Data di Pubblicazione:
2022
Abstract:
Assyro-Babylonian procedural texts for
making cult objects dated to the 1st millen- nium BCE provide an untapped resource for examining scribal conceptions of craft and purity in the ancient world. Ritual pro- cedures for “opening of the mouth” of a cult statue (mīs pî), and for manufacturing a ritual drum called the lilissu, constitute the principal focus of this two-part study. This work uses three themata – time, space, and the material world – to provide the scaffold- ing for a comparative analysis that spans various centuries and localities, highlight- ing the ways in which “purity” was crafted in cuneiform scholarly cultures.
making cult objects dated to the 1st millen- nium BCE provide an untapped resource for examining scribal conceptions of craft and purity in the ancient world. Ritual pro- cedures for “opening of the mouth” of a cult statue (mīs pî), and for manufacturing a ritual drum called the lilissu, constitute the principal focus of this two-part study. This work uses three themata – time, space, and the material world – to provide the scaffold- ing for a comparative analysis that spans various centuries and localities, highlight- ing the ways in which “purity” was crafted in cuneiform scholarly cultures.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Assyriology, Craft Production, Cult Objects, Cuneiform Studies, History of Knowledge, History of Science, History of Technology, History of the Ancient Near East, Procedures, Purity, Recipes, Religion.
Elenco autori:
Borrelli, Noemi; Escobar, Eduardo
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