Sippar (
Sumerian: 𒌓𒄒𒉣𒆠, Zimbir) was an
ancient Near EasternSumerian and later
Babylonian city on the east bank of the
Euphrates river. Its tell is located at the site of modern Tell Abu Habbah near
Yusufiyah in
Iraq's
Baghdad Governorate, some 69 km (43 mi) north of
Babylon and 30 km (19 mi) southwest of
Baghdad. The city's ancient name, Sippar, could also refer to its sister city,
Sippar-Amnanum (located at the modern site of Tell ed-Der); a more specific designation for the city here referred to as Sippar was Sippar-Yahrurum.[1]
History
Despite the fact that thousands of cuneiform
clay tablets have been recovered at the site, relatively little is known about the history of Sippar. As was often the case in Mesopotamia, it was part of a pair of cities, separated by a river. Sippar was on the east side of the Euphrates, while its sister city, Sippar-Amnanum (modern Tell ed-Der), was on the west.
While pottery finds indicate that the site of Sippar was in use as early as the
Uruk period, substantial occupation occurred only in the
Early Dynastic Period of the 3rd millennium BC, the
Old Babylonian period of the 2nd millennium BC, and the
Neo-Babylonian time of the 1st millennium BC. Lesser levels of use continued into the time of the
Achaemenid,
Seleucid and
Parthian Empires.[2]
Sippar was the cult site of the sun god (Sumerian
Utu, Akkadian
Shamash) and the home of his temple
E-babbara (
𒂍𒌓𒌓𒊏, means "white house").
During early Babylonian dynasties, Sippar was the production center of wool. The
Code of Hammurabi stele was probably erected at Sippar.
Shamash was the god of justice, and he is depicted handing authority to the king in the image at the top of the stele.[3] A closely related motif occurs on some cylinder seals of the
Old Babylonian period.[4] By the end of the 19th century BC, Sippar was producing some of the finest
Old Babylonian cylinder seals.[5]
Sippar has been suggested as the location of the Biblical
Sepharvaim in the
Old Testament, which alludes to the two parts of the city in its
dual form.[6]
Rulers
In the
Sumerian king list a king of Sippar,
En-men-dur-ana, is listed as one of the early pre-dynastic rulers of the region but has not yet turned up in the epigraphic records.
In his 29th year of reign
Sumu-la-El of
Babylon reported building the city wall of Sippar. Some years later
Hammurabi of Babylon reported laying the foundations of the city wall of Sippar in his 23rd year and worked on the wall again in his 43rd year. His successor in Babylon,
Samsu-iluna worked on Sippar's wall in his 1st year. The city walls, being typically made of mud bricks, required much attention. Records of
Nebuchadnezzar II and
Nabonidos record that they repaired the Shamash temple E-babbara.
Classical speculation
Xisuthros, the "Chaldean Noah" in Sumerian mythology, is said by
Berossus to have buried the records of the
antediluvian world here—possibly because the name of Sippar was supposed to be connected with sipru, "a writing".[7] And according to
Abydenus,
Nebuchadnezzar II excavated a great reservoir in the neighbourhood.[8]
Pliny (Natural History 6.30.123) mentions a sect of Chaldeans called the Hippareni. It is often assumed that this name refers to Sippar (especially because the other two schools mentioned seem to be named after cities as well: the Orcheni after
Uruk, and the Borsippeni after
Borsippa), but this is not universally accepted.[9]
Archaeology
Si.427, a tablet excavated in Sippar in 1894, depicting a
land survey. A mathematical text dealing with the surface area of a field divided into 11 pieces.[10][11]
Tell Abu Habba, measuring over 1 square kilometer was first excavated by
Hormuzd Rassam between 1880 and 1881 for the British Museum in a dig that lasted 18 months.[13] Tens of thousands of tablets were recovered including the
Tablet of Shamash in the Temple of
Shamash/
Utu. Most of the tablets were
Neo-Babylonian.[14][15] The temple had been mentioned as early as the 18th year of
Samsu-iluna of Babylon, who reported restoring "Ebabbar, the temple of Szamasz in Sippar", along with the city's
ziggurat.
