footnote 52 in which case it is related to OT ˀmnwn ‘faithful’ (based on a qatl-formation; Reference ZadokZadok 1988, 75). He might alternatively be a Judean or a Transjordanian.

The same applies to [22] Ḫaraṣīnu (Iḫa-ra-ṣi-nu), son of Gūzūnu (Igu-zu-nu), who is mentioned in the archive of the Ebabbar temple from Sippar.Footnote 53 His name may consist of Ḫ-R-Ṣ ‘to cut in, carve’ (Phoen., Heb.) and a rare suffix -īn,Footnote 54 while the paternal name, which ends in -ōn < -ān, is based on a qūl-formation of G-W/Y-Z ‘to pass’ (Heb., Aram.).

qatál > qatól

The name [23] Adūmê (Ia-du-me-e), father of Ṣiḫā (Iṣi-ḫa-ˀ),Footnote 55 is based on ˀdm ‘man’Footnote 56 and ends with the suffix -ē < -ī < -iy,Footnote 57 which can be either adjectivising (‘man-like, human’), a gentilic (nisbe ‘belonging to Adam’),Footnote 58 or a hypocorism (short for a compound name with the theophoric element ˀdm). His son’s name is Egyptian.

qatīl (optional)

[24] Arīšu (Ia-ri-iš-šú), father of Abdia, a witness in the Egibi archive from Babylon,Footnote 59 may render the common Phoenician–Punic name ˀrš ‘desired, requested’ (Latin Arisus).Footnote 60 For an alternative (Arabian) interpretation, see Reference ZadokZadok 1981, 70 (no. 15).

qātil > qōtil (G active participle)

The name of [25] Sūkinni (Isu-ki-in-ni), son of Bēl-uballiṭ, who acted as a witness in a deed from Uruk,Footnote 61 renders /Sōkin/ ‘inspector, prefect, steward’.Footnote 62 The doubling of the n is unexpected, but is also recorded in Middle Babylonian transcriptions of this title from Ugarit.Footnote 63

qittīl

The name of [26] Šillimu, who is attested as the father of Aštartu-šēzib [34] in the text from Duqulān discussed earlier [14],Footnote 64 renders Phoenician–Punic šlm,Footnote 65 which is either a substantive (‘Recompense’) or an isolated predicate, viz. D perfect 3 sg. m. of Š-L-M (‘He has paid’).Footnote 66 It is a substitute name (i.e., an anthroponym whose bearer is named after a deceased family member).Footnote 67

maqtal

Two names of this type are attested in the Babylonian text corpus:Footnote 68 [27] Mattanu (Ima-at-ta-nu) and [28] Mattannāya (Ima-tan-na-a-a).Footnote 69 Both names have the same base (mtn ‘gift’), the second one ending in the hypocoristic suffix -ay.Footnote 70 They are explicable in any Northwest Semitic dialect and therefore not necessarily Phoenician.Footnote 71 The second vowel of the first name is -a- conforming to the rendering of the initial component of the name of the king of Arwad in an inscription of Esarhaddon (Ima-ta-an-ba-ˀ-al)Footnote 72 and the second vowel of the defective spelling Mαθαν in Josephus (both Phoenician names).Footnote 73 On the other hand, the CVC-sign TAN in Ima-tan-na-a-a is indifferent to vowel quality and can render either á or ó < á, like most of the comparanda.Footnote 74

muqattil (optional)

The name of [29] Munaššê (Imu-na-še-e), father of Iddin-Nabû,Footnote 75 can render Phoenician mnšy.Footnote 76 Similarly, with attenuation u > i, [30] Minaššê (Imi-na-áš-še-e), father of Dādia.Footnote 77 This anthroponym, which is also common in Hebrew, is a substitute name (D active participle of N-Š-Y ‘to forget’, cf. ad [26]).

qūl

The name of [31] Ṣūlūa (Iṣu-lu-ú-a), father of [11]), apparently ending in –ūa, may be based on a cognate of Biblical Hebrew ṣwlh ‘ocean-deep’ (possibly a numen).

qill (optional)

[32] Giddâ (Igi-id-da-a), father of a messenger of an alphabet scribe,Footnote 78 is a hypocorism of *gadd (variants: *gedd, *gidd) ‘fortune, good fortune’, which is also extant in Phoenician.Footnote 79 Alternatively, the name can be an Aramaic dialectal form.

Gentilic

[33] Ṣūrāya (Iṣu-ra-a-a) ‘Tyrian’ is the name of a Phoenician inhabitant of Yāhūdu, a colony of Judeans in or near the Nippur region. In a similar vein, the Tyrian colony of Bīt-Ṣūrāyi near Nippur had Judean inhabitants.Footnote 80 He is mentioned in a list of sixteen holders of fractions of bow-fiefs whose names are preserved.Footnote 81 The majority of the names (eleven) contain the theophoric element Yhw, hence referring to Judeans. The remaining four names are all explicable in Canaanite–Hebrew terms. It can be surmised that few Tyrians were settled by the Babylonians in the Judean settlement after the conquest of Tyre, which had taken place just a few years after the earliest occurrence of Yāhūdu. It is well known that Judeans and Lycians lived in the settlement of the Tyrians (Bīt-Ṣūrāyi) in the Nippur region during the late-Achaemenid period.

Hybrid Names

A hybrid Phoenician name is [34] Aštartu-šēzib (Idáš-tar-tu4-še-zib), borne by the son of [26] Šillimu.Footnote 82 Anthroponyms with the theophoric element ˁAštart are common in Phoenician and Punic, where all their predicative elements are explicable in Phoenician-Canaanite terms.Footnote 83 However, here the predicative element is Aramaic–Akkadian (‘ˁAštart save!’) due to the Babylonian–Aramaic milieu. The predicative element is masculine because the name-bearer is male, despite the fact that the subject is a female deity (see also Chapter 3 n. 1 on this practice).

Moabite Anthroponyms

Only two Moabite personal names are attested in the Babylonian text corpus so far. In a deed concerning an Egyptian slave woman, two brothers (Sîn-qitri and Itti-Nabû-balāṭu) bear the Moabite patronym [35] Kamuš-šarru-uṣur (Idka-mu-šú-šarru-uṣur) ‘Kemosh protect the king!’.Footnote 84 The same text mentions the Phoenician Abdu-Ḫmūnu, discussed earlier [12]. The second Moabite anthroponym is [36] Kamuš-il ‘Kemosh is god’ (Ika-mu-šu-i-lu, Ika-am-mu-šú-DINGIR.MEŠ). The person bearing this name is recorded as the father of Ḫanṭušu, a witness in Susa in 505 BCE.Footnote 85

An Ammonite Anthroponym

The only Ammonite name attested in the Babylonian text corpus so far is [37] Milkūmu-šarru-uṣur (Imil-≪ki≫ku-mu- …) ‘Milkom protect the king’, who is recorded in a text dated to Nabonidus.Footnote 86 This person’s presence in Babylonia accords well with the assumption that Ammon was transformed from a vassal kingdom to a Babylonian province in c. 582 BCEFootnote 87 (i.e., one generation earlier). The Neo-Babylonian Empire pursued the Assyrian policy of deporting members of the local elite as well as experts following such an administrative transformation.

