Royal Inscriptions of Lugalzagesi and Sargon

DOI

Abstract

I examined the royal inscriptions of Lugalzagesi and Sargon on two subjects: 1) geographical views of the world as they appeared in the inscriptions, 2) phraseology of the inscriptions. <br> Lugalzagesi's inscription described geographical areas in three ways: the region from the sunrise to the sunset, the region from the lower sea to the upper sea, and regions described with a pair of the terms, kalam and kur. The first and the second views were based on people's commonsense. The third one was derived from political thought. It developed as the concept of the political sphere of influence shifted from the city-state to the regional state. This political concept had a strong influence on Mesopotamian kings until the first halfofthe second millennium B.C. <br> Royal inscriptions were not records of events simply written down as they occurred. To understand how the contents of royal inscriptions related to historical facts, we need to consider the phraseology used and their overall structure.

Journal

  • Orient

    Orient 40 (0), 3-30, 2005

    The Society for Near Eastern Studies in Japan

Related Projects

See more

Details 詳細情報について

  • CRID
    1390282680478544896
  • NII Article ID
    130004651256
  • DOI
    10.5356/orient.40.3
  • ISSN
    18841392
    04733851
  • Text Lang
    en
  • Data Source
    • JaLC
    • Crossref
    • CiNii Articles
    • KAKEN
  • Abstract License Flag
    Disallowed

Report a problem

Back to top