The tablets, which ended up in the
British Museum, are being studied to this day.[16] As was often the case in the early days of archaeology, excavation records were not made, particularly find spots. This makes it difficult to tell which tablets came from Sippar-Amnanum as opposed to Sippar.[17] Other tablets from Sippar were bought on the open market during that time and ended up at places like the British Museum and the
University of Pennsylvania.[18][19] Since the site is relatively close to
Baghdad, it was a popular target for illegal excavations.[20]
In 1894, Sippar was worked briefly by
Jean-Vincent Scheil.[21] The tablets recovered, mainly Old Babylonian, went to the
Istanbul Museum.[22] In modern times, the site was worked by a Belgian team from 1972 to 1973.[23] Iraqi archaeologists from the College of Arts at the
University of Baghdad, led by Walid al-Jadir with Farouk al-Rawi, have excavated at Tell Abu Habbah from 1977 through the present in 24 seasons.[24][25][26] In the 8th season a library of over 300 tablets was discovered but few were published at the time due to conditions in Iraq. With conditions improving they are now being published.[27][28][29] After 2000, they were joined by the
German Archaeological Institute.[30][31] According to Andrew George, a cuneiform tablet containing a portion of the
Epic of Gilgamesh probably came from Sippar.[32]
^MacGinnis, John, Jon McGinnis, and Cornelia Wunsch. The arrows of the sun: armed forces in Sippar in the first millennium BC. Islet-Verlag, 2012 ISBN 9783980846653
^"Law Code of Hammurabi, king of Babylon"
[1], Louvre, retrieved on 29 Nov 2013.
^G. R. Driver, Geographical Problems, Eretz Israel, vol. 5, pp. 18-20, 1958
^Ward, William Hayes, "Sippara", Hebraica, vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 79–86, 1886
^Dalley, Stephanie, "Nineveh, Babylon and the Hanging Gardens: Cuneiform and Classical Sources Reconciled", Iraq, vol. 56, pp. 45–58, 1994
^"It is usually assumed that the Hippareni refers to Sippar (Ptolemy's Sippara), but even that requires proof, since the change of ‘s’ to ‘h’ is strange." —R. D. Barnett (1963). "Xenophon and the Wall of Media". The Journal of Hellenic Studies. 83. The Journal of Hellenic Studies, Vol. 83: 1–26.
doi:
10.2307/628451.
JSTOR628451.
S2CID163366720.
^Al-Gailani Werr, L., 1988. Studies in the chronology and regional style of Old Babylonian Cylinder Seals. Bibliotheca Mesopotamica, Volume 23.
^[2] Hormuzd Rassam, Asshur and the Land of Nimrod: Being an Account of the Discoveries Made in the Ancient Ruins of Nineveh, Asshur, Sepharvaim, Calah, [etc]..., Curts & Jennings, 1897
^Erie Leichty et al., Catalogue of the Babylonian Tablets in the British Museum: Tablets from Sippar 3, vol. 8, British Museum Publications, 1988,
ISBN0-7141-1124-4
^[3] Nebo-Sarsekim Cuneiform Tablet at Archaeology.org
^[4]Hermann Ranke, Babylonian Legal and Business Documents from the Time of the First Dynasty of Babylon; Chiefly from Sippar, University of Pennsylvania, 1906 (reprinted by Nabu Press
ISBN1-144-69277-6)
^E. A. Budge, By Nile and Tigris: A Narrative of Journeys in Egypt and Mesopotamia on Behalf of the British Museum Between the Years 1886 and 1913, John Murray, 1920
^V. Scheil, Une Saison de fouilles a Sippar, Le Caire, 1902
^[5]Adalı, Selim Ferruh, and Frahm Eckart, "The Slave-Girl's Child: A" Literary" Fragment from the Istanbul Sippar Archive", Aula Orientalis, pp. 5-17, 2021
^W. al-Jadir and Z. Rajib, "Archaeological Results from the Eighth Season at Sippar", Sumer, vol. 46,
pp. 69-90, 1990 (in arabic)
^Fadhil, Anmar Abdulillah, and Enrique Jiménez, "Literary Texts from the Sippar Library I: Two Babylonian Classics", Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und vorderasiatische Archäologie 109.2, pp. 155-176, 2019
^Fadhil, Anmar Abdulillah, and Enrique Jiménez, "Literary Texts from the Sippar Library II: The Epic of Creation", Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und vorderasiatische Archäologie 111.2, pp. 191-230, 2021
