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Summary Of: Adab

Adab was occupied from at least the Early Dynastic period... brief and there were later epigraphic references to Adab such as in the... inscribed with the name of a king of Adab which has been variously translated as Lugal... found by Banks during his excavation of Adab state that the... Of the Adab tablets that ended up at the University of Chicago... Digital images and Transliterations of 280 Adab tablets at University of Chicago...

Encyclodia Page On: Adab

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Adab (behavior) | Wasit Governorate | Iraq | Sumerian | Telloh | Nippur | Akkadian Empire | Ur III | Code of Hammurabi | Lugal-Anne-Mundu | Sumerian King List | Kish | Mesilim | Ur III | Sumerian | Descent to the Underworld | Inanna | Akkadian | Naram-Suen | ruin | Jezireh | Tigris | Euphrates | William Hayes Ward | University of Pennsylvania | University of Chicago | Edgar James Banks | Sumerian king list | Hammurabi Code | canal | temple | ziggurat | Shulgi | Ur-Nammu | Third Dynasty of Ur | Nippur | Naram-Suen | Sargon of Akkad | Oriental Institute | Mesopotamia | Constantinople | alabaster | onyx | porphyry | granite | ivory | Sumerian | Cities of the Ancient Near East | Short chronology timeline | Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition | public domain | Coordinates | Categories | Sumerian cities | Archaeological sites in Iraq | Former settlements in Iraq | Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica |
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