Scheil dynastic tablet
The Scheil dynastic tablet or Kish Tablet is an ancient Mesopotamian cuneiform text containing a variant form of the Sumerian King List.[1][2]
Discovery
The tablet came into possession of the Assyriologist Jean-Vincent Scheil in 1911, having bought it from a private collection in France. The tablet when purchased was reported to have been unearthed from Kish.[3] Scheil translated the tablet in 1911,[4] followed by another translation in 1934.[5] The tablet dates to the early 2nd millennium BC.
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References
- S. Langdon, "The Early Chronology of Sumer and Egypt and the Similarities in Their Culture", Journal of Egyptian Archaeology, 17, No. 3/4, Oct., 1921, p. 133. JSTOR
- Albert Kirk Grayson, Assyrian and Babylonian chronicles (Eisenbrauns, 2000), p. 268.
- Hence in some literature the tablet is called the "Kish Tablet" (Waddell, 1929).
- Scheil, Les plus anciennes dynasties connues dc Sumer-Accad, in Comptes liendus, 1911, pp. 606 ff. 2 VAB, I, 170. 3 Scheil, Une nouvdle dynastic Sumero-Accadienne des rois "Quit", in Comptes Rendus, 1911, pp. 318ff
- Scheil, "Liste susienne des dynasties de Sumer-Accad," Memoires de l'Institute franqais d'archeologie orientate, LXII (Cairo, 1934), Melanges Maspero, I, pp. 393-400.
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