Search Results: Girsu

Search

Search Results

Distribution of Barley Rations Tablet from Girsu
Image by Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin

Distribution of Barley Rations Tablet from Girsu

Adult workers received standard rations of 30 to 40 pints of barley per month while children received 20; the barley was distributed as rations to about 200 workmen and their children. This scribe was clearly highly trained in this art. From...
Votive Mace Head of Ur-Ningirsu II from Girsu
Image by Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin

Votive Mace Head of Ur-Ningirsu II from Girsu

This grey stone mace head was inscribed with a cuneiform text. The text says that this mace head was dedicated to the god Ningirsu by Ur-Ningirsu II (son of Gudea, ruler of Lagash). From Girsu, Sothern Mesopotamia, modern-day Iraq. Circa...
Terracotta Tablet from Girsu
Image by Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin

Terracotta Tablet from Girsu

This reform text belongs to King Uru'inimgina (or URU-KA-GI-NA), king of Lagash. From Girsu (modern Tell Telloh, Dhi-Qar Governorate, Iraq), Southern Mesopotamia, Iraq. Early dynastic period, 2351-2342 BCE. (Istanbul Archaeological Museums/Ancient...
Foundation Pegs, from Ningirsu Temple, Girsu
Image by Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin

Foundation Pegs, from Ningirsu Temple, Girsu

Each peg has a very faint cuneiform inscription of Gudea, the ruler of the city-state of Lagash. Foundation pegs were buried in the foundation of buildings to magically protect them and preserve the builder's name for posterity. In this...
Door Pivot Stone from Girsu
Image by A.K.

Door Pivot Stone from Girsu

A door pivot stone from Telloh (ancient Girsu), third millennium BCE. Istanbul Archaeology Museum.
Foundation Tablet of Ammar-Seun from Girsu
Image by Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin

Foundation Tablet of Ammar-Seun from Girsu

This is a stone tablet, inscribed with a cuneiform text. This was a dedication to the Temple of Inanna at Girsu by Amar-Seun (Amar-Sin). Amar-Seun was king of Ur III dynasty. From Southern Mesopotamia, modern-day Iraq. Neo-Sumerian Period...
Sumerian Language
Definition by Jason Moser

Sumerian Language

The Sumerian language was spoken in southern Mesopotamia before the 2nd millennium BCE and was the first language to be written in the cuneiform script. It is an isolate language meaning we know of no other languages that relate to it ancestrally...
Ninurta
Definition by Joshua J. Mark

Ninurta

Ninurta (identified with Ningirsu, Pabilsag, and the biblical Nimrod) is the Sumerian and Akkadian hero-god of war, hunting, and the south wind. He first appears in texts in the early 3rd millennium BCE as an agricultural god and local deity...
Foundation Cone of Gudea
Image by Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin

Foundation Cone of Gudea

This foundation cone records the building of a temple at Girsu by Gudea, ruler of Lagash. From Girsu (modern Tell Telloh, Dhi-Qar Governorate, Iraq), Southern Mesopotamia, Iraq. Reign of Gudea, 2144-2124 BCE. (The Sulaimaniya Museum, Iraq...
Map of Sumer
Image by P L Kessler

Map of Sumer

The area which formed Sumer started at the Persian Gulf and reached north to the 'neck' of Mesopotamia where the two rivers, the Tigris and the Euphrates meander much closer to each other. To the east loomed the Zagros Mountains, where scattered...
Membership