Omeka ID: 847     
Transcription:

Room 6 ES

In - N. Corner tr was a hole in - pavement 080 x 035 x 060 deep, partly brick-lined + w brick bottom : in this was found

(1) a broken brick marked out as a game-board
(2) a broken cone of Kudur-Mabug
(3) a terracotta thus, ht 0095 [drawing (artifact: terracotta relief of woman holding child)] [= U 2802]
(4) a number of inscribed clay tablets & fragments
(5) jar thus [drawing (artifact: pot) labeled: < 010 > < 015 > ^ 018 ˇ reddish clay cf P.128 vol IX]
(6) clay goblets thus : frs. of 6 [drawing (artifact: pot) labeled: < 014 > ^ 0075 ˇ < 007 >]
(7) Three large ring-stands of drab & of greenish clay
(8) Saucer, roughly made, drab clay dial 012 ht 003 + other frs.

[struck through]

     
Omeka Label: Ur_Notes_v2_p030     
BM Volume: 2     
BM Page Number: 29     
Media Title: Woolley's Field Note Cards     
Page Number: 30     
Volume: v2     
BM Archive Number: 194     
BM Description: ES-Room_6     
Omeka Tags: drawing, ES     
Omeka Type: 6     

Locations: Woolley's Field Note Cards | Woolley's Field Note Cards Export: JSON - XML - CSV

Location Context Title Context Description Description (Modern)
ES The abbreviation ES almost certainly stands for Enunmah South, though it may also have to do with the building called Emuriana, referenced in a disturbed Kassite door socket found in the area. Legrain lists ES as the Egigpar of Nabonidus, SW end, and ES, or at least ESB did extend into the later remains of the Dublalmah, which at that time was part of the NeoBabylonian Giparu. The abbreviation ES first appeared in season one as a supplement to Trial Trench B (TTB.ES) when the trench was expanded to reveal the extents of the building found to be called E-nun-mah. In season 3, the abbreviation shortened simply to ES, used for the majority of the enunmah building. The Enunmah changed in layout and likely in usage through the many centuries of its existence. Initially a storage building called the ga-nun-mah, it seems to have been used as a temple, the e-nun-mah, in the Neo-Babylonian period. Some lists of excavation abbreviations equate ES with the Dublalmah site. This is because the southern Enunmah is just east of the Dublalmah. Area ESB is still more closely associated with the eastern edge of the dublalmah and likely into it. (none)
  • 1 Location