The Context of Scripture: Canonical Compositions from the Biblical World
- G. N. Knoppers, W. Hallo, K. L. Y. join
- Art
- 1 February 1997
The Context of Scripture. Vol. 1, Canonical Compositions from the Biblical World, ed. William W. Hallo and K. Lawson Younger, Jr. Leiden/New York/Cologne: Brill, 1997. Pp. xviii+ 599.$109.50. This…
Canonical compositions from the biblical world
- W. Hallo, K. Younger
- Art
- 1997
The Context of Scripture illuminatingly presents the multi-faceted world of ancient writing that forms the colourful background to the literature of the Hebrew Bible. Designed as a thorough and…
The Exaltation of Inanna
- W. Hallo, J. V. Dijk, Enḫeduanna
- Art
- 1 June 1979
The Ancient Near East: A History
- W. Hallo, W. Simpson
- History
- 1 June 1971
Mesopotamia and the Asiatic Near East: The Near East to the End of the Stone Age. The Early Bronze Age. The Middle Bronze Age. From the Sack of Babylon to the Sack of Troy: The Late Bronze Age. The…
The Coronation of Ur-Nammu
- W. Hallo
- LinguisticsJournal of Cuneiform Studies
- 1 January 1966
The brief but brilliant literary productivity of Ur is second, as of now, only to that of Nippur in the Old Babylonian age, and it is therefore of particular interest to compare the oeuvre of the "Ur…
Origins: The Ancient Near Eastern Background of Some Modern Western Institutions
- W. Hallo
- History
- 1 September 1996
Origins is the first fully comprehensive study of the debt owed by modern western culture to Ancient Near Eastern civilization - a debt touched upon by standard histories of the Ancient Near East but…
From Qarqar to Carchemish: Assyria and Israel in the Light of New Discoveries
- W. Hallo
- HistoryThe Biblical Archaeologist
- 1 May 1960
The Biblical Archaeologist is published quarterly (February, May, September, December) by the American Schools of Oriental Research. Its purpose is to meet the need for a readable non-technical, yet…
The Road to Emar
- W. Hallo
- PhysicsJournal of Cuneiform Studies
- 1 January 1964
forerunner of a sign explained in later texts as 'cypress.'6 We are on safer ground in the Sargonic period when what are indubitably maps of real territory are attested from Gasur (Nusi)7 and Lagas.8…
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