Statistical Evaluation and Some Conclusions

The percentage of bearers of names deriving from Phoenician and fringe Canaanite in the abundant prosopographical record from first-millennium Babylonia is negligible. Almost half of the thirty-four Phoenician names are undoubtedly such, the other half is optional – that is, either Phoenician or belonging to other Northwest Semitic dialects, mostly fringe Canaanite or Hebrew; two are alternatively Arabian.

Most individuals bearing these names have filiations. All the filiations are two-tier: a son’s and a father’s name are combined. Two-tier filiation is typical of foreigners in the Babylonian documentation, where only Babylonian urbanites bore three-tier filiations (son, father, and remote ancestor). This is an indication that the Phoenicians did not marry members of the segregated urbanite elite. Like other foreigners, they assimilated to the less prestigious classes of the Babylonian society. However, members of these classes did not necessarily form a poorer layer of the Babylonian society: a clear case in point are prominent members of the palatial sectors and entrepreneurs lacking family names.

Eleven individuals are recorded without filiations. There are several reasons for this omission. One anthroponym [4] is derived from a toponym, where no patronyms are expected. Slaves or people having a title (as in [5, 17]) bear an identifier and therefore do not need to be presented with a paternal name which is an additional, superfluous, identifier. Filiations are not required in non-legal documents, which supplies the context of several attestations [6, 8, 16]. Ṣūrāya [33] is mentioned in a deed where only recurrent and homonymous individuals are listed with their paternal names. Another one is recorded in a deed without witnesses [2].

Only one purely Phoenician filiation is attested [12, 13]. All the other filiations are mixed – that is, with members bearing Akkadian or West Semitic, mostly Aramaic, names. This is expected in first-millennium Babylonia where people bearing Akkadian and Aramaic names belonged to the local scene. Cases where the father bore a Phoenician name but the son had a local (Akkadian or Aramaic) anthroponym are recorded in the earliest occurrences (624 and 617 BCE [9, 15]) and in 548 BCE [1] (i.e., about one generation after the deportations of the Phoenicians by Nebuchadnezzar II). These are clear cases of acculturation that, to some extent, hint at assimilation. The earliest inverted case – a father with an Akkadian name and a son with an undoubtedly Phoenician anthroponym – is from 556 BCE [25]. Such cases are also encountered slightly later in the reign of Nabonidus [21], one or two generations after these deportations. The Akkadian names are either typical of members of the palatial sector or very common.

As stated earlier, there are also cases where the other member of the filiation has a West Semitic name. Such cases are recorded in 547 and 503 BCE [3, 24]. The paternal name of [19] (Ibi-ˀ-ú-e) is too short for an unambiguous linguistic affiliation; it may be common West Semitic. The last-recorded filiation has members with Akkadian and Aramaic names [28].

Exceptionally, an individual with an Egyptian name has a Phoenician paternal name (421 BCE [23]). An analogous case from 489 BCE is [20], where a common Canaanite anthroponym is combined with an Egyptian paternal name. Two waves of Egyptian deportees arrived in Babylonia, notably due to Nebuchadnezzar II’s western campaigns around 600 BCE and the conquest of Egypt by Cambyses about 80 years later. An influx of Egyptians into Babylonia continued in the late-Achaemenid period. Phoenicia itself, like the whole coast of the southern Levant, was under Egyptian cultural influence. The purely Phoenician filiation from 524 BCE [12–13], slightly less than forty years after Nebuchadnezzar II conquered Tyre, is a remarkable but isolated case of keeping Phoenician identity during two generations. However, there is no telling when their ancestors arrived in Babylonia. Still, there is a possibility that both members enjoyed a long life-span, in which case the father arrived as early as 600 BCE. Like in their motherland, several Phoenicians in Babylonia are related to individuals with Egyptian names. On the whole, within few generations the Phoenicians intermarried with non-urbanite Babylonians and assimilated.

Very few Phoenicians occupied prominent positions (at least two [1, 17]), but most of them are recorded in a rural milieu, notably the earliest ones: the individuals from Duqulān [14, 26, 29, 34], the Tyrian from Yāhūdu [33], and the shepherds [2, 11]. Several Phoenicians were absorbed by the temples. As expected, some played the passive role of witnesses, like most individuals who are recorded in deeds from the Neo-Babylonian and Late Babylonian periods.

The Ammonite person [37] has an Aramaic paternal name (‘Hammatean’; i.e., North Syrian). One of the Moabites has an Aramaic given name [35]. The other Moabite has a West Semitic anthroponym common in first-millennium BCE Babylonia [36].

Footnotes

1 All the names discussed in this chapter are Neo-Babylonian or Late Babylonian unless otherwise stated. Numbers in square brackets refer to the personal names discussed in the chapter.

2 One individual is recorded in a deed from Susa outside Babylonia [36], but he might have been based in Babylon, as the contract belongs to the archive of the Egibi family from Babylon.

3 Reference San NicolòSan Nicolò 1951, 26–7 ad AnOr 9 4 ii 44–iii 44.

6 The deed recording his name (Nbn. 33) concerns the receipt of silver, barley, and dates, probably from the Ebabbar temple of Sippar in 16th year of Nabonidus (540/39 BCE). The deed itself was written on the 14th day of Abu (fifth month) of the first year of ‘[…], king of Babylon’, in all probability Cambyses as viceroy of Babylon – that is, the first year of Cyrus (538 BCE). The silver and commodities were given by order of the chief administrator (šatammu) of the Eigikalamma temple of Marad to the oblates of the god Lugal-Marada. It is therefore very likely that Yatūnu was the royal resident of the Eigikalamma temple.

7 These are individuals [2, 3, 6, 7, 11, 27] and perhaps [12, 28].

8 The Tyrian colony (Bīt-Ṣūrāyi) is mentioned in the Murašû archive; see the discussion in Reference ZadokZadok (1978b, 60).

9 Reference BongenaarBongenaar 1997, 131, 392–3, 395, 400–3, 407.

10 Reference ZadokZadok 1985, 158, 183 s.vv. (see Reference ZadokZadok 1978b, 61b and add uruḫa-za-tu4 in Reference Pearce and WunschPearce and Wunsch 2014 no. 101:6, 11). The settlement urupal(-la)-áš-ti was named after Philistia (see Reference Zadok, Lipschits and BlenkinsoppZadok and Zadok 2003).

