Question

Godefroy Goossens contradicted a thesis about a late ruler of this polity by pointing out his predecessor’s similar practice of designing building projects using temennu. A ruler from this polity dated the reign of Naram-Sin to 3900 BCE using foundation deposits at a temple site. An expedition under this polity discovered a statue of Sargon in the foundations of a temple at Sippar. Tri-lingual labels appeared next to artifacts in the world’s oldest known museum created by the daughter of this polity’s last ruler. That ruler of this polity, sometimes called the (*) world's first archaeologist, restored the Great Ziggurat of Ur and the Etemenanki in this polity's capital city. A lapis lazuli covered structure built under this polity attempted to emulate the style of Sumerian and Akkadian predecessors. (-5[1])For 10 points, name this empire where the Ishtar Gate and a possibly fictional Hanging Gardens were constructed (-5[1])under its kings Nabonidus (10[1])and Nebuchadnezzar (10[1])■END■

ANSWER: Neo-Babylonian Empire [or Chaldean Empire; or Second Babylonian Empire; prompt on Babylonian Empire or Babylonia; reject “First Babylonian Empire” or “Old Babylonian Empire”]
<Strombeck, Other History>
= Average correct buzz position

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Buzzes

PlayerTeamOpponentBuzz PositionValue
Johnathan ShaufUNC ADuke127-5
Eric GunterUNC BUNC Hunny145-5
Jacob EgolDukeUNC A14910
John StathisUNC HunnyUNC B15110

Summary

2024 ESPN @ Chicago03/23/2024Y667%0%83%141.00
2024 ESPN @ Columbia03/23/2024Y7100%43%14%100.29
2024 ESPN @ Duke03/23/2024Y2100%0%100%150.00
2024 ESPN @ Brown04/06/2024Y2100%0%0%118.50
2024 ESPN @ Cambridge04/06/2024Y2100%50%100%116.50
2024 ESPN @ Online06/01/2024Y3100%33%67%124.00