Texts nos. 1001-1004

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1001

This text is partially preserved on a fragment of stone slab discovered by R.C. Thompson at Nineveh and it may be a duplicate of text no. 6 [/riao/ria3/Q006036/], but not enough of the inscription remains to be certain of this. Due to the object's poor state of preservation, the piece may have been left in the field.

[Poppy Tushingham]

Access the composite text [/riao/ria3/Q006048/] of Tukultī-Ninurta II 1001.

Source: Arch. 79 no. 19

Bibliography

1929 Thompson, Arch. 79 p. 117 n. 4 and pl. XLII no. 19 (copy, study)
1976 Grayson, ARI 2 C 5 (study)
1991 Grayson, RIMA 2, pp. 186-7 A.0.100.1001 (edition)


1002

This piece of a clay cone bears a badly preserved text; it was discovered in the palace of Ashurnasirpal II [/riao/ria4/index.html] at Nineveh and is currently housed in the British Museum (London). Just like text no. 1001, it may be a duplicate of text no. 6 [/riao/ria3/Q006036/], but not enough of the text survives to substantiate this theory.

[Poppy Tushingham]

Access the composite text [/riao/ria3/Q006049/] of Tukultī-Ninurta II 1002.

Source: BM 123497 (1932-12-10, 0440)

Bibliography

1932 Thompson, AAA 19 p. 100 n. 11 and pl. LXXIV no. 122 (copy, translation)
1967 Borger, HKL 1 p. 527 (study)
1968 Lambert and Millard, Cat. p. 30 (study)
1976 Grayson, ARI 2 C 5 (study)
1984 Frame, ARRIM 2 p. 14 (study)
1991 Grayson, RIMA 2, pp. 187 A.0.100.1002 (edition)


1003

A small fragment of a clay cone now in the British Museum (London), possibly from Nineveh, preserves part of a text of Adad-nārārī II's son or grandson. Because it unclear whether Adad-nārārī is the father or grandfather of the monarch who had this inscription written out, the object could be ascribed either to Tukultī-Ninurta II or Ashurnasirpal II [/riao/ria4/index.html].

[Poppy Tushingham]

Access the composite text [/riao/ria3/Q006050/] of Tukultī-Ninurta II 1003.

Source: K 08539

Bibliography

1893 Bezold, Cat. 3 p. 937 (study)
1898 Winckler, OLZ 1 71 (study)
1991 Grayson, RIMA 2, pp. 188 A.0.100.1003 (edition)


1004

This poorly preserved text, along with images of several divine figures, is engraved on a stone stele discovered at Tell Ashara (Terqa), which is located on the Middle Euphrates; the object is now housed in the Aleppo Museum. The inscription is very difficult to read, therefore making its identification to a particular ruler very uncertain. Because the text appears to contain the names Tukultī-Ninurta and Adad-nārārī, as well as that of the city Laqû, as H. Güterbock and A.K. Grayson suggest, this inscribed object might have been erected by Tukultī-Ninurta II, although this is far from certain.

[Poppy Tushingham]

Access the composite text [/riao/ria3/Q006051/] of Tukultī-Ninurta II 1004.

Source: NMSA 3165 (1)

Bibliography

1952 Tournay and Soubhi, AAAS 2 pp. 169-90 and pls. I-III (photo, copy, edition)
1957 Güterbock, JNES 16 p. 123 (study)
1976 Grayson, ARI 2 C 13 (study)
1991 Grayson, RIMA 2, pp. 188 A.0.100.1004 (edition)

Jamie Novotny & Poppy Tushingham

Jamie Novotny & Poppy Tushingham, 'Texts nos. 1001-1004', RIA 3: Inscriptions of Tiglath-pileser I to Tukultī-Ninurta II, The RIA Project, 2023 [http://oracc.org/tukultininurtaii/texts10011004/]

 
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