Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-t6hkb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-12T01:30:59.995Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Foreign Stone Vessels of the Late Third Millennium B.C. from Southern Mesopotamia: their origins and mechanisms of exchange1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 August 2014

Extract

It has long been realized that much of the stonework recovered from sites in southern Mesopotamia must have been imported, either as finished artefacts or as raw lumps which were then fashioned locally. The rare outcrops of stone which occur in the alluvium, principally around Uruk and Ur, are restricted to limestone and its light-coloured derivatives (calcite, gypsum, etc.). These were exploited extensively for sculpture, vessels and other relatively small objects throughout the third millennium and beyond, forming the staple medium for the bulk of the Mesopotamian stoneworking industry. Along with these materials, however, a not insignificant proportion of the stonework found on early Babylonian sites consists of dark igneous and metamorphic stones, of which the nearest sources are the mountains and plateaux which border Mesopotamia to the north-west, north and east, extending across the Gulf into Oman. Notable categories which illustrate this phenomenon are the numerous vessels deposited in private graves of the Jemdet Nasr to Early Dynastic II periods, the elaborately decorated “steatite” vessels of the mid-third millennium, and the royal statuary of the Sargonids and their successors.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The British Institute for the Study of Iraq 1989

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

1

This study is based on research undertaken for Chapter 6 of my Oxford D.Phil, thesis, Aspects of the foreign relations between southern Mesopotamia and her eastern neighbours in the late fourth and third millennia B.C., Oxford University, 1987. It has been revised on the basis of publications available up to June 1988.

References

References Cited

Adams, R.McC., 1974. Anthropological Perspectives on Ancient Trade. Current Anthropology 15, 239–58.Google Scholar
Adams, R.McC., 1981. Heartland of Cities: Surveys of Ancient Settlement and Land Use on the Central Floodplain of the Euphrates. Chicago.Google Scholar
Ainsworth, W., 1838. Researches in Assyria, Babylonia and Chaldaea, forming part of the labours of the Euphrates Expedition. London.Google Scholar
Amiet, P., 1976. L'art d'Agadé au Musée du Louvre. Paris.Google Scholar
Amiet, P., 1977. Bactriane proto-historique. Syria 54, 89121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amiet, P., 1980. Art of the Ancient Near East. New York. (Translated by Shepley, J. & Choquet, C.).Google Scholar
Amiet, P., 1986. L'âge des échanges inter-iraniens 3500–1700 avant J.-C. (Editions de la Réunion des musées nationaux). Paris.Google Scholar
Amiet, P., 1987. Une statue de Gudea. La revue du Louvre et des Musées de France 1987/1983, 169–71.Google Scholar
Alden, J. R., 1979. Regional Economie Organization in Banesh period Iran (Ph.D. dissertation). Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Andersen, H. H., 1986. The Barbar Temple: Stratigraphy, architecture and interpretation. In Khalifa, S. H. A. & Rice, M. (ed.), Bahrain through the Ages: The Archaeology. London.Google Scholar
Barton, G. A., 1929. The Royal Inscriptions of Sumer and Akkad. New Haven.Google Scholar
Basmachi, F., 1950. Sculptured Stone Vases in the Iraq Museum. Sumer 6, 165–76.Google Scholar
Berthoud, Th., et al., 1982. Cuivres et alliages en Iran, Afghanistan, Oman au cours des IVe et IIIe millénaires. Paléorient 8/2, 3954.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biggs, R. D., Buccellati, G., 1969. Cuneiform Texts from Nippur, The Eighth and Ninth Seasons (Assyriological Studies 17). Chicago.Google Scholar