^Fadhil, Anmar Abdulillah, and Enrique Jiménez, "Literary Texts from the Sippar Library III:‘Eriš šummi’, a Syncretistic Hymn to Marduk", Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und vorderasiatische Archäologie 112.2, pp. 229-274, 2022
^Abdulillah Fadhil et al., Ausgrabungen in Sippar (Tell Abu Habbah). Vorbericht über die Grabungsergebnisse der 24. Kampagne 2002, in: Baghdader Mitteilungen (BaM) 36, pp. 157-224, 2005
^Abdulillah Fadhil et. el., Sippar - Results of prospecting 2004/24, in: Sumer, A journal of archaeology in Iraq and the Arab world, vol. LII, no. 1&2, pp. 294-357, 2004
Rivkah Harris, Ancient Sippar : a demographic study of an old-Babylonian city, 1894-1595 B.C., Nederlands Historisch-Archaeologisch Instituut, 1975
F. N. H. al-Rawi, Tablets from the Sippar Library I. The "Weidner Chronicle": A Suppositious Royal Letter concerning a Vision, Iraq, vol. 52, pp. 1–15, 1990
F. N. H. al-Rawi and A. R. George, Tablets from the Sippar Library II. Tablet II of the Babylonian Creation Epic, Iraq, vol. 52, pp. 149–158, 1990
F. N. H. al-Rawi and A. R. George, Tablets from the Sippar Library III. Two Royal Counterfeits, Iraq, vol. 56, pp. 135–149, 1994
Luc Dekier, Old Babylonian real estate documents from Sippar in the British Museum, University of Ghent, 1994
F. N. H. al-Rawi and A. R. George, Tablets from the Sippar Library IV. Lugale, Iraq, vol. 57, pp. 199–224, 1995
John MacGinnis, Letter orders from Sippar and the administration of the Ebabbara in the late-Babylonian period, Bonami, 1995,
ISBN83-85274-07-3
F. N. H. al-Rawi and A. R. George, Tablets from the Sippar Library V. An Incantation from Mis Pi, Iraq, vol. 57, pp. 225–228, 1995
F. N. H. Al-Rawi and Andrew George, Tablets from the Sippar Library, VI. Atra-hasis, Iraq, vol. 58, pp. 147–190, 1996
A. C. V. M. Bongenaar, The Neo-Babylonian Ebabbar Temple at Sippar : its administration and its prosopography, Nederlands Historisch-Archeologisch Instituut te Istanbul, 1997,
ISBN90-6258-081-5
F. N. H. al-Rawi and A. R. George, Tablets from the Sippar Library VII. Three wisdom texts, Iraq, vol. 60, pp. 187–206, 1998
Ivan Starr and F. N. H. Al-Rawi, Tablets from the Sippar Library VIII. Omens from the Gall-Bladder, Iraq, vol. 61, pp. 173–185, 1999
W. Horowitz and F. N. H. Al-Rawi , Tablets from the Sippar library IX. A ziqpu-star planisphere, Iraq, vol. 63, pp. 171–181, 2001
F. N. H. al-Rawi, Tablets from the Sippar library X: A dedication of Zabaya of Larsa, Iraq, vol. 64, pp. 247–248, 2002
Andrew George and Khalid Salim Ismail, Tablets from the Sippar library, XI. The Babylonian almanac, Iraq, vol. 64, pp. 249–258, 2002
Nils P. Heeßel and Farouk N. H. Al-Rawi, Tablets from the Sippar Library XII. A Medical Therapeutic Text, Iraq, vol. 65 , pp. 221–239, 2003
F. N. H. Al-Rawi and A. R. George, Tablets from the Sippar Library XIII: "Enūma Anu Ellil" XX, Iraq, vol. 68, pp. 23–57, 2006
Moore, Stephen A., "Ransom and Quittance in Early Old Babylonian Sippar: a New Text", Revue d’assyriologie et d’archéologie orientale 116.1, pp. 69-78, 2022
Theophilus Goldridge Pinches, The Antiquities found by Mr. H. Rassam at Abu-habbah (Sippara), Harrison and Sons, 1884
K. De Graef, “Many a mickle makes a muckle : advance payments in the Ur-Utu archive (Old Babylonian Sippar),” AKKADICA, vol. 137, no. 1, pp. 1–51, 2016
Janssen, Caroline, "Thirteen bones and a skeleton: the location of Inanna-mansum’s grave and material manifestations of the cult of the dead in Old Babylonian Sippar", Akkadica 143, pp. 59-100, 2022
Reinhard Pirngruber, Minor Archives from First-Millennium Bce Babylonia: The Archive of Iššar-Tarībi from Sippar, Journal of Cuneiform Studies, vol. 72, pp. 165–198, 2020
[7]Richardson, Seth, "Hard Times for Sippar Women: Three Late Old Babylonian Cases", Journal of Ancient Near Eastern History 9.2, pp. 319-350, 2022
Verhulst, Astrid. “An Old Babylonian Seal from Sippar with Trading Owners.” Journal of Near Eastern Studies, vol. 74, no. 2, 2015, pp. 255–65