The Dogs of Ninkilim, part two: Babylonian rituals to counter field pests

Main author: George, Andrew
Other authors: Taniguchi, Junko
Geller, Markham J.
Format: Journal Article           
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id eprints-10101
recordtype eprints
institution SOAS, University of London
collection SOAS Research Online
language English
language_search English
description This article presents editions of all the extant Babylonian incantations against field pests. The sources date to the first millennium BC and many have not been published before. They are mostly tablets of the Neo-Assyrian period, from Ashurbanipal's library at Nineveh, but the corpus also contains some Neo-Babylonian fragments from Nineveh, as well as a tablet from Sultantepe (ancient Huzirina) and two Late Babylonian tablets from southern Mesopotamia. Some of the pieces certainly belong to a series called in antiquity Zu-buru-dabbeda “To Seize the Locust-Tooth”, a compendium of incantations and rituals designed to combat by magic means the destruction of crops by locusts, insect larvae and other pests; other pieces are parts of related and similar texts. Some of the rituals require the observation of the Goat-star rising above the eastern horizon, which suggests they were performed at night as a precautionary measure during the winter months of the barley-growing season.
format Journal Article
author George, Andrew
author_facet George, Andrew
Taniguchi, Junko
Geller, Markham J.
authorStr George, Andrew
author_letter George, Andrew
author2 Taniguchi, Junko
Geller, Markham J.
author2Str Taniguchi, Junko
Geller, Markham J.
title The Dogs of Ninkilim, part two: Babylonian rituals to counter field pests
publisher Cambridge University Press
publishDate 2010
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/10101/