Boehmer, R. M., 1984. Kalkstein für das urukzeitliche Uruk. Baghdader Mitteilungen 15, 141–7.Google Scholar
Boehmer, R. M., 1984a. Uruk-Warka XXXVI: Survey des Stadtgebeites von Uruk. Baghdader Mitteilungen 15, 113–40.Google Scholar
Boucharlat, R., Haerinck, E., Phillips, C. S., Potts, D. T., in press. Archaeological Reconnaissance at ed-Dur, Uram al-Qaiwain, U.A.E.Akkadica.Google Scholar
Braun-Holzinger, E. A., 1987. Nochmals zu Naramsins “Beute von Magan”. Or. Ant. 26, 285–90.Google Scholar
Burkholder, G., 1984. An Arabian Collection, Artifacts from the Eastern Province. Boulder City, Nevada.Google Scholar
Calmeyer, P., 1969. Datierbare Bronzen aus Luristan und Kirmanshah. Berlin.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Cardi, B., 1971. Archaeological Survey in the Northern Trucial States. East and West 21, 225–89.Google Scholar
de Cardi, B.et al., 1976. Excavations and Survey in Oman, 1974–5. Journal of Oman Studies 2, 101–87.Google Scholar
Christian, V., 1940. Altertumskunde des Zweiströmlandes I, Leipzig.Google Scholar
Ciarla, R., 1979. The Manufacture of Alabaster Vessels at Shahr-i Sokhta and Mundigak in the 3rd Millennium B.C.: A Problem of Cultural Identity. In Gnoli, G. & Rossi, A. V. (ed.), Iranica (Napoli, Istituto Universario Orientale, Seminario di Studi Asiatici, Series Minor X), Naples.Google Scholar
Ciarla, R., 1981. A Preliminary Analysis of the Manufacture of Alabaster Vessels at Shahr-i Sokhta and Mundigak in the 3rd Millennium B.C. In Härtel, H. (ed.), South Asian Archaeology 1979. Berlin.Google Scholar
Cleuziou, S., 19781979. The Second and Third Seasons of Excavation at Hili 8. Archaeology in the United Arab Emirates 23, 3069.Google Scholar
Cleuziou, S., 1981. Oman in the Early 2nd Millennium B.C.Härtel, H. (ed.), South Asian Archaeology 1979, Berlin, 279–93.Google Scholar
Cleuziou, S., Vogt, B., 1983. Umm an-Nar Burial Customs: New Evidence from Tomb A at Hili North. Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 13, 3752.Google Scholar
Davidović, V., 1984. Testi di Ur III concernenti bottino di guerra?Annali (Napoli, Istituto Universario Orientale) 44, 177205.Google Scholar
Delougaz, P. P., 1940. The Temple Oval at Khafajah (OIP LIII). Chicago.Google Scholar
Delougaz, P. P., 1960. Architectural Representations on Steatite Vases. Iraq 22, 90–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Durrani, F. A., 1964. Stone Vases as Evidence of Connection between Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley. Ancient Pakistan 1, 5196.Google Scholar
Edzard, D. O., 1959. Enmebaragesi von Kish. ZA 53, 926.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edzard, D. O., Farber, W., 1974. Die Orts- und Gewässernamen der Zeit der 3. Dynastie von Ur (Répertoire géographique des textes cunéiformes 2). Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Edzard, D. O., Farber, W., Soliberger, E., 1977. Die Orts- und Gewässernamen der präsargonischen und Sargonischen Zeit (Répertoire géographique des textes cunéiformes 1). Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Eichmann, R., 1987. Uruk-Warka XXXVIII. Oberflächenfunde III. Steingefâssbohrer. Baghdader Mitteilungen 18, 107–15.Google Scholar
Eilers, Wh., 1983. Das Volk der Maka vor und nach den Achämeniden. AMI Ergänzungsband 10, 101–19.Google Scholar
Fairservis, W. A., 1961. Archeological Studies in the Seistan Basin of Southwestern Afghanistan and Eastern Iran. New York.Google Scholar
Foster, B. R., 1977. Commercial Activity in Sargonic Mesopotamia. Iraq 39, 3143.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foster, B. R., 1982. Umma in the Sargonic Period. Hamden.Google Scholar
