The Forschungskolleg Humanwissenschaften: Events
Thursday, 25 June 2026, 11:00
Forschungskolleg Humanwissenschaften, Am Wingertsberg 4, 61348 Bad Homburg
Forschungskolleg Humanwissenschaften of Goethe UniversityFKH colloquium
Hossein Badamchi (University of Teheran)
»Ordeal in Susa in its Old Babylonian Context«Abstract
(joint research project with Guido Pfeifer, Professor of Ancient Legal History at Goethe University Frankfurt)
The institution of ordeal occupied a significant place in the judicial systems of the ancient Near East, serving as a mechanism for resolving disputes when conventional evidence proved insufficient. This paper examines the practice and legal meaning of ordeal in Susa during the first half of the second millennium BCE, drawing on approximately 600 Akkadian legal texts from Susiana. These documents constitute the most important source for the study of law in Elam during the Old Babylonian period and offer a unique perspective on the interaction between local traditions and broader Mesopotamian legal culture.
The study focuses on references to the water ordeal in both judicial records and contractual documents. Particular attention is given to the terminology of ordeal, the role of the deity Šazi, and the differing functions of ordeal clauses in litigation and legal contracts. While previous scholarship has interpreted these references either as evidence of a river ordeal or as formulas invoking divine punishment, the present analysis argues that a distinction must be made between trial proceedings and contractual stipulations. Judicial texts indicate the use of a genuine river ordeal comparable to those attested elsewhere in the Old Babylonian world, particularly in the Mari archives, whereas contractual clauses may have functioned primarily as sanctions against false claims and breaches of legally protected agreements.
Through new collations, translations, and comparative analysis of the Susa corpus, this paper reassesses the nature of ordeal as both a judicial procedure and a legal-religious institution. By situating the Susian evidence within its broader Old Babylonian context, the study contributes to a deeper understanding of the relationship between law, evidence, divine authority, and social order in the ancient Near East.
The speaker
Hossein Badamchi is Associate Professor of Ancient Iranian History at the University of Tehran, and a Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Fellow. At present, he is a fellow at the Forschungskolleg Humanwissenschaften at the invitation Guido Pfeifer, Professor of Ancient Legal History at Goethe University Frankfurt.
Participation
Closed event. Contact: Beate Sutterlüty; E-mail: b.sutterluety@forschungskolleg-humanwissenschaften.de
In order to provide you with the best online experience this website uses cookies. Delete cookies
By using our website, you agree to the data protection declaration and to the use of cookies.
Learn more
I agree
Cookies are short reports that are sent and stored on the hard drive of the user's computer through your browser when it connects to a web. Cookies can be used to collect and store user data while connected to provide you the requested services and sometimes tend not to keep. Cookies can be themselves or others.
There are several types of cookies:
- Technical cookies that facilitate user navigation and use of the various options or services offered by the web as identify the session, allow access to certain areas, facilitate orders, purchases, filling out forms, registration, security, facilitating functionalities (videos, social networks, etc..).
- Customization cookies that allow users to access services according to their preferences (language, browser, configuration, etc..).
- Analytical cookies which allow anonymous analysis of the behavior of web users and allow to measure user activity and develop navigation profiles in order to improve the websites.
So when you access our website, in compliance with Article 22 of Law 34/2002 of the Information Society Services, in the analytical cookies treatment, we have requested your consent to their use. All of this is to improve our services. We use Google Analytics to collect anonymous statistical information such as the number of visitors to our site. Cookies added by Google Analytics are governed by the privacy policies of Google Analytics. If you want you can disable cookies from Google Analytics.
However, please note that you can enable or disable cookies by following the instructions of your browser.