E-LIBRARY / BIBLIOGRAPHY / Abstracts / 923Güterbock1965

Hans Gustav Güterbock

1965 “A Votive Sword with Old Assyrian Inscription,”
Assyriological Studies 16, pp. 197-198.
Webpage

     The present author publishes in this paper a bronze sword kept in a private collection in Europe (anonymous owner), said to come from the vicinity of Diyarbakir.
     The sword is intact (1.09 m in length) and carries an inscription in Old Assyrian cuneiform (thus, dating before ca. 1800 BC), with a dedication made by Luluanum, son of Azizum, to a god defined as be-lim ša ḫu-te-ša. Güterbock analyses the names, recognizing Azizum, as attested also at Kültepe, suggesting for Luluanum and the name of the city where the god is worshipped a possible Hurrian influence.
     A comparison is then established between the actual sword and the depiction of the Sword-god at Yazılıkaya and some magic ritual texts written in Hittite, concerning the ritual 'burning' of a bronze sword in honour of Nergal.

[M. De Pietri – July 2019]