Page 1 El Que Vive En La Verdad: La Arqueología Y Los Patriarcas Www

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Page 1 El Que Vive En La Verdad: La Arqueología Y Los Patriarcas Www El que Vive en la Verdad: La Arqueología y los Patriarcas www.DomainOfMan.com Copyright © Charles Pope, 1999-2002 Por Charles N. Pope Copyright © por la traducción, Óscar Calle, 2003 Traducción de Óscar David Calle Mesa Cuadro 5a Cronología Antigua Diluvio Primordial Atum Anubis Adamu Anu ~2500 a. C. Pirámides Shu Ptah Enlil Enki Ra Osiris Marduk Dumuzi Egipto Seth Horus Baal Adad Mesopotamia 1450 a. C. Erupción de Thera Thoth Nabu Ziusudra / Utna-pishtim Cobra Escorpión Lugalbanda Gilgamés/ Meskiag-kasher Meskiag- Barsal-nunna Etana I Narmer (Menes) Enmerkar / Balih / Balulu / Lugalannemundu nunna Enmebaraggesi Ga[.]ur Djet Den/Adimu Lugalbanda II Udulkalamma Agga I Dinastía de Kish III Djoser Labasher I Dinastía IV Snefru Khufu Ennundaranna Meshede de Ur II Dinastía de Kish Khafra Menkaura Melamanna Lugalkidul Userkaf Sahura Dinastía de Eanna (Erec / Uruk) Puzur-Sin Ur-Zababa V Shepseskara Simudarra Kakai, Ini, Kaiu Imperio Usiwatar Nannia Ishme-muti Dinastía Lagash Dinastía Umma Djedkare-Isesi Antiguo Ishme-Shamash-Mesilim Unas Ur-Nanshe Ush Egipcio Akurgal Enakalle VI Teti I Dinastía Il-shu Pepi I Pepi II En-annatum Ur-Lumma Entemena Lugal-zaggesi 1250 a. C. Merenra de Babilonia Dinastía Mari Agade Damiqilishu Nitocris Sargón Inyotef A Tudiya IX-X Shushi Qakara Iby Khety I Rimush XI Montuhotep A Araam Khuy Manishtushu Montuhotep I Mandaru Neferkara Dinastía Gutea VII y VIII Khety III Naram-Sin Inyotef I Yengi Shu-Dural Utuhegal Inyotef II Kitlamu Gudea Ur-Nammu Imperio Amenemhet I Hanu Yarlagan Tirigan Shulgi XIII Dinastía Senusret I Zuabu Medio Amenemhet II Amar-Sin Sekhemkarra Nuabu Egipcio Senusret III Suma-abum Gandash / Shu-Sin Ibbi-Sin Sobekhotep II Khendjer Rim-sim Abi-sare Kun (China) III Dinastía de Ur Sobekhotep III XII Dinastía Apil-sin Sin-muballit Abi-rattash Neferhotep I Amenemhet III Sumulael Agum Shamshi-adad Sobekhotep IV Kashtiliashu Dadusha Zimri-lim 1120 a. C. Ishme-Dagon Dedumesiu Gran Diluvio del Ush-shi / Harba- Hammurabi Ushpiya Yasmah-adad Inyotef IV Wa-ibra Nilo Yu (China) Shipak Amenemhet IV Samsu-iluna Sabium Kashtiliashu II XIV Din. El Éxodo Asiria Neferhotep II Salitis Abi-eshuuh Tazzigurumash Inyotef VII Ammi-ditana Tiptakzi XVI Din. Yakubher Sobekemsaf II Khyan Ammi-saduqa Agum II / Kakrime Puzur-asshur III Tao I Apofis Samsu-ditana Burna-buriash I 1000 a. C. Arik-den-ili XVII Dinastía Adad-nirari I XV Din. (Hyksos) Djehuty Tao II Kashtiliashu III Reyes Shalmaneser I Kamosis Ahmosis (Ulamburiash) Nuevo Reyes de Imperio Hanni- Tukulti-ninurta I Thutmosis I Babilonia galbat