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This classic work has served students of Akkadian literature as a
useful sourcebook and as a model publication for the study of a
specific corpus of cuneiform literature. These timeless proverbs,
instructive precepts, and ancient fables demonstrate a rich
heritage in the Mesopotamian development of this genre. Lambert's
focused collection also provides scholars with a unique comparative
reference for those studying biblical wisdom literature. An
Eisenbrauns classic reprint.
The Babylonian tamitu texts are a corpus of questions addressed to
the sun-god Shamash and the storm-god Adad jointly. Professional
diviners were employed to put the questions with the appropriate
rites and to formulate the wording correctly, since the only answer
would be "yes" or "no." Thus the questions had to include a
detailed exposition of the matter, and they open up intimate
glances of things not otherwise available. Kings ask whether they
should undertake a certain campaign, laying out a detailed plan of
action. At the other end of the scale, a man wants to know whether
his wife is telling him the truth. All tablets are of first
millennium B.C. date, though some of the questions date from the
second millennium B.C. Scribes copied out questions to serve as
models for later use. In this volume W.G. Lambert has gathered
together all the known material, including 54 tablets and fragments
not previously published. All are given in cuneiform copy,
transliteration, translation, with notes and an introduction. By
far the greater part of this material has not been edited before.
The Babylonian flood story of Atra-hasis is of vital importance to
ancient Near Eastern and biblical scholars, as well as students of
history, anthropology, and comparative religion. Professors Lambert
and Millard provide the reader with a detailed introduction,
transliterated Akkadian with English translation, critical notes,
and line drawings of the cuneiform tablets. The epic opens in a
time when only the gods lived in the universe. Having decided on
their established spheres of influence, the chief Mesopotamian
gods-Anu, Enlil, and Enki-began their divine labors. In a joint
effort, Enki and Mami (the mother goddess) engineered the creation
of mankind from clay and the flesh and blood of a slain god. The
remainder of the story recounts the expansion of humanity, the
consequent irritation of Enki by this expansion, the attempt by
Enki and Enlil to destroy humankind through a great flood, and the
escape from the flood by Atra-hasis in a boat, accompanied by his
possessions, family, and animals. This classic scholarly edition of
the epic is once again made available as a quality Eisenbrauns
reprint.
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