11 Nbn. 282:3 (Babylon, 548 BCE); see Reference BenzBenz (1972, 94–6, 328–9).

13 Reference BenzBenz (1972, 310 ad 54) compares Bibl. Heb. (lby) ḥll (bqrby, Psalms 109, 22) and quotes Reference KaddaryKaddary (1963). The latter was of the opinion that ḥll in this verse is a case of interchange between Ḥ-L-L and Ḥ-W/Y-L (< Ḫ-W/Y-L) ‘to tremble from fear’ > ‘to fear’ (Phoen., Heb., Ugar.) – namely, ‘The father has feared (god)’.

14 Reference ZawadzkiTarasewicz and Zawadzki 2018, 643 no. 349 r. 12´ (archive of the Ebabbar temple of Sippar; 547 BCE).

15 Cf. Bibl. Heb. ˁzb byd and for the suffix of 1.sg.; see Reference Friedrich, Röllig, Amadasi Guzzo and MayerFriedrich et al. (1999, 75–6: 128).

16 BE 10 126:5 (417 BCE).

18 BE 9 55:1, 14 (Nippur, 427 BCE); EE 28:1, r.: -l[u-nu] (same place and year). Note that in the last text, the slave uses a stamp seal (Reference BregsteinBregstein 1993, 479 no. 87).

20 Reference ZadokZadok 1978b, 61a. Reference Friedrich, Röllig, Amadasi Guzzo and MayerFriedrich et al. 1999, 117–18: 174bis classify the Late Babylonian name as G-stem without justification, while they aptly consider the Punic name as D-stem.

21 The name is recorded in a tablet from the Ebabbar temple of Sippar (549 BCE) published by Reference ZawadzkiTarasewicz and Zawadzki 2018, 641 no. 348:17; the final sign is mistakenly written -ḫu. The predicative element of this name is with anaptyxis /ˁizr/ > /ˁizir/. For anaptyctic forms in Phoenician, see, for instance, Σεδεκ/Συδεκ/Συδυκ < *Ṣidq (Reference Friedrich, Röllig, Amadasi Guzzo and MayerFriedrich et al. 1999, 26: 45; their opinion that qVtl in Phoenician is retained [6: viii] should be relativised).

22 For this ambiguity of DN-ˁzr, see Reference BenzBenz (1972, 214), who cautiously states ‘with possible preference for the latter’ (i.e., the nominal predicative element). This statement is unfounded not only due to the negligible number of pertinent unambiguous examples, but also in view of the fact that DN + perfect verb is more common than the inverted order (like in the Aramaic onomasticon).

23 Reference BenzBenz 1972, 139, 344–5, 375–6.

24 The name is attested in CT 57 26 (Reference ZawadzkiZawadzki 2018, 203 no. 40:5; c. sixth century BCE).

27 The predicative element (ˁm) is found in Aramaic (including Samalian) and Hebrew. The Aramaic name type DN + ˁm + -y is extant in, for example, Nusku-im-mi-ˀ (AnOr 9 19:35) and Nabê-ḫi-im-mì-i (BIN 1 177:15), ‘Nusku/Nabû is with me’.

28 Reference ZadokZadok 2018, 117 ad VAT 16284+16285:21´ and Reference WeidnerWeidner 1939, pl. iii opposite p. 928 no. B r. i 12´, respectively.

30 See Reference Friedrich, Röllig, Amadasi Guzzo and MayerFriedrich et al. (1999, 106:166). CVC-signs like ŠID are indifferent to vowel quality.

31 Reference LipińskiLipiński 1995, 357–60. The theophoric element is common in Arabic and is productive in the Arabian onomasticon, but in view of the predicative element the Neo-Babylonian name is more likely Phoenician (cf. Reference ZadokZadok 1979, 154 ad 110 and Reference ZadokZadok 2000, 643, Footnote n. 21).

32 Reference Da RivaDa Riva 2002, 436b, BM 78907:3 (transcription only).

33 Reference KozuhKozuh 2014, 49–50 no. 7 (= NCBT 673):49, 56.

34 PNA 1/I, 91, s.v. Aia-Mitūnu, and Reference ZadokZadok 1978a, 351; cf. NA Imi-tu-nu (PNA 2/II, 758, s.v. Mitūnu).

37 Reference BenzBenz 1972, 61, 109, 263, 269; for Hebrew and Aramaic equivalents, see Reference StammStamm (1980, 76).

38 NBC 4611:6.

41 Reference ZadokZadok 2018, 117 ad VAT 16284+16285:2´.

42 Cf. Reference BenzBenz 1972, 180, 417–18.

43 Nbn. 33:5; and see the Introduction to this chapter.

44 Reference BenzBenz 1972, 129, 328–9.

45 Reference Pearce and WunschPearce and Wunsch 2014 no. 98:9 and no. 99:8 (Ālu-ša-Našar, 525 BCE); see Reference Abraham, Jursa and LevaviAbraham et al. (2018) for collations.

46 BaAr 6 16:23; 512 BCE.

47 Reference DurandDurand 1982, 602:12 (Nippur, 521 BCE).

49 Reference WunschWunsch 2003–4, 243–4 no. 23 (BM 26506:5, 7, 11). The terms of the adoption are thoroughly discussed by Wunsch, who aptly suggests that fḫi-il-bu/pu-un-nu was of lower status; there is no need to identify her father with the witness Ipa-ṭe-de-si. Both bore names with the Egyptian theophoric element Esi (Isis), but the predicative elements are different: pa-ṭe- is very common, while pa-tar- is very rare.

50 A derivation from ḥlb ‘milk’ does not seem likely, as this lexeme does not produce West Semitic anthroponyms.

51 Reference WunschWunsch 1993 no. 254a r. 5´.

52 The doubling of m is merely graphic, in order to avoid a reading of <VmV> as /w/.

53 Reference ZawadzkiTarasewicz and Zawadzki 2018, 650 no. 354 r. 5´ (511 BCE).

54 This suffix (cf., e.g., Reference Littmann and HvidbergLittmann 1953, 195) is also found in the name Ḫamadinnu (Iḫa-ma-din-nu) in a ration list from Tel Keisan in a Phoenician-speaking region; see Reference Horowitz, Oshima and SandersHorowitz et al. (2018, 101–2:6´).

55 BE 10 66:13 (Nippur, 421 BCE). This person appears as a witness and uses a ring seal (Reference BregsteinBregstein 1993, 518 no. 124).

