
Among the most representative objects not only of metallurgy, but of the Urartian kingship itself, there is a rather conspicuous group of bronze bowls bearing short inscriptions in cuneiform. These texts allow to attribute the ownership of these objects to a series of Urartian rulers. Since 2022, a new project has been underway to study comprehensively these objects, most of which are stored in the History Museum of Armenia. The present article deals with two bowls referable to king Minua, son of Išpuini, one of which, unpublished, bears an unfinished inscription. A reconstruction of this inscription is given based on microscopic analysis of the epigraph preparation marks.
Bronze bowls. Cuneiform inscriptions. Karmir-blur. Minua. Urartu, Languages and literature of Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania, PL1-8844
Bronze bowls. Cuneiform inscriptions. Karmir-blur. Minua. Urartu, Languages and literature of Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania, PL1-8844
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