Omeka ID: 4915     
Transcription:

Room 15 TTB

By the big drain, 3.20 below the founds of the brick wall, were found a number of v. small beads of clear bright red glass close to these were 10 larger facetted spheroid beads of opaque white glass paste

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Omeka Label: Ur_Notes_v4_p176     
BM Volume: 4     
BM Page Number: 175     
Media Title: Woolley's Field Note Cards     
Page Number: 176     
Volume: v4     
BM Archive Number: 194     
BM Description: TTB-Room_15     
Omeka Tags: TTB     
Omeka Type: 27     

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

Location Context Title Context Description Description (Modern)
TTB TTB is shorthand for Trial Trench B, one of two trenches excavated in Woolley's first season at Ur in 1922. This one was about 4 meters wide by about 60 meters long and ended up almost entirely within the e-nun-mah, a building that went through many forms over the centuries. The trench was expanded to reveal the building and extra abbreviations were added to it to indicate portions, roughly in directional notation from the main trench. The trench cut the building close to the west corner and TTB.W became the abbreviation for this area beyond the trench itself. TTB.SS and TTB.ES covered the larger area to the south and east. The abbreviation ES was then used in later seasons to refer to the majority of the building and a small portion of the area to the south of it. The enunmah itself was a complicated structure that seems to have changed function from storeroom (originally called the ganunmah) to temple through its long history. Woolley began assigning room numbers within the abbreviation TTB, but these excavation room numbers do not correlate precisely with the published room numbers. (none)
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