59 Dar. 474:18 (503 BCE).

61 YOS 6 2:21 (556 BCE).

62 The title attained an honorific dimension; cf. Phoen. skn bs<k>nm after mlk bmlkm, quoted in Reference Hoftijzer and JongelingHoftijzer and Jongeling 1995, 2: 785–6, s.v. skn2.

63 Cf. CAD S 76.

64 NBC 4611:7 (496 BCE).

65 Reference BenzBenz 1972, 180, 417–18; cf. Heb. šlm (Septuagint Σε/υλλημ).

66 Cf. the Phoenician compound anthroponyms DN + šlm (-σελημ-, defective) which are discussed in Reference Friedrich, Röllig, Amadasi Guzzo and MayerFriedrich et al. 1999, 88: 143.

67 See Reference StammStamm (1980, 46, 52, 73, 78, 118), cf. Reference ZadokZadok (1988, 115).

69 Nbn. 450:7 (Ebabbar archive; 546 BCE) and the ‘Bellino text’ BM 68610:23, lo.e. (308/7 BCE; Reference van der Spekvan der Spek 1986, 202–9). In the latter text, Mattannāya is mentioned alongside his brother, who was named after Izalla, an Aramaic-speaking region in the northern Jazirah. Their father bore an Akkadian name, Ina-ṣilli-Nanāya ‘In the shade of Nanāya’.

72 PNA 2/II, 746, s.v. Mattan-Baˀal 3.

74 For a discussion of the comparanda, see Reference BenzBenz (1972, 356–7) (cf. 143–6).

75 NBC 4611:17 (Duqulān, 496 BCE).

76 Reference BenzBenz 1972, 142, 363–4.

78 Reference Pearce and WunschPearce and Wunsch 2014 no. 1 (Ālu-ša-Yāḫūdāyi, 572 BCE).

82 NBC 4611:7 (Duqulān, 496 BCE).

86 VS 3 53:5 (Babylon, 545 BCE); Reference Zadok, Lipschits and BlenkinsoppZadok 2003, 502.

87 Reference LipschitsLipschits 2004, 39–41 with literature.

References

Further Reading

In addition to Frank L. Benz (1972), who lists most of the Phoenician anthroponyms (with their references) and succinctly analyses and classifies them, Felice Israel (1991) can be consulted with benefit as he offers a synthetic treatment. Johannes Friedrich et al. (1999) provides a linguistic analysis of most of the predicative elements, while Edward Lipiński (1995) discusses most of the pertinent theophoric elements. Since the names of the Moabites and the only Ammonite name discussed herein are linguistically Akkadian (with Moabite and Ammonite theophoric elements) and Aramaic, there is no point in referring to the bibliography on Ammonite–Moabite onomastica; consult any recent and updated Old Testament comprehensive dictionary or encyclopaedia where the deities Kemosh and Milkom are amply discussed.

