Iqqur Ipuš (“he destroyed, he built”) is an ancient Mesopotamian menology, first described as "An Almanac fromancient Babylonia", a work recording favorable and inauspicious months in which one might choose to carry out a wide variety of enterprises, such as building works, ritual activities, etc. It exists in two forms, ordered by activity (“série générale”) and by month (“série mensuelles”), providing lists and tables for easy reckoning and was probably composed during the last third of the second millennium. Together with the astrological work, Astrolabe B, it is the most distinctly menological work within Mesopotamian literature.
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| - Iqqur Ipuš (“he destroyed, he built”) is an ancient Mesopotamian menology, first described as "An Almanac fromancient Babylonia", a work recording favorable and inauspicious months in which one might choose to carry out a wide variety of enterprises, such as building works, ritual activities, etc. It exists in two forms, ordered by activity (“série générale”) and by month (“série mensuelles”), providing lists and tables for easy reckoning and was probably composed during the last third of the second millennium. Together with the astrological work, Astrolabe B, it is the most distinctly menological work within Mesopotamian literature. (en)
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| - Iqqur Ipuš (“he destroyed, he built”) is an ancient Mesopotamian menology, first described as "An Almanac fromancient Babylonia", a work recording favorable and inauspicious months in which one might choose to carry out a wide variety of enterprises, such as building works, ritual activities, etc. It exists in two forms, ordered by activity (“série générale”) and by month (“série mensuelles”), providing lists and tables for easy reckoning and was probably composed during the last third of the second millennium. Together with the astrological work, Astrolabe B, it is the most distinctly menological work within Mesopotamian literature. (en)
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