Stephanie Dalley
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Stephanie Mary Dalley | |
---|---|
Born | Stephanie Mary Page March 1943 (age 81) |
Nationality | British |
Title | Former Shillito Fellow in Assyriology Honorary Senior Fellow of Somerville College ) |
Stephanie Mary Dalley
Biography
As a schoolgirl, Stephanie Page worked as a volunteer on archaeological excavations at
In the years 1966–67, Page was awarded a Fellowship by the
From 1979 to 2007, Dalley taught
Dalley took part in archaeological excavations in the Aegean, Iraq, Syria, Jordan and Turkey. She has published extensively, both technical editions of texts from excavations and national museums, and more general books. She has been involved in several television documentaries.
Contributions to Assyriology
Mythology
Dalley published her own translations of the main Babylonian myths: Atrahasis, Anzu, The Descent of Ishtar, Gilgamesh, The Epic of Creation, Erra and Ishum. Collected into one volume,[6] this work has made the Babylonian corpus accessible for the first time to the student of general mythology and it is widely used in university teaching.
The Nimrud Princesses
In 1989 the Iraqi Department of Antiquities excavated one of a series of tombs in the ancient Palace of
Legacy in later cultures
In several academic articles Dalley has traced the influence of Mesopotamian culture in the
Hanging Garden of Babylon
The Sealand
Dalley published in 2009 an archive of some 470 newly-found cuneiform texts[11] and deduced that they had originated in a southern Mesopotamian kingdom previously known only as the Sea land which flourished c 1,500 BC. This fills a significant gap in modern historical knowledge. Her analysis of the texts has made it possible to identify tablets in other museums and collections as being from the Sealand dynasties.
Selected publications
A full list of publications up to 2014 is available on www.academia.edu
Books
- Mari and Karana: Two Old Babylonian Cities. Longman. 1984. ISBN 978-0582783638.
- The Tablets from Fort Shalmaneser (Cuneiform Texts from Nimrud). The British School of Archaeology in Iraq. 1984. ISBN 978-0903472081.
- Myths from Mesopotamia: Creation, The Flood, Gilgamesh, and Others. Oxford. 1998. ISBN 978-0192835895.
- The Legacy of Mesopotamia. Oxford. 2005. ISBN 978-0199291588. (Editor)
- Esther's Revenge at Susa: From Sennacherib to Ahasuerus. Oxford. 2007. ISBN 978-0199216635.
- Babylonian Tablets from the First Sealand Dynasty. CDL Press. 2009. ISBN 978-1934309-087.
- The Mystery of the Hanging Garden of Babylon: An Elusive World Wonder Traced. Oxford. 2013. ISBN 978-0199662265.
- The City of Babylon: A History, c.2000BC-AD116. Cambridge. 2021. ISBN 978-1-10713627-4.
- The City of Babylon: A History, c.2000BC-AD116. Cambridge. 2021. ISBN 978-1-316-50177-1. (paperback)
Papers
- Page, Stephanie (Spring 1968). "The Tablets from Tell Al-Rimah 1967: A Preliminary Report". Iraq. 30 (1): 87–97. S2CID 140186570.
- Dalley, Stephanie (1980). "Old Babylonian Dowries". Iraq. 42 (1): 53–74. S2CID 163871506.
- Dalley, Stephanie (January 1985). "Foreign Chariotry and Cavalry in the Armies of Tiglath-Pileser III and Sargon II". Iraq. 47: 31–48. S2CID 162367249.
- Dalley, Stephanie (January 1986). "The God Ṣalmu and the Winged Disk". Iraq. 48: 85–101. S2CID 162233850.
- Dalley, Stephanie (January 1990). "Yahweh in Hamath in the 8th Century BC: Cuneiform Material and Historical Deductions". Vetus Testamentum. 40 (1): 21–32. JSTOR 1519260.
- Dalley, Stephanie (1991). "Ancient Assyrian Textiles and the Origins of Carpet Design". Iran. 29: 117–135. JSTOR 4299853.
- Dalley, Stephanie (1993). "Nineveh after 612 BC". Altorientalische Forschungen. 20 (1). S2CID 163383142.
- Dalley, Stephanie (January 1994). "Nineveh, Babylon and the Hanging Gardens: cuneiform and classical sources reconciled". Iraq. 56: 45–58. S2CID 194106498.
- Dalley, Stephanie (December 1999). "Sennacherib and Tarsus". Anatolian Studies. 49: 73–80. S2CID 162371873.
- Dalley, Stephanie; Oleson, John Peter (January 2003). "Sennacherib, Archimedes, and the Water Screw: The Context of Invention in the Ancient World". Technology and Culture. 44 (1): 1–26. S2CID 110119248.
- Dalley, Stephanie (2013). "Gods from north-eastern and north-western Arabia in cuneiform texts from the First Sealand Dynasty, and a cuneiform inscription from Tell en-Naṣbeh, c.1500 BC". Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy. 24 (2): 177–185. .