Assur-dan I Hatshepsut Imperio Mitani Hitita Kara-indash Thutmosis III Assur-resha-ishi I Egipcio Kasita XVIII Dinastía 880 a. C. Tiglath-pileser I Kurigalzu I Amenhotep II XXII Dinastía Assur-bel-kala Amenhotep III Damasco Sheshonq I Kadashman-enlil I Tukulti-ninurta II Akhenaton Ben-Haddad Takelot II Shalmaneser III (Abdi-Ashirta) Burna-buriash II Tutankhamon XXIII Dinastía Haza’el (Aziru) Kurigalzu II XIX Dinastía Pedubastet Nazi-maruttash Seti I Osorkón III 760 a. C. Adad-nirari III Ramsés I Kadashman-turgu XXIV Dinastía XXV Dinastía Kadashman-enlil II Bochoris Piye Tiglath Pileser III Merneptah Shagarakti-shuriash Sargón II Shabaka Marduk-apla-iddina I Senaquerib XX Dinastía Shebitku Esarhaddón Ramsés III Taharqa (Marduk-baladin II) 663 a. C. Ashurbanipal (Año de las Hienas) Año 9 de Ramsés XI 640 a. C. Conquista Asiria XXI Dinastía Babilonia XXVI Dinastía Psusennes I Psamético I Caldea 586 a. C. Conquista Babilónica Amenemope Necao II Nabucodonosor Apries 580 a. C. .
Recommended publications
  • The Sumerian King List the Sumerian King List (SKL) Dates from Around 2100 BCE—Near the Time When Abram Was in Ur
    BcResources Genesis The Sumerian King List The Sumerian King List (SKL) dates from around 2100 BCE—near the time when Abram was in Ur. Most ANE scholars (following Jacobsen) attribute the original form of the SKL to Utu-hejel, king of Uruk, and his desire to legiti- mize his reign after his defeat of the Gutians. Later versions included a reference or Long Chronology), 1646 (Middle to the Great Flood and prefaced the Chronology), or 1582 (Low or Short list of postdiluvian kings with a rela- Chronology). The following chart uses tively short list of what appear to be the Middle Chronology. extremely long-reigning antediluvian Text. The SKL text for the following kings. One explanation: transcription chart was originally in a narrative form or translation errors resulting from and consisted of a composite of several confusion of the Sumerian base-60 versions (see Black, J.A., Cunningham, and the Akkadian base-10 systems G., Fluckiger-Hawker, E, Robson, E., of numbering. Dividing each ante- and Zólyomi, G., The Electronic Text diluvian figure by 60 returns reigns Corpus of Sumerian Literature (http:// in harmony with Biblical norms (the www-etcsl.orient.ox.ac.uk/), Oxford bracketed figures in the antediluvian 1998-). The text was modified by the portion of the chart). elimination of manuscript references Final versions of the SKL extended and by the addition of alternative the list to include kings up to the reign name spellings, clarifying notes, and of Damiq-ilicu, king of Isin (c. 1816- historical dates (typically in paren- 1794 BCE). thesis or brackets). The narrative was Dates.
