Sumerian·Book

Position in chronology

Adad-narari I 42

~1300 BCE·Middle Assyrian·Q005779

Written in modern English

Adad-nārārī I, vice-regent of the god Aššur, refaced the drainage openings in the wall of Aššur's temple — the wall that faces the gardens of the upper... The inscription breaks off there; whatever stood beyond the gardens is lost.

A modern paraphrase of the literal translation — same content, contemporary voice.

Translation — scholar edition

RIAo
High confidence
(1) Adad-nārārī (I), vice-regent of (the god) Aššur, refaced the drainage openings of the wall of the temple of the god Aššur, his lord, which (is) before the gardens of the upper ...

Royal Inscriptions of Assyria online — scholar edition (ORACC / MOCCI).

Transliteration

m10-ERIM.TÁḪ ŠID aš-šur / bi-i-be šá du-ri / šá É daš-šur EN-šu / šá IGI GIŠ.KIRI₆.MEŠ šá IM / e-le-e ik-si-ir

Scholarly note

Royal inscription of an Assyrian king, published in the Royal Inscriptions of Assyria online project (RIAo). Translation reproduced from the ORACC edition. ORACC text Q005779.

Attribution

Image: Based on A. Kirk Grayson, Assyrian Rulers of the Third and Second Millennia BC (to 1115 BC) (RIMA 1), Toronto, 1987. Adapted by Jamie Novotny (2015-16) and lemmatized and updated by Nathan Morello (2016) for the Munich Open-access Cuneiform Corpus Initiative (MOCCI), a corpus-building initiative funded by LMU Munich and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation (through the establishment of the Alexander von Humboldt Chair for Ancient History of the Near and Middle East) and based at the Historisches Seminar - Abteilung Alte Geschichte of Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. The annotated edition is released under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike license 3.0. Please cite this page as http://oracc.org/riao/Q005779/..
Translation excerpted from Royal Inscriptions of Assyria online (RIAo), Munich Open-access Cuneiform Corpus Initiative (MOCCI), Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München; in association with the RINAP Project, University of Pennsylvania. https://oracc.museum.upenn.edu/riao/Q005779/.

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