Limestone boundary-stone (kudurru) from the time of Nabu-mukin-apli: consisting of a block of limestone, which has been roughly faced and rubbed down to take inscriptions, or sculptures in low relief, upon all four sides and on the top. The larger part of one side of the stone is carved with symbols, arranged in four registers, and portions of two other sides are devoted to a scene probably representing Nabu-mukin-apli sanctioning the original deed of gift. The symbols represented are as follows: Face C : First register, (1) Solar disc, (2) Eight-pointed star, (3) Crescent, (4) Horned headdress upon a shrine, (5) Horned headdress upon a shrine, (6) Turtle upon a shrine, (7) Twin spiral, upon a shrine ; Second register, (8) Spear-head upon a shrine, beside a horned dragon, (9) Wedge upon a shrine beside a horned dragon; Third register, (10) The goddess Gula seated upon a shrine, with a dog beside her, (11) Lamp, (12) Bird upon a perch, (13) Arrow; Fourth register, (14) Lion-headed mace, (15) Eagle-headed mace, (16) Lightning-fork, (17) Walking bird, (18) Scorpion; and, on the right of the four registers, (19) Serpent. The text contains a title-deed of an estate in the district of the city of Sha-mamitu, which had formerly been the property of Arad-Sibitti and his family, but passed through marriage to the family of Burusha, the jewel-worker. For several years previously there had been friction between the two families, and the deed of gift was afterwards repudiated. The text traces the history of the feud between the families from the beginning, and, after citing the legal evidence for the transfer of the estate to Burusha's family, it enumerates the payments by which Burusha succeeded in freeing the land from rival claims and in securing the confirmation of the original deed of gift.