Context Title: Royal Cemetery | PG1932     
Context Name (Excavation): PG1932; PG32     
Context Name (Publication): Royal Cemetery     
Context Description: In season 10 Woolley had completed the Royal Cemetery volume (UE2) but he continued to expand the Royal Cemetery area and find more graves. Continuing the PG numbers would be confusing since they would not be included in the main publication of the cemetery. Thus, he shifted his numbering to reflect the year in which he was digging, beginning very late in 1931. When January arrived, he shifted his numbers to PG1932. However, he had stopped the normal Private Grave sequence at around number 1850 (some PG/18xx numbers were renamed PG1931 or PG1932 numbers) and 1932 is easily mistaken for an individual grave when it is actually a series of graves from late in the excavations. Even more confusing, Woolley often shortened the 1932 number simply to PG32, which is easily mistaken for PG/32, a grave in Trial Trench E. The general abbreviation PG1932 or PG32 refers to the 1931-1932 Royal Cemetery investigation, revisiting the area along the western side of the Mausoleum of the Ur III kings (area BC). Some of these graves are from the Isin-Larsa/Old Babylonian period and are likely associated with House 30. PG1932 graves were therefore often renamed for publication to LG/xx (Larsa Grave). Objects that were collected from the area but not associated with a particular grave were given the generic PG1932 or PG32 abbreviation. Specific graves were given additional numbers in the sequence PG1932/xx or PG32/xx. The highest number noted in this sequence is PG32/80.     

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Objects: Royal Cemetery | PG1932 Export: JSON - XML - CSV

Object U Number Museum Number (UPM Date Reg Number) Museum Number (BM Registration Number) Museum Number (UPM B-number) Description (Catalog Card)
18092 (none) (none) (none) Clay mould. For making figurines. Apparently - god advancing right but too covered with salt for the design to show.
17875 (none) (none) (none) Copper bowl. With base ring. Type RC.116. [additional notes on back of catalog card][drawing]
17770 (none) (none) (none) Copper bowl. [drawing]
17874 (none) (none) (none) Copper chopper. Bent over for hafting. [drawing 1:1]
17879 (none) (none) (none) Copper object. Egg-shaped and pierced with triangular holes at each end a knob for attachment, the two pierced inverse directions inside is a lump of metal of uncertain shape. [drawing 1:1]
17850 32-40-333, 32-40-333 (none) (none) Cylinder (seal?) unpierced. White limestone with 4 columns of inscription. Two names. NU-UR-KU-BI son of DUG-GA-AN-SA and E-MU-MA-NI-DA son of NU-UR-KU-BI. HC 1931 / 1
17638 (none) (none) (none) Cylinder seal. Fragmentary; shell. Three scorpions; star.
17796 (none) (none) (none) Cylinder seal. Lapis. Introductory scene; seated deity.
17900 (none) (none) (none) Cylinder seal. Steatite. Door of shrine on back of animal; crescent above table on which things are laid; star.
17849 (none) (none) (none) Cylinder, clay. Fragment from the end of a barrel cylinder of dark clay, unbaked, with remains of inscription.
17862 (none) 1932,1008.37 (none) Fragment of bas-relief or statuette in the round of black steatite. The legs (bare) only survive, against a background of a cloak. The cloak has a beaded hem on the front of a tasselled fold behind. The work is very fine. It has been broken in antiquity and the fracture at the feet is worn smooth: the top fracture is sharp.
17768 32-40-311 (none) (none) Imitation knuckle bone. Rock crystal. [drawing]
17901 (none) (none) (none) Pin. Silver. Type No. V. [Type] RC.1 [drawing 1:1]
17793 (none) (none) (none) Pot. Copper. [drawing]
17931 (none) (none) (none) Rattle clay. [drawing 1:1]
17780 32-40-445 (none) (none) Ring. Gold. [drawing 1:]
17795 (none) (none) (none) Spear copper. With tang. [drawing]
17847A (none) (none) (none) Tablets. A set of about 15. Found together in a (broken) clay pot in the house ruins. With them was part of a cuttlefish bone.
17888 (none) (none) (none) Terracotta figurine. nude female with hands clasped below breast fragment only from the waist up, & a poor impression from the mould archaic type with sharp & prominent nose. PHOTO. 2047 vol IV
18087 32-40-30 (none) (none) Terracotta figurine. Hand modelled, snowman technique. Nude female figure standing full face. Fragment, the legs missing. The hands clasped upon breast.
18088 (none) (none) (none) Terracotta figurine. Hand modelled, snowman technique. Nude female figure. Arms, legs and breasts missing.
18089 (none) (none) (none) Terracotta figurine. Hand modelled. Female figure: drapery indicated by incised lines: very crude. Legs and body below waist missing.
18091 (none) (none) (none) Terracotta figurine. Nude female figure wandering full face, hands apparently clasped: unusually fat face: heavy hair. Fragment, only head and breasts preserved.
18205 32-40-44 (none) (none) Terracotta head of a dog (?). Hand modelled, lively work.
18206 32-40-46 (none) (none) Terracotta mould. For a relief. Standing god, in long robes, holding whip, standing on a beast, perhaps a sirrus. Feet and body of animal broken away.

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Ur > Royal Cemetery | PG > Royal Cemetery | PG1932