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Professor Simo Parpola (honorary Assyrian)
by Assyrian Information Management (AIM)
Posted: Tuesday, April 20, 2010 at 02:03 PM CT
Professor
Simo Parpola is an Assyriologist, author, and historian who has inspired
millions of
Assyrians worldwide. As the world-renowned expert in Cuneiform and
Akkadian languages, he has given hope to
generations of Assyrians by providing research information explaining the
current characteristics of Assyrians in relation to our ancient ancestors.
Through extensive research and deciphering of clay tablets at the British Museum
and many archaeological sites in the Middle East, Dr. Parpola has brought a
clearer understanding of the multifaceted Assyrian empire.
For nearly 2,000 years, the Biblical view of
Assyria has been portrayed in a negative manner. Fortunately, Dr. Parpola's scientific research has deciphered an ancient
Assyrian empire with the ideology
and religion that are the foundations of today's western civilization.
In 1993, Dr. Parpola published his profound article “ The Assyrian Tree of
Life”. It has changed the world's view of the Assyrian empire, both for
its role in ancient and contemporary history, and has inspired Assyrians to
be prouder of their ancestors, heritage and culture.
These academic achievements were made possible by the University of Helsinki in
Finland, which has a remarkable 120-year Assyriological teaching and research
program. We hope the university grants permanent status to Assyriology to
ensure this tradition of academic excellence continues in Europe.
Assyriological
Studies in Finland (2007).
Dr. Parpola received his Ph.D. in Assyriology from the University of Helsinki in
1971 and is currently Professor of Assyriology at the University of Helsinki. He
has worked as an Associate Professor at the University of Chicago and as a
Visiting Professor at both the University of Padua and Hebrew University,
Jerusalem. He was also a research associate and Special Consultant for the
Chicago Assyrian Dictionary (CAD). He is the director of the Neo-Assyrian Text
Corpus project of the Academy of Finland. He is the Editor-in-Chief of
the State
Archives of Assyria (SAA). He has been an Editorial Board member of Mesopotamian
Civilizations at Johns Hopkins University. He is internationally recognized as
one of the foremost scholars on ancient Assyria, and has a long and impressive
list of article and book publications on various topics in Assyriology.
Assyrian
Identity in Ancient Times and Today
Assyrians
after Assyria
The Assyrian Tree of
Life
Assyrian
Prophecies, The Assyrian Tree, and The Mesopotamian Origins of Jewish
Monotheism, Greek Philosophy, Christian Theology, Gnosticism, and much more
The
Mesopotamian Soul of Western Culture
Assyrian
Library Records
Neo-Assyrian
Treaties from the Royal Archives of Nineveh
A
Letter from Šamaš-šumu-ukīn
to Esarhadden (680-669 B.C.)
More publications by Professor Simo
Parpola...
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The Helsinki Neo-Assyrian Dictionary
The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project
Director & Editor in Chief, Dr. Simo Parpola
- Hardcover, 356 pages, $50 US
- English-Assyrian (pages 1 to 189)
- Assyrian-English (pages 1 to 167)
Purchase Information:
Al-Itekal Bookstore
6307 N. Pulaski Road
Chicago, Illinois 60646 USA
Telephone: 773-463-4135 |
The Helsinki Neo-Assyrian Dictionary
The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project
Director &
Editor in Chief,
Dr. Simo
ParpolaEnglish/Assyrian - Assyrian/English
Dictionary: The Dawn of Civilization
(From the inside cover)
5000 years of Writing
Writing is Humankind's most far-reaching creation.
No other invention has had a
longer and greater impact. The history of writing and the history of mankind are
synonymous. Everything that happened prior to the invention of writing we label
prehistory. Non-verbal communication started with cave paintings. The oldest of
these are found in Chauvet, a cave in France. The drawings there were made in
35,000 BC. Some five billion people can read and write today, about 85 percent
of the world's population. The invention of writing provided a foundation upon
which all subsequent intellectual and technological progress has been built. We
enjoy the benefits of modem civilization today because of that foundation.
The transition from the spoken to the written word occurred because writing
meets certain needs so much more effectively. Subway ads, priceless first
editions, speedy e-mail — all can be traced to clay tokens, precursors of
writing, used to count goods in the Middle East. It gradually became, among the
people of Mesopotamia, first a form of memorandum, then a system for recording
spoken language, and, above all, an alternative medium for communication,
thought, and expression. Called cuneiform, it is a written form of the Sumerian
language. Developed from pictographic script, when pictures represented words,
cuneiform was a syllabic system. A wedge shaped instrument was impressed into
soft clay tablets. Cuneiform was used for over 3,000 years. While cuneiform
signs were spreading throughout Mesopotamia, other writing systems were
appearing and being developed in nearby and distant lands. From one end of the
world to the other, people, seeing writing as a divine gift, set themselves to
record their past on stone, clay, and papyrus. Among many other significant
achievements, the invention of cuneiform allowed the preservation of hymns,
divination texts, and what we have to describe as literature. Writing permits
analysis, precision, and communication with future generations in a way not
possible via the spoken word. It has helped preserve the three major
monotheistic religions. The invention of writing laid the foundation for the
development of a system of formal education.
