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So at Babylon, at least, according to Herodotus. Bit pirishti. IIR. 50, obverse, 6. Peters' Nippur, ii. chapter vi. Schick, Die Stiftschütte, der Tempel, und der Tempelplatz der Jetztzeit, pp. 8, 9. The present structure, though comparatively modern, is built after ancient models. Schick, ib. pp. 125-131. Die Stiftshütte, der Tempel, und der Tempelplatz der Jeiztzeit, p. 82.
Arch., xviii. 19. See Jensen, Kosmologie, pp. 224, 225. Cory's Ancient Fragments, p. 58. See above, pp. 198, 199. See above, pp. 198, 199. I avoid the term "Sumerian" here, because I feel convinced that the play on Anshar is of an entirely artificial character and has no philological basis. See below, pp. 421-423. IIR. 54, no. 3.
Hommel, Geschichte Babyloniens und Assyriens, p. 19. Written ideographically, as the names of the zikkurats and of all sacred edifices invariably are. See above, p. 459. Inscription G, col. i. l. 14; D, col. ii. l. 11. IIR. 50; obverse 20. See p. 472. Kosmologie, pp. 171-174.
Also in a proper name, Khusha-ilu, i.e., 'Khusha is god. Meissner, nos. 40 and 118. See chapter xi. IIR. 60, 18a. For this deity, see a paper by the writer, "The Element Bosheth in Hebrew Proper Names," in the Journal of Bibl. Liter. xiii. 20-30.
Perrot and Chiplez, History of Art in Sardinia, Phoenicia, Judea, Syria, and Asia Minor, ii. 176. Pinches, Babylonian and Assyrian Cylinders, etc., of Sir Henry Peak, no. 18. Cf. Harper, ib. p. 408. A lexicographical tablet, IIR. 56, col. iii. 22-35, mentions four dogs of Marduk. See p. 232. See Harper, ib. p. 426.
An official 'the great Si-gar' is mentioned in a list, IIR. 31, no. 5, 33a. One is tempted to conclude that Marduk's statue was removed to Nineveh, not in a spirit of vandalism, but in order to enable Assyrian kings to 'seize the hands of Bel' without proceeding to E-Sagila.
IR. 2. nos. 11, 2. IIR, 50, obverse 13. Gen. xxviii. 12. See above, p. 619. The ideas 'true, fixed, established, eternal' are all expressed by the element Zida. I adopt this reading as the one generally used. See above, p. 242. Or tush. Cf. Brünnow, Sign List, no. 10523. Or ab. See Jensen, Keils Bibl. 3, i. pp. 15, 173. See above, p. 57.
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