Foster, B. R., 1982a. The Seige of Armanum. JANES 14, 2736.Google Scholar
Frankfort, H., 1935. Oriental Institute Discoveries in Iraq, 1933/4 (OIC 19). Chicago.Google Scholar
Frankfort, H., 1954. The Art and Architecture of the Ancient Orient, Harmondsworth.Google Scholar
Frayne, D. R., 1984. Notes on a New Inscription of Šar-kali-šarrī. Annual Review of the Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia Project 2, 23–7.Google Scholar
Frifelt, K., 1970. Jamdat Nasr Graves in the Oman. KUML 1970, 374–83.Google Scholar
Frifelt, K., 1975. On Prehistoric Settlement and Chronology of the Oman Peninsula. East and West 25, 359424.Google Scholar
Frifelt, K., 1986. Burial Mounds near Ali excavated by the Danish Expedition. In Khalifah, S. H. A. al & Rice, M. (ed.), Bahrain Through the Ages: The Archaeology. London.Google Scholar
Gadd, C. J., 1971. The Dynasty of Agade and the Gutian Invasion. The Cambridge Ancient History I/2, Cambridge, 417–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gadd, C. J., Legrain, L., 1928. Ur Excavations, Texts I: Royal Inscriptions. London.Google Scholar
Gautier, J. E., Lampre, G., 1905. Fouilles de Moussian. MDP VIII, 59148.Google Scholar
Gelb, I. J., 1961. Old Akkadian Writing and Grammar (Materials for the Assyrian Dictionary 2). 2nd edn. Chicago.Google Scholar
Genouillac, H. de, 1913. Inscriptions diverses. RA 10, 101 f.Google Scholar
Genouillac, H. de, 1934. Fouilles de Telloh I: Époques présargoniques. Paris.Google Scholar
Genouillac, H. de, 1936. Fouilles de Tello II: Époques d'Ur III Dynastie et de Larsa. Paris.Google Scholar
Gibson, McG., et al., 1978. Excavations at Nippur, Twelfth Season (OIC 23). Chicago.Google Scholar
Glassner, J.-J., in press. Mesopotamian Textual Evidence on Magan/Makkan in the Late 3rd Millennium B.C.Costa, P., Tosi, M. (ed.), Oman Studies (Orientalia Romana 7). Rome.Google Scholar
Glob, P. V., 1958. Alabaster Vases from the Bahrain Temple. KUML 1958, 138–45.Google Scholar
Gockel, W., 1982. Die Stratigraphie und Chronologie der Ausgrabungen des Diyala-Gebietes und der Stadt Ur in der Zeit von Uruk/Eanna IV bis zur Dynastie von Akkad. Rome.Google Scholar
Goetze, A. 1968. Akkad Dynasty Inscriptions from Nippur. JAOS 88, 54–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goetze, A., 1970. Early Dynastic Dedication Inscriptions from Nippur. JCS 23, 3956.Google Scholar
Golding, M., 1974. Evidence for pre-Seleucid Occupation of Eastern Arabia. Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 4, 1931.Google Scholar
Grayson, A. K., 1972. Assyrian Royal Inscriptions I: From the Beginning to Ashur-resha-ishi I. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Grayson, A. K., 1975. Assyrian and Babylonian Chronicles. (Texts from Cuneiform Sources 5). New York.Google Scholar
Grayson, A. K., Sollberger, E., 1976. L'insurrection générale contre Naram-Suen. RA 70, 103–28.Google Scholar
Grégoire, J.-P., 1981. Inscriptions et archives administratives cunéiformes (le partie). Rome.Google Scholar
Güterbock, H. G., 1938. Die historische Tradition und ihre literarische Gestaltung bei Babyloniern und Hethitern bis 1200. (2nd Part) ZA (NF) 10, 45149.Google Scholar
Hakemi, A., 1972. Catalogue de l'éxposition: Lut, Xabis (Skahdad). Tehran.Google Scholar
Hall, H. R., Woolley, C. L., 1927. Ur Excavations I: Al-'Ubaid. London.Google Scholar
Hallo, W. W., 1957. Early Mesopotamian Royal Titles (American Oriental Series 43). New Haven.Google Scholar
Hallo, W. W., 1961. Royal Inscriptions of the Early Old Babylonian Period: a Bibliography. Bi. Or. 18, 414.Google Scholar
Hallo, W. W., 1962. The Royal Inscriptions of Ur: A Typology. Harvard Union College Annual 33, 143.Google Scholar
