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         Mesopotamian:     more books (99)
  1. Heralds of that Good Realm: Syro-Mesopotamian Gnosis and Jewish Traditions.(Review): An article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society by James C. VanderKam, 1999-01-01
  2. Politics, Religion, and Cylinder Seals: A study of Mesopotamian Symbolism in the Second Millennium B.C. (bar s) by Jeanne Nijhowne, 1999-12-31
  3. Adoption in Old Babylonian Nippur and the Archive of Mannum-Mesu-Lissur (Mesopotamian Civilizations, Vol 3) (Mesopotamian Civilizations, Vol 3) by Elizabeth Caecilia Stone, David I. Owen, et all 1991-08-01
  4. The Table-Talk of a Mesopotamian Judge by al-Muhassin ibn Ali Tanukhi, 2010-01-06
  5. Formation Processes of the First Developed Neolithic Societies in the Zagros and the Northern Mesopotamian Plain.(Book Review): An article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society by Reinhard Bernbeck, 2003-07-01
  6. Indenture at Nuzi: The Personal Tidennutu Contract and Its Mesopotamian Analogues (Near Eastern Researches Series) by Professor Barry L. Eichler, 1973-09-10
  7. Foundations in the Dust: A Story of Mesopotamian Exploration by Seton Lloyd, 1976-12
  8. Mesopotamian Furniture (bar s) by Sam Kubba, 2006-01
  9. Excavations at Tell Brak 4: Exploring an Upper Mesopotamian Regional Centre, 1994-1996 (Monograph Series) by Roger Matthews, 2001-08-15
  10. Formation Processes of the First Developed Neolithic Societies in the Zagros and the Northern Mesopotamian Plain. by Francesca Balossi. Restelli, 2001
  11. Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography.(Review): An article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society by F. S. Reynolds, 2001-01-01
  12. Mesopotamian Conceptions of Dreams and Dream Rituals by Sally A Butler, 1998-01-01
  13. Twenty-five years of Mesopotamian discovery, 1932-1956 by M. E. L Mallowan, 1956
  14. Time at Emar: The Cultic Calendar & the Rituals from the Diviner's House (Mesopotamian Civilizations 11) (Mesopotamian Civilizations 11) by Daniel E. Fleming, 2000-10-01

61. Mesopotamian Avatars [Male]
these images that you would like. At the bottom of this page is a linkto mesopotamian female avatars. mesopotamian Avatars Female.
http://joseph_berrigan.tripod.com/ancientbabylon/id41.html
Ancient Mesopotamia Home Library Courtyard Study ... Music Room Mesopotamian Avatars [Male] Mesopotamian Avatars [Female] Entrances Royal Tombs of Ur The Tower of Babel ... Battle of Hydaspes Mesopotamian Avatars [Male] jojo's Avatar Shop
This page is very image intensive and may take some time to download but the wait is well worth it so go make yourself a cup of coffee and come back later. Please feel free to copy and download any of these images that you would like. At the bottom of this page is a link to Mesopotamian female avatars. Mesopotamian Avatars [Female]

62. Mesopotamian Avatars [Female]
Ancient Mesopotamia. mesopotamian Avatars Female. Home. Library. Courtyard. Study.Music Room. mesopotamian Avatars Male. mesopotamian Avatars Female. Entrances.
http://joseph_berrigan.tripod.com/ancientbabylon/id42.html
Ancient Mesopotamia Mesopotamian Avatars [Female] Home Library Courtyard Study ... Mesopotamian Avatars [Male] Mesopotamian Avatars [Female] Entrances Royal Tombs of Ur The Tower of Babel Hanging Gardens of Babylon ... Battle of Hydaspes
Finding "authentic" Mesopotamian female avatars is very difficult. What little I have gathered are shown here and I am still searching for more. Enter content here

63. The Mesopotamian Heritage Of Islamic Architecture
The mesopotamian Heritage of Islamic Architecture. This film followsa path from the fivethousand-year-old Sumerian architecture
http://www.roland-collection.com/rolandcollection/section/2/25.htm
Text Search Automatic translation by
Systran
The Mesopotamian Heritage of Islamic Architecture
Availability
Available worldwide
Additional
information
Order number: 25
Select one option then click Add to Order button below.
VHS VIDEO
Institutions 1
Colleges, Universities, Museums, Galleries, Corporations
Institutions 2
Schools, Public Libraries, Not for profit community groups. Private Home Use: OTHER FORMATS *includes public performance and lending rights IMPORTANT! BEFORE ORDERING NOTE AVAILABILTY: Available worldwide Royal Mosque, Isfahan, detail Download (MPEG1 - 9.93 M) Clips available for various connection speeds: Low modem speed (146 K) Medium modem speed (227 K) Higher speed connections (706 K) View entire film (High speed only. 19.07 M) How to view instant streaming video. How to view MPEG Clips Credits Director Antti Kaskia Also available in Finnish 29 minutes Color Recommended audience age range 14-adult sales@roland-collection.co.uk The Roland Collection

