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<root><list-item><id>986</id><url>http://www165.123.244.137/location/986/</url><title>TTB.20</title><type>Unit </type><parent>TTB</parent><control_properties></control_properties><free_form_properties><list-item><prop>Context Title</prop><property_value>TTB.20</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote></footnote></list-item><list-item><prop>Context Name (Excavation)</prop><property_value>Trial Trench B.20</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote></footnote></list-item><list-item><prop>Context Name (Publication)</prop><property_value>E-nun-mah Room 14</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote></footnote></list-item><list-item><prop>Context Description</prop><property_value>(See PI. 32b) Except at the NW end of the room virtually nothing of the burnt-brick wall survived. Against the western jamb of the door in the NW wall was a doorsocket stone, uninscribed, for the insertion of which the mudbrick wall has been cut back; part of the brick hinge-box remains and the mud floor can be traced running above the bricks of the box, from which fact one can conclude that the socket-stone belongs to the Kassite restoration. The mud floor, flush with the middle of the fourth course of wall bricks, was much destroyed; at the NW end there were traces of a brick pavement above it, for which it may have served as a foundation. There was a brick threshold across the doorway, and against the northern jamb a brick with a hole through it had been used as an impost for the door frame. Tablets found here included one dated in the 7th year of Gungunum of Larsa (U. 318).</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote></footnote></list-item></free_form_properties></list-item></root>