Harrison, J. V., 1968. Geology. The Cambridge History of Iran I, Cambridge, 111–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Häser, J., 1987. The Soft-stone inventory of Shimal. In Vogt, B., Franke-Vogt, U. (ed.), Shimal 1985/1986. Excavations of the German Archaeological Mission in Ras al-Khaimah, U.A.E., A Preliminary Report (Berliner Beiträge zum Vorderen Orient, Bd. 8). Berlin.Google Scholar
Hauptmann, A., 1985. 5000 Jahre Kupfer in Oman. Bd. 1: Die Entwicklung der Kupfermetallurgie vom 3. Jahrtausend bis zur Neuzeit (Der Anschnitt Suppl. vol. 4). Bochum.Google Scholar
Hawkins, J. D. (ed.), 1977. Trade in the Ancient Near East, Papers of the XXIIIrd Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Birmingham (= Iraq 39). London.Google Scholar
Heimpel, W., 1982. A First Step in the Diorite Question. RA 76, 65–7.Google Scholar
Heimpel, W., 1987. Das Unterer Meer. ZA 77, 2291.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heinrich, E., Andrae, W., 1931. Fara. Ergebnisse des Ausgrabungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft in Fara und Abu Hatab 1902/3. Berlin.Google Scholar
Herrmann, G., 1968. Lapis Lazuli: The Early Phases of its Trade. Iraq 30, 2157.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heuzey, L., Sarzec, E. de, 18841912. Découvertes en Chaldée, 2 vols. Paris.Google Scholar
Hilprecht, H. V., 1893/1896. Old Babylonian Inscriptions, chiefly from Nippur (Babylonian Expedition of the University of Pennsylvania, Series A: Cuneiform Texts, vol. I, 2 parts). Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Hilprecht, H. V., 1903. Explorations in Bible Lands. Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Hirsch, H., 1963. Die Inschriften der Könige von Agade. AfO 20, 181.Google Scholar
Huot, J.-L.et al., 1983. Larsa et 'Oueili, travaux de 1978–81 (Editions Recherche sur les Civilizations, Mémoire 26). Paris.Google Scholar
Jacobsen, Th., 1939. The Sumerian King List (Assyriological Studies 11). Chicago.Google Scholar
Jarrige, C., Tosi, M., 1981. The Natural Resources of Mundigak. In Härtel, H. (ed.), South Asian Archaeology 1979. Berlin.Google Scholar
de Hoogerwierd, Keun, Baron, R. C., 1889. Die Häfen und Handelsverhaltnisse des Persischen Golfs und des Golfs von Oman. Annalen der Hydrographie und maritimen Meteorologie 17, 189207.Google Scholar
King, L. W., 1899. Cuneiform Texts from Babylonian Tablets in the British Museum, Part VII. London.Google Scholar
King, L. W., 1907. Chronicles Concerning Early Babylonian Kings. 2 vols. London.Google Scholar
King, L. W., 1912. Cuneiform Texts from Babylonian Tablets in the British Museum, Part XXXII. London.Google Scholar
Klengel, H., 1979. Handel und Händler im alten Orient. Wien, Köln, Graz.Google Scholar
Klengel, H., Klengel, E., 1980. Zum Fragment eines Steatitgefäßes mit einer Inschrift der Rimuš von Akkad. Rocznik Orientalistyczny 41/2, 4551.Google Scholar
Kohl, P. C., 1974. Seeds of Upheaval: The Production of Chlorite at Tepe Yahya and an Analysis of Commodity Production and Trade in Southwest Asia in the Third Millennium (Harvard Ph.D. dissertation). Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Kohl, P. C., 1975. Carved Chlorite Vessels: A Trade in Finished Commodities in the mid-third Millennium. Expedition 18/1, 1831.Google Scholar
Kohl, P. C. 1975a. The Archaeology of Trade. Dialectical Anthropology 1, 4350.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kohl, P. C., 1977. A Note on Chlorite Artifacts from Shahr-i Sokhta. East and West 27, 111–28.Google Scholar
Kohl, P. C., 1978. The Balance of Trade in Southwestern Asia in the Mid-Third Millennium B.C. Current Anthropology 19, 463–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kohl, P. C., 1979. The “World Economy” of West Asia in the Third Millennium B.C. In Taddei, M. (ed.), South Asian Archaeology 1977. Naples.Google Scholar
