Zabala (also Zabalam, modern Tell Ibzeikh site, Iraq) was a city of ancient Sumer in what is now the Dhi Qar governorate in Iraq. The cities
deity was Inanna of Zabala. The temple of Inanna in Zabalam is the subject of
hymn 26 in the temple hymns of Enheduanna.
History
The first mentions of Zabala are in seals from the
Jemdet Nasr Period including a list of early cites - Ur, Nippur, Larsa, Uruk, Kes, and Zabalam. The earliest historical record, a bowl inscription, indicates that Zabala was under the control of
Lugalzagesi of
Lagash.
In the Sargonic Period,
Shar-kali-sharri and
Naram-Sin both
reported building a temple to the goddess
Inanna in Zabala and
Rimush of
Akkad reports
Zabala as attempting to rebel against the control of the
Akkadian Empire. After the
fall of Akkad, Zabala came into the sphere of the city-state of
Isin as reported
by the year names of several rulers including
Itar-pisa and
Ur-Ninurta.
The town was later subject to
Abisare of
Larsa, who's year name reported the building of the
"Favorite of Inanna of Zabalam" canal.
During the
Ur III period, Zabala was controlled by the
Ur governor in
Umma
which was the capital of Umma Province.
Cuneiform texts state that
Hammurabi built Zabala's temple Ezi-Kalam-ma to the goddess
Innana.
Archaeology
Beginning in the early 1900s, a great deal of illegal excavation occurred in Zabala. This
activity reached a new height in the 1990s, at which time the Iraqi State Organization of Antiquities and Heritage appears to have authorized an official excavation, the
first at the site. It is not
clear that the results were ever published. A further outbreak of archaeological looting
at Zabala broke out after the 2003 war in Iraq.
Notes
See also
Cities of the Ancient Near East
References
External links