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Babylonian Records in the Library of J. Pierpont Morgan. Edited by Albert T. Clay. Part I: Babylonian Business Transactions of the first millennium b.c. 12 × 9¼ inches. New York: privately printed, 1912.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 March 2011
Abstract
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- Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1913
References
page 489 note 1 Probably meaning that the gur was the late one of 180 qa instead of 300 qa.
page 490 note 1 Possibly the Succoth of Succoth Benoth, 2 Kings xvii, 30Google Scholar, who, mentioned here after “my lady”, was probably Merodach. The true form of Succoth Benoth was in that case Sukoth ban wāth = Sakut ban mâti (wâti), “Sakut, creator of the land.”
page 491 note 1 If my reading be correct, these may have been natives of Kars in Armenia.