    [Show full text]
  • {PDF} Ancient Civilizations the Near East and Mesoamerica 2Nd Edition
    ANCIENT CIVILIZATIONS THE NEAR EAST AND MESOAMERICA 2ND EDITION PDF, EPUB, EBOOK C C Lamberg-Karlovsky | 9780881338348 | | | | | Ancient Civilizations The near East and Mesoamerica 2nd edition PDF Book Thanks to their artwork, we have a very good idea of how they looked: men of short stature, but with muscular bodies, that shaved their faces and heads. Their known homeland was centred on Subartu , the Khabur River valley, and later they established themselves as rulers of small kingdoms throughout northern Mesopotamia and Syria. Add to Wishlist. They are the most striking constructions in their monumental funerary complex, the position of which symbolized the journey of the deceased ruler to the western realm of the dead. The River Nile was the center of Egyptian life. Rating details. Later dynasties promoted the worship of Ra, the solar god who ruled the world. Deanne rated it really liked it Feb 15, Scholars even have used the term 'Aramaization' for the Assyro-Babylonian peoples' languages and cultures, that have become Aramaic-speaking. Laurelyn Anne added it Oct 23, It has Nefertiti on the front, need I say more? Luwian was also the language spoken in the Neo-Hittite states of Syria , such as Melid and Carchemish , as well as in the central Anatolian kingdom of Tabal that flourished around BC. Priests were seers who predicted the future, acted as oracles, explained dreams, and offered sacrifices. The great Sumerian invention was cuneiform writing, which made it possible to share their thoughts and the events that affected them with future generations. A'annepada Meskiagnun Elulu Balulu. Rick rated it it was amazing Oct 19, Twenty-seventh Dynasty of Egypt Achaemenid conquest of Egypt.
    [Show full text]
  • N42.27-Sintesi Preistorica E Schizzo Assiriologico Tomo II
    2 No part of this book may be reproduced or translated in any form, by print, photoprint, microfilm and by other means, without written permission from the publisher. 8 by CESHE (Belgium) 1995 che ha dato autorizzazione temporanea a Rosanna Breda, in data 5 aprile 1995, di pubblicare, sotto questa forma, la presente opera in lingua italiana 11 novembre 2010 3 SOMMARIO Avvertenze 4 I PATRIARCHI BIBLICI ANTIDILUVIANI 5 Genesi III, 1 6 Genesi IV, 16 10 Genesi IV, 15 11 Le età dei Patriarchi 11 Genesi IV, 26 12 Genesi V, 24 13 Genesi V, 28 15 Genesi IV, 17 15 Genesi IV, 23 17 Genesi IV, 20 19 Genesi IV, 21 19 Genesi IV, 22 21 Genealogia cainita 22 GLI SCAVI MESOPOTAMICI 24 Cronologia post diluviana rettificata 44 I PRIMI RE DELLE LISTE BABILONESI 45 Liste di Beròso; la W.B. 62; la W.B. 444 45 La morte di Abele per Caino (Genesi IV, 7) 54 I PRIMI RE DELLA LISTA ASSIRA 59 I PRIMI REAMI DEL MONDO 62 PERIODO POST DILUVIANO 66 LA PRIMA ESTENSIONE DELL'UMANITÀ POST DILUVIANA 68 Genesi XI, 2 70 I PRIMI RE CAMITI (prima della Dispersione) 72 Genesi X, 8 87 LE SECONDE DINASTIE CALDEE 95 Genesi X, 8-9 97 Tabella riassuntiva 114 LE TERZE DINASTIE CALDEE 115 Tavola riassuntiva 134 IL SEGUITO DELLE DINASTIE BABILONESI 137 I RE D' ASSIRIA 147 GIRO D' ORIZZONTE RETROSPETTIVO 168 BIBLIOGRAFIA 171 4 AVVERTENZA In questa opera, Fernand Crombette continua quello che aveva cominciato alla fine del primo volume: svelarci quella che ancor'oggi si chiama PREISTORIA, cioè gli inizi del- la storia umana.
