Esarhaddon 1001

Obverse
Column i
i'Lacuna

Lacuna

i' 1'1'

[...] Ú [...]

(i' 1') [...] ... [...] ... the sun [...] heart [was ang]ry [...] ... [... (i′ 5′) ...] ... [...] I raised and [...] Imgur-Enlil ... [...] ... [...] ... a wall a king [... to be as secure as a great] mountain [for far-off days].

i' 2'2'

[...]-ti dUTU-ši [...]

i' 3'3'

[... e-zi]-iz lìb-bi [...]

i' 4'4'

[...] ú-saḫ-ḫu-ú [...]

i' 5'5'

[...] x UD ERIM [...]

i' 6'6'

[...] ú-šaq--ma [...]

i' 7'7'

[...] im?-gur-dEN.LÍL x [...]

i' 8'8'

[...] il-lu-u-ni bi-[...]

i' 9'9'

[...] x BÀD LUGAL [...]

i' 10'10'

[... ú-ḫu]-um-meš [šur-šu-du]

Column ii
ii'ii Lacuna

Lacuna

ii' 1'1'

[...] ma-mit [...]

(ii' 1') [...] oath [...] ... to [...] he placed and [...] the people. He built their ... [...] and [...] over [... (ii′ 5′) (As for) E]durgina, the dwelling of the god [l-ṣarbi that is in]side of Baṣ, he took its [...] and bui[lt] (it) anew. [The gods Bēl]-ṣarbi, Nabû and [Marduk, (and) Ni]nsaggirgi and Dumu[zi, (ii′ 10′) the god]s living in [it], they raised up their [...].

ii' 2'2'

[...] ŠÚ BI a-na [...]

ii' 3'3'

ú-šib-ma UN.MEŠ [...]

ii' 4'4'

[(x)] x-si-na ib-ni-ma UGU [...]

ii' 5'5'

[é]-dúr-gi-na šu-bat dLUGAL-[GIŠ.ASAL]

ii' 6'6'

[šá] -reb LAM×KUR.RU.KI

ii' 7'7'

[x (x)]-šú iṣ-bat-ma ana -šu-ti -[]

ii' 8'8'

[dLUGAL]-GIŠ.ASAL dAG u d[AMAR.UTU?]

ii' 9'9'

[d]nin?-sag-gìr-gi u ddumu-[zi]

ii' 10'10'

[DINGIR].MEŠ a-šib lìb-bi-[šú]

ii' 11'11'

[x (x)]-šú-nu ú-šaq-qu? [...]

ii' 12'12'

[dé-a u] dasal--ḫi ina -me--šú-nu [ṣi-ru-ti]

(ii' 12') [The gods Ea and] Asalluḫi, by the[ir exalted] wisdom,

Lacuna

Lacuna


Created by Erle Leichty, Jamie Novotny, and the Royal Inscriptions of the Neo-Assyrian Period (RINAP) Project, 2011, 2017. Lemmatized by Jamie Novotny, 2010, and updated by him, 2017, for the Munich Open-access Cuneiform Corpus Initiative (MOCCI), a corpus-building initiative funded by LMU Munich and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation (through the establishment of the Alexander von Humboldt Chair for Ancient History of the Near and Middle East) and based at the Historisches Seminar - Abteilung Alte Geschichte of Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. The annotated edition is released under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike license 3.0. Please cite this page as http://oracc.org/rinap/Q003373/.