The fifth volume of Ur Excavations, Texts, recently published, contains under nos. 732–790 a series of 57 tablets, all of which belonged to the archives of the Gá-nun-maḫ, the store-house of the Ningal-temple, and deal with materials issued for offerings to various major and minor gods and at various festivals. I have added to these documents a few numbers which were rejected from publication, but may be useful to strengthen the evidence; these are introduced by their excavation numbers, e.g., U6393, U6395, etc.; furthermore, I added from Ur Excavations, Texts, vol. III, published by Legrain, two numbers (236 and 282) which in fact are undated, but the persons mentioned in them, i.e., mār Nadi and Warad-Nannar, occur in other documents which can be dated to years of Abisare and Rim-Sin.
All in all, there are 65 texts covering a space of 100 years from the 19th year of Gungunum to the 19th year of Rim-Sin; there are hardly any documents after Sumu-ilum, as there is only one tablet which can be dated to Ṣilli-Adad, one to Warad-Sin, and three to Rim-Sin. Even the 60 tablets covering the 49 years from Gungunum to the end of Sumu-ilum form only a very small remnant of those which were really drawn up within those years.