@prefix cito: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix foaf: . @prefix owl: . @prefix pleiades: . @prefix prov: . @prefix rdfs: . @prefix skos: . @prefix spatial: . a ; rdfs:label "Eʾesirkalama"; spatial:C , ; rdfs:comment "The temple of the god Pisangunuk, Eʾesirkalama (“House of the Street of the Land”), was located in the Kumar district of Babylon, in the western half of the inner city. According to the Babylonian topographical text Tintir = Babylon Tablet IV, it was one of seven temples in that part of Babylon."; foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf . a , ; dcterms:bibliographicCitation "BTTo Tintir IV", "George 1992 329", "George 2004 81 no. 238"; dcterms:creator ; dcterms:description "The temple of the god Pisangunuk, Eʾesirkalama (“House of the Street of the Land”), was located in the Kumar district of Babylon, in the western half of the inner city. According to the Babylonian topographical text Tintir = Babylon Tablet IV, it was one of seven temples in that part of Babylon."; dcterms:modified "2021-02-03T11:33:59-04:00"; dcterms:subject "ANE", "Babylonian"; dcterms:title "Eʾesirkalama"; cito:citesAsEvidence ; cito:citesForInformation , ; rdfs:seeAlso , ; owl:sameAs ; skos:altLabel "Eʾesirkalama"@sux, "bīt Pisangunuk"@akk; skos:inScheme ; prov:wasDerivedFrom [ rdfs:label "Pleiades" ]; pleiades:hasFeatureType , ; pleiades:hasName , . a ; dcterms:bibliographicCitation "BTTo Tintir IV"; dcterms:creator ; dcterms:description "Everyday Akkadian name of “the temple of the god Pisangunuk” (Eʾesirkalama)."; dcterms:modified "2021-02-03T11:33:59-04:00"; dcterms:subject "ANE", "Babylonian"; dcterms:title "bīt Pisangunuk"; cito:citesAsEvidence ; owl:sameAs ; prov:wasDerivedFrom [ rdfs:label "Pleiades" ]; pleiades:during ; pleiades:end_date -540; pleiades:nameRomanized "bīt Pisangunuk"; pleiades:start_date -720 . a ; dcterms:bibliographicCitation "BTTo Tintir IV"; dcterms:creator ; dcterms:description "The Sumerian ceremonial name Eʾesirkalama means “House of the Street of the Land.”"; dcterms:modified "2021-02-03T11:33:59-04:00"; dcterms:subject "ANE", "Babylonian"; dcterms:title "Eʾesirkalama"; cito:citesAsEvidence ; owl:sameAs ; prov:wasDerivedFrom [ rdfs:label "Pleiades" ]; pleiades:during ; pleiades:end_date -540; pleiades:nameRomanized "Eʾesirkalama"; pleiades:start_date -720 . a ; owl:sameAs , ; skos:inScheme ; skos:prefLabel "temple"@en; skos:scopeNote "A temple as defined by the Getty Art and Architecture Thesaurus term 300007595: \"Buildings housing places devoted to the worship of a deity or deities. In the strictest sense, it refers to the dwelling place of a deity, and thus often houses a cult image. In modern usage a temple is generally a structure, but it was originally derived from the Latin \"templum\" and historically has referred to an uncovered place affording a view of the surrounding region. For Christian or Islamic religious buildings the terms \"churches\" or \"mosques\" are generally used, but an exception is that \"temples\" is used for Protestant, as opposed to Roman Catholic, places of worship in France and some French-speaking regions."@en . a ; owl:sameAs ; skos:inScheme ; skos:prefLabel "unlocated"@en . a ; owl:sameAs , ; skos:inScheme ; skos:prefLabel "Neo-Assyrian/Babylonian Middle East (720–540 BC)"@en; skos:scopeNote "ME [[-720,-540]]"@en .