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Amat-Mamu : ウィキペディア英語版
Amat-Mamu
Amat-Mamu, fl. ca. 1750 BC, Sippar in ancient Babylonia, was a scribe whose existence is known from the cuneiform tablets on which she wrote.
Amat-Mamu was a Naditu priestess and temple scribe in Sippar, in ancient Babylonia. We know she lived in the ''gagum,'' a walled cloister precinct inhabited exclusively by women, similar to a convent.
Her name is known through Naditu documents that show Amat-Mamu was one of eight scribes within Sippar's ''gagum.'' Her career spanned the reigns of three kings, Hammurabi (1792–1750 BC), Samsu-iluna (1749–1712 BC), and Abi-eshuh (1711–1684 BC).〔
==References==

*(Biographical Notes on the Naditu Women of Sippar ) Rivkah Harris, Journal of Cuneiform Studies, Vol. 16, No. 1 (1962), pp. 1–12 Accessed September 2007


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