Once cuneiform writing was fully evolved, it was sufficiently flexible to be
able to record other languages in addition to Sumerian, like Akkadian. In time
this writing system became that of the mighty kingdom of Assyria and of the
kingdom of Babylon, which rose to power in the 18th century BC. Written
fragments have been recovered, largely from the library of Assyrian king
Assurbanipal at Nineveh, of great Epics. These epics, which anticipate the great
Greek myths, in particular the Labors of Hercules, also contain an extraordinary
retelling of the flood story, which foreshadows the account in the Bible.
Writing has become the vehicle for the recording of historical events and for
the expression of the deepest religious and philosophical concerns of humanity.
Related Information
Professor Simo Parpola
publications |
List of SAA
publications
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Of God(s), Trees, Kings, and Scholars: Neo-assyrian and Related Studies in Honour of Simo Parpola
by Mikko Luukko, S. Svard, R. Mattila; Eisenbrauns, 2009.
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Assyrian-English
/ English-Assyrian Dictionary;
Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, 2007.
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Letters from Assyrian Scholars to the Kings Esarhaddon and Ashurbanipal;
(Illustrated, hardcover) Eisenbrauns, 2007.
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Letters from Assyrian Scholars to the Kings Esarhaddon and Ashurbanipal;
Eisenbrauns, 2007.
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The Babylonian Correspondence of Esarhaddon and Letters to Assurbanipal and Sin-sarru-iskun from Northern and Central Babylonia (State Archives of Assyria, Volme XVIII);
Helsinki University Press, 2003.
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Assyrian Dictionary | The Helsinki Neo-Assyrian Dictionary;
2002.
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Legal Transactions of the Royal Court of Nineveh, Part II: Assurbanipal Through Sin-Sarru-Iskun (State Archives of Assyria);
Helsinki University Press, 2002.
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Sex and Gender in the Ancient New East: Proceedings of the 47th Assrioloique Internationale;
Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, 2002.
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Helsinki Atlas of the Near East in the Neo Assyrian Period;
Kikimora Publications, 2001.
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The Correspondence of Sargon II, Part III: Letters from Babylonia and the Eastern Provinces (State Archives of Assyria);
Helsinki University Press, 2001.
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The
Prosopography of the Neo-Assyrian empire;
The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, 2000.
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The Standard Babylonian Epic of Gilgamesh;
The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, 1997.
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Grants,
Decrees and Gifts of the Neo-Assyrian period (State archives of Assyria); Helsinki University Press, 1997.
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Letters from Babylonia and the Eastern Provinces;
Helsinki University Press, 1997.
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Assyrian Prophecies (State Archives of Assyria, published by the Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project of the University of Helsinki in co-operation with Deutsche Orient-Gesellschaft);
Helsinki University Press, 1997.
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Assyria, 1995: Proceedings of the 10th Anniversary Symposium of the Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project Helsinki, September 7-11, 1995; The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, 1997.
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State Archives of Assyria: Imperial Administrative Records. Part II:
Provincial and Military Administration / [edited by] F.M. Fales and J.N.
Postgate, Volume 11; Helsinki University Press, 1995.
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Legal transactions of the Royal Court of Nineveh (State archives of Assyria);
Helsinki University Press, 1991.
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Correspondence of Sargon the Second: Letters from the Northern and Northeastern Provinces; Eisenbrauns, 1990.
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Neo Assyrian Treaties and Loyalty Oaths (State Archives of Assyria Ser, Vol 2);
Helsinki University Press, 1988.
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Letters from Babylonia and the Eastern Provinces;
Helsinki University Press, 1987.
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The Correspondence of Sargon Second, Part I: Letters Form Assyria and the West (State Archives of Assyria Ser, Vol 1);
Helsinki University Press, 1987.
-
Likalka ittatakku: Two notes on the morphology of the verb
"alaÌ,,ku" in Neo-Assyrian (Studia orientalia); Finnish
Oriental Society, 1984.
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Letters from Assyrian Scholars to the Kings Esarhaddon and Assurbanipal Part IIII;
1983.
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The alleged Middle/Neo-Assyrian irregular verb *nass
and the Assyrian sound change (Assur); Undena Publications, 1974.
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