- "Review of Andre Salvini,ed. La Tour de Babylone; Etudes et recherches sur les monuments de Babylon". Bibliotheca Orientalis. LXXII: 751–755. 2015.
- Mizzi, Dennis; Vella, Nicholas C.; Zammit, Martin R. (2017). "The Cuneiform inscriptions found at Tas-Silg (Malta); banded agate, "targets" and "cushions"". Ancient Near Eastern Studies. supplement 50, in honour of Anthony Frendo: 21–28. ISBN 978-90-4293419-1.
- Heffron, Yağmur; Stone, Adam; Worthington, Martin, eds. (2017). At the Dawn of History. Ancient Near Eastern Studies in Honour of J N Postgate. Vol. Of arches, vaults and domes. Eisenbrauns. pp. 127–131. ISBN 9781575064710.
- Parham, John; Westling, Louise, eds. (2017). "The natural world in ancient Mesopotamian literature". A Global History of Literature and the Environment. Cambridge University Press. pp. 21–36. ISBN 978-1-107-10262-0.
- Sherratt, Susan; Bennet, John, eds. (2017). "Gilgamesh and heroes at Troy: myth, history and education". Archaeology and Homeric Epic. Oxbow Books. pp. 116–134. ISBN 978-1-78570-295-2.
- Frahm, Eckart, ed. (2017). "Assyrian Warfare". A Companion to Assyria. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 522–533. ISBN 978-1-444335934.
- Paulus, Susanne; Clayden, Tim, eds. (2020). "The First Sealand Dynasty: Literacy Economy and the Likely Location of Dur-Enlil(e) in Southern Mesopotamia at the End of the Old Babylonian Period". Babylonia under the Sealand and Kassite Dynasties. De Gruyter. pp. 9–27. ISBN 978-1-5015-1706-8.
- Dalley, Stephanie (2020). "asur nisirti / bit nisirti in the context of the early zodiac". Nouvelles Assyriologiques Brèves et Utilitaires. June: 77.
- "Babylon: Some Problems with Evidence". Bibliotheca Orientalis. 79 (5–6): 427–445. 2022. ISSN 0006-1913.
- Wilson, Karen; Bekken, Deborah, eds. (2023). "Kish and Hursagkalama: an assessment of the cities' history and cults in the light of information from cuneiform texts". Where Kingship descended from Heaven. Studies on Ancient Kish. Vol. Studies in Ancient Cultures 1. University of Chicago. pp. 23–48. ISBN 978-1-61491-092-3.
Radio and television
- BBC Horizon "Noah's Flood", 1996[12]
- BBC Secrets of the Ancients episode 5: "Hanging Gardens of Babylon", 1999
- BBC Radio, "Babylon and the Gilgamesh Epic". 2006
- BBC Masterpieces of the British Museum, Series 2 Episode 1, "The Assyrian Lion Hunt Reliefs", 2006
- Channel 4 UK: "Secrets of the Dead, The Lost Gardens of Babylon", 2013
- PBS Secrets of the Dead, "The Lost Gardens of Babylon", 2014
References
- ^ a b PBS 2014.
- ^ Oates 1963.
- ^ Devi 2013.
- ^ Oates 1967, p. 5.
- ^ Moorey 2000.
- ISBN 978-0192835895.
- ^ "New light on Nimrud" (PDF). www.bisi.ac.uk. 2002. Retrieved 17 July 2020.
- ^ Maier 1997, p. 214.
- ^ Alberge 2013.
- ^ Copping 2013.
- ISBN 978-1934309-087.
- ^ "BBC - Horizon - 1996 - Noah's Flood - video dailymotion". Dailymotion. 25 July 2014.
Sources
- Alberge, Dalya (5 May 2013). "Babylon's hanging garden: ancient scripts give clue to missing wonder". The Observer.
- Copping, Jasper (24 November 2013). "Pictured: the 'real site' of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon". The Daily Telegraph.
- Devi, Sharmila (12 November 2013). "New Book Places Hanging Garden of Babylon in Nineveh". Rudaw. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
- "Q&A with Dr. Stephanie Dalley, TV Host & Author of "Lost Gardens of Babylon"". PBS. 2014. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
- Maier, John R. (1997). Gilgamesh: A Reader. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. ISBN 978-0-86516-339-3.
- Moorey, Roger (2000). "Introduction to the Ashmolean Museum collections of tablets and inscribed objects". Ashmolean Museum.
- Oates, David (1963). "The Excavations at Nimrud (Kalḫu), 1962". Iraq. 25 (1).
- Oates, David (1967). "Report to the Council" (PDF). Report & Accounts for the Year Ended 31st May, 1967. British School of Archaeology in Iraq. Retrieved 22 September 2015.