The silver situla, here edited, is one of the few items of this type
which are well known from the royal Assyrian reliefs connected with the
ceremony of the tree. The inscription is a dedication of the ob ject by
the Urartian king Ispuini (ca. 825-810 B.C.) for his grandson Inuspua
who has here the otherwise unknown title of kib?ru (or kibarru). The
language is Assyrian and this is the first case of a non monumental
inscription of an Urartian king in this language. It is evident that an
Assyrian scribal school existed at the Urartian capital Tuspa, at least
at the time of Sarduri Ist, father of Ispuini, and now it is also
probable that a sort of bilinguialism was present within the leading
class of Urartu. The situla is to be dated around 810 B.C.