The Religion of Babylonia and Assyria - novelonlinefull.com
You’re read light novel The Religion of Babylonia and Assyria Part 77 online at NovelOnlineFull.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit NovelOnlineFull.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
[1359] Book i. sec. 183.
[1360] See the chief pa.s.sage, IR. 54, col. ii, ll. 54-65; another name is E-Kua, 'dwelling.'
[1361] See p. 423.
[1362] VR. 50, col. i. l. 5.
[1363] VR. 41, No. 1, Rev. 18.
[1364] IVR. 57, 24a. Jensen's suggestion (_Kosmologie_, p. 242) to read Mar-duku is out of the question.
[1365] What Jensen says (_Kosmologie_, p. 10) of the temple at Sippar would apply to the papakhu in the temple, rather than to the whole structure.
[1366] De Sarzec, _Decouvertes en Chaldee_, pls. 24, 25 _bis_, etc.
[1367] See p. 537.
[1368] De Sarzec, _Decouvertes en Chaldee_, pls. 4, 4 _bis_ and 43 _bis_. On the latter, bulls, lions, and eagle in combination.
[1369] See p. 653.
[1370] See the plan in Schick, _Die Stiftshutte_, pl. 5. Layard (_Discoveries among the Ruins of Nineveh and Babylon_, pp. 642-648) points out some a.n.a.logies between the constructions at Nimrod and Solomon's buildings, but what he says applies chiefly to the palaces.
[1371] Herodotus, book i. sec. 183, speaks of two altars outside of the temple of Marduk in Babylon. In the case of so important a structure, the number of altars was naturally more numerous.
[1372] See Heuzey's note in De Sarzec's _Decouvertes en Chaldee_, p. 65.
[1373] See pp. 109 _seq._
[1374] See p. 106.
[1375] _Recueil des Travaux_, etc., xvii. 39.
[1376] See pp. 140 _seq._
[1377] The date of this king has recently been pushed down by Thureau-Dangin, considerably later than the date a.s.signed to him by Hilprecht (_Revue Semitique_, v. 265-269).
[1378] See p. 110.
[1379] Nebuchadnezzar, IR. 65, col. i. ll. 34, 35.
[1380] This is to be concluded from Nebuchadnezzar, ib. l. 32.
[1381] See Tiele's note, _Zeitschrift fur a.s.syriologie_, ii. 184, note.
[1382] IR. 55, col. iv. ll. 54-57.
[1383] See Tiele, _Zeitschrift fur a.s.syriologie_, ii. 190.
[1384] III Rawlinson, pl. 66. The list also contains objects in the temples used for the cult.
[1385] IIIR. 66. obverse, col. ii. ll. 2-25.
[1386] See p. 207.
[1387] The sign for image occurs in connection with some of the G.o.ds.
[1388] The term can hardly be used here in the strict sense of 'towers,'
but appears to have become a general word for a sacred structure.
[1389] _Ib._ col. iii. ll. 22-34.
[1390] Meissner-Rost, _Bauinschriften Sanherib's_, p. 7.
[1391] See, _e.g._, the list IIIR. 66. An exception is formed by the temple to Ramman in the city of a.s.shur, which has a special name. See the following note.
[1392] Including the one to Ramman in a.s.shur.
[1393] IR. 2. nos. 11, 2.
[1394] IIR, 50, obverse 13.
[1395] Lge-e-nir = zikkurat; Kidur = shubtu (dwelling); Makh = rabu (great).
[1396] The name approaches closely to the conception of a zikkurat in the Book of Genesis, as a 'ladder' connecting heaven and earth. Gen.
xxviii. 12.
[1397] See above, p. 619.
[1398] The ideas 'true, fixed, established, eternal' are all expressed by the element _Zida_.
[1399] I adopt this reading as the one generally used.
[1400] See above, p. 242.
[1401] Or _tush_. Cf. Brunnow, Sign List, no. 10523.
[1402] Or _ab_. See Jensen, _Keils Bibl._ 3, i. pp. 15, 173.
[1403] See above, p. 57.
[1404] Compare the name 'Belit-seri,' 'mistress of the fields,' as the name of a G.o.ddess who belongs to the pantheon of the lower world. See p.
588.
[1405] IIR. 61, nos. 1, 2, 6.
[1406] Text, _Kar_, _i.e._, 'dam,' 'wall,' or 'quay.'
[1407] IIR. 50, l. 8.