A Companion to the Achaemenid Persian Empire, 2 Volume Set. Группа авторов

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A Companion to the Achaemenid Persian Empire, 2 Volume Set - Группа авторов

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several small archives of the Achaemenid period (Jursa 2005b: pp. 133–138): the file of Nidinti‐Ea (Late Achaemenid), the Imbia archive (reign of Darius I), and most importantly the Gallābu archive. This is a group of more than 50 tablets with an extraordinarily long chronological spread: seven generations of the archive‐holding family are attested, the texts date from the 29th year of Nebuchadnezzar II to the fourth year of Darius III and thus to the very end of the Achaemenid period. The tablets deal with the management of the not very extensive properties of the family (Popova 2018).

      Uruk

      Larsa

      This minor town in the vicinity of Uruk has left one archive of a family of businessmen that stretches from the middle of the reign of Nebuchadnezzar to the second year of Cambyses: the archive of the sons of Itti‐Šamaš‐balāṭu (Jursa 2005b: pp. 108–109). The archive is interesting for the continuity of business and also of tax and service obligations that are not visibly affected by the conquest of Babylonia by the Persians. There is some dispersed Late Achaemenid material (Stolper 1990) and one small dossier that extends from the end of the Achaemenid period to the early Hellenistic era (Jursa 2005b: pp. 109–110; more texts have been located in a private collection and will be published in the near future).

      Varia

      A group of texts documenting the economic and social life of communities of deported Judeans who were settled in southern Babylonia, probably between Nippur and Uruk, came to light in the 1990s on the antiquities' market (Peirce and Wunsch 2014). This group contains a few Neo‐Babylonian texts (dating as far back as the reign of Nebuchadnezzar), but the bulk of the material dates to the reigns of Cyrus, Cambyses, and Darius I. With the accession of Xerxes, the number of tablets decreases rapidly, but a few texts do postdate 484 BCE. The archive documents the management of the fields assigned to the deportees, their tax and service obligations vis‐à‐vis the royal administration, and aspects of the private business of some of the more affluent of these Judean families.

      The Late Babylonian library texts are an important testament of the vigor of Babylonian cultural life under foreign occupation. However, they have not yet been analyzed comprehensively as a group. Library texts are normally undated. If, as happens frequently, colophons naming identifiable scribes, a meaningful archeological context, or a connection with dated archival texts are also missing, dating depends on the evaluation of epigraphy and tablet formats. Owing to a lack of pertinent research, it is currently possible only to distinguish a broad category of ‘late’ texts dating roughly to the late fifth through second centuries from tablets originating in the late seventh, the sixth, and perhaps also the early fifth centuries: distinguishing Late Achaemenid from Seleucid period literary tablets is often impossible. With this general uncertainty in mind, the following major “libraries” can be assigned roughly to the Achaemenid period.

      From Uruk comes the library of the Eanna temple, 400‐plus texts and fragments, having a chronological range (on the basis of archeological context and accompanying administrative texts) from the Neo‐Babylonian period to the second year of Xerxes (Pedersén 1998: p. 206; Clancier 2009: pp. 34–35; other, later temple libraries from Uruk include no, or nearly no, Late Achaemenid material and date exclusively to the Seleucid period). Two libraries of families of exorcists have been recovered in a private house, one dating to roughly 445–385 BCE, the other from the second half of the fourth to the end of the third century (Clancier 2009: pp. 58–61). The texts include predominantly magical, medical, and divinatory material, as well as school texts and some mathematical compositions (Clancier 2009: pp. 81–82).

      From Babylon, we have a large group of literary texts of all descriptions that can be associated with the Esangila temple. The texts include a vast group of astronomical texts, perhaps as many as 3000 (see, e.g., Ossendrijver 2012), as well as divinatory, magical, and some medical material, other learned compositions, viz., mathematical and lexical texts, commentaries and school texts, and finally a few historical and historical‐literary compositions (Clancier 2009: pp. 205–212). The chronological distribution of the dateable astronomical material suggests, however, that the bulk of this library is post‐Achaemenid (Clancier 2009: pp. 309–311). Among the astronomical texts, the Astronomical Diaries deserve special notice. These mostly post‐Achaemenid texts are records of astronomical observations accompanied by price data, information on the water level of the Euphrates, and occasional notes on remarkable incidents of political, economic, or social nature and/or of ominous portent (e.g. Pirngruber 2012).

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