    [Show full text]
  • Part 6: Old Testament Chronology, Continued
    1177 Part 6: Old Testament Chronology, continued. Part 6C: EXTRA-BIBLICAL PRE-FLOOD & POST-FLOOD CHRONOLOGIES. Chapter 1: The Chronology of the Sumerian & Babylonian King Lists. a] The Post-Flood King Lists 1, 2, 3, & 4. b] The Pre-Flood King Lists 1, 2, & 3. Chapter 2: The Egyptian Chronology of Manetho. a] General Introduction. b] Manetho’s pre-flood times before Dynasty 1. c] Manetho’s post-flood times in Dynasties 1-3. d] Post-flood times in Manetho’s Dynasties 4-26. Chapter 3: Issues with some other Egyptian chronologies. a] The Appollodorus or Pseudo-Appollodorus King List. b] Inscriptions on Egyptian Monuments. c] Summary of issues with Egyptian Chronologies & its ramifications for the SCREWY Chronology’s understanding of the Sothic Cycle. d] A Story of Two Rival Sothic Cycles: The PRECISE Chronology & the SCREWY Chronology, both laying claim to the Sothic Cycle’s anchor points. e] Tutimaeus - The Pharaoh of the Exodus on the PRECISE Chronology. Chapter 4: The PRECISE Chronology verses the SCREWY Chronology: Hazor. Chapter 5: Conclusion. 1178 (Part 6C) CHAPTER 1 The Chronology of the Sumerian & Babylonian King Lists. a] The Post-Flood King Lists 1, 2, 3, & 4. b] The Pre-Flood King Lists 1, 2, & 3. (Part 6C, Chapter 1) The Chronology of the Sumerian & Babylonian King List: a] The Post-Flood King Lists 1, 2, 3, & 4. An antecedent question: Are we on the same page: When do the first men appear in the fossil record? The three rival dating forms of the Sumerian King List. (Part 6C, Chapter 1) section a], subsection i]: An antecedent question: Are we on the same page: When do the first men appear in the fossil record? An antecedent question is, Why do I regard the flood dates for Sumerian and Babylonian King Lists (and later in Part 6C, Chapter 2, the Egyptian King List) as credible, or potentially credible? The answer relates to my understanding of when man first appears in the fossil record vis-à-vis the dates found in a critical usage of these records for a Noah’s Flood date of c.
    [Show full text]
  • Sumero-Babylonian King Lists and Date Lists A
    XI Sumero-Babylonian King Lists and Date Lists A. R. GEORGE The Antediluvian King List The antediluvian king list is an Old Babylonian (b) a tablet from Nippur, now in Istanbul text, composed in Sumerian, that purports to (Kraus 1952: 31) document the reigns of successive kings of (c) another reportedly from Khafaje (Tutub), remote antiquity, from the time when the gods now in Berkeley, California (Finkelstein first transmitted to mankind the institution of 1963: 40) kingship until the interruption of human histo- (d) a further tablet now in the Karpeles Manu- ry by the great Flood. The list exists in several script Library, Santa Barbara, California, versions. Sometimes it appears as the opening given below in a preliminary transliteration section of the Sumerian King List, as in text (No. 97) No. 98 below. More often it occurs as an inde- (e) a small fragment from Nippur now in Phil- pendent list, of which one example is held by adelphia that bears lines from the list fol- the Schøyen collection, published here as text lowed by other text (Peterson 2008). No. 96. Other examples of the Old Babylonian A more extensive treatment of the lists of ante- list of antediluvian kings copied independently diluvian kings, including No. 96 and the tablet of the Sumerian King List are: in the Karpeles Manuscript Library, is promised (a) the tablet W-B 62, of uncertain prove- by Gianni Marchesi as part of his forthcoming nance and now in the Ashmolean Museum larger study of the Sumerian king lists. (Langdon 1923 pl. 6) No.