64. UNEP GRID-Geneva > Major Activities > Sustainable Resource Use > Mesopotamian Ma
The mesopotamian Marshlands of the TigrisEuphrates Delta. The mesopotamian MarshlandsDemise of an Ecosystem. Click to download report in PDF format (1.05 Mb).
http://www.grid.unep.ch/activities/sustainable/tigris/marshlands/
Major Activities Sustainable Resource Use Tigris-Euphrates Basin Information Update 2003 ... Press Clippings The Mesopotamian Marshlands of the Tigris-Euphrates Delta
Completely in Five Years Unless Urgent Action Taken
UNEP Says Post-War Rehabilitation Should Include the Marshlands of Mesopotamia for the Sake of People and Wildlife 22 March 2003 Download this document as PDF file (144 Kb) Click here for latest photos Kyoto/Nairobi, 22 March 2003 - The Marshlands of Mesopotamia, considered by some to be the Biblical location of the Garden of Eden and known as the fertile crescent, are continuing to disappear at an alarming rate. Vanishing Marshlands:
Click on image to download (8.14 Mb)

The new studies show that a further 325 square kilometres have dried out since 2000 leaving just seven per cent of the original area. Unless urgent action is taken to reverse the trend and re-habilitate the marshlands, the entire wetland known as the Hawr Al-Hawizeh in Iraq and Hawr Al-Azim in Iran, are likely to have gone in three to five years. Mesopotamian marshlands in 2000
Click on image to download (12.46 Mb)

65. UNEP GRID-Geneva > Major Activities > Sustainable Resource Use > Mesopotamian Ma
UNEP Study Sounds Alarm about the Disappearance of the mesopotamian Marshlands. Themesopotamian marshlands in 197376 Click on image to download (12.46 Mb).
http://www.grid.unep.ch/activities/sustainable/tigris/marshlands/marshdoc.php
Major Activities Sustainable Resource Use Tigris-Euphrates Basin Information Update 2003 ... Press Clippings The Mesopotamian Marshlands of the Tigris-Euphrates Delta Click to go to UNEP/NASA Press Release
UNEP Study Sounds Alarm about the Disappearance of the Mesopotamian Marshlands
Download this document as PDF file See also Press Clippings on UNEP's Mesopotamian Marshlands Study Around 85% per cent of the Mesopotamian marshlands, the largest wetland in the Middle East and one of the most outstanding freshwater ecosystems in the world, have been lost mainly as a result of drainage and damming. Drawing on historical and new satellite imagery, the UNEP study graphically documents the scale and speed of their disappearance. Despite intermittent warnings against the imminent decline of the Mesopotamian marshlands, there has been little immediate action to avoid such a fate. Iraq's difficult situation in the past decade has limited access to and hindered monitoring of events in the marshlands. As a result, this major ecological disaster, broadly comparable in extent and rapidity to the drying of the Aral Sea and the deforestation of large tracts of Amazonia, has gone virtually unreported until now. Comprising an integral part of the Tigris-Euphrates river system, the marshlands are located at the confluence of the two rivers in southern Iraq, and partially extend into Iran. The study shows that these vast wetlands which once covered between 15,000 and 20,000 square kilometres now cover less than 1,300 square kilometres.

