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The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

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— Paul-Alain Beaulieu —<br />

Figure 33.1 Kudurru of the <strong>Babylonian</strong> king Marduk-zakir-shumi (left) which shows him<br />

handing a document to his scribe (right) (ninth century) (Louvre).<br />

<strong>The</strong>refore, even long after its death as a living tool of communication, late <strong>Babylonian</strong><br />

continued for some time to be transmitted both orally and in writing in the schools<br />

alongside Standard <strong>Babylonian</strong> and Sumerian. Cuneiform civilization remained<br />

surprisingly alive in this form until the last decades of Seleucid rule. <strong>The</strong> large<br />

temples, especially the Esagil in Babylon, continued to function as centers of intellectual<br />

life and science and as repositories of texts. <strong>Babylonian</strong> scholars, better known as<br />

Chaldeans, even began to spread, with some success, their astronomical science and<br />

religious doctrines throughout the Mediterranean world. Only with the installation<br />

of Parthian rule at the end of the second century BC can we gather evidence for the<br />

disintegration and collapse of <strong>Babylonian</strong> institutions and the end of cuneiform<br />

learning. <strong>The</strong> last known cuneiform tablet, which is, not surprisingly, an astronomical<br />

text, is datable to the year 75 of our era (Sachs 1976).<br />

BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

Al-Rawi, F.N.H. and George, A.R. (1994), “Tablets from the Sippar Library III. Two Royal<br />

Counterfeits,” Iraq 56, 135–148.<br />

Beaulieu, P.-A. (1992), “New Light on Secret Knowledge in Late <strong>Babylonian</strong> Culture.” Zeitschrift<br />

für Assyriologie und vorderasiatischen Archäologie 82 (1992) 98–111.<br />

–––– (2000), “<strong>The</strong> Descendants of Sîn-lēqi-unninni,” in J. Marzahn and H. Neumann, eds,<br />

Assyriologica et Semitica. Festschrift für Joachim Oelsner anläßlich seines 65. Geburtsages am 18. Februar<br />

1997. (Alter Orient und Altes Testament 252; Münster: Ugarit Verlag) 1–16.<br />

Boiy, T. (2004), Late Achaemenid and Hellenistic Babylon (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 136;<br />

Leuven: Peeters).<br />

482

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