    [Show full text]
  • Sumerer Und Semiten in Der Frühen Geschichte Mesopotamiens
    Sumerer und Semiten in der frühen Geschichte Mesopotamiens Autor(en): Edzard, Dietz Otto Objekttyp: Article Zeitschrift: Genava : revue d'histoire de l'art et d'archéologie Band (Jahr): 8 (1960) Heft 1-4 PDF erstellt am: 05.10.2021 Persistenter Link: http://doi.org/10.5169/seals-727773 Nutzungsbedingungen Die ETH-Bibliothek ist Anbieterin der digitalisierten Zeitschriften. Sie besitzt keine Urheberrechte an den Inhalten der Zeitschriften. Die Rechte liegen in der Regel bei den Herausgebern. Die auf der Plattform e-periodica veröffentlichten Dokumente stehen für nicht-kommerzielle Zwecke in Lehre und Forschung sowie für die private Nutzung frei zur Verfügung. Einzelne Dateien oder Ausdrucke aus diesem Angebot können zusammen mit diesen Nutzungsbedingungen und den korrekten Herkunftsbezeichnungen weitergegeben werden. Das Veröffentlichen von Bildern in Print- und Online-Publikationen ist nur mit vorheriger Genehmigung der Rechteinhaber erlaubt. Die systematische Speicherung von Teilen des elektronischen Angebots auf anderen Servern bedarf ebenfalls des schriftlichen Einverständnisses der Rechteinhaber. Haftungsausschluss Alle Angaben erfolgen ohne Gewähr für Vollständigkeit oder Richtigkeit. Es wird keine Haftung übernommen für Schäden durch die Verwendung von Informationen aus diesem Online-Angebot oder durch das Fehlen von Informationen. Dies gilt auch für Inhalte Dritter, die über dieses Angebot zugänglich sind. Ein Dienst der ETH-Bibliothek ETH Zürich, Rämistrasse 101, 8092 Zürich, Schweiz, www.library.ethz.ch http://www.e-periodica.ch ASPECTS DU CONTACT SUMÉRO-AKKADIEN a IX® Rencontre assyriologique internationale, qni a tenu ses assises à Genève, au Musée d'art et d'histoire, du 20 au 23 juin 1960, avait choisi pour thème central de ses débats d'étudier quelques aspects du contact suméro-akkadien.
    [Show full text]
  • Rebatiendo a Zecharia Sitchin Gabriel García
    Rebatiendo a Zecharia Sitchin Gabriel García REBATIENDO A ZECHARIA SITCHIN Las mentiras (y los errores) de su teoría sobre el planeta Nibiru © 2005 Gabriel García © 2005 Gabriel García. Todos los derechos reservados. Email: [email protected] Rebatiendo a Zecharia Sitchin Gabriel García INTRODUCCIÓN El best-seller de Zecharia Sitchin “El 12º Planeta” está más vivo que nunca gracias a Internet, la red de redes. Se han formado ingentes cantidades de grupos de conversación en torno a su teoría, en una dinámica tan peligrosa que la mayoría de ellos han terminado no sólo aceptándola sino ampliándola sin miramientos ningunos. Así, los “anunnaki” (extraterrestres que crearon al hombre) han pasado de vivir en Nibiru, el 12º Planeta de nuestro sistema solar (contando a la Luna), a ser originarios de las Pléyades, de terceras dimensiones “de amor” e incluso ¡¡de la Matrix!!. Asimismo, a la cronología presentada por Sitchin se han añadido otras que nos hablan de seres reptiloides, divinos y semidivinos, y toda una suerte de entidades biológicas inteligentes que no cabrían en diez enciclopedias como las de Tolkien. Como la mayoría de los crédulos son como loros, es decir que repiten lo que oyen sin ni siquiera detenerse a analizarlo, se ha formado una gran mentira que en forma de bola de nieve recorre la red haciéndose cada vez más grande. Las teorías de Sitchin son criticables desde todos sus ángulos; el autor tan sólo necesitó coser sus mentiras con fina aguja al tejido de la auténtica historia ya desentrañada en su mayor parte por los expertos sumerólogos y arqueólogos. Separando ambas, y conociendo de antemano la historia pues, lo que nos queda es la mentira.
