Biblical Archaeology.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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religion, among them the storm deity Baal (title of Hadad) mentioned frequently in the Old Testament.
Moreover, the poetry of Ugarit has strong affinities with that ofthe Bible.
They share much in the way of vocabulary, structure, and the use of figures of speech and other literary devices.
In 1945, at ancient Naj‘Ḩamm ād ī in Upper Egypt, some 50 Gnostic writings in Coptic were discovered.
They could be dated to the 4th century AD, but investigation of their character and content showed that they were translations of Greek works of perhaps the 2nd century, thus placing them among the earliest known sources forGnostic Christianity.
These writings have proved invaluable for understanding the evolution of Christianity in Egypt, especially in its nonorthodox forms.
The completeNaj‘ Ḩamm ādī collection was published in English in 1977.
See Gnosticism.
Since 1964, an Italian expedition under the direction of Paolo Matthiae has exposed at ancient Ebla (modern Tell Mard īkh), in central Syria, royal palaces, a monumentalcity gate, rampart, temples, and private houses.
From 1974 to 1976, thousands of tablets and fragments of tablets belonging to the early Bronze Age (perhaps c.
2500BC) were found.
The tablets are written in cuneiform and represent two languages.
The first is Sumerian, for which cuneiform was devised, and the second is Semitic,the actual language of the Eblaites and of many other peoples scattered throughout the Middle East.
These texts have shed new light on commerce and culture in 3rd-millennium Syria and supplied considerable information about both languages at this stage of their evolution.
In 1979 the statue of a Syrian king was found at AlFakhkh ārīyah in the Habur region of Syria.
The statue, inscribed in Assyrian and Aramaic and dated around 1000 BC, could be of the greatest value for linguists, especially Aramaists, as this is one of the longest inscriptions of such an early date in that language.
Having a parallel text in Assyrian enhances its value.
See also Archaeology; Palestine.
Contributed By:Bruce E.
WilloughbyDavid Noel FreedmanMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
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