About
ePSD is an online lexicon of Sumerian, the world's earliest written language which has no relatives, living or dead. The project is housed at the Penn Museum because of its outstanding collection of ancient scribal excercises in Sumerian. Where: Sumer is located in the south of modern Iraq. Sumerian was used across the Ancient Near East from Iran to Turkey. When: ePSD will eventually cover all of Sumerian from the “Archaic” period, around 3200 BCE to the turn of the era. Researchers: Steve Tinney, Clark Research Associate Professor of Assyriology, Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, University of Pennsylvania. Project Overview: ePSD has created an online lexicon of Sumerian as it occurs in cuneiform texts from ancient Iraq, dating from about 2700 to1600 BCE. The lexicon consists of basic definitions of words, and can be searched in English. Words are linked from the lexicon entries to all the places where they occur in a corpus of about 90,000 texts. ePSD is designed to grow to keep pace with new scholarship and new texts.
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Belief system
Sumerian religion refers to spiritual beliefs practiced from ca. 4500-1900 BCE in Mesopotamia, or modern-day southern Iraq. Many deities were diffused into other Mesopotamian cultures.
Belief systems cited
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Library works
Website · 1997
The The Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature (ETCSL) is a digital project sponsored and hosted by the University of Oxford (Faculty of Oriental Studies). It contains ancient Sumerian literature that includes myths, proverbs, letters, king lists, and more. The project was started in 1997, led by Jeremy Black, and funding for it ended in 2006.
Website · 1998
The CDLI is a joint project of the University of California, Los Angeles, the University of Oxford, and the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin. The project is funded by various universities and donors in the hopes of cataloging, translating, and digitizing artifacts with in cuneiform script. The CDLI also releases online publications related to cuneiform.
Website · 2007
The CDLI:Wiki is an extension of the Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative (CDLI) project. It provides useful information about cuneiform studies: lists of artifacts, scholar biographies, and a list of abbreviations related to Assyriology.
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Cite this work
ChicagoTinney, Stephen J. "ePSD: Electronic Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary." Philadelphia, PA: Penn Museum, 2004. Created May 2004. Accessed September 3, 2022. http://psd.museum.upenn.edu/nepsd-frame.html.