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Nungal Hymn

1800 BC - 1600 BC
Clay
Nippur
8.1 cm x 7.4 cm x 2.0 cm
A30234

Oriental Institute Museum

Artifact Description

Nungal Hymn

The cuneiform script, like our own alphabet, was used to write many different languages. This cuneiform tablet, written in Sumerian, contains 15 lines from a hymn to the goddess Nungal. The hymn was probably written by a scribe who found himself accused of a serious crime. Before his sentencing, and in the hope of obtaining leniency, he sings the praises of Nungal and of the prison over which she presides. This hymn became a literary classic, and more than 50 copies of it have survived.

Inscription

The gate of the great house, which is a furious storm,
a flood which covers everybody:
when a man of whom his god disapproves reaches it,
he is delivered into the august hands of Nungal,
the warden of the prison;
this man is held by a painful grip
like a wild bull with spread forelegs.
He is led to a house of sorrow.

Collected by

Joint Nippur Expedition
Excavated by The Oriental Institute 1951-1952

Multimedia

An Early Clay Tablet
See how this early clay tablet used pictures to communicate.

Suggested Readings

Black, Jeremy and Anthony Green. Gods, Demons, and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia: An Illustrated Dictionary. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1992.

Frankfort, H. and H.A., John A. Wilson, and Thorkild Jacobsen. Before Philosophy: The Intellectual Adventure of Ancient Man. Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1946.

Roaf, Michael. Cultural Atlas of Mesopotamia and the Ancient Near East. New York: Facts on File, 1990.

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