What's in a name? : terminology related to the work force and job categories in the ancient Near East

Weitere Verfasser: Garcia-Ventura, Agnès , [HerausgeberIn]
Ort/Verlag/Jahr: Münster : Ugarit-Verlag, 2018.
Umfang/Format: 536 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm.
Schriftenreihe: Alter Orient und Altes Testament ; Band 440.
ISBN: 9783868352122
3868352120
Inhaltsangabe:
  • Introduction: the work force and job categories in the Ancient Near East / Agnès Garcia-Ventura
  • Labor administration in proto-Elamite Iran / Jacob L. Dahl, Laura F. Hawkins, Kathryn Kelley
  • Age, gender and labor: recording human resources in 3350-2500 BC Mesopotamia / Vitali Bartash
  • The archaic lists of professions and their relevance for the late Uruk period: observations on some officials in their administrative context / Camille Lecompte
  • Female servants of Royal Household (ars-tu munus) / Fumi Karahashi
  • Reading history through lexicography: the weavers of Sargonic Adabin in comparative rerspective / Massimo Maiocchi
  • The maškim in Ur III legal documents / Laura Culbertson
  • kīma napišti māti eqlumma ul tīdê? Field Work in Old Babylonian Sippar / Katrien de Graef
  • The gold- and silversmith in the Middle Assyrian documents / Jaume Llop
  • Middle Babylonian terminology related to workforce / Daniel Justel
  • On the terminology of some (job) titles in Hittite texts / Matteo Vigo
  • The role of the "overseer" as the -person responsible for the labour force in the hurrian milieu / Josué J. Justel
  • Aspects of job categories and household workforce management in Nuzi documentation / Philippe Abrahami, Brigitte Lion
  • Terminology related to work force and job categories in Ugarit / Juan-Pablo Vita
  • Craftsmen in the Neo-Assyrian Empire / Melanie Groß
  • Travel and displacement as part of the job: the case of the Neo-Assyrian ummânus
  • The organization of building works in Neo-Babylonian / Stefan Zawadzki
  • Dependent Labor and status in the Neo-Babylonian and Achaemenid periods / Kristin Kleber
  • Dependent labor and status in the Neo-Babylonian and Achaemenid periods / Mark Tamerus.