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A small Mesopotamian clay cuneiform foundation cone inscribed for King Sin-Kashid of Uruk image 1
A small Mesopotamian clay cuneiform foundation cone inscribed for King Sin-Kashid of Uruk image 2
Various Properties
Lot 3

A small Mesopotamian clay cuneiform foundation cone inscribed for King Sin-Kashid of Uruk

4 December 2025, 11:00 GMT
London, New Bond Street

£2,000 - £3,000

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A small Mesopotamian clay cuneiform foundation cone inscribed for King Sin-Kashid of Uruk

circa 1900-1700 B.C.
7.7.cm long

Footnotes

Provenance:
Alfred Russel Wallace OM FRS (1823–1913) Collection, acquired before 1944, thence by descent.
Pictures, Books & Prints; and Antique Furniture & Objects, Semley Auctioneers, Dorset, 23 January 2021, lot no.371.
Acquired by the present owner at the above sale.

Sîn-kāšid was the king of the Southern Babylonian city of Uruk during the 19th Century BC (his precise dating is debated). His building works include an enormous palace called the Ekituššaḫula, (House – Abode of Rejoicing) and the rebuilding of the temple called Eanna, (House of Heaven) are recorded on numerous bricks, tablets and cones such as this example which were imbedded in its walls.

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