==Ushumgal Stele== {{ http://cdli.ox.ac.uk/images/P220620_detail.jpg?200}} //Artifact//: Stone tablet\\ //Provenience//: Umma?\\ //Period//: Early Dynastic I-II (ca. 2900-2700 BC)\\ //Current location//: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York\\ //Text genre, language//: Ancient Kudurru; Sumerian\\ [[http://cdli.ucla.edu/P220620|CDLI page]]\\ //Description//: Towards the beginning of the 20th century, scholarship on the political economy of early Mesopotamia considered a ‘temple-state’ model (Deimel:1931 and Schneider:1920) which emphasized land ownership by large institutions. This was subsequently amended by a number of scholars including Diakonoff (1969) and Gelb (1979), who emphasised also the role of private land ownership and economy. This stele provides an example of a transfer of land in an unclear context, adding textual and iconographic evidence to the discussion about early land ownership. Carved on four sides, this 22 cm high gypsum object shows a large man with an uncertain label, possibly to be read “Ušumgal, the pab-šeš priest of (the diety) Šara” (Gelb et. al: 1989). He is followed by a cohort of three smaller men (possibly leaders of the assembly, the UKKIN), and they all approach a building façade on the other side of which (side D in Gelb’s edition) stands a large female figure with an unclear name and designation. She is followed by a smaller female figure on side C with a similarly unclear adscription. The adscriptions for both of these figures include the sign “DUMU”, “child/offpspring” (note, not specifically ‘daughter’). An amount of land is recorded, about 18 acres of land (18 iku). The text of this Early Dynastic I-II inscription is still poorly understood, highlighting the great amount of work to be done still towards the decipherment of the earliest cuneiform. (Kathryn Kelley, Oxford University) //Lineart//:OIP 104 Plates (1989), pl. 12-13,16-17 //Edition(s)//: OIP 104, pp. 43-47 [[objects41to50 |[Back to objects 41 to 50]]]