Puabi

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Pu-Abi (Akkadian Lit. "Word of my Father") was an important personage in the Sumerian city of Ur who lived about 2600-2500 BCE, during the First Dynasty of Ur. While she is normally labeled as a "Queen", that title is somewhat in dispute. Puabi, known in Sumerian as "Shubad", was identified by several cylinder seals in her tomb. These seals indicate that she was a "Nin" a Sumerian word which can denote a Queen or a Priestess. It is entirely possible that Puabi was both, as in ancient times Kings and Queens held both supreme secular and religious power.

What is known about Puabi is despite the fact that she was an important figure among the non-semitic Sumerians, she was, in fact, a semite herself, belonging to the Akkadian people, neighbors of the ancient Sumerian cities. This is historically significant because it indicates a very high degree of cultural exchange and influence between the ancient Sumerians and their semitic neighbors.


[edit] The Tomb of Puabi

Sir Leonard Woolley[1], the famed British Archaeologist is credited with the discovery of the tomb of Pu-Abi, which was excavate along with some 1800 other graves at the "Royal Cemetery of Ur" by Woolley and his team between 1926 and 1932. Pu-Abi's tomb was nearly unique among the other excavations not only because of the large amount of incredibly high quality and well preserved grave goods, but also because her tomb had been untouched by looters through the millennia. She was also buried with five soldiers and 23 "ladies in waiting for", retainers who had apparently poisoned themselves (or been poisoned by others) to serve their mistress in the next world. The amount of grave goods that Woolley uncover in Pu-abi's tomb were staggering: A magnificent, if heavy, golden headdress made of golden leaves, rings, and plates, a superb lyre, complete with the golden and lapis-lazuli encrusted bearded bulls head, a profusion of gold table ware, golden, carnelian, and lapis lazuli cylindrical beads for extravagant necklaces and belts, a chariot adorned with lioness' heads in silver, and an abundance of silver, lapis lazuli, and golden rings and bracelets.

Image:Ur-head.jpg


The excavated treasures from Woolley's expedition were divided between the British Museum in London, the University of Pennsylvania Museum in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and the National Museum in Baghdad. Several pieces were looted from the National Museum in the aftermath of the Second Gulf War in 2003. Recently, several of the more spectacular pieces from Pu-Abi's grave have been the feature of a highly successful Art and History Museum tour through the United Kingdom and America.

[edit] External links

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Wooley, Leonard (1934). Ur Excavations II, The Royal Cementery. Page 73 & ss: London-Philadelphia. 


History of Sumer:
Notable Rulers of Sumer
Legendary Kings:  Alulim Dumuzid Ziusudra
First Dynasty of Kish Etana Enmebaragesi
First Dynasty of Uruk Enmerkar Lugalbanda Gilgamesh
First Dynasty of Ur Meskalamdug Mesannepada Puabi
Dynasty of Adab Lugal-Anne-Mundu
Third Dynasty of Kish Kubaba
First Dynasty of Lagash Ur-Nanshe Eannatum En-anna-tum I
Entemena Urukagina
Third Dynasty of Uruk Lugal-Zage-Si
Dynasty of Akkad Sargon Enheduanna Manishtushu
Naram-Sin Shar-Kali-Sharri Dudu Shu-turul
Second Dynasty of Lagash Gudea
Fifth Dynasty of Uruk Utu-hegal
Third Dynasty of Ur Ur-Nammu Shulgi Amar-Sin Shu-Sin Ibbi-Sin
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