66. Heritage Marketing And Publications
Author Kupper J, Period mesopotamian, ISBN Publisher Ancient Mesopotamia. Author Pollock S, Period mesopotamian, ISBN 0521573343.
http://www.heritagemp.com/querybuild.asp?period=Mesopotamian

67. Mesopotamian Protohistory
mesopotamian protohistory. Attempts have been made by philologists toreach conclusions about the origin of the flowering of civilization
http://www.angelfire.com/nt/Gilgamesh/proto.html
Mesopotamian protohistory Attempts have been made by philologists to reach conclusions about the origin of the flowering of civilization in southern Mesopotamia by the analysis of Sumerian words. It has been thought possible to isolate an earlier, non-Sumerian substratum from the Sumerian vocabulary by assigning certain words on the basis of their endings to either a Neolithic or a Chalcolithic language stratum. These attempts are based on the phonetic character of Sumerian at the beginning of the 2nd millennium BC, which is at least 1,000 years later than the invention of writing . Quite apart, therefore, from the fact that the structure of Sumerian words themselves is far from adequately investigated, the enormous gap in time casts grave doubt on the criteria used to distinguish between Sumerian and " pre-Sumerian " vocabulary. The earliest peoples of Mesopotamia who can be identified from inscribed monuments and written tradition[ people in the sense of speakers of a common language ]are, apart from the

68. The Emergence Of Mesopotamian Civilization
The emergence of mesopotamian civilization. The Late Neolithic Periodand the Chalcolithic Period. Between about 10,000 BC and the
http://www.angelfire.com/nt/Gilgamesh/emergenc.html
The emergence of Mesopotamian civilization The Late Neolithic Period and the Chalcolithic Period . Between about 10,000 BC and the genesis of large permanent settlements, the following stages of development are distinguishable, some of which run parallel The change to sedentary life , or the transition from continual or seasonal change of abode, characteristic of hunter-gatherers and the earliest cattle breeders, to life in one place over a period of several years or even permanently. The transition from experimental plant cultivation to the deliberate and calculated farming of grains and leguminous plants. The erection of houses and the associated " settlement " of the gods in temples The burial of the dead in cemeteries The invention of clay vessels , made at first by hand, then turned on the wheel and fired to ever greater degrees of hardness, at the same time receiving almost invariably decoration of incised designs or painted patterns, The development of specialized crafts and the distribution of labour Metal production (the first use of metalcoppermarks the transition from the Late Neolithic to the Chalcolithic Period).

69. Mesopotamian Documents
KC Hanson's Collection of mesopotamian Documents. SUMERIAN
http://www.kchanson.com/ANCDOCS/meso/meso.html
K. C. Hanson's Collection of
Mesopotamian Documents

SUMERIAN

70. Mesopotamian Archaeology
mesopotamian Archaeology Guide picks. Archaeological sites and studies of theancient civilization of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers of the middle east.
http://archaeology.about.com/cs/mesopotamia/
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Mesopotamian Archaeology
Guide picks Archaeological sites and studies of the ancient civilization of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers of the middle east.
Assur (Qal'at Sherqat)

From the University of Heidelberg, several papers and other forms of information on the recent excavations at this Assyrian capital. Mostly German and some English. Achaemenid Royal Inscriptions
From the University of Chicago's Oriental Institute, an electronic study edition of the inscriptions of the Achaemenid Persian kings in all of their versionsOld Persian, Elamite, Akkadian, and, where appropriate, Aramaic and Egyptian. Achemenet.com

71. Periods In Art History Cro-Magnon Mesopotamian Egyptian Style
mesopotamian Art pile. mesopotamian structures used a sundried mud-brickcore faced with yellowish baked brick laid in bitumen.
http://thefey.surfsyou.net/history/mesopotamia.html
Mesopotamian Art
Periods In Art History

Cro-Magnon

Mesopotamian

Egyptian Style

Minoans
...
  • Sculpture
    Mesopotamians
    The earliest Near Eastern settlements were in the region known as Mesopotamia, a Greek word meaning "the land between the rivers" the Tigirs and Euphrates, whose generous waters were brought under control by a system of dikes and irrigation canals. This prosperous area is also known as the Fertile Cresent. About 4000 b.c. the land of Sumer was inhabited by a people who developed a hightly organized society. The Sumerians invented an early numerical sytem and also devised a form of writing on clay tablets with wedge-shaped characters called cuneiforum
    Architecture

