Stock Photo - A boundary stone of Babylonia, 1000 BC (1922). Set up to mark the extent of a private individual's estate, the stone is inscribed with certain texts which refer to the ownwership of the land during the reigns of two kings, about 1000 BC. Held by the British Museum. From Peoples of All Nations, Their Life Today and the Story of Their Past, volume I: Abyssinia to the British Empire, edited by JA Hammerton and published by the Educational Book Company (London, 1922).

Stock Photo: A boundary stone of Babylonia, 1000 BC (1922). Set up to mark the extent of a private individual's estate, the stone is inscribed with certain texts which refer.

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