The Amarna Letters: Diplomatic Correspondence In Ancient Egypt
A. Sutherland - AncientPages.com - Amarna Letters also known as Amarna Tablets are mostly diplomatic letters (with a few myths and epics) dated to an interesting, historical period in ancient Egypt, related to the reigns of pharaoh Akhenaten of the 18th Dynasty of Egypt and his wife Nefertiti, and Amenhotep III (1402-1364).
In 1887, local Egyptian peasants found a few tablets in the Akhenaten’s palace complex ruins.
Amarna Akkadian letter. Image credit: Capmo - Public Domain
Famous English Egyptologist William Matthew Flinders Petrie (1853 – 1942), was one the first excavators of the Amarna Tablets in 1891-92; later other archaeologists helped to reveal the rest of the documents.
There are 382 tablets written in cuneiform characters and 350 of them are letters), which can be found in museums of Berlin, London, and Cairo. The documents are written in the Akkadian language.
The Amarna Tablets were found in Amarna, now an archaeological site located near the modern city of Tell-Amarna (“Hill at El-Amarna”), with the remains of Akhenaten’s ancient capital.
They constitute a very important historical documents and reflect a cosmopolitan culture of the region, the so-called a "cuneiform culture" that throughout most of the second millennium extended to the east of Assyria and Babylonia, the Fertile Crescent, over into Asia Minor.
The Amarna letters still remain documents of the highest importance because they provide the rich evidence they provide for the social and political history of Syria and Palestine in the fourteenth century BC.
The tablets were diplomatic letters sent to Egypt from abroad, from the kings of Babylonia, Assyria, Hittites in Eastern Asia Minor, Mittani, and Cyprus. However, most of this correspondence was sent from vassal rulers in the neighboring region as for example from Ugarit, Syria-Palestine (Canaan, Lebanon, Ugarit, and the lands located in the region of the eastern part of the Mediterranean Sea.
The documents deal with a variety of subjects, such as exchange of gifts between rulers, news about events in distant Phoenician cities: Byblos, Tyre, various requests regarding food, military affairs, and diplomatic marriages.
There are also diplomatic letters dealing with serious concerns about military threats. A few tablets from Amarna are covered with legends and myths. There is, for example, the famous myth about Nergal and Ereshkigal, a famous, passionate love story that takes place in the Mesopotamian Underworld.
In 1992, William L. Moran (1921 – 2000), an American Assyriologist, translated the 350 Amarna Letters into English for the first time.
Written by – A. Sutherland - AncientPages.com Senior Staff Writer
Updated on June 19, 2023
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