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Book Cover for: The Magical Ceremony Maqlû: A Critical Edition, Tzvi Abusch

The Magical Ceremony Maqlû: A Critical Edition

Tzvi Abusch

The Akkadian series Maqlû, 'Burning', remains the most important magical text against witchcraft from Mesopotamia and perhaps from the entire ancient Near East. Maqlû is a nine-tablet work consisting of the text of almost 100 incantations and accompanying rituals directed against witches and witchcraft. The work prescribes a single complex ceremony and stands at the end of a complex literary and ceremonial development. Thus, Maqlû provides important information not only about the literary forms and cultural ideas of individual incantations, but also about larger ritual structures and thematic relations of complex ceremonies. This new edition of the standard text contains a synoptic edition of all manuscripts, a composite text in transliteration, an annotated transcription and translation.

"These were only minor remarks scribbled in the margins of an excellent and most welcome edition of Maqlû, a real monument. This book is the firm foundation on which future studies on Maqlû will be based." Marten Stol, NINO Leiden, Bibliotheca Orientalis lxxIII n° 5-6, September-December 2016

Book Details

  • Publisher: Brill
  • Publish Date: Nov 18th, 2015
  • Pages: 424
  • Language: English
  • Edition: Critical - undefined
  • Dimensions: 11.60in - 8.70in - 1.00in - 4.00lb
  • EAN: 9789004285149
  • Categories: OccultismAfrican

About the Author

Tzvi Abusch, Ph.D. (1972), Harvard University, is Cohen Professor of Assyriology and Ancient Near Eastern Religion at Brandeis University. His primary fields of publication are Mesopotamian religion and literature. Some of his early studies on Babylonian witchcraft are found in Mesopotamian Witchcraft (Brill, 2002). He is co-author along with Daniel Schwemer of Corpus of Mesopotamian Anti-witchcraft Rituals (Brill, 2011-).

Praise for this book

"This book is the firm foundation on which future studies on Maqlû will be based." -Marten Stol, Dutch Institute for the Near East, Bibliotheca Orientalis, vol. 73, no. 5-6 (2016)