What was sacrificial divination for?
	
		
How did it work? (e.g., SAA 4:  280)
	
		- Ritual posing of query TT  – on clay TT  or on papyrus TT  – in front of Šamaš
 
		- Ritual TT  induction of signs into body of sacrificial animal
 
		- Systematic examination and recording of entrails TT :
 
		- Disposition of organs – ideally healthy on the right, diseased or deformed on the left
 
		- Disposition of fortuitous markings TT  on organs – e.g., "foot" mark, "weapon" mark
 
		- Consultation of standard omen collection TT  (bārûtu) for particular meanings
 
		- Compilation of written report TT , counting favourable TT  and unfavourable omens
 
		- Followed by discussion with the king
 
	
		
What made it trustworthy?
	
		- Trustworthiness in science/scholarship - as much about social status of reporter as about "objective" believability
 
		- Who is believable as much as what is believable
 
		- Diviners were high status, literate practioners, close to the king, and high-cost materials
 
		- But anyone at all could have an ominous dream or observe an ominous event
 
		- The ritual itself was controlled, systematic, initiated and repeatable on demand
 
		- The theory of extispicy incorporated many means of finessing the outcome – not "cheating" but looking for deeper meanings
 
		- Extispicy had a pedigree at least a thousand years old, but continually underwent revisions and refinements, in consultation with the king
 
	
	Extispicy was primarily a means for the king to take high-risk decisions in discussion with his (human) advisors without undermining his absolute authority – or his credibility if the risk failed.
Further reading
		
			- Starr, Queries to the Sungod, 1990: 'The practice of extispicy', pp. XXXVI-LV
 
			- Veldhuis, 'Reading the signs', 1999
 
			- Veldhuis, 'Divination: theory and use', 2006
 
			- Guinan, 'Left/right symbolism', 1996
 
			- Guinan, 'A severed head laughed', 2002
 
			- Lipton, 'Epistemology of testimony', 1998
 
			- Park, 'Divination and its social contexts', 1963
 
		
		Content last modified: 07 Jul 2012.