Sacrificial Economy
Assessors, Contractors, and Thieves in the Management of Sacrificial Sheep at the Eanna Temple of Uruk
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Word Count
84,000 words, Guess
Page Count
336 pages
Identifiers
- ISBN-139781575062785
- ISBN-10157506278X
- Library of Congress Control Number2014011316
- OCLC Control Number897002857
- Better World Books9781575062785
and 1 more
- Open LibraryOL28546055M
Classifications
- LCCDS70.5.E65K69 2014
- LCCDS70.5.E65 K69 2014
Description
"In the mid-first millennium B.C., the Eanna temple at Uruk sacrificed a minimum of nine lambs every day in its basic routine of offerings to its gods; in addition to these, special occasions and festivals demanded the sacrifice of as many as 90 lambs in a single day. All told, the Eanna sacrificed about 4,300 lambs per year. There were more than 120 herdsmen connected to the Eanna at any given time, and the temple expected there to be tens of thousands of sheep and goats under their responsibility. These herdsmen delivered male lambs to the Eanna for sacrifice, and the temple had an internal infrastructure for the care, maintenance, and ritual expenditure of these lambs; they also delivered wool, which the Eanna sold mostly in bulk quantities. This book aims to analyze the economic organization of this entire system of sheep and goat maintenance and utilization, to explore the economic and social relationships between the Eanna and its herdsmen, and to integrate the study of the Eanna's animal economy into the developing picture of the Neo-Babylonian temple economy as a whole"--Provided by publisher.
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