Royal Inscriptions (21-29)
(21) Statue of Enmetena
CIRPL 31 (copy); D.R. Frayne, RIME 1, 219-222 (edition); G. Marchesi/N. Marchetti, MC 14, 176-179 (edition).
Photographs of the inscription can be found in C.J. Gadd, UET 1, pl. A-B, photographs of the statue in L. Woolley, UE 4, pl. 40.
(22) Gudea statue A
DC II, pl. VI-VII (copy); D.O. Edzard, RIME 3/1, 29f. (edition).
Photographs of this statue can be found in F. Johansen, Mesopotamia 6, pl. 1-4 and in E. de Sarzec, DC II, pl. 15 no. 5 and pl. 20.
(23) Gudea statue C
DC II, pl. XVI-XVII (copy); D.O. Edzard, RIME 3/1, 38-40 (edition).
Photographs of this statue can be found in F. Johansen, Mesopotamia 6, pl. 5-8 and in E. de Sarzec, DC II, pl. 10, pl. 13 no. 1.
(24) Gudea statue D
DC II, pl. XVII-XIX (copy); D.O. Edzard, RIME 3/1, 38-40 (edition).
Photographs of this statue can be found in F. Johansen, Mesopotamia 6, pl. 23-27 and in E. de Sarzec, DC II, pl. 9.
(25) Gudea statue F
DC II, pl. XVIII-XXV (copy); D.O. Edzard, RIME 3/1, 46-48 (edition).
Photographs of this statue are published in F. Johansen, Mesopotamia 6, pl. 28-32 and in E. de Sarzec, DC II, pl. 14 and pl. 15 nos. 2-4.
(26) Gudea statue H
DC II, pl. XXVIII (copy); D.O. Edzard, RIME 3/1, 50f. (edition).
Photographs of this staue are published in F. Johansen, Mesopotamia 6, pl. 33-36 and in E. de Sarzec, DC II, pl. 13 no. 4.
(27) Door socket
UVB 10, pl. 28 (copy); D.R. Frayne, RIME 3/2, 262-264 (edition); A. Becker, AUWE 6, 7 Nr. 26, Taf. 3 (description with photographs).
The door socket is currently in the Iraq Museum, Baghdad (IM 46207).
The four detail photographs are reproduced with kind permission of the Vorderasiatisches Museum, Berlin and the DAI/Orientabteilung.
(28) Dedicatory cone
LIH 58 (copy); D.R. Frayne, RIME 4, 347-349 (edition).
There are currently no photographs of this object or its duplicates available.
(29) Dedicatory cone
UET 8 84 (cone head); D.R. Frayne, RIME 4, 278f.
The collection database of the British Museum has a photograph of a duplicate (BM 122869) of this inscription. The cone is the second to left object in the photograph.