    [Show full text]
  • Historical Fragments
    UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA THE UNIVERSITY MUSEUM PUBLICATIONS OF THE BABYLONIAN SECTION VOL.XI11 HISTORICAL FRAGMENTS li I' LEON LEGRAIN EEIILADE1,PHIA PUB1,ISHED BY TIIE UNIVERSITY RiUSEUM 1922 CONTENTS PAGE IN'TKODUCTION ................................. j9 NI~PURCHRONOLOGY ........................... I 1-13 CITIESOF SUMERAND AKKAD................... 14 TRANSLATION AND COIMMENTARY LIST OF KINGS(NO . I, 2) ...................... 15-28 THEEND OF THE ~'HIRDUK DYNASTY.IBI-SIN AND ISBI-IRRA(NO . 3. 6. 9) ..................... 28-33 A SEALGIVEN BY IBI-SINTO THE HIGHPRIEST OF ENLIL(NO . 5) ............................. 34-41 LIST OF TEMPLES(NO . 7. 16) ................... 41-45 CLAYTAG FROM SURUPIJAK(NO . 12) ............ 47 SEAL I.MPRESSION OF THE TIMEOF GIMIL-SIN (No. 13).................................. 47-48 INSCRIPTIONS OF SARGON(NO . 14. 15)........... 48-50 VOTIVECONE OF ARAD-SIN(NO . 18) ............ 51-54 UR-ENGURAND NIN-SUN(NO . 23) ............... 55-60 BAL KANIZI(NO . 24) ........................... 60 NIN-DIN-UG-GA(NO . 26) ........................ 61 RUINOF MAERON A PRFSARGONICDATE (NO. 27) 62-63 PATESIOF MARAD(No . 28) ..................... 63-64 PATES{OF A~NUNNA(NO . 31)................... 65 INCANTATION. KITLIALOF THE DEAD(NO . 33) .... 66 SUMERIANLETTER ON FII;LI)S AND ORCHARDS (N0.34) .................................. 67 ~NCANTAT~ONBY 'THE BROKENREED OF APSU (NO. 3j) .................................. 68 FRAGMENTOF TI-IE CODE,SLAVES' WAGES (NO . 39) 70 HYMNTO NINAZU(NO . 41) ..................... 71-74 RUILDING~NSCR~PT~ON OF DUNGI(NO . 42) ....... 74-77 BUILD~NC~NSCRIPTION (NARAMSIN, HAMAZI) (No. 43) .................................. 77-78 1-ITURGY OF PA-GIBIL-SAG(NO . 44) .............. 78-80 TUMMALOF NINLIL (NO . 48) ................. 80-82 PRAISEOF LIBIT-ISTAR(NO . 49) .............. 82-83 (3) PAGE ,\ IJ~r2SE FOR LAND,THk; j.lH YEAR AFTER 'IIIE CAPTUREOF ISIN (NO.
    [Show full text]
  • Ancient Chronology Primeval Flood by Charles N
    Living in Truth: Archaeology & the Patriarchs www.DomainOfMan.com Chart 5b Ancient Chronology Primeval Flood by Charles N. Pope Atum Anubis Adam Cain Adamu Anu Copyright © 1999-2002 ~2500 BC Shu Enlil Pyramids Ptah Re Enoch Irad Enki Marduk Osiris Horus Mehujael Mehushael Dumuzi Adad Egypt Seth Baal Mesopotamia Thoth Lamech Nabu 1300 BC Eruption of Thera Noah / Utna-pishtim Great Flood 1st Dynastyof Kish Cobra Scorpion Lugalbanda (Ham) Meskiag-kasher (Cush) Meskiag-nunna Barsal-nunna Etana 1st Narmer (Menes) Enmerkar / Balih / Balulu / Lugalannemundu Enmebaraggesi Ga[.]ur Djet Den/Adimu Lugalbanda II Udulkalamma (Nimrod) 1st Dynasty Agga 3rd Djoser Labasher of Ur Snefru Khufu Ennundaranna Meshede 4th Khafre Menkaure Melamanna Lugalkidul 2nd Dynasty of Kish Userkaf Sahure Eanna (Erech / Uruk) Dynasty Puzur-Sin Ur-Zababa 5th Shepseskare Simudarra