Shulgi-simti is mainly known from the archive of her household providing much evidence for people working for her and her economic power. Her secretary was Maš-gu-la. Several messengers are known. Several men looked after her livestock. Although most of her texts come from Puzrish-Dagan, it seems that she actually lived in Ur.
The cuneiform text archive of Shulgi-simti was found by illegal excavations around 1909. The cuneiform tablets are now mainly in the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago and in the Montserrat Abbey in Spain. The texts in the archive mainly deal with a transaction in a religious foundation most likely made by Shulgi-simti. The archive stops with her death. The texts can be divided into two groups: incomes and expenditures. The texts provide the names of people working for Shulgi-simti and many further details about economic transactions. However, in comparison to other households, her estate seems to be rather modest.
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