Kohl, P. C., 1982. The First World Economy: External Relations and Trade in West and Central Asia in the Third Millennium B.C. In Nissen, H.-J. & Renger, J. (ed.), Mesopotamien und seine Nachbarn. Berlin.Google Scholar
Kohl, P. C., Harbottle, G., Sayre, E. V., 1979. Physical and Chemical Analyses of Soft Stone Vessels from Southwest Asia. Archaeometry 21, 131–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolbus, S., 1983. Zur Chronologie des sog. Ǧamdat Nasr-Friedhofs in Ur. Iraq 45, 717.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamberg-Karlovsky, C. C., 1970. Excavations at Tepe Yahya, Iran 1967–9, Progress Report 1 (American Schools of Prehistoric Research, Bulletin 27). Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Lamberg-Karlovsky, C. C., 1973. Urban Interaction on the Iranian Plateau: Excavations at Tepe Yahya 1967–73. Proceedings of the British Academy 54, 282319.Google Scholar
Lamberg-Karlovsky, C. C., Tosi, M., 1973. Shahr-i Sokhta and Tepe Yahya: Tracks on the Earliest History of the Iranian Plateau. East and West 23, 2158.Google Scholar
Lambert, M., 1953. Textes commerciaux de Lagash. R4 47, 57–69, 105–20.Google Scholar
Lambert, M., 1968. Masses d'armes de pierre au nom de Naramsîn. Orientalia 37, 85 f.Google Scholar
Le Breton, L., 1957. The Early Periods at Susa, Mesopotamian Relations. Iraq 19, 79124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leemans, W. F., 1960. Foreign Trade in the Old Babylonian Period. Leiden.Google Scholar
Legrain, L., 1926. Royal Inscriptions and Fragments from Nippur and Babylon (PBS XV). Philadelphia.Google Scholar
van Loon, M. N., 1977. Archaeological Evidence of Trade in Western Asia: Problems and Perspectives. In van Beck, B. L.et al. (ed.), Ex Horrea. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Loretz, O., 1969. Texte aus Chagar Bazar und Tell Brak, Teil 1 (AOAT 3/1). Neukirchen-Vluyn.Google Scholar
Mackay, E., 1929. A Sumerian Palace and the “A” Cemetery at Kish, Mesopotamia. Part II (Field Museum of Natural History, Anthropology Memoirs, vol. I, no. 2). Chicago.Google Scholar
Mackay, E., 1932. An Important Link Between Ancient India and Elam. Antiquity 6, 356 f.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCown, D. E., et al., 1967. Nippur I: Temple of Enlil, Scribal Quarter and Soundings (OIP LXXVIII). Chicago.Google Scholar
Mallowan, M. E. L., 1947. Excavations at Brak and Chagar Bazar. Iraq 9, 1266.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mallowan, M. E. L., 1970. The Development of Cities from al-'Ubaid to the end of Uruk 5. In The Cambridge Ancient History, 3rd edn., vol. 1/1. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Mallowan, M. E. L., 1971. The Early Dynastic Period in Mesopotamia. In The Cambridge Ancient History, 3rd edn., vol. 1/2. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Masson, V. M., Sarianidi, V. I., 1972. Central Asia: Turkmenia before the Achaemenids. London.Google Scholar
Matthiae, P., 1985. I tesori di Ebla. Milan.Google Scholar
Mecquenem, R. de, 1911. Constructions élamites du tell de l'Acropole de Suse. MDP XII, 6578.Google Scholar
Mecquenem, R. de, 1934. Fouilles de Suse (1929–33). MDP XXV, 177237.Google Scholar
Mecquenem, R. de, 1943. Fouilles de Suse (1933–9). MDP XXIX, 3161.Google Scholar
Meyer, C. A., 1981. Stone Artifacts from Tutub, Eshnunna and Nippur. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Chicago.Google Scholar
Michalowski, P., 1975. The Bride of Simanum. JAOS 95, 716–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Michalowski, P., 1978. Foreign Tribute to Sumer During the Ur III Period. ZA 68, 3449.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Michalowski, P., 1980. New Sources Concerning the Reign of Narām-Sîn. JCS 32, 233–46.Google Scholar
