SAA 19 085. “What Are the King my Lord’s Orders?” (CTN 5 p. 48)[via saao/saa19]
| Obverse | ||
| o 1o 1 | (1) To the king, [m]y lord: your servant Aššur-šallimanni. Good health to the kin[g], my lord! | |
| o 22 | ||
| o 33 | ||
| o 44 | (4) As to the order that the king, my lord, gave me: "Go, [let] them [occ]upy the fort." | |
| o 55 | ||
| o 66 | ||
| o 77 | (7) The king, my lord | |
| o 88 | [x x] ⸢x x⸣ [x x x] | |
| rest broken away | ||
| Reverse | ||
| rr | beginning broken away | |
| r 1'1' | [x x x x x x]+⸢x x x x⸣ | |
| r 2'2' | [x x x] ⸢x x x⸣ | (r 2) "Bring me [......], or I will immediately go to the Palace." |
| r 3'3' | ||
| r 4'4' | ||
| r 5'5' | (r 5) What are the king my lord's orders? | |
| r 6'6' | ||
| r 7'7' |
Adapted from Mikko Luukko, The Correspondence of Tiglath-Pileser III and Sargon II from Calah/Nimrud (State Archives of Assyria, 19), 2012. Lemmatised by Mikko Luukko, 2012, as part of the AHRC-funded research project “Mechanisms of Communication in an Ancient Empire: The Correspondence between the King of Assyria and his Magnates in the 8th Century BC” (AH/F016581/1; University College London) directed by Karen Radner. The annotated edition is released under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike license 3.0. Please cite this page as http://oracc.org/saao/P393637/.