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The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

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— Contributors —<br />

Dominique Collon has recently retired from the British Museum where she was a<br />

curator in the Department of the Ancient Near East with particular responsibility<br />

for Seals, Anatolia and Mesopotamia. Her numerous publications include three volumes<br />

of the catalogue of the Museum’s seals (she is working on a fourth), First Impressions<br />

– Cylinder Seals in the Ancient Near East (London, 1987; new edition 2005), and Ancient<br />

Near Eastern Art (London, 1995) based on the Museum’s collections. She has travelled<br />

extensively throughout the Near East, led many tours and excavated in Iraq, Syria<br />

and Turkey.<br />

Harriet Crawford specializes in the later prehistory of Mesopotamia and is an honorary<br />

Visiting Professor at the Institute of Archaeology, University College London. She<br />

is also a Research Fellow at the McDonald Institute Cambridge and the author of<br />

Sumer and the Sumerians (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), as well as<br />

a number of books on the archaeology of the Arabo/Persian Gulf.<br />

Frederick Mario Fales is Full Professor of Ancient Near Eastern History at the<br />

University of Udine (Italy). His main scholarly interests concern the Neo-Assyrian<br />

period, and range from historical studies to the edition of Assyrian and Aramaic texts<br />

of this age. He is on the editorial board of two international projects on Neo-Assyrian<br />

texts, State Archives of Assyria (Helsinki), and Studien zu den Assur-Texten (Berlin), to<br />

which he has also contributed three co-authored monographs. He has founded an<br />

international journal on Neo-Assyrian studies, the State Archives of Assyria Bulletin<br />

(Padua), which has now reached its thirteenth annual volume. His most recent book,<br />

Saccheggio in Mesopotamia (Udine [Forum], 2004) is an analysis of the 2003 pillage of<br />

the Iraq Museum in Baghdad, framed within a history of the museum and of its rich<br />

archaeological heritage, from Gertrude Bell to Saddam Hussein.<br />

Hannes D. Galter is Universitätsdozent for Assyriology at the University of Graz.<br />

He teaches Assyriology and Ancient Near Eastern History at the University of Graz<br />

and is co-editor of the ‘Grazer Morgenländische Studien’. He published several books<br />

on Ancient Near Eastern topics such as Der mesopotamische Gott Enki/Ea (1983), Die<br />

Rolle der Astronomie in den Kulturen Mesopotamiens (1993) and Kopftuch und Schleier (2001).<br />

His main interests and working areas are Mesopotamian history, historiography and<br />

literature and especially Assyrian royal inscriptions.<br />

M. J. Geller is Professor of Semitic Languages at UCL, in the Department of Hebrew<br />

and Jewish Studies. He spent the 2005–2006 academic year in Paris as Visiting<br />

Professor at the École Pratique des Hautes Études, with a grant from the Wellcome<br />

Trust. He has published ‘Renal and rectal disease’, Babylonisch-Assyrische Medizin,<br />

Vol. 7 (2005).<br />

A. R. George is Professor of <strong>Babylonian</strong> at the School of Oriental and African Studies,<br />

the University of London. His chief research focus is on <strong>Babylonian</strong> civilization,<br />

especially literature, religion, mythology and intellectual achievement and his most<br />

recent book is <strong>The</strong> <strong>Babylonian</strong> Gilgamesh Epic: Introduction, Critical Edition and Cuneiform<br />

Texts (OUP, 2003). His new translation of Gilgamesh for Penguin Classics won the<br />

2000 Kuwait-British Fellowship Society prize for Middle Eastern Studies.<br />

xvi

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