Miroschedji, P. de, 1973. Vases et objets en stéatite susiens du Musée du Louvre. DAFI 3, 942.Google Scholar
Møller, E., 1984. Reliefstenkar fra Mesopotamien. In Frandsen, P.J. & Laessøe, J. (ed.), Mellem Nilen og Tigris. Copenhagen.Google Scholar
Moorey, P. R. S., 1978. Kish Excavations 1923–33. Oxford.Google Scholar
Moorey, P. R. S., 1985. Materials and Manufacture in Ancient Mesopotamia: The Evidence of Archaeology and Art. Metals and Metalwork, Glazed Materials and Glass (BAR International Series 237). Oxford.Google Scholar
Morgan, J. de, 1900. Matières minérales employées à Suse dans l'antiquité. MDP I, 3349.Google Scholar
Mortensen, P., 1970. On the Date of the Temple at Barbar in Bahrain. KUML 1970, 385–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mortensen, P., 1986. The Barbar Temple: its Chronology and Foreign Relations Reconsidered. In Khalifah, S. H. A. al & Rice, M. (ed.), Bahrain Through the Ages: The Archaeology. London.Google Scholar
Mughal, M. R., 1983. The Dilmun Burial Complex at Sar, The 1980–82 Excavations in Bahrain. Bahrain.Google Scholar
Muhly, J. D., 1973. Copper and Tin: The Distribution of Mineral Resources and the Nature of the Metals Trade in the Bronze Age. Hamden.Google Scholar
Muscarella, O. W., (ed.), 1981. Ladders to Heaven, Art Treasures from Bible Lands. Toronto.Google Scholar
Nagel, W., 1966. Frühe Großplastik und die Hochkulturkunst am Erythraïschen Meer. Berliner Jahrbuch für Vor- und Frühgeschichte 6, 154.Google Scholar
Nagel, W., Strommenger, E., 1968. Reichsakkadische Glyptik und Plastik im Rahmen der mesopotamisch-elamischen Geschichte. Berliner Jahrbuch für Vor- und Frühgeschichte 8, 137206.Google Scholar
Nassouhi, E., 1925. Un vase en albâtre de Naram-Sin. RA 22, 91.Google Scholar
Nissen, H.-J., 1965. Eine neue Version der Sumerischen Königsliste. ZA 57, 15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nissen, H.-J., 1966. Zur Datierung des Königsfriedhofes von Ur (Beiträge zur Ur- und Frühgeschichtlichen Archäologie des Mittelmeer-Kulturraumes Bd. 3). Bonn.Google Scholar
Nöldeke, A., et al., 1936. Siebenter vorläufiger Bericht … Uruk-Warka. Berlin.Google Scholar
Oppenheim, A. L., 1954. The Seafaring Merchants of Ur. JAOS 71, 617.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oppenheim, A. L., 1976. Trade in the Ancient Near East. In Fifth International Congress of Economic History, Moscow, 1970, vol. 5. Moscow.Google Scholar
Parrot, A., 1956. Le temple d'Ishtar (Mission archéologique de Mari I). Paris.Google Scholar
Parrot, A., 1967. Les temples d'Ishtarat et de Ninni-zaza (Mission archéologique de Mari III). Paris.Google Scholar
Peters, J. P., 1897. Nippur II, Second Season. New York & London.Google Scholar
Pettinato, G., 1972. Il commercio con l'estero della Mesopotamia meridionale nel 3. millcnnio av. Cr. alla luce delle fonti letterarie e lessicali sumeriche. Mesopotamia 7, 43166.Google Scholar
Pettinato, G., 1982. Il tesoro del nemico elamita ovvero il bottino della guerra contro Anšan di Šulgi. Or. Ant. 21, 4972.Google Scholar
Piggott, S., 1950. Prehistoric India. Harmondsworth.Google Scholar
Pézard, M., 1914. Mission à Bender-Bouchir, documents archéologiques et épigraphiques (MDP XV). Paris.Google Scholar
Pollock, S., 1985. Chronology of the Royal Cemetery of Ur. Iraq 47, 129–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Porada, E., 1977. Of Professional Seal Cutters and Nonprofessionally Made Seals. In Gibson, McG. & Biggs, R. D. (ed.), Seals and Sealing in the Ancient Near East (Bibliotheca Mesopotamica 6). Malibu.Google Scholar
Postgate, J. N. (ed.), 1985. Abu Salabikh Excavations vol. 2: Graves 1 to 99. Hertford.Google Scholar
Pottier, M.-H., 1984. Matériel funéraire de la Bactriane méridionale de l'âge de bronze (Éditions recherche sur les civilizations, mémoire 36). Paris.Google Scholar
