FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   191   192   193   194   195   196   197   198   199   200   201   202   203   204   205   206   207   208   209   210   211   212   213   214   215  
216   217   218   219   220   221   222   223   224   225   226   227   228   229   230   231   232   233   234   235   236   237   238   239   240   >>   >|  
. Elsewhere, Cylinder B, col. v. 17, Ishtar is called the daughter of Bel. This, however, must be an error; either Sin must be read for Bel, or _khirat_ (consort) for _marat_ (daughter). [252] See above, p. 151. [253] See Barton, "The Semitic Ishtar Cult" (_Hebraica_, x. 9-12). [254] _I.e._, _c._ 1800 B.C. [255] See p. 154. [256] See above, p. 149. [257] See below, p. 237. [258] A king of Nippur (_c._ 2500 B.C.) bears the name Ishme-Dagan. [259] See above, p. 154; Tiele, _Geschichte der Religion im Alterthum_, i. 172. [260] See Hommel, _Geschichte_, p. 490. How much earlier Samsi-Ramman I. reigned is not known--perhaps only 40 or 50 years. [261] The _d_ of Dagon would be represented by _d_ in cuneiform writing. [262] See p. 154. [263] An eponym in his days bears the name Daganbelusur. [264] In the El-Amarna tablets (_c._ 1400 B.C.) the governors of the Palestinian states generally address their Egyptian lord as 'my sun'. [265] Exactly of what nature we do not know. The Assyrian word used, Cylinder, l. 43, is obscure. [266] See p. 160. [267] IR. 8, col. i. 85. See above, p. 166. [268] Ashurnasirbal calls him so in his annals, _e.g._, col. iii. 1. 130. [269] Bavian Inscription, ll. 48-50. See also Meissner-Rost, _Bauinschriften Sanherib's_, p. 102. The reading of the name of the city is not certain. It signifies 'city of palaces.' [270] _c._ 1120 B.C. [271] II Rawlinson, 57, 33. [272] So Tiglathpileser associates Ashur and Nin-ib, as those 'who fulfill his desire.' [273] Ashurnasirbal's father bears the name Tukulti-Ninib. [274] See above, pp. 151, 206. [275] One of the gates of Sargon's palace is called after Nin-ib. [276] See above, p. 57. [277] See above, pp. 92-94. [278] _Kosmologie_, pp. 457-475. [279] He is also called the offspring of a goddess, Ku-tu-shar, but this reference is not clear. See Jensen, _Kosmologie_, p. 468, note 5. [280] In a religious text he is addressed as 'holy, holy, holy.' [281] Balawat, col. v. ll. 4, 5. [282] Kar = fortress. [283] See Sayce, _Hibbert Lectures_, p. 438, and Jensen's important note, _Kosmologie_, pp. 492-494. [284] See pp. 124, 125. [285] Cylinder, l. 61. [286] See pp. 117 _seq._ [287] We may therefore expect, some day, to come across the name Marduk in Assyrian texts earlier than the ninth century. [288] See p. 131. [289] So also Shalmaneser II., Obelisk, l. 179, unless Marduk here is a
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   191   192   193   194   195   196   197   198   199   200   201   202   203   204   205   206   207   208   209   210   211   212   213   214   215  
216   217   218   219   220   221   222   223   224   225   226   227   228   229   230   231   232   233   234   235   236   237   238   239   240   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Cylinder

 

Kosmologie

 

called

 

Geschichte

 

Ashurnasirbal

 

Jensen

 

Assyrian

 

earlier

 
Marduk
 

daughter


Ishtar
 

century

 

fulfill

 
desire
 

Tukulti

 
father
 
Sargon
 

palace

 

Shalmaneser

 

signifies


palaces

 

reading

 
Sanherib
 

Rawlinson

 
associates
 

Tiglathpileser

 

Obelisk

 

Hibbert

 
Lectures
 

fortress


Balawat

 

important

 

expect

 

addressed

 

goddess

 

offspring

 

reference

 

religious

 
Bauinschriften
 
Religion

Alterthum

 

Nippur

 

reigned

 

Ramman

 

Hommel

 

khirat

 

consort

 

Elsewhere

 

Barton

 

Semitic