Abraham, K. 1997. ‘Šušan in the Egibi texts from the time of Marduk-nāṣir-apli’, Orientalia Lovaniensia Periodica 28, 5585.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abraham, K., Jursa, M., and Levavi, Y. 2018. ‘Further Collations to CUSAS 28’, Nouvelles Assyriologiques Brèves et Utilitaires 2018/53.Google Scholar
Baker, H. D. (ed.) 2001. The Prosopography of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, 2/II: L–N. Helsinki: The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project.Google Scholar
Benz, F. L. 1972. Personal Names in Phoenician and Punic Inscriptions, Studia Pohl 8. Rome: Pontificium Institutum Biblicum.Google Scholar
Bongenaar, A. C. V. M. 1997. The Neo-Babylonian Ebabbar Temple at Sippar: Its Administration and its Prosopography, Publications de l’Institut historique-archéologique néerlandais de Stamboul 80. Leiden: Nederlands Historisch-Archaeologisch Instituut te Istanbul.Google Scholar
Bregstein, L. B. 1993. Seal Use in Fifth Century BC Nippur, Iraq: A Study of Seal Selection and Sealing Practices in the Murašû Archive. PhD dissertation: University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
de Clercq, L. and Ménant, J. 1903. Collection de Clercq: Catalogue méthodique et raisonné, Vol. 2. Paris: Leroux.Google Scholar
Da Riva, R. 2002. Der Ebabbar-Tempel von Sippar in frühneubabylonischer Zeit (640–580 v.Chr.), Alter Orient und Altes Testament 291. Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.Google Scholar
Donner, H. 1957–8. ‘Zur Inschrift von Sudschīn Aa 9’, Archiv für Orientforschung 18, 390–2.Google Scholar
Durand, J.-M. 1982. Documents cunéiformes de la IVe section de l’École Pratique des Hautes Études. Tome I: Catalogue et copies cunéiformes. Geneva: Droz.Google Scholar
Fitzmyer, J. A. 1961. ‘The Aramaic inscriptions of Sefire I and II’, Journal of the American Oriental Society 81, 178222.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedrich, J., Röllig, W., Amadasi Guzzo, M. G., and Mayer, W. 1999. Phönizisch-Punische Grammatik, 3rd ed., Analecta Orientalia 55. Rome: Pontificium Institutum Biblicum.Google Scholar
Gehlken, E. 1996. Uruk: Spätbabylonische Wirtschaftstexte aus dem Eanna-Archiv, Tl. 2: Texte verschiedenen Inhalts, Ausgrabungen in Uruk-Warka Endberichte 11. Mainz: Philipp von Zabern.Google Scholar
Harding, G. L. 1971. An Index and Concordance of Pre-Islamic Arabian Names and Inscriptions, Near and Middle East Series 8. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Hoftijzer, J. and Jongeling, K. 1995. Dictionary of the North-West Semitic Inscriptions, 2 Vols, Handbuch der Orientalistik I/21. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Horowitz, W., Oshima, T., and Sanders, S. L. 2018. Cuneiform in Canaan: The Next Generation, 2nd ed. University Park: Eisenbrauns.Google Scholar
Israel, F. 1991. ‘Note di onomastica semitica IV: rassegna critica sull’onomastica fenicio-punica’ in Atti del II congresso internazionale di studi fenici e punici, Roma, 9–14 novembre 1987. Rome: Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche: Istituto per la Civiltà Fenicia e Punica, pp. 511–22.Google Scholar
Kaddary, M. Z. 1963. ‘Ḥll = “bore”, “pierce”?’, Vetus Testamentum 13, 486–9.Google Scholar
Kozuh, M. 2014. The Sacrificial Economy: Assessors, Contractors, and Thieves in the Management of Sacrificial Sheep at the Eanna Temple of Uruk (ca. 625–520 BC), Explorations in Ancient Near Eastern Civilizations 2. Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns.Google Scholar
Lipiński, E. 1995. Dieux et deésses de l’univers phénicien et punique, Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 64. Leuven: Peeters.Google Scholar
Lipschits, O. 2004. ‘Ammon in transition from vassal kingdom to Babylonian province’, Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 335, 3852.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Littmann, E. 1953. ‘Arabische Hypokoristika’ in Hvidberg, F. F. (ed.), Studia Orientalia Ioanni Pedersen Septuagenario AD VII id. Nov. anno MCMLIII a collegis discipulis amicis dicata. Copenhagen: Munskaard, pp. 193–9.Google Scholar
Pearce, L. E. and Wunsch, C. 2014. Documents of Judean Exiles and West Semites in Babylonia in the Collection of David Sofer, Cornell University Studies in Assyriology and Sumerology 28. Bethesda: CDL Press.Google Scholar
Pedersén, O. 2005. Archive und Bibliotheken in Babylon: Die Tontafeln der Grabung Robert Koldeweys 1899–1917, Abhandlungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft 25 Saarbrücken: Saarländische Druckerei und Verlag.Google Scholar
Radner, K. (ed.) 1998. The Prosopography of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, 1/I: A. Helsinki: The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project.Google Scholar
San Nicolò, M. 1951. Babylonische Rechtsurkunden des ausgehenden 8. und des 7. Jahrhunderts v. Chr., Abhandlungen der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Philologisch-historische Klasse, Neue Folge 34. München: Verlag der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
van der Spek, R. J. 1986. Grondbezit in het Seleucidische Rijk. Amsterdam: Vrije Universiteit Uitgeverij.Google Scholar
Stamm, J. J. 1980. Beiträge zur hebräischen und altorientalischen Namenkunde. Zu seinem 70. Geburtstag herausgegeben von Ernst Jenni und Martin A. Klopfenstein, Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis 30. Freiburg/Göttingen: Universitätsverlag/Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.Google Scholar
Stol, M. 1977. ‘Un texte oublié’, Revue d’assyriologie et d’archéologie orientale 71, 96.Google Scholar
Stolper, M. W. 1985. Entrepreneurs and Empire: The Murašû Archive, the Murašû Firm, and Persian Rule in Babylonia, Uitgaven van het Nederlands Historisch-Archaeologisch Instituut te Istanbul 54. Istanbul: Nederlands Historisch-Archaeologisch Instituut.Google Scholar
Stolper, M. W. 1996. ‘A paper chase after the Aramaic on TCL 13 193’, Journal of the American Oriental Society 116, 517–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tarasewicz, R. and Zawadzki, S. 2018. Animal Offerings and Cultic Calendar in the Neo-Babylonian Sippar, Alter Orient und Altes Testament 451. Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.Google Scholar
Weidner, E. F. 1939. ‘Jojachin, König von Juda, in babylonischen Keilschrifttexten’ in Mélanges Syriens offerts à M. René Dussaud, secrétaire perpétuel de l’Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres, par ses amis et ses élèves II, Bibliothèque archéologique et historique 30. Paris: Geuthner, 923–35, pls I–V.Google Scholar