Potts, D. T., 1978. Towards an Integrated History of Culture Change in the Arabian Gulf Area: Notes on Dilmun, Makkan and the Economy of Sumer. Journal of Oman Studies 4, 2951.Google Scholar
Potts, D. T., 1983. Barbar Miscellanies. In Potts, D. T. (ed.), Dilmun: New Studies in the History of Bahrain (Berlin Beiträge zum Vorderen Orient, Bd. 2). Berlin.Google Scholar
Potts, D. T., 1986. Eastern Arabia and the Oman Peninsula during the Late Fourth and Early Third Millennia B.C. In Finkbeiner, U. & Röllig, W. (ed.), Ǧamdat Nasr: Period or Regional Style? (Beiheft zum Tübinger Atlas des Vorderen Orients, Reihe B, Nr. 62). Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Potts, D. T., 1986a. The Booty of Magan. Or. Ant. 25, 271–85.Google Scholar
Potts, D. T., in press (a). A Chronological and Culture Historical Summary. Chapter 8 in Potts, D. T.et al., Excavations at Tepe Yahya, Iran: Periods IVC and IVB (3000–2000 B.C).Google Scholar
Potts, D. T., in press (b). The Chronology of the Archaeological Assemblages from the Head of the Arabian Gulf to the Arabian Sea (8000–1750 B.C.). In Ehrich, R. W. (ed.), Chronologies in Old World Archaeology. 3rd edn. Chicago.Google Scholar
Potts, D. T., in press (c). The Arabian Gulf in Antiquity, vol. I, From Prehistory to the Fall of the Achaemenid Empire, Oxford.Google Scholar
Pumpelly, R., 1908. Explorations in Turkestan, Expedition of 1904. Washington.Google Scholar
Rawlinson, H. C., 1861. The Cuneiform Inscriptions of Western Asia, vol. I. London.Google Scholar
Ratnagar, S., 1981. Encounters: The Westerly Trade of the Harappa Civilization. Delhi.Google Scholar
Reisner, G. A., 1931. Stone Vessels found in Crete and Babylonia. Antiquity 5, 200–12.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Röllig, W., 1975. Heirat, politische. RIA IV, 282–7.Google Scholar
Sabloff, J. A., Lamberg-Karlovsky, C. C. (ed.), 1975. Ancient Civilization and Trade. Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Scheil, V., 1902. Textes élamites-sémitiques, deuxième série (MDP IV). Paris.Google Scholar
Schmidt, E. F., 1933. Tepe Hissar Excavations 1931. The Museum Journal 23, 323483.Google Scholar
Schmidt, E. F., 1937. Excavations at Tepe Hissar, Damghan. Philadelphia.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schüller, A., 1963. Die Rohstoffe der Steingefäße der Sumerer aus der archaischen Siedling bei Uruk-Warka. In Lenzen, H. J.et al., XIX. vorläufiger Bericht … Uruk-Warka. Berlin.Google Scholar
Shileiko, V. K., 1915. Votivnye nadpisi Shumeriiskikh pravitelei. Petrograd.Google Scholar
Sollberger, E., 1960. Notes on the Early Inscriptions from Ur and el-'Obed. Iraq 23, 6989.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soliberger, E., 1965. Ur Excavations, Texts VIII: Royal Inscriptions, Part II. London.Google Scholar
Sollberger, E., 1976. Ibbi-suen. RIA V, 18.Google Scholar
Sollberger, E., Kupper, J.-R., 1971. Inscriptions royales sumériennes et akkadiennes. Paris.Google Scholar
Steible, H., 1982. Die altsumerische Bau- und Weihinschriften, 2 vols. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Stein, A., 1937. Archaeological Reconnaissances in North-Western India and South-Eastern Iran. London.Google Scholar
Steinkeller, P., 1982. The Question of Marhaši: A Contribution to the Historical Geography of Iran in the Third Millennium B.C. ZA 72, 237–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steinkeller, P., 1987. The Administrative and Economic Organization of the Ur III State: The Core and the Periphery. In Gibson, McG. and Biggs, R. D. (ed.), The Organization of Power: Aspects of Bureaucracy in the Ancient Near East (SOAC 46). Chicago.Google Scholar
