Description (Catalog Card): Clay bowl. Pinkish drab clay with creamy engobbage. Wheelmade. Rounded base. Hole drilled through side. Type V.2     
Find Context (Catalog Card): T.T.A about 1.00 -1.20 down in loose mixed soil     
Material (Catalog Card): Clay3     
Measurement (Catalog Card): ht. 0.07 diam. 0.135     
U Number: 16     
Object Type: Vessels/Containers >> Open Forms >> Bowls      
Museum: British Museum      
Season Number: 01: 1922-1923      
Description (Modern): BM Description Pottery bowl; round bottom; depressed beneath rim; hole pierced through rim; rim chipped.     
Description (Modern): Pottery bowl; round bottom; depressed beneath rim; hole pierced through rim; rim chipped.1     
Material: Inorganic Remains >> Clay >> Fired >> Pottery/Ceramic      
Material: Inorganic Remains >> Clay      
Museum Number (BM Big Number): 116493     
Museum Number (BM Registration Number): 1923,1110.82     
Measurement (Height): 751     
Measurement (Diameter): 1301     Rim
Fabric: Fine pale clay1     
[1] Data collected by British Museum research team.
[2] Woolley's description
[3] Material as described by Woolley

Locations: 16 | 1923,1110.82 Export: JSON - XML - CSV

Location Context Title Context Description Description (Modern)
TTA TTA is shorthand for Trial Trench A, one of two exploratory trenches excavated in Woolley's first season at Ur in 1922. This one was about 4 meters wide by about 40 meters long as revealed by an aerial photograph taken at the end of the 1922 season. The trench encountered a few scattered finds of jewelry and materials that led Woolley to suspect they were from a graveyard, but he felt his team of local diggers was not yet ready to excavate such sensitive contexts. Thus, he decided to concentrate on TTB for the first few seasons, according to his various publications. One of the primary reasons for concentrating on TTB initially, however, may have been that Woolley discovered no architecture in TTA but had struck the enunmah building in TTB. Woolley returned to TTA in season 5, when he expanded with new trial trenches and eventually opened up the entire area of the Royal Cemetery. No individual graves are reported in TTA and any that might have been encountered did not receive PG numbers. Those in the following trial trenches expanding TTA (TTE, TTF, TTG) did receive these numbers and gave their abbreviation (PG) to the entire Royal Cemetery area. (none)
  • 1 Location

Media: 16 | 1923,1110.82 Export: JSON - XML - CSV

Media Media Title Title Label Author Omeka Label
Ur Excavations IX; The Neo-Babylonian and Persian Periods Ur Excavations IX; The Neo-Babylonian and Persian Periods 1962 Woolley, L. and Mallowan, Max (none)
Woolley's Catalog Cards Woolley's Catalog Cards Card -- BM ID:194 Box:21 Page:16 Card -- BM ID:194 Box:21 Page:16 (none)
  • 2 Media