    The Sumerians believed in a pantheon of gods who personified the creative and destructive forces of nature. Each city honored it's special deity by erecting a ziggurat , which means "mountian" or "Pinnacle." Architectecturally, these towers were concieved as dwelling places of the god who watched over the fortunes of the town. They were also the center of the powerful priesthood, where scribes kept written records, accounts, and inventories of food and supllies. In the flat surrounding countryside these multistoried structures rose so hight that they were thought, as recorded in the Bible, to "reach unto heaven." The 270 - foot ziggurat at Babylon was the legendary Tower of Babel, but now ony the foundation remains. The ziggurat at Ur, dating from 2100 b.c., was also an imposing pile. Mesopotamian structures used a sun-dried mud-brick core faced with yellowish baked brick laid in bitumen.
  • 72. Marriage And Divorce Documents: Mesopotamian
    Marriage and Divorce Documents from the Ancient Near East. mesopotamian.(Translator JJ Finkelstein). Marriage Contracta. Old Assyrian
    http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~humm/Topics/Contracts/marri02.html
    Marriage and Divorce Documents from the Ancient Near East
    Mesopotamian
    (Translator: J.J. Finkelstein)
    Marriage Contract [a]
    Old Assyrian, 19th century B.C. Text: B. Hrozný, Inscriptions Cunéiformes du Kultépé (Praha, 1952). Transliteration and translation, Hrozný, in Symbolae Koschaker Studia et Documenta II, 1939), 108 ff . For bibliography of discussions cf. H. Hirsch, Orientalia , xxxv (1966), 259 f
    Laqipum has married Hatala, daughter of Enishru. In the country (i.e., Central Anatolia) Laqipum (5) may not marry another (woman)—(but) in the City (i.e., Ashur) he may marry a hierodule. If within two years she (i.e., Hatala) does not provide him with offspring, (10) she herself will purchase a slavewoman, and later on, after she will have produced a child by him, (15) he may then dispose of her by sale wheresoever he pleases. Should Laqipum choose to divorce her (text: "him"), he must pay (her) five minas of silver- (20) and should Hatala choose to divorce him, she must pay (him) five minas of silver. Witnesses: Masa, Ashurishtikal, (25) Talia, Shupianika.
    Akk.

    73. Sumerian Inventions Ms Stone's Grade 6 Project
    Technology in the Classroom A closeup look at mesopotamian and SumerianInventions by Emily Stone, Core Teacher King Estates Middle School
    http://webtest.ousd.k12.ca.us/cvf/core_values/projects/sumeria/sumeria.html

    74. Mesopotamian Gallery @ UPM Of Archaeology And Anthropology

    http://www.upenn.edu/museum/Collections/mesopotamia.html
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    75. Hollow Hills: Mesopotamian Traditions
    mesopotamian Traditions Books. Magick it. Magick Early mesopotamianIncantations and Rituals. Author Jan Van Dijk and Albrecht Goetze.
    http://members.tripod.com/~hollowhills/babylonian.html
    Mesopotamian Traditions Books Magick
    Currently, Hollow Hills is working in association with Amazon Books and the Internet Book Shop. Although both companies ship internationally, we know that sometimes converting to dollars or pounds can be frustrating. So, by each selection there will be either an American or UK flag indicating such. However, not all selections are available in both formats.
    The shop is still being set up and is currently under construction. If you find a link that is broken, please contact us and let us know. If you would like to suggest a new category or know of a selection which is not listed, please feel free to e-mail us about it.
    Magick Early Mesopotamian Incantations and Rituals Author : Jan Van Dijk and Albrecht Goetze
    Asian Traditions
    Bardic Traditions Celtic Traditions Discordian ... Webrings

    76. Www.funet.fi/pub/culture/beer/homebrew/docs/ninkasi_article
    To answer the question scholars helped concoct a mesopotamian brew from a 3,800year-oldrecipe etched in clay. By Solomon H. Katz and Fritz Maytag.
    http://www.funet.fi/pub/culture/beer/homebrew/docs/ninkasi_article
    Contributed by "Don Sharp"

    77. NM's Creative Impulse..Mesopotamia
    Introduction. The mesopotamian plain was part of the Fertile Crescent. Sargon Nicebio of the man who established the first empire in the mesopotamian area;
    http://history.evansville.net/meso.html
    NM's Creative Impulse
    Development of Western Civilization I
    World History I
    Mesopotamia
    Contents
    Introduction
    The Mesopotamian plain was part of the Fertile Crescent. Situated between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, the area was the birth place of the varied civilizations that developed writing, schools, libraries, written law codes and moved us from prehistory to history. The Sumerians, Akkadians, Chaldeans, Hittites, Babylonians, Israelites, Phoenicians, Lydians, Assyrians and Persians established the foundations for future Civilizations. Their contributions include: the wheel, glass, the sail, coinage, mathematics, the alphabet, calendars, bronze, iron, monotheism, epic poetry, farming and irrigation. The art of Mesopotamia is as diverse as the civilizations that inhabited the area. Art became decorative, stylized and conventionalized at different times and places in the area. Gods took on human forms and humans were combined with animals to make fantastic creatures. Art commemorated the accomplishments of great men and intimidated the lowly. Skills improved and new media was developed. Large temples and imposing palaces dotted the landscape. Man recorded his history and poetry for the first time and set them down to music. Lyres, pipes, harps and drums accompanied their songs and dances.
    History
    People