Kakai, Ini, Kaiu Lagash Dynasty Umma Dynasty Usiwatar Nannia Ishme-muti Djedkare-Isesi Egyptian Ishme-Shamash-Mesilim Unas Ur-Nanshe Ush 6th Teti Akurgal Enakalle Il-shu Pepi I Pepi II Old Kingdom En-annatum Ur-Lumma 1st Dynasty Mari Dynasty 1050 BC Merenre Agade Entemena Lugal-zaggesi of Babylon Nitocris 9-10th Sargon 11th Inyotef A Tudiya-Adama Qakare Iby Khety I Rimush Montuhotep A (Adam II) Khuy Neferkare Manishtushu Montuhotep I Mandaru Gutian Dynasty Inyotef I 7th & 8th Khety III Naram-Sin (Seth II) Gudea Inyotef II Utuhegal Yarlagan Tirigan Ur-Nammu Egyptian Amenemhet I Hanu (Enosh) 13th Dynasty Shulgi 12th Dynasty Amar-Sin Middle Auibre-Hor (Enoch II) (Methuseleh) Ibbi-Sin Kingdom Inyotef IV Senusret III Suma-abum Gandash / Kun (Jabal-Joseph I) Ushpiya Yu (China) Amenemhet III Sumulael (Noah II) Agum I 3rd Dynasty of Ur Nile Flooding Amenemhet IV Sabium (Shem II) Kashtiliashu I Assyria Sobekhotep III Apil-sin (Arphaxad) 920 BC Neferhotep I Sin-muballit Kassite Shamshi-adad Sobekhotep IV Zimri-lim (Shelah) Babylon Ishme-Dagon Wa-ibre Hammurabi (Eber) 14th Dyn.
    [Show full text]
  • OXFORD EDITIONS of CUNEIFORM TEXTS the Weld-Blundell
    OXFORD EDITIONS OF CUNEIFORM TEXTS Edited under the Direction of S. LANGDON, Professor of Assyriology. VOLUME II The Weld-Blundell Collection, vol. II. Historical Inscriptions, Containing Principally the Chronological Prism, W-B. 444, by S. LANGDON, M. A. OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS London Edinburgh Glasgow Copenhagen New York Toronto Melbourne Cape Town Bombay Calcutta Madras Shanghai Humphrey Milford 1923 PREFACE. The fortunate discovery of the entire chronological tables of early Sumerian and Bbylonian history provides ample reason for a separate volume of the Weld-Blundell Series, and thle imme- diate publication of this instructive inscription is imperative. It constitutes the most important historical document of its kind ever recovered among cuneiform records. The Collection of the Ashmolean Museum contains other historical records which I expected to include in this volume, notably the building inscriptions of Kish, excavated during the first year's work of the Oxford and Field Museum Expedition. MR. WELD-BLUNDELL who supports this expedition on behalf of The University of Oxford rightly expressed the desire to have his dynastic prism prepared for publication before the writer leaves Oxford to take charge of the excavations at Oheimorrl (Kish) the coming winter. This circumstance necessitates the omission of a considerable nulmber of historical texts, which must be left over for a future volume. I wish also that many of the far reaching problems raised by the new dynastic prism might have received more mature discussion. The most vital problem, concerning which I am at present unable to decide, namely the date of the first Babylonian dynasty, demands at least special notice some-where in this book.
