Nimrud Letters

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The Nimrud Letters are an archive of 244 Neo-Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian cuneiform letters found at Nimrud in 1952 during the excavations led by Max Mallowan of the British School of Archaeology.[1] The letters were published by H. W. F. Saggs.[2]

The majority of the tablets were found in Room ZT 4, where ZT stands for Z[iggurat]T[errace].[2]

105 tablets (99 Neo-Assyrian and 6 Neo-Babylonian) were first published between 1955 and 1974 in the journal Iraq (vols. 17–36), and the remaining 139 were published in 2001 in Saggs' book The Nimrud Letters, 1952.[2]

Bibliography

References

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  2. ^ a b c Novotny, Jamie (2014). "[Rezension von] HWF Saggs, The Nimrud Letters, 1952 (Cuneiform Texts From Nimrud 5)" (PDF). Bibliotheca Orientalis. 71 (1–2): 191–195.