-
Ludlul bēl nēmeqi ("I Will
Praise the Lord of Wisdom"), also
sometimes known in
English as The Poem of the
Righteous Sufferer, is a
Mesopotamian poem (ANET...
-
prayer to
Ninisina shares similar motifs with the
Prayer to
Marduk no.1 and
Ludlul bel nemeqi,
where Marduk's
anger is
blamed for some
certain ailment affecting...
- such as The
Babylonian Theodicy (sometimes
called The
Babylonian Job),
Ludlul bēl nēmeqi ("I Will
Praise the Lord of Wisdom" or "The Poem of the Righteous...
- (Sin-liqe-unninni',
Standard Babylonian version, 13th to 11th
century BC)
Ludlul Bel
Nemeqi "Neo-****yrian".
Archived from the
original on 11
August 2011...
- period.
Perhaps the most
notable were the Poem of the
Righteous Sufferer (
Ludlul bēl nēmeqi) and the
Babylonian Theodicy.
Included in this
group are a number...
- Carl Jung Book of Job in
Byzantine illuminated m****cripts
Moralia in Job
Ludlul bēl nēmeqi, the "Babylonian Job"
Testament of Job
Chapter 28, previously...
-
Autobiography 560–562 The
Mother of
Nabonidus Ludlul bēl nēmeqi 1.153 The Poem of the
Righteous Sufferer 596–600; 434
Ludlul Bēl Nēmeqi
Babylonian Theodicy 1.154...
- ("Daniel in the Lions' Den") is
based on the
classic Babylonian folk-tale
Ludlul Bel Nemeqi,
telling of a
courtier who
suffers disgrace at the
hands of evil...
- p. 187.
Takayoshi Oshima (2015).
Babylonian Poems of
Pious Sufferers:
Ludlul Bel
Nemeqi and the
Babylonian Theodicy. Mohr Siebeck. pp. 22–24.
Bruce Zuckerman...
-
Egyptian Instruction of Amenemope,
Papyrus Anastasi I 1300 BC:
Akkadian Ludlul bēl nēmeqi, the
Dream of Kurigalzu, The
Hemerology for ****-Maruttaš, Iqqur...