P ¶ 17

Prologue ¶ 17 of Hammurabi's Code

Summary
Hammurabi explains how he honors deities by means of various activities.
Translation
the leader of kings, who controls the Euphrates communities under the guidance of Dagan his creator. He is the one who shows favour to the inhabitants of Mari and Tuttul, the devout prince, who brightens the face of the god Tishpak, and ensures that pure food is presented to the goddess Ninazu;
Section
Inscription

Cuneiform

Prologue ¶  - Cuneiform - Law Code of Hammurabi

Source: Bergmann (1953, p. 3, col. IV, lns. 23–37)

Transliteration

a-ša-ri-id bšar+alim mu-ka-an-ni-iš da-ad-mi nâruUD.KIB.NUN.NA ṣal-tum iluDa-gan ba-ni-šu šu ig-mi-lu ni-ši ME.RA.KI u TU.TU.UL.KI ru-bu-um na-'-du-um mu-na-wi-ir pa-ni iluNanâ ša-ki-in ma-ka-li bel-lu-tim a-na iluNIN.A.ZU

Source: Harper (1904, p. 6)

Normalization

ašared šarrī, mukanniš dadmē nār Purattim ittum Dagan bānîšu. šû igmilu nišī Mera u Tuttul rubûm na'dum munawwer pani Tišpak šākin mākalī ellūtim ana Ninazu

Source: Richardson (2004, p. 36,38)

Translation

the leader of kings, who controls the Euphrates communities under the guidance of Dagan his creator. He is the one who shows favour to the inhabitants of Mari and Tuttul, the devout prince, who brightens the face of the god Tishpak, and ensures that pure food is presented to the goddess Ninazu;

Source: Richardson (2004, p. 37,39)

Inscription

Location of Prologue ¶ 17 · Powered by Stele3DSM

Orientation Front
Side(s) Sides 1 – 2 (overflow)
Column(s) Col. 4
Line(s) Lns. 23–37
Key
Prologue ¶ 17
Prologue
Laws
Epilogue
Damage

Citation

Dedović, B. "P ¶ 17 - eHammurabi." OMNIKA Foundation, 6 Aug. 2024, ehlaw.org/prologue/17. [Accessed 17 Sep. 2024]

MLA 9

Dedović, B. (2024, August 6). P ¶ 17 - eHammurabi. OMNIKA Foundation. https://ehlaw.org/prologue/17

APA 7

Dedović, Boban. "P ¶ 17 - eHammurabi." Las Vegas, NV: OMNIKA Foundation. Created August 6, 2024. Modified August 25, 2024. Accessed September 17, 2024. https://ehlaw.org/prologue/17.

CMS 16

Bibliography

Abulhab, Saad D. The Law Code of Hammurabi: Transliterated and Literally Translated from its Early Classical Arabic Language. New York, NY: Blautopf, 2017.

ACH

Bergmann, Eugen. Codex Ḫammurabi: Textus Primigenius. Rome, Italy: Pontificium Institutum Biblicum, 1953.

CHTP

Huehnergard, John. A Grammar of Akkadian (Third Edition). Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2011.

HAG3

Huehnergard, John. Key to a Grammar of Akkadian (Third Edition). Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2013.

HKEY3

OMNIKA Foundation Contributors. "OMNIKA: Digital Mythology Library & Search Engine." Las Vegas, NV: OMNIKA Foundation, accessed November 14, 2023. https://omnika.org. [Visit]

Richardson, Mervyn E.J. Hammurabi's Laws: Text, Translation and Glossary. New York, NY: T & T Clark International, 2004.

RHL

Sound of Text Contributors. "Sound of Text: AI Text-to-Speech." Accessed November 14, 2023. https://soundoftext.app. [Visit]

SoT

eHammurabi Glossary

The § symbol commonly denotes "a shorthand notation for the word 'section'."

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eHammurabi Glossary

The term Cuneiform commonly means "an ancient writing system used by various cultures around Mesopotamia."

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eHammurabi Glossary

The term Normalization commonly means "the application of grammatical rules unto transliterated sound values."

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eHammurabi Glossary

The term Translation commonly means "the conversion of linguistic contents and their meanings from one language into another."

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eHammurabi Glossary

The term Transliteration commonly means "the conversion of sound values from one writing system into another."

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