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The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

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— <strong>Babylonian</strong> lists of words and signs —<br />

within a greater system. That system taught them primarily about writing and its<br />

uses. This fact is crucial to understanding what the lists represent.<br />

THE OLD BABYLONIAN LISTS<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are actually many different kinds of list. Already when students practised<br />

making single wedges this was done in list format. <strong>The</strong> same was true for the<br />

combinations of wedges into signs, such as the ones contained in a list called Syllable<br />

Alphabet A. 4 This list provided instruction in common, simple signs in various combinations.<br />

Next, the student learned sets of related syllables, still without real meaning,<br />

through a list called Tu-ta-ti. That list begins: tu ta ti, nu na ni and continues in<br />

this way, listing sets of three signs combining a consonant with a standard sequence<br />

of three vowels.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first meaningful list encountered was that of personal names. Learning how<br />

to write names is a very natural way to start learning how to write, being relatively<br />

easy, interesting and also useful. Here the student would come across features of the<br />

cuneiform writing system that he would learn more systematically later.<br />

<strong>The</strong> next stage was to learn the series of lists known today as Urra. <strong>The</strong> series<br />

comprised six lists, each containing many words on various themes: (1) trees and<br />

wooden objects; (2) reed, vessels, clay, hides, metals; (3) domestic and wild animals<br />

and meats; (4) stones, plants, birds, fish, clothing; (5) geographical terms, stars; (6)<br />

foods. <strong>The</strong> first tablet begins:<br />

gisˇtaskarin ‘boxwood’<br />

gisˇesi ‘ebony’<br />

gisˇnu11 (type of tree)<br />

gisˇha-lu-ub2 ‘oak’<br />

<strong>The</strong>re was also a list of professions, known as Proto-Lu, 5 but this was not part of<br />

Urra; it was taught later in the curriculum.<br />

Next came what we refer to as Proto-Ea, a sign list teaching the various possible<br />

readings of individual cuneiform signs (it is a feature of the cuneiform writing system<br />

that a sign may be read in several different ways). <strong>The</strong> first section deals with the<br />

A-sign:<br />

reading sign meaning<br />

a 2 A (an anguished expression)<br />

ia A (reading derived from context)<br />

du-ru A ‘moist’<br />

e A (reading derived from context)<br />

a A ‘water’<br />

A.A ‘father’<br />

A.A.A ‘grandfather’<br />

sa-ah HA.A ‘runaway’<br />

435

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