Religion and Humanity in Mesopotamian Myth and Epic
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date: 22 December 2022
71. Jan N. Bremmer, “The
Ancient Near East,” in
The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Greek Religion, ed. Esther Eidinow
and Julia Kindt (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015), 605–620.
72.
CDLI: Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative . A joint project of the University of California, Los
Angelese, The University of Oxford and the Max Plancke-Institute for the History of Science, Berlin.
73. J. A. Black, G. Cunningham, J. Ebeling, E. Flückiger-Hawker, E. Robson, J. Taylor, and G. Zólyomi,
The Electronic
Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature , Oxford, 1998–2006.
74.
The Melammu Project , The Heritage of Mesopotamia
and
the Ancient Near East, University of Helsinki.
75. Stephanie Dalley,
Myths from Mesopotamia: Creation, the Flood, Gilgamesh, and Others (Oxford:
Oxford University
Press, 1989).
76. Foster,
Before the Muses.
77. Thorkild Jacobsen,
The Harps that Once Sounded: Sumerian Poetry in Translation (New Haven, CT:
Yale University
Press, 1987).
78. Foster,
From Distant Days.
79. Benjamin R. Foster, Douglas Frayne and Gary M. Beckman,
The Epic of Gilgamesh: A New Translation, Analogues,
Criticism (New York: Norton, 2001).
80. Andrew George,
The Babylonian Gilgamesh Epic: Introduction, Critical Edition and Cuneiform Texts (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2003).
81. Lambert,
Babylonian Creation Myths.
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