User:SomeGuyWhoRandomlyEdits/Weld-Blundell Prism

Coordinates: 31°17′09″N 45°51′13″E / 31.285833°N 45.853611°E / 31.285833; 45.853611
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Weld-Blundell Prism
Weld-Blundell Prism, with transcription and translation by Stephen Herbert Langdon (1876–1937).[1][2]
MaterialClay
Size20x9 cm
Created1800 BCE
DiscoveredProbably Larsa
31°17′09″N 45°51′13″E / 31.285833°N 45.853611°E / 31.285833; 45.853611
Present locationAshmolean Museum, Oxford
RegistrationAN1923.444.

The Weld-Blundell Prism ("WB", dated 1800 BCE) is a clay, cuneiform inscribed vertical prism housed in the Ashmolean Museum.[2] The prism was found in a 1922 expedition in Larsa in modern-day Iraq by British archaeologist Herbert Weld Blundell.[3] The four sides, about 20 cm high and 9 cm wide, are inscribed in the Sumerian language with lists of Sumerian kings; each side contains the text in two columns: this is the famous Sumerian King List. It is considered as the most complete of the Sumerian King Lists which have been found, of which there are approximately 25 more or less complete fragments as of 2016.[2]

The list begins with the antediluvian rulers and ends with

Isin dynasty (r. 1827–1817). The list was most likely written in Sin-magir's final year, or soon after.[4]
Many, especially antediluvian, kings are credited with incredibly long reigns (counted in sars and nerah), as a result of which many scholars consider this work to be more artistic than historical.[3]

Various theories are being constructed in an attempt to explain such large numbers. They are supposed to express the great importance of rulers who were considered demigods. According to another version, sar (3600 years) and ner (600 years), the units of time measurement in the Sumerian number system, should be taken as years and months, respectively.[5]

This text of the

Sumerian cuneiform.[6]

Contents

Gallery

See also

References

Notes

Citations

  1. ^ Langdon, S. (1923). The Weld-Blundell Collection, vol. II. Historical Inscriptions, Containing Principally the Chronological Prism, W-B. 444 (PDF). OXFORD EDITIONS OF CUNEIFORM TEXTS. pp. 8–21.
  2. ^ .
  3. ^ a b "Weld-Blundell Prism". University of Oxford - Ashmolean Museum.
  4. ^ Van De Mieroop, Marc (2016). A History of the Ancient Near East (3rd ed.). Oxford: Wiley Blackwell. p. 47.
  5. ^ "Kingdoms of Mesopotamia - Sumer". The History Files.
  6. .

Sources