    78. Ancient Mesopotamia Of Iraq And Syria
    2. The Uruk Expansion Cross Cultural Exchange in Early mesopotamian CivilizationGuillermo Algaze (OI) JSTOR Current Anthropology Volume 30 No.
    http://ancientneareast.tripod.com/Mesopotamia.html
    The History of the Ancient Near East Electronic Compendium ANCIENT ISRAEL IRAQ EGYPT TURKEY SYRIA
    LEBANON JORDAN ARABIA CYPRUS BAHRAIN
    AND WESTERN IRAN FUNCTIONAL HOME PAGE WITH TABLE OF CONTENTS Mesopotamia Mesopotamia is a Greek word meaning between the rivers . The rivers are the Tigris and Euphrates which flow through modern Iraq. The Euphrates also flows through much of Syria. Early civilizations first developed in Mesopotamia over six thousand years ago ..... Selected Excerpts on Mesopotamia The Era of Townships in Northern Mesopotamia
    Abdul Jalil Jawad - Thesis - Doctor of Philosophy

    Department of Anthropology - University of Chicago 1962

    Library of Congress # DS 70.9 J3
    ...
    Library of Congress # DS71 .S24 1995b
    In the days of the Sumerians and Babylonians the river's low banks made irrigation easy. Rain was scarce; but the alluvial soil, when watered by artificial means, proved enormously fertile. Floods and Mongol invaders destroyed the ancient water systems; Iraq now tries to restore them ...... The National Geographic Magazine
    Ancient Mesopotamia: A Light That Did Not Fail
    January 1951 - Pages 41-105 Other Online Links Mesopotamia - World Civilizations
    Washington State University
    Mesopotamia - John Heise
    Mesopotamia - Cyber Museum - Jay D'Ambrosio
    ... Duncan J. Melville - Saint Lawrence University

    79. Mesopotamian Gods And Goddesses
    mesopotamian Gods and Goddesses. Abgal, Seven wisemen and the attendingdeities of the god Enki. Adrammelech, Babylonian god (possibly
    http://fullmoon_deities.tripod.com/mesopotamian.html
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    Mesopotamian Gods and Goddesses
    Abgal Seven wise-men and the attending deities of the god Enki. Adrammelech Babylonian god (possibly of the sun) to whom babies were burned in sacrifice. Aja Babylonian sun goddess. Akkan Four Saami goddesses who overseeconception, birth and destiny. Alauwaimis Demon which drives away evil sickness. Ama-arhus Babylonian and Akkadian fertility goddess. Amurru Akkadian god of mountains and nomads. An Summerian god of heaven. Anatu Goddess of the earth and sky. Antu Summerian goddess of creation. Later replaced by Ishtar. Anu Summerian and Babylonian god of the sky, father of the gods and most powerful deity of the pantheon. Anunitu Babylonian goddess of the moon. She was later merged with Ishtar.

    80. Mesopotamian Goddesses
    Ki !!!! 3, 8/23/01 70850 pm by Liztar, 4manna. mesopotamian Goddessesfrom the ANE LIST, 2, 7/24/01 54844 am by Liztar, Liztar. The
    http://pub25.ezboard.com/fgatewaystobabylonboardfrm6
    "); else document.write(""); // >
    GATEWAYS TO BABYLON
    Discussion Board
    Goddesses are present and active in Sumerian mythology. They take action, They challenge male gods, take Them to court if the Gods misbehave and captivate us with Their wit, passion, resourcefulness, magick and power. Although as time goes by towards the Babylonian and Assyrian states, female power decreases, the presence of Goddesses was always strong in Mesopotamia. In other words, the Divine Masculine was not alienated from the Divine Feminine. Here, we will try to retrieve a bit of the image of the Divine Feminine in Mesopotamia as much as our sources allow us. For Goddesses are archetypes of wholeness that help us to stretch our limits and possibilities of being and becoming... one more time for men and women alike.
    GatewaysToBabylon - Board
    > Mesopotamian Goddesses
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