Research Catalog

An ancient Mesopotamian herbal handbook : the series URU.AN.NA and MÚD-UR.MAḪ

Title
An ancient Mesopotamian herbal handbook : the series URU.AN.NA and MÚD-UR.MAḪ / by Jeanette C. Fincke.
Author
Fincke, Jeanette
Publication
Leuven : Paris : Bristol, CT : Peeters, 2021-

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StatusVol/DateFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
v. 1Book/textUse in library JX 22-17112Schwarzman Building - General Research Room 315

Details

Series Statement
Orient & Méditerranée ; 33
Uniform Title
Orient & méditerranée ; 33.
Alternative Title
Series URU.AN.NA and MUD-UR.MAH
Subject
  • Cuneiform tablets
  • Medicine, Ancient > Formulae, receipts, prescriptions
  • Herbs > Therapeutic use
  • Akkadian language > Texts
  • Medicine, Assyro-Babylonian > Sources
Genre/Form
  • Texts.
  • Sources.
  • Prescriptions, formulae, receipts, etc.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references.
Language (note)
  • Text in English; summary in French.
Contents
volume 1. The Tablets
Call Number
JX 22-17112
ISBN
  • 9789042944718
  • 9042944714
OCLC
1249751793
Author
Fincke, Jeanette, author.
Title
An ancient Mesopotamian herbal handbook : the series URU.AN.NA and MÚD-UR.MAḪ / by Jeanette C. Fincke.
Publisher
Leuven : Paris : Bristol, CT : Peeters, 2021-
Description
volumes : illustrations (some color) ; 30 cm.
Type of Content
still image
text
Type of Medium
unmediated
Type of Carrier
volume
Series
Orient & Méditerranée ; 33
Orient & méditerranée ; 33.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
Summary
The related series uru.an.na = mas / ltakkal, "uru.an.na means the mas/ltakkal plant", and mud-ur.mah = mê sa libbi bini, "lion's blood means the liquid from the heart of the tamarisk", both give synonyms and equivalent foreign names for plants, herbs and wood, as well as for other ingredients ancient medical practitioners used to effect cures. This first volume about both series focuses on the cuneiform tablets on which the texts were written, from the British Museum, London, the Vorderasiatisches Museum, Berlin, and the Oriental Institute, Chicago. New hand copies and sketches show the physical and non-physical joins. Viewing the tablets as archaeological objects, the author provides numerous observations about format, shape, colour, firing holes, worm holes and trace fossils. The ways scribes marked out their tablets with horizontal lines (sometimes doubled) to separate entries or paragraphs or provide ruled tablets are described; vertical rulings defined the left edge and column divisions (sometimes replaced by a glossenkeil). Areas reserved for writing, layout, slanted lines of writing, alignment and indentation of paragraphs, line spacing and ductus (especially changes from Middle to Neo-Assyrian) are carefully examined. The last chapter concentrates on scribal corrections and various correction marks, line markers and supplementary glosses. Such features illuminate the personal preferences and professional experience of the frequently anonymous scribes behind the tablets.
Language
Text in English; summary in French.
Research Call Number
JX 22-17112
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