- The
archaeological site of Abu
Salabikh (Tell Abū
Ṣalābīkh),
around 20 km (12 mi)
northwest of the site of
ancient Nippur and
about 150
kilometers southeast...
-
survive the
coming flood.
Grouped with the
other cuneiform tablets from Abu
Salabikh, the
Instructions date to the
early third millennium BCE,
being among the...
-
earliest known literary texts, are
created in Adab,
Shuruppak and Abu
Salabikh. 2570 BC:
Reigns of Uhub, king of Kish, and of En-hegal, king of Lagash...
-
period and
continues into the
Early Dynastic I period.
Jemdet Nasr Abu
Salabikh Tell Fara Tell
Uqair Khafajah Nippur Ur Uruk In the
early 1900s, clay tablets...
- from the
third millennium BCE,
there is
among the clay
tablets of Abu
Salabikh from 2600 BCE (the
oldest dated texts), a "Hymn to Shamash"
which includes...
- in the Levant,
Nagar in the north, and the proto-Akkadian
sites of Abu
Salabikh and Kish in
central Mesopotamia[better source needed] in to the
early East...
- 000–25,000 1933
Akkadian Alalakh 300 1937 Akkadian, Hurro-Akkadian Abu
Salabikh 500 1963 Sumerian,
Akkadian Ebla approx. 5,000 1974 Sumerian,
Eblaite Nimrud...
-
Retrieved July 26, 2018. Biggs,
Robert D. (1974).
Inscriptions from Tell Abū
Ṣalābīkh (PDF).
Oriental Institute Publications.
University of
Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-62202-9...
- the
incomplete mythological text
Lugalbanda and Ninsuna,
found in Abu
Salabikh, that
describes a
romantic relationship between Lugalbanda and Ninsun....
- date from
about the 18th
century BC. 2600 BC:
Sumerian texts from Abu
Salabikh,
including the
Instructions of
Shuruppak and the Kesh
temple hymn 2600...