Volume 40 / Number 2
1998
Special Edition: The World of Ur
On The Cover: The great bull-headed lyre from Ur. Collection Object Number: B17694B UPM Neg. T4-480.
Vol. 40 / No. 2
By: Helen Schenck
Introduction – Summer 1998
Few sites possess the lure and mystique of the ancient Near Eastern mound of Ur, with its imposing ziggurat and […]
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By: Jeremy A. Sabloff
Musings and Visions from the Director’s Desk – Summer 1998
The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology’s collection of materials from the excavations in the Royal Cemetery at […]
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By: Tamsen Fuller
A Makeover for the Philadelphia ‘Ram Caught in a Thicket’
PHOTO 1. The “Ram” as it was before the new work began in May 1997. As conservators and curators discovered, […]
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By: Yelena Rakic
Rescue and Restoration: A History of the Philadelphia 'Ram Caught in a Thicket'
In 1928 Sir Leonard Woolley unearthed a find that has been described by some as the most beautiful object […]
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By: Steve Tinney
Texts, Tablets, and Teaching: Scribal Education in Nippur and Ur
Besides the justly famous treasures of the so-called Royal Cemetery, the site of Ur also yielded up to its excavators […]
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By: Edward Ochsenschlager
Life on the Edge of the Marshes
In 1968, archaeologists digging at the mound of Al-Hiba in Iraq were struck by the fact that the people living […]
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By: Maude de Schauensee
The ‘Boat-Shaped’ Lyre: Restudy of a Unique Musical Instrument from Ur
Stringed instruments have probably been around since the first time someone stretched a gut, rawhide, or fiber string over a […]
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By: Anne Draffkorn Kilmer
The Musical Instruments from Ur and Ancient Mesopotamian Music
The nearly half million cuneiform tablets excavated from ancient Near Eastern sites provide us with ample evidence for the uses […]
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By: Lee Horne
Ur and Its Treasures: The Royal Tombs
Alder Sumer lay in lower Mesopotamia, an arid land broken by belts of green along the banks of its canals […]
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