Wunsch, C. 1993. Die Urkunden des babylonischen Geschäftsmannes Iddin-Marduk: Zum Handel mit Naturalien im 6. Jahrhundert v. Chr., Vol. 2, Cuneiform Monographs 3b. Groningen: Styx.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wunsch, C. 2003–4. ‘Findelkinder und Adoption nach neubabylonischen Quellen’, Archiv für Orientforschung 50, 172244.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1978a. On West Semites in Babylonia during the Chaldean and Achaemenian Periods: An Onomastic Study, revised version. Jerusalem: Wanaarta/Tel Aviv University.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1978b. ‘Phoenicians, Philistines and Moabites in Mesopotamia in the first millennium BC’, Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 230, 5765.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zadok, R. 1979. The Jews in Babylonia during the Chaldean and Achaemenian Periods According to Babylonian Sources, Studies in the History of the Jewish People and the Land of Israel Monograph Series 3. Haifa: University of Haifa.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1981. ‘Arabians in Mesopotamia during the Late-Assyrian, Chaldean, Achaemenian and Hellenistic Periods’, Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft 131, 4284.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1984. ‘Assyro-Babylonian lexical and onomastic notes’, Bibliotheca Orientalis 41, 3346.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1985. Geographical Names according to Neo- and Late-Babylonian Texts, Répertoire Géographique des Textes Cunéiformes 8. Wiesbaden: Reichert.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1988. The Pre-Hellenistic Israelite Anthroponymy and Prosopography, Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 28. Leuven: Peeters.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 2000. ‘On the prosopography and onomastics of Syria–Palestine and adjacent regions’, Ugarit Forschungen 32, 599674.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 2002. The Earliest Diaspora: Israelites and Judeans in Pre-Hellenistic Mesopotamia, Publications of the Diaspora Research Institute 151. Tel Aviv: Tel Aviv University.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 2003. ‘The representation of foreigners in Neo- and Late Babylonian legal documents (eighth through second centuries BCE)’ in Lipschits, O. and Blenkinsopp, J. (eds.), Judah and the Judeans in the Neo-Babylonian Period. Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns, pp. 471589.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zadok, R. 2014. ‘Judeans in Babylonia: Updating the Dossier’ in Gabbay, U. and Secunda, S. (eds.), Encounters by the Rivers of Babylon: Scholarly Conversations between Jews, Iranians and Babylonians in Antiquity, Texts and Studies in Ancient Judaism 160. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, pp. 109–29.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 2015. ‘West Semitic groups in the Nippur region between c. 750 and 330 BCE’ in Stökl, J. and Waerzeggers, C. (eds.), Exile and Return: The Babylonian Contexts, Beihefte zur Zeitschrift für die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft 478. Berlin: De Gruyter, pp. 94156.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zadok, R. 2018. ‘People from countries west and north of Babylonia in Babylon during the reign of Nebuchadnezzar II’, Hebrew Bible and Ancient Israel 7, 112–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zadok, R and Zadok, T. 2003. ‘Neo/Late-Babylonian geography and documentation’, Nouvelles Assyriologiques Brèves et Utilitaires 2003/35.Google Scholar
Zawadzki, S. 2018. The Rental of Houses in the Neo-Babylonian Period (VI–V Centuries BC). Warsaw: Agade Bis.Google Scholar
Abraham, K. 1997. ‘Šušan in the Egibi texts from the time of Marduk-nāṣir-apli’, Orientalia Lovaniensia Periodica 28, 5585.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abraham, K., Jursa, M., and Levavi, Y. 2018. ‘Further Collations to CUSAS 28’, Nouvelles Assyriologiques Brèves et Utilitaires 2018/53.Google Scholar
Baker, H. D. (ed.) 2001. The Prosopography of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, 2/II: L–N. Helsinki: The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project.Google Scholar
Benz, F. L. 1972. Personal Names in Phoenician and Punic Inscriptions, Studia Pohl 8. Rome: Pontificium Institutum Biblicum.Google Scholar
Bongenaar, A. C. V. M. 1997. The Neo-Babylonian Ebabbar Temple at Sippar: Its Administration and its Prosopography, Publications de l’Institut historique-archéologique néerlandais de Stamboul 80. Leiden: Nederlands Historisch-Archaeologisch Instituut te Istanbul.Google Scholar
Bregstein, L. B. 1993. Seal Use in Fifth Century BC Nippur, Iraq: A Study of Seal Selection and Sealing Practices in the Murašû Archive. PhD dissertation: University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
de Clercq, L. and Ménant, J. 1903. Collection de Clercq: Catalogue méthodique et raisonné, Vol. 2. Paris: Leroux.Google Scholar
Da Riva, R. 2002. Der Ebabbar-Tempel von Sippar in frühneubabylonischer Zeit (640–580 v.Chr.), Alter Orient und Altes Testament 291. Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.Google Scholar
Donner, H. 1957–8. ‘Zur Inschrift von Sudschīn Aa 9’, Archiv für Orientforschung 18, 390–2.Google Scholar
Durand, J.-M. 1982. Documents cunéiformes de la IVe section de l’École Pratique des Hautes Études. Tome I: Catalogue et copies cunéiformes. Geneva: Droz.Google Scholar
Fitzmyer, J. A. 1961. ‘The Aramaic inscriptions of Sefire I and II’, Journal of the American Oriental Society 81, 178222.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedrich, J., Röllig, W., Amadasi Guzzo, M. G., and Mayer, W. 1999. Phönizisch-Punische Grammatik, 3rd ed., Analecta Orientalia 55. Rome: Pontificium Institutum Biblicum.Google Scholar
Gehlken, E. 1996. Uruk: Spätbabylonische Wirtschaftstexte aus dem Eanna-Archiv, Tl. 2: Texte verschiedenen Inhalts, Ausgrabungen in Uruk-Warka Endberichte 11. Mainz: Philipp von Zabern.Google Scholar
Harding, G. L. 1971. An Index and Concordance of Pre-Islamic Arabian Names and Inscriptions, Near and Middle East Series 8. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Hoftijzer, J. and Jongeling, K. 1995. Dictionary of the North-West Semitic Inscriptions, 2 Vols, Handbuch der Orientalistik I/21. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Horowitz, W., Oshima, T., and Sanders, S. L. 2018. Cuneiform in Canaan: The Next Generation, 2nd ed. University Park: Eisenbrauns.Google Scholar
Israel, F. 1991. ‘Note di onomastica semitica IV: rassegna critica sull’onomastica fenicio-punica’ in Atti del II congresso internazionale di studi fenici e punici, Roma, 9–14 novembre 1987. Rome: Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche: Istituto per la Civiltà Fenicia e Punica, pp. 511–22.Google Scholar
Kaddary, M. Z. 1963. ‘Ḥll = “bore”, “pierce”?’, Vetus Testamentum 13, 486–9.Google Scholar
Kozuh, M. 2014. The Sacrificial Economy: Assessors, Contractors, and Thieves in the Management of Sacrificial Sheep at the Eanna Temple of Uruk (ca. 625–520 BC), Explorations in Ancient Near Eastern Civilizations 2. Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns.Google Scholar
