Hostname: page-component-5c6d5d7d68-lvtdw Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-08-10T03:14:14.975Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Some remarks on Mesopotamian metrology during the Old Babylonian period: The evidence from Graves LG/23 and LG/45 at Ur

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 August 2014

Extract

The excavations carried out during the 1926–7 and 1930–1 seasons at Ur by C. L. Woolley brought to light two large sectors (AH and EM) of the Old Babylonian city characterized by private dwellings dating from the Larsa domination but partly re-used until the Kassite period after the destruction of the city by King Samsu-iluna of Babylon, in the eleventh year of his reign (1729 BC) (Woolley 1955: 163–94; Woolley and Mallowan 1976; see also Pinnock 1995: 101–11). These sectors offer important documentation about daily life in lower Mesopotamia at the beginning of the second millennium BC and meaningful data concerning architecture and urbanism in the Middle Bronze Age, as well as hundreds of cuneiform tablets discovered in the archives of private citizens. The presence of several graves below the floors and in particular the existence of corbel-vaulted family tombs in baked brick, built with sophisticated technique beneath what seem to be domestic chapels (Woolley and Mallowan 1976: 29–30, 33–9, Pls. 43–8), usually placed at the back of the houses, led Woolley to identify cultic activities linked to ancestors, suggesting close kinship between the persons living in a house and the dead buried beneath it. In spite of the criticism raised by M.-Th. Barrelet a few years after the publication of the final report, it seems very probable that Woolley's hypothesis is correct, as confirmed at other Mesopotamian sites (e.g. the tombs related to private residences found at Larsa; see Calvet 1996).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The British Institute for the Study of Iraq 2000

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

Archi, A. 1987: Reflections on the system of weights from Ebla, in Gordon, C. H. et al. (eds.), Eblaitica: Essays on the Ebla Archives and Eblaite Language, Winona Lake, pp. 4786.Google Scholar
Arnaud, D. et al. 1979: Ilshu-Ibni-shu orfèvre de l'E.babbar de Larsa, la jarre L. 76-7 et son contenu, Syria 56: 164.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amiet, P. 1986: L'âge des échanges inter-iraniens 3500–1700 avant J.-C., Paris.Google Scholar
Ascalone, E. and Peyronel, L. 1999: Typological and quantitative approach to the ancient weight systems. Susa, Persian Gulf and Indus Valley from the end of the III mill, to the beginning of the II mill. BC, Altorientalische Forschungen 26: 352–76.Google Scholar
Ascalone, E. and Peyronel, L. in press a: The Eblaite metrology in Middle Bronze Age. Archaeological context and distributive analysis of weights, in Landscapes. Territories, Frontiers and Horizons in the Ancient Near East. Proceedings of the 44e RAI Venice, 7–11 07 1997, Padua.Google Scholar
Ascalone, E. and Peyronel, L. in press b: Two weights from Temple N at Tell Mardikh-Ebla, Syria. A link between metrology and cultic activities in the second millennium BC?, Journal of Cuneiform Studies 50.Google Scholar
Barrelet, M.-Th. 1978: Review of Woolley and Mallowan 1976, Bibliotheca Orientalis 35: 266–81.Google Scholar
Barrelet, M.-Th. 1980: Les pratiques funéraires de l'Iraq ancien et l'archéologie: état de la question et essai de prospective, Akkadica 16: 227.Google Scholar
Belaiew, N. T. 1929: Au sujet de la valeur probable de la mine sumérienne, RA 26: 115–32.Google Scholar
Belaiew, N. T. 1934: Métrologie élamite. Examen préliminaire des documents pondéraux. Fouilles de Suse 1921–1933, Mémoires de la Mission Archéologique de Perse 25: 134–76.Google Scholar
Besenval, R. 1984: Technologie de la voute dans l'Orient ancien, Paris.Google Scholar
Calvet, Y. 1996: Maisons privée paléo-babyloniennes à Larsa. Remarques d'architecture, in Veenhof, K. M. (ed.), Houses and Households in Ancient Mesopotamia, Leiden: 197209.Google Scholar
Holland, T. A. 1975: An inscribed weight from Tell Sweyhat, Syria, Iraq 37: 75–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Karwiese, S. 1990: Šiklu, kite und stater: der Weg zu einer neuen Metrologie des Altertums. 1. Mesopotamien, in Gyselen, R. (ed.), Prix, salaires, poids et mesures (Res Orientales 2), Paris: 9118.Google Scholar
Legrain, L. 1951: Ur Excavations X. Seal Cylinders, London.Google Scholar
Oppenheim, A. L. 1954: The seafaring merchants of Ur, Journal of the American Oriental Society 74: 617.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parise, N. F. 19701971: Per uno studio del sistema ponderale ugaritico, Dialoghi di Archeologia 4: 336.Google Scholar
Parise, N. F. 1981: Mina di Ugarit, mina di Karkemish, mina di Khatti, Dialoghi di Archeologia NS 3: 155–60.Google Scholar
Parise, N. F. 1984: Unità ponderali e rapporti di cambio nella Siria del Nord, in Archi, A. (ed.), Circulations of Goods in Non-Palatial Context in the Ancient Near East, Roma: 125–38.Google Scholar
Pinnock, F. 1995: Ur. La città del dio-luna, Roma-Bari.Google Scholar
Pollock, S. 1991: Of priestesses, princes and poor relations: The dead in the Royal Cemetery of Ur, Cambridge Archaeological Journal 1: 171–89.Google Scholar
Pomponio, F. 1980: AO 7754 ed il sistema ponderale di Ebla, Oriens Antiquus 19: 171–86.Google Scholar
Powell, M. A. 1979: Ancient Mesopotamian weight metrology. Methods, problems and perspectives, in Powell, M. A., and Sack, R. H. (eds.), Studies in Honor of Tom B. Jones, Neukirchen: 71109.Google Scholar
Powell, M. A. 19891990: Masse und Gewichte, in Reallexikon der Assyriologie VII: 457530.Google Scholar
Ratnagar, S. 1981: Encounters. The Westerly Trade of the Harappa Civilization, Delhi.Google Scholar
Roaf, M. 1982: Weights on the Dilmun standard, Iraq 44: 137–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stone, E. and Zimansky, P. 1992: Mashkan-shapir and the anatomy of an Old Babylonian city, Biblical Archaeologist 55: 212–18.Google Scholar
Van De Mieroop, M. 1992: Society and Enterprise in Old Babylonian Ur (BBVO 12), Berlin.Google Scholar
Vargyas, P. 1998: Talent of Karkamish and talent of Yamhad, Altorientalische Forschungen 25: 303–11.Google Scholar
Vine, P. 1993: Bahrain National Museum, London.Google Scholar
Woolley, C. L. 1955: Excavations at Ur. A Record of Twelve Years' Work, London.Google Scholar
Woolley, C. L. and Mallowan, M. E. L. 1976: Ur Excavations VII. The Old Babylonian Period, London.Google Scholar
Zaccagnini, C. 1986: The Dilmun standard and its relationship with Indus and Near Eastern weight systems, Iraq 48: 1923.Google Scholar