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#References

[1] Goh, D.H., Ng, P.K., 2007. Link decay in leading information science journals. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 58 (1), 15–24. doi.org/10.1002/asi.20513
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[2] Saberi, M.K., Abedi, H., 2012. Accessibility and decay of web citations in five open access ISI journals. Internet Research 22 (2), 234–247. doi.org/10.1108/10662241211214
(scholar.google.com/scholar?clu )

The Reception of the Marduk Prophecy in Seventh-Century B.C. Nineveh

This article discusses how the Marduk Prophecy was read and re-interpreted in Nineveh at that time. Between the Marduk Prophecy and the royal literature during the reign of Ashurbanipal, the following common themes can be recognized: (1) reconstruction of the Babylonian temples, above all Esagil; (2) conquest of Elam; and (3) fulfillment of divine prophecies. On the basis of these, the author proposes that in the seventh-century Nineveh the Marduk Prophecy was regarded as an authentic prophecy predicting the achievements of Ashurbanipal, and that this is the main reason why this text was read at his court.

Takuma SUGIE, The Reception of the Marduk Prophecy in Seventh-Century B.C. Nineveh, Orient, 2014, Volume 49, Pages 107-113, Released on J-STAGE April 03, 2017, Online ISSN 1884-1392, Print ISSN 0473-3851, doi.org/10.5356/orient.49.107.

#FreeAccess #Article #History #Histodon #Histodons #Ancient #Antiquity #Antiquidons #Orient #MiddleEast #NearEast #Marduk #Nebuchadnezzar #Ashurbanipal #Nineveh #Academia #Academic #Academics @histodon @histodons @antiquidons

J-STAGEThe Reception of the Marduk Prophecy in Seventh-Century B.C. NinevehThe Marduk Prophecy is a literary composition in the guise of prophetic speech by Marduk. It is supposed to be written to praise Nebuchadnezzar I’s tr …