Lipiński, E. 1995. Dieux et deésses de l’univers phénicien et punique, Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 64. Leuven: Peeters.Google Scholar
Lipschits, O. 2004. ‘Ammon in transition from vassal kingdom to Babylonian province’, Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 335, 3852.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Littmann, E. 1953. ‘Arabische Hypokoristika’ in Hvidberg, F. F. (ed.), Studia Orientalia Ioanni Pedersen Septuagenario AD VII id. Nov. anno MCMLIII a collegis discipulis amicis dicata. Copenhagen: Munskaard, pp. 193–9.Google Scholar
Pearce, L. E. and Wunsch, C. 2014. Documents of Judean Exiles and West Semites in Babylonia in the Collection of David Sofer, Cornell University Studies in Assyriology and Sumerology 28. Bethesda: CDL Press.Google Scholar
Pedersén, O. 2005. Archive und Bibliotheken in Babylon: Die Tontafeln der Grabung Robert Koldeweys 1899–1917, Abhandlungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft 25 Saarbrücken: Saarländische Druckerei und Verlag.Google Scholar
Radner, K. (ed.) 1998. The Prosopography of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, 1/I: A. Helsinki: The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project.Google Scholar
San Nicolò, M. 1951. Babylonische Rechtsurkunden des ausgehenden 8. und des 7. Jahrhunderts v. Chr., Abhandlungen der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Philologisch-historische Klasse, Neue Folge 34. München: Verlag der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
van der Spek, R. J. 1986. Grondbezit in het Seleucidische Rijk. Amsterdam: Vrije Universiteit Uitgeverij.Google Scholar
Stamm, J. J. 1980. Beiträge zur hebräischen und altorientalischen Namenkunde. Zu seinem 70. Geburtstag herausgegeben von Ernst Jenni und Martin A. Klopfenstein, Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis 30. Freiburg/Göttingen: Universitätsverlag/Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.Google Scholar
Stol, M. 1977. ‘Un texte oublié’, Revue d’assyriologie et d’archéologie orientale 71, 96.Google Scholar
Stolper, M. W. 1985. Entrepreneurs and Empire: The Murašû Archive, the Murašû Firm, and Persian Rule in Babylonia, Uitgaven van het Nederlands Historisch-Archaeologisch Instituut te Istanbul 54. Istanbul: Nederlands Historisch-Archaeologisch Instituut.Google Scholar
Stolper, M. W. 1996. ‘A paper chase after the Aramaic on TCL 13 193’, Journal of the American Oriental Society 116, 517–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tarasewicz, R. and Zawadzki, S. 2018. Animal Offerings and Cultic Calendar in the Neo-Babylonian Sippar, Alter Orient und Altes Testament 451. Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.Google Scholar
Weidner, E. F. 1939. ‘Jojachin, König von Juda, in babylonischen Keilschrifttexten’ in Mélanges Syriens offerts à M. René Dussaud, secrétaire perpétuel de l’Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres, par ses amis et ses élèves II, Bibliothèque archéologique et historique 30. Paris: Geuthner, 923–35, pls I–V.Google Scholar
Wunsch, C. 1993. Die Urkunden des babylonischen Geschäftsmannes Iddin-Marduk: Zum Handel mit Naturalien im 6. Jahrhundert v. Chr., Vol. 2, Cuneiform Monographs 3b. Groningen: Styx.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wunsch, C. 2003–4. ‘Findelkinder und Adoption nach neubabylonischen Quellen’, Archiv für Orientforschung 50, 172244.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1978a. On West Semites in Babylonia during the Chaldean and Achaemenian Periods: An Onomastic Study, revised version. Jerusalem: Wanaarta/Tel Aviv University.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1978b. ‘Phoenicians, Philistines and Moabites in Mesopotamia in the first millennium BC’, Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 230, 5765.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zadok, R. 1979. The Jews in Babylonia during the Chaldean and Achaemenian Periods According to Babylonian Sources, Studies in the History of the Jewish People and the Land of Israel Monograph Series 3. Haifa: University of Haifa.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1981. ‘Arabians in Mesopotamia during the Late-Assyrian, Chaldean, Achaemenian and Hellenistic Periods’, Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft 131, 4284.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1984. ‘Assyro-Babylonian lexical and onomastic notes’, Bibliotheca Orientalis 41, 3346.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1985. Geographical Names according to Neo- and Late-Babylonian Texts, Répertoire Géographique des Textes Cunéiformes 8. Wiesbaden: Reichert.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1988. The Pre-Hellenistic Israelite Anthroponymy and Prosopography, Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 28. Leuven: Peeters.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 2000. ‘On the prosopography and onomastics of Syria–Palestine and adjacent regions’, Ugarit Forschungen 32, 599674.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 2002. The Earliest Diaspora: Israelites and Judeans in Pre-Hellenistic Mesopotamia, Publications of the Diaspora Research Institute 151. Tel Aviv: Tel Aviv University.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 2003. ‘The representation of foreigners in Neo- and Late Babylonian legal documents (eighth through second centuries BCE)’ in Lipschits, O. and Blenkinsopp, J. (eds.), Judah and the Judeans in the Neo-Babylonian Period. Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns, pp. 471589.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zadok, R. 2014. ‘Judeans in Babylonia: Updating the Dossier’ in Gabbay, U. and Secunda, S. (eds.), Encounters by the Rivers of Babylon: Scholarly Conversations between Jews, Iranians and Babylonians in Antiquity, Texts and Studies in Ancient Judaism 160. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, pp. 109–29.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 2015. ‘West Semitic groups in the Nippur region between c. 750 and 330 BCE’ in Stökl, J. and Waerzeggers, C. (eds.), Exile and Return: The Babylonian Contexts, Beihefte zur Zeitschrift für die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft 478. Berlin: De Gruyter, pp. 94156.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zadok, R. 2018. ‘People from countries west and north of Babylonia in Babylon during the reign of Nebuchadnezzar II’, Hebrew Bible and Ancient Israel 7, 112–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zadok, R and Zadok, T. 2003. ‘Neo/Late-Babylonian geography and documentation’, Nouvelles Assyriologiques Brèves et Utilitaires 2003/35.Google Scholar
Zawadzki, S. 2018. The Rental of Houses in the Neo-Babylonian Period (VI–V Centuries BC). Warsaw: Agade Bis.Google Scholar

