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Chapter 25. Enmity Against Samsu-ditāna
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Elyze Zomer
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface: Law and (Dis)Order in Ghent (and the Ancient Near East) viii
- Abbreviations xi
- Program xvii
- Chapter 1. Foreseeing the Future, Classifying the Present: On the Concepts of Law and Order in the Omen Literature 1
- Chapter 2. Le vol à l’époque paléo- babylonienne : L’application de la loi à travers la jurisprudence 10
- Chapter 3. “Let the Sleeping Dogs Lie” or the Taboo (NÍG.GIG=ikkibu) of the Sacredness of Sleep as Order and Noise at Night (“tapage nocturne”) as Disorder in Some Ancient Near Eastern Texts 19
- Chapter 4. Lorsque les généraux prêtent serment ... : Quelques remarques sur l’usage du serment de loyauté (depuis la documentation d’Ur III jusqu’à l’époque néo- assyrienne) 37
- Chapter 5. Unjust Law: Royal Rhetoric or Social Reality? 48
- Chapter 6. The Vocabulary of Rebellion in Neo-Assyrian Documents 61
- Chapter 7. Legal Fiction in Emar and Ekalte: A Source of Order or Disorder in the Legal System? 78
- Chapter 8. What the “Man of One Mina” Wanted: Law and Commerce in the Ur III Period 87
- Chapter 9. How Ancient Near Eastern Societies Regulated Life in the Community: Crucial Clues from Archaeology 95
- Chapter 10. A Variationist Approach to Orthographic and Phonological Peculiarities of the Language in the Laws of Hammurabi 117
- Chapter 11. “For Each Runaway Assyrian Fugitive, Let Me Replace Him One Hundred- Fold”: Fugitives/ Runaways in the Neo-Assyrian Empire 136
- Chapter 12. Perfections of Justice? Measure for Measure Aspirations in Biblical and Cuneiform Sources 144
- Chapter 13. Putting Some Order in Ur III Letter- Orders 153
- Chapter 14. Luminous Oils and Waters of Wisdom: Shedding New Light on Oil Divination 169
- Chapter 15. (Mis)Translating Gender: The Scribes Couldn’t Have Been Competent, They Didn’t Go to Yale 177
- Chapter 16. Rétablir l’ordre par la mort dans les textes législatifs du début du IIe millénaire av. J.-C. 199
- Chapter 17. To Be Guilty at Nuzi 208
- Chapter 18. Fremde Götter—eigene Götter: Zu den neuassyrischen Götterbeschreibungen 219
- Chapter 19. “Not Even Her Own Jewelry”: Marital Property in the Middle Assyrian Laws 242
- Chapter 20. Disorder and Its Agents: The Akkadian Epic of Anzû Revisited 270
- Chapter 21. When the Trial Does Not Work: Pathological Elements in the Judicial Procedure in the Old Babylonian Period 284
- Chapter 22. The Ashurbanipal Library Project at the British Museum 291
- Chapter 23. The Sea and Monarchic Legitimation in the Ancient Near East 297
- Chapter 24. Putting Life in Order: The Architecture of the New Excavations in Kamid el-Loz, Lebanon 308
- Chapter 25. Enmity Against Samsu-ditāna 324
- Contributors 333
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface: Law and (Dis)Order in Ghent (and the Ancient Near East) viii
- Abbreviations xi
- Program xvii
- Chapter 1. Foreseeing the Future, Classifying the Present: On the Concepts of Law and Order in the Omen Literature 1
- Chapter 2. Le vol à l’époque paléo- babylonienne : L’application de la loi à travers la jurisprudence 10
- Chapter 3. “Let the Sleeping Dogs Lie” or the Taboo (NÍG.GIG=ikkibu) of the Sacredness of Sleep as Order and Noise at Night (“tapage nocturne”) as Disorder in Some Ancient Near Eastern Texts 19
- Chapter 4. Lorsque les généraux prêtent serment ... : Quelques remarques sur l’usage du serment de loyauté (depuis la documentation d’Ur III jusqu’à l’époque néo- assyrienne) 37
- Chapter 5. Unjust Law: Royal Rhetoric or Social Reality? 48
- Chapter 6. The Vocabulary of Rebellion in Neo-Assyrian Documents 61
- Chapter 7. Legal Fiction in Emar and Ekalte: A Source of Order or Disorder in the Legal System? 78
- Chapter 8. What the “Man of One Mina” Wanted: Law and Commerce in the Ur III Period 87
- Chapter 9. How Ancient Near Eastern Societies Regulated Life in the Community: Crucial Clues from Archaeology 95
- Chapter 10. A Variationist Approach to Orthographic and Phonological Peculiarities of the Language in the Laws of Hammurabi 117
- Chapter 11. “For Each Runaway Assyrian Fugitive, Let Me Replace Him One Hundred- Fold”: Fugitives/ Runaways in the Neo-Assyrian Empire 136
- Chapter 12. Perfections of Justice? Measure for Measure Aspirations in Biblical and Cuneiform Sources 144
- Chapter 13. Putting Some Order in Ur III Letter- Orders 153
- Chapter 14. Luminous Oils and Waters of Wisdom: Shedding New Light on Oil Divination 169
- Chapter 15. (Mis)Translating Gender: The Scribes Couldn’t Have Been Competent, They Didn’t Go to Yale 177
- Chapter 16. Rétablir l’ordre par la mort dans les textes législatifs du début du IIe millénaire av. J.-C. 199
- Chapter 17. To Be Guilty at Nuzi 208
- Chapter 18. Fremde Götter—eigene Götter: Zu den neuassyrischen Götterbeschreibungen 219
- Chapter 19. “Not Even Her Own Jewelry”: Marital Property in the Middle Assyrian Laws 242
- Chapter 20. Disorder and Its Agents: The Akkadian Epic of Anzû Revisited 270
- Chapter 21. When the Trial Does Not Work: Pathological Elements in the Judicial Procedure in the Old Babylonian Period 284
- Chapter 22. The Ashurbanipal Library Project at the British Museum 291
- Chapter 23. The Sea and Monarchic Legitimation in the Ancient Near East 297
- Chapter 24. Putting Life in Order: The Architecture of the New Excavations in Kamid el-Loz, Lebanon 308
- Chapter 25. Enmity Against Samsu-ditāna 324
- Contributors 333