
Ancient
language dictionary completed after 90 years
An ambitious project to identify, explain and provide citations for
the words written in cuneiform on clay tablets and carved in stone by
Babylonians, Assyrians and others in Mesopotamia between 2500 B.C. and
A.D. 100 has been completed after 90 years of labor, the University of
Chicago announced on June 5.
To mark the completion of the 21-volume Chicago Assyrian Dictionary
(CAD) the Oriental Institute at the University, where the project was
housed, held a conference on June 6, during which scholars from around
the world discussed the significance of the achievement."I feel proud
and privileged to have brought this project home," said Martha Roth,
editor-in-charge of the dictionary and dean of Humanities Division at
the University of Chicago, who has been working on the project since
1979. "I feel this will be a foundation for how to do more dictionary
projects in the future."

Martha Roth, Editor in Charge of the Assyrian Dictionary at the
University of Chicago, puts the final volume in the set of
books.
(Credit: University of Chicago) |
"The Chicago Assyrian Dictionary is one of the most important and
unique contributions of the Oriental Institute to understanding the
civilizations of the ancient Near East," said Gil Stein, director of the
Oriental Institute. "The CAD is the single most impressive effort I know
of to systematically record, codify and make accessible the Akkadian
language that forms the heart of the textual record of civilization in
the place of its birth: Mesopotamia."The CAD is not simply a word list.
By detailing the history and range of uses of each word, this unique
dictionary is in essence a cultural encyclopedia of Mesopotamian
history, society, literature, law and religion and is an indispensable
research tool for any scholar anywhere who seeks to explore the written
record of Mesopotamian civilization," he added.
The Chicago Assyrian Dictionary project was started in 1921 by James
Henry Breasted, founder of the Oriental Institute and one of the
country's premier Middle Eastern archaeologists. It documents cultures
that developed in what is now Iraq.Although originally named after the
Assyrian language, scholars found that Assyrian was a dialect of another
Semitic language, Akkadian.
Over the years, researchers filled out millions of index cards with
references to the use of 28,000 words. The entries for each word denote
various meanings and reference the contexts and ways in which it was
used.In the final volume, for instance, the listing for the word umu,
meaning "day," covers 17 pages and documents its use. Robert Biggs,
professor emeritus at the Oriental Institute, worked on the dictionary
and also as an archaeologist on digs where he recovered tablets."You'd
brush away the dirt, and then there would emerge a letter from someone
who might be talking about a new child in the family, or another tablet
that might be about a loan until harvest time. ."They wrote these
tablets thousands of years ago, never meaning for them to be read so
much later, but they speak to us in a way that makes their experiences
come alive," he said.
- ScienceDaily |