References

Abraham, K. 1997. ‘Šušan in the Egibi texts from the time of Marduk-nāṣir-apli’, Orientalia Lovaniensia Periodica 28, 5585.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abraham, K., Jursa, M., and Levavi, Y. 2018. ‘Further Collations to CUSAS 28’, Nouvelles Assyriologiques Brèves et Utilitaires 2018/53.Google Scholar
Baker, H. D. (ed.) 2001. The Prosopography of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, 2/II: L–N. Helsinki: The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project.Google Scholar
Benz, F. L. 1972. Personal Names in Phoenician and Punic Inscriptions, Studia Pohl 8. Rome: Pontificium Institutum Biblicum.Google Scholar
Bongenaar, A. C. V. M. 1997. The Neo-Babylonian Ebabbar Temple at Sippar: Its Administration and its Prosopography, Publications de l’Institut historique-archéologique néerlandais de Stamboul 80. Leiden: Nederlands Historisch-Archaeologisch Instituut te Istanbul.Google Scholar
Bregstein, L. B. 1993. Seal Use in Fifth Century BC Nippur, Iraq: A Study of Seal Selection and Sealing Practices in the Murašû Archive. PhD dissertation: University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
de Clercq, L. and Ménant, J. 1903. Collection de Clercq: Catalogue méthodique et raisonné, Vol. 2. Paris: Leroux.Google Scholar
Da Riva, R. 2002. Der Ebabbar-Tempel von Sippar in frühneubabylonischer Zeit (640–580 v.Chr.), Alter Orient und Altes Testament 291. Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.Google Scholar
Donner, H. 1957–8. ‘Zur Inschrift von Sudschīn Aa 9’, Archiv für Orientforschung 18, 390–2.Google Scholar
Durand, J.-M. 1982. Documents cunéiformes de la IVe section de l’École Pratique des Hautes Études. Tome I: Catalogue et copies cunéiformes. Geneva: Droz.Google Scholar
Fitzmyer, J. A. 1961. ‘The Aramaic inscriptions of Sefire I and II’, Journal of the American Oriental Society 81, 178222.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedrich, J., Röllig, W., Amadasi Guzzo, M. G., and Mayer, W. 1999. Phönizisch-Punische Grammatik, 3rd ed., Analecta Orientalia 55. Rome: Pontificium Institutum Biblicum.Google Scholar
Gehlken, E. 1996. Uruk: Spätbabylonische Wirtschaftstexte aus dem Eanna-Archiv, Tl. 2: Texte verschiedenen Inhalts, Ausgrabungen in Uruk-Warka Endberichte 11. Mainz: Philipp von Zabern.Google Scholar
Harding, G. L. 1971. An Index and Concordance of Pre-Islamic Arabian Names and Inscriptions, Near and Middle East Series 8. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Hoftijzer, J. and Jongeling, K. 1995. Dictionary of the North-West Semitic Inscriptions, 2 Vols, Handbuch der Orientalistik I/21. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Horowitz, W., Oshima, T., and Sanders, S. L. 2018. Cuneiform in Canaan: The Next Generation, 2nd ed. University Park: Eisenbrauns.Google Scholar
Israel, F. 1991. ‘Note di onomastica semitica IV: rassegna critica sull’onomastica fenicio-punica’ in Atti del II congresso internazionale di studi fenici e punici, Roma, 9–14 novembre 1987. Rome: Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche: Istituto per la Civiltà Fenicia e Punica, pp. 511–22.Google Scholar
Kaddary, M. Z. 1963. ‘Ḥll = “bore”, “pierce”?’, Vetus Testamentum 13, 486–9.Google Scholar
Kozuh, M. 2014. The Sacrificial Economy: Assessors, Contractors, and Thieves in the Management of Sacrificial Sheep at the Eanna Temple of Uruk (ca. 625–520 BC), Explorations in Ancient Near Eastern Civilizations 2. Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns.Google Scholar
Lipiński, E. 1995. Dieux et deésses de l’univers phénicien et punique, Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 64. Leuven: Peeters.Google Scholar
Lipschits, O. 2004. ‘Ammon in transition from vassal kingdom to Babylonian province’, Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 335, 3852.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Littmann, E. 1953. ‘Arabische Hypokoristika’ in Hvidberg, F. F. (ed.), Studia Orientalia Ioanni Pedersen Septuagenario AD VII id. Nov. anno MCMLIII a collegis discipulis amicis dicata. Copenhagen: Munskaard, pp. 193–9.Google Scholar
Pearce, L. E. and Wunsch, C. 2014. Documents of Judean Exiles and West Semites in Babylonia in the Collection of David Sofer, Cornell University Studies in Assyriology and Sumerology 28. Bethesda: CDL Press.Google Scholar
Pedersén, O. 2005. Archive und Bibliotheken in Babylon: Die Tontafeln der Grabung Robert Koldeweys 1899–1917, Abhandlungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft 25 Saarbrücken: Saarländische Druckerei und Verlag.Google Scholar
Radner, K. (ed.) 1998. The Prosopography of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, 1/I: A. Helsinki: The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project.Google Scholar
San Nicolò, M. 1951. Babylonische Rechtsurkunden des ausgehenden 8. und des 7. Jahrhunderts v. Chr., Abhandlungen der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Philologisch-historische Klasse, Neue Folge 34. München: Verlag der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
van der Spek, R. J. 1986. Grondbezit in het Seleucidische Rijk. Amsterdam: Vrije Universiteit Uitgeverij.Google Scholar
Stamm, J. J. 1980. Beiträge zur hebräischen und altorientalischen Namenkunde. Zu seinem 70. Geburtstag herausgegeben von Ernst Jenni und Martin A. Klopfenstein, Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis 30. Freiburg/Göttingen: Universitätsverlag/Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.Google Scholar
Stol, M. 1977. ‘Un texte oublié’, Revue d’assyriologie et d’archéologie orientale 71, 96.Google Scholar
Stolper, M. W. 1985. Entrepreneurs and Empire: The Murašû Archive, the Murašû Firm, and Persian Rule in Babylonia, Uitgaven van het Nederlands Historisch-Archaeologisch Instituut te Istanbul 54. Istanbul: Nederlands Historisch-Archaeologisch Instituut.Google Scholar
Stolper, M. W. 1996. ‘A paper chase after the Aramaic on TCL 13 193’, Journal of the American Oriental Society 116, 517–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tarasewicz, R. and Zawadzki, S. 2018. Animal Offerings and Cultic Calendar in the Neo-Babylonian Sippar, Alter Orient und Altes Testament 451. Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.Google Scholar
Weidner, E. F. 1939. ‘Jojachin, König von Juda, in babylonischen Keilschrifttexten’ in Mélanges Syriens offerts à M. René Dussaud, secrétaire perpétuel de l’Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres, par ses amis et ses élèves II, Bibliothèque archéologique et historique 30. Paris: Geuthner, 923–35, pls I–V.Google Scholar
Wunsch, C. 1993. Die Urkunden des babylonischen Geschäftsmannes Iddin-Marduk: Zum Handel mit Naturalien im 6. Jahrhundert v. Chr., Vol. 2, Cuneiform Monographs 3b. Groningen: Styx.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wunsch, C. 2003–4. ‘Findelkinder und Adoption nach neubabylonischen Quellen’, Archiv für Orientforschung 50, 172244.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1978a. On West Semites in Babylonia during the Chaldean and Achaemenian Periods: An Onomastic Study, revised version. Jerusalem: Wanaarta/Tel Aviv University.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1978b. ‘Phoenicians, Philistines and Moabites in Mesopotamia in the first millennium BC’, Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 230, 5765.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zadok, R. 1979. The Jews in Babylonia during the Chaldean and Achaemenian Periods According to Babylonian Sources, Studies in the History of the Jewish People and the Land of Israel Monograph Series 3. Haifa: University of Haifa.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1981. ‘Arabians in Mesopotamia during the Late-Assyrian, Chaldean, Achaemenian and Hellenistic Periods’, Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft 131, 4284.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1984. ‘Assyro-Babylonian lexical and onomastic notes’, Bibliotheca Orientalis 41, 3346.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1985. Geographical Names according to Neo- and Late-Babylonian Texts, Répertoire Géographique des Textes Cunéiformes 8. Wiesbaden: Reichert.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 1988. The Pre-Hellenistic Israelite Anthroponymy and Prosopography, Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 28. Leuven: Peeters.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 2000. ‘On the prosopography and onomastics of Syria–Palestine and adjacent regions’, Ugarit Forschungen 32, 599674.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 2002. The Earliest Diaspora: Israelites and Judeans in Pre-Hellenistic Mesopotamia, Publications of the Diaspora Research Institute 151. Tel Aviv: Tel Aviv University.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 2003. ‘The representation of foreigners in Neo- and Late Babylonian legal documents (eighth through second centuries BCE)’ in Lipschits, O. and Blenkinsopp, J. (eds.), Judah and the Judeans in the Neo-Babylonian Period. Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns, pp. 471589.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zadok, R. 2014. ‘Judeans in Babylonia: Updating the Dossier’ in Gabbay, U. and Secunda, S. (eds.), Encounters by the Rivers of Babylon: Scholarly Conversations between Jews, Iranians and Babylonians in Antiquity, Texts and Studies in Ancient Judaism 160. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, pp. 109–29.Google Scholar
Zadok, R. 2015. ‘West Semitic groups in the Nippur region between c. 750 and 330 BCE’ in Stökl, J. and Waerzeggers, C. (eds.), Exile and Return: The Babylonian Contexts, Beihefte zur Zeitschrift für die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft 478. Berlin: De Gruyter, pp. 94156.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zadok, R. 2018. ‘People from countries west and north of Babylonia in Babylon during the reign of Nebuchadnezzar II’, Hebrew Bible and Ancient Israel 7, 112–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zadok, R and Zadok, T. 2003. ‘Neo/Late-Babylonian geography and documentation’, Nouvelles Assyriologiques Brèves et Utilitaires 2003/35.Google Scholar
Zawadzki, S. 2018. The Rental of Houses in the Neo-Babylonian Period (VI–V Centuries BC). Warsaw: Agade Bis.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×