25.03.2013 Views

The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

— Anne Goddeeris —<br />

silver could be invested in loans for consumptive purposes (issued to fishermen and<br />

herdsmen who could not fulfil their quota) and for commercial purposes.<br />

<strong>The</strong> three major Old <strong>Babylonian</strong> archives from Larsa itself, the archive of<br />

Balmunamhe, the one of Shep-Sîn and the letter archive of Shamash-hazir and Sîniddinam,<br />

all date from the period of domination by Hammurabi and Samsuiluna.<br />

Apart from the fact that dues were redirected to the palace in Babylon and a definite<br />

increase in scale, they exhibit much continuity with the previous period.<br />

It is still not clear how far the activities of Balmunamhe, the most famous inhabitant<br />

of the area of large residences excavated in Larsa, extended (the cuneiform tablets<br />

were excavated illicitly before the official French excavations started). This businessman<br />

was involved in slave purchases and real estate transactions. A village from which<br />

revenues was extracted was named after him, just as another village was named after<br />

his father. A study by Dyckhoff (1998) situates the activities of Balmunamhe in the<br />

management of the Enki temple of Larsa. However, the barley revenues of his village<br />

(or rather, the agricultural district under his supervision) and the one of his father<br />

were brought to the central storehouse of Larsa. This reconstruction confirms and<br />

illustrates how the palace used the existing structures – in the south, the temple<br />

households – to control the local economy and extract its surpluses.<br />

<strong>The</strong> archive of Shep-Sîn consists of two files. On the one hand, the file of mainly<br />

loan documents dating from before and after Shep-Sîn’s official function as Overseer<br />

of the Merchants in Larsa, forms his private archive. Another file, consisting of<br />

administrative texts dated between Hammurabi 36 and Hammurabi 42, documents<br />

the responsibilities of Shep-Sîn as overseer of the merchants. <strong>The</strong>se official documents<br />

must have been kept in his private archive, a practice not uncommon in Babylonia.<br />

In his function as Overseer of the Merchants, Shep-Sîn was responsible for the retail<br />

of dates from the palace orchards around Larsa. <strong>The</strong> merchants selling the dates owed<br />

an amount of silver to the palace equivalent to one-third of the value of the dates,<br />

to be collected and delivered to (the delegate of) the palace in Babylon by Shep-Sîn.<br />

Accordingly, the merchants had a profit margin of two-thirds of the value of the<br />

dates. <strong>The</strong> retail of fish from the palace marshes also fell under Shep-Sîn’s responsibility.<br />

<strong>The</strong> correspondence of Hammurabi with Shamash-hazir and Sîn-iddinam concerns<br />

the managment of royal land in the province of Larsa after Hammurabi’s conquest<br />

of the region. Since this is our main source for the practice of assigning subsistence<br />

plots, it will be discussed below.<br />

NORTHERN BABYLONIA<br />

Ur III control over the northern part of Babylonia and the Diyala region seems to<br />

have been largely restricted to the extraction of tribute. Since no archives from Ur<br />

III ‘great organizations’ have been recovered, continuity cannot be detected. After<br />

the downfall of the Ur III kingdom, the local palaces could not fall back on temples<br />

or other households with a well established economic basis, as in the south.<br />

Political developments<br />

In the Diyala-region, written (though largely unpublished) documentation continues<br />

after the fall of the Third Dynasty of Ur. Already at the beginning of Ibbi-Sîn’s reign,<br />

202

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!