Steinkeller, P., 1988. On the Identity of the Toponmy LÚ.SU(.A). JAOS 108, 197202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stephens, F.J., 1937. Votive and Historical Texts from Babylonia and Assyria (YOS IX). New Haven, London & Oxford.Google Scholar
Stolper, M. W., 1982. On the Dynasty of Šimaški and the early Sukkalmahs. ZA 72, 4267.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stolper, M. W., 1984. Political History. In Stolper, M. W. & Carter, E., Elam: Surveys of Political History and Archaeology. Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Sumner, W. M., 1986. Proto-Elamite Civilization in Fars. In Finkbeiner, U. & Röllig, W. (ed.) Gamdat Nasr: Period or Regional Style?. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Thorvildsen, K., 1962. Burial Cairns on Umm an-Nar. KUML 1962, 208–19.Google Scholar
Tosi, M., 1969. Excavations at Shahr-i Sokhta, Preliminary Report on the Second Season, Sept.-Dec. 1968. East and West 19, 283386.Google Scholar
Tosi, M., 1974. The Lapis Lazuli Trade Across the Iranian Plateau in the 3rd Millennium B.C. In Gururājamañjarikā. Studi in onore Guiseppe Tucci. Naples.Google Scholar
Tosi, M., 1975. Notes on the Distribution and Exploitation of Natural Resources in Ancient Oman. Journal of Oman Studies 1, 187206.Google Scholar
Tosi, M., 19761980. Karneol. RIA V, 448–52.Google Scholar
Tosi, M. (ed.), 1983. Prehistoric Seistan I (Istituto Italiano per il Medio ed Estremo Oriente, Reports and Memoirs XIX, 1). Naples.Google Scholar
Vallat, F., 1980. Suse et l'Elam (Recherche sur les grandes civilizations, mémoire 1). Paris.Google Scholar
Vallat, F., 1985. Éléments de géographie élamite (Résumé). Paléorient 11/2, 4954.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vértesalji, P. P., Kolbus, S., 1985. Review of Protodynastic Developments in Babylonia. Mesopotamia 20, 53109.Google Scholar
Vogt, B., 1985. Zur Chronologie und Entwicklung der Gräber des späten 4.–2. Jtsd. v. Chr. auf der Halbinsel Oman: Zusammenfassung, Analyse und Würdigung publizierter wie auch unveröffentlichter Grabungsergebnisse. Unpublished Ph.D., Göttingen.Google Scholar
Vogt, B., 1985a. The Umm an-Nar Tomb A at Hili North: A preliminary report on three seasons of excavation, 1982–1984. Archaeology in the United Arab Emirates 4, 2037.Google Scholar
Waetzoldt, H., 1981. Zur Terminologie der Metalle in den Texten aus Ebla. In Cagni, L. (ed.), La Lingua di Ebla. Naples.Google Scholar
Walker, C. B. F., Collon, D., 1980. Hormuzd Rassam's Excavations for the British Museum at Sippar in 1881–2. In Meyer, L. de (ed.), Tell ed-Dēr III: Sounding at Abū Habbah (Sippar). Louvain.Google Scholar
Wartke, R. B., 1979. Steinbohrer aus Uruk. Altorientalische Forshungen 6, 257–61.Google Scholar
Watelin, L. Ch., 1934. Excavations at Kish IV (1925–1930). Paris.Google Scholar
Weisgerber, G., 1981. Mehr als Kupfer in Oman–Ergebnisse der Expedition 1981. Der Anschnitt 33, 174263.Google Scholar
Williams, G. R., 1981. Geological Notes on Rocks, Fossils and Objects of Antiquarian Interest Excavated from the Ruins of Eridu. In Safar, F.et al. (ed.), Eridu. Baghdad.Google Scholar
Woolley, C. L., 1928. The Sumerians. London.Google Scholar
Woolley, C. L., 1934. Ur Excavations II: The Royal Cemetery. London.Google Scholar
Woolley, C. L., 1955. Ur Excavations IV: The Early Periods. London.Google Scholar
Woolley, C. L., 1974. Ur Excavations VI: The Ur III Period. London.Google Scholar
Woolley, C. L., Mallowan, M. E. L., 1976. Ur Excavations VII: The Old Babylonian Period. London.Google Scholar
Yener, K. A., 1982. A Review of Interregional Exchange in Southwest Asia. Anatolica 9, 3375.Google Scholar
Yoffee, N., 1981. Explaining Trade in Ancient Western Asia (Monographs on the Ancient Near East, vol. 2/2). Malibu.Google Scholar
Zarins, J., 1978. Steatite Vessels in the Riyadh Museum. Atlal 2, 6593.Google Scholar