    [Show full text]
  • Sex and Eroticism in Mesopotamian Literature 1St Edition Pdf, Epub, Ebook
    SEX AND EROTICISM IN MESOPOTAMIAN LITERATURE 1ST EDITION PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Leick | 9780203462751 | | | | | Sex and Eroticism in Mesopotamian Literature 1st edition PDF Book More Details Start your review of Sex and Eroticism in Mesopotamian Literature. The galla go to Dumuzid's unnamed "friend", who betrays Dumuzid, telling the galla exactly where Dumuzid is hiding. Ancient Iraq. December 4, Showing Error rating book. The cult of Dumuzid was later spread to the Levant and to Greece, where he became known under the West Semitic name Adonis. Gwendolyn Leick examines the development of the principal styles of ancient architecture within their geographical and historical context, and describes features of major sites such as Ur, Nineveh and Babylon, as well as many of the lesser-known sites. One line of interpretation throughout the work is that ancient Mesopotamian writers took for granted that sex should be pleasurable for women as well as men. Sumerian period — BCE. Mythology portal Asia portal. Who was the wealthiest businessman in Babylon? Seller Inventory GRD Lugalbanda Dumuzid, the Fisherman. New Paperback Quantity Available: 2. Mesopotamia Gwendolyn Leick. Subjects Erotic literature, Assyro-Babylonian , Erotica , History , History and criticism , Sex customs , Sex in literature , Sumerian Erotic literature , Erotic literature, history and criticism , Iraq, social life and customs. Main article: Dying-and-rising deity. View all 3 comments. A full glossary, chronological chart, maps and bibliographical information complement the biographical entries. SC marked it as to-read Sep 20, Ush Enakalle. Associated Subjects. While some of the terminology is a bit dated, given that this was written nearly thirty years ago, the general analysis is - at least for someone like me who is not an Assyriologi Turns out the oldest surviving literary culture was pretty into sex.
    [Show full text]
  • Page 1 El Que Vive En La Verdad: La Arqueología Y Los Patriarcas Www
    El que Vive en la Verdad: La Arqueología y los Patriarcas www.DomainOfMan.com Copyright © Charles Pope, 1999-2002 Por Charles N. Pope Copyright © por la traducción, Óscar Calle, 2003 Traducción de Óscar David Calle Mesa Cuadro 5b Cronología Antigua Diluvio Primordial Atum Anubis Adán Caín Adamu Anu ~2500 a. C. Shu Enlil Pirámides Ptah Ra Enoc Irad Enki Marduk Osiris Horus Mehujael Mehusael Dumuzi Adad Mesopotamia Egipto Seth Thoth Lamec Nabu Baal 1450 a. C. Erupción de Thera Noé / Utna-pishtim Gran Diluvio I Dinastía de Kish Cobra Escorpión Lugalbanda (Cam) Meskiag-kasher (Cus) Meskiag- Barsal-nunna Etana I Narmer (Menes) Enmerkar / Balih / Balulu / Lugalannemundu nunna Enmebaraggesi Ga[.]ur Djet Den/Adimu Lugalbanda II Udulkalamma (Nimrod) Agga III Djoser Labasher I Dinastía IV Snefru Khufu Ennundaranna Meshede de Ur II Dinastía de Kish Khafra Menkaura Melamanna Lugalkidul Userkaf Sahura Dinastía de Eanna (Erec / Uruk) Puzur-Sin Ur-Zababa V Shepseskara Simudarra Kakai, Ini, Kaiu Imperio Usiwatar Nannia Ishme-muti Dinastía Lagash Dinastía Umma Djedkare-Isesi Antiguo Ishme-Shamash-Mesilim Unas Ur-Nanshe Ush Egipcio Akurgal Enakalle VI Teti I Dinastía Il-shu Pepi I Pepi II En-annatum Ur-Lumma Entemena Lugal-zaggesi 1250 a. C. Merenra de Babilonia Dinastía Mari Agade XI Inyotef A Nitocris IX-X Sargón Tudiya-Adama Qakara Iby Rimush Montuhotep A Khety I (Adán II) Khuy Manishtushu Montuhotep I Neferkara Dinastía Gutea VII y VIII Khety III Naram-Sin Inyotef I Mandaru Inyotef II Utuhegal (Set II) Gudea Yarlagan Tirigan Ur-Nammu Imperio Amenemhet I Hanu (Enós) Shulgi Medio XIII Dinastía Auibra-Hor (Enoc II) XII Dinastía (Matusalén) Amar-Sin Egipcio Shu-Sin Ibbi-Sin Inyotef IV Senusret III Suma-abum Gandash / Kun (Jabal-Joseph I) Ushpiya Yu (China) III Dinastía de Ur Amenemhet III Sumulael (Noé II) Inundación del Nilo Agum I Amenemhet IV Sabium (Sem II) Kashtiliashu I Sobekhotep III 1120 a.
    [Show full text]