A MESOPOTAMIAN CHLORITE AMULET
A MESOPOTAMIAN CHLORITE AMULET
A MESOPOTAMIAN CHLORITE AMULET
A MESOPOTAMIAN CHLORITE AMULET
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PROPERTY FROM A DISTINGUISHED AMERICAN COLLECTION
A MESOPOTAMIAN CHLORITE AMULET

THIRD DYNASTY OF UR TO KASSITE DYNASTY, CIRCA 2112-1155 B.C.

Details
A MESOPOTAMIAN CHLORITE AMULET
THIRD DYNASTY OF UR TO KASSITE DYNASTY, CIRCA 2112-1155 B.C.
1 1⁄8 in. (2.8 cm.) long
Provenance
with Jean-Alain Mariaud de Serres (1920-1999), Paris, acquired by 1960; thence by descent.
Archéologie, Collection Jean-Alain Mariaud de Serres, François de Ricqlès, Drouot-Montaigne, Paris, 1-2 October 2000, lot 96.
Literature
W.G. Lambert, “An Old Babylonian Letter and Two Amulets,” Iraq, vol. 38, no. 1, 1976, pp. 61-64, fig. 3.
Cuneiform Digital Library Database no. P363159.

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Hannah Solomon
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Lot Essay

According to W.G. Lambert (op. cit., p. 62), the dating is difficult to establish since "most of the sign forms would be normal on stone at any time from the end of the third millennium B.C. to the middle of the second millennium," and some signs are in "an older linear form, so clearly archaizing. Since the script as a whole may be archaizing perhaps one should allow the beginning of the Third Dynasty of Ur and the end of the Kassite dynasty as the extreme limits between which this object was probably written." The text includes a common incantation formula of unknown meaning, and mentions three well-known Sumerian gods, Enlil, Enki and Nergal, while the rest remains obscure.

For a related amulet, compare the one in the Nies Babylonian Collection, Yale Peabody Museum (inv. no. YPM BC 005504; see no. 16 in N.B. Nies, Babylonian Inscriptions in the Collection of James B. Nies, vol. II, pl. VIII, no. 16).

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