Amarna letters wikipedia - Search
Open links in new tab
  1. Amarna letters - Wikipedia

    • The Amarna letters are an archive, written on clay tablets, primarily consisting of diplomatic correspondence between the Egyptian administration and its representatives in Canaan and Amurru, or neighboring kingdom leaders, during the New Kingdom, spanning a period of no more than thirty years in the middle 14th century BC. The letters were found in Uppe… See more

    The letters

    These letters, comprising cuneiform tablets written primarily in Akkadian – the regional language of diplomacy for this period – were first discovered around 1887 by local Egyptians who secretly dug most of them from the rui… See more

    Amarna letters list

    Note: Many assignments are tentative; spellings vary widely. This is just a guide.
    William L. Moran summarizes the state of the chronology of these tablets as follows:
    Despite a long history of inquiry, the chronology … See more

     
    Kizdar net | Kizdar net | Кыздар Нет
  1. The Amarna Letters are a body of correspondence exchanged between the Pharaoh of Egypt, his client kingdoms, and the other Great Powers of the Near East. These letters are some of the earliest examples of diplomacy in human history. viii They were discovered in 1887 CE in El-Amarna, the former capital of the Pharaoh Akhenaten.
    www.forbes5.pitt.edu/article/diplomacy-ancient-nea…

    The Amarna letters (/ əˈmɑːrnə /; sometimes referred to as the Amarna correspondence or Amarna tablets, and cited with the abbreviation EA, for "El Amarna") are an archive, written on clay tablets, primarily consisting of diplomatic correspondence between the Egyptian administration and its representatives in Canaan and Amurru, or neighboring kingdom leaders, during the New Kingdom, spanning a period of no more than thirty...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amarna_letters
    The Amarna Letters are a body of 14th-century BCE correspondence exchanged between the rulers of the Ancient Near East and Egypt. They are perhaps the earliest examples of international diplomacy while their most common subjects are negotiations of diplomatic marriage, friendship statements, and exchanged materials.
    www.worldhistory.org/Amarna_Letters/
     
  2. Amarna letters localities and rulers - Wikipedia

     
  3. Amarna letter EA 1 - Wikipedia

  4. Amarna Letters | Egyptian, Pharaohs, Diplomacy | Britannica

  5. Diplomacy in the Ancient Near East - University of Pittsburgh

  6. Letters to Pharaoh: The Canaanite Amarna Tablets

    The Amarna Letters, a collection of cuneiform documents discovered in Egypt, provide a wealth of insights into diplomatic relations between Egypt and the kingdoms and empires of the Late Bronze Age.

  7. The Amarna Letters | Essay - The Metropolitan …

    The Amarna Letters are a group of several hundred clay tablets inscribed with cuneiform (“wedge-shaped”) writing that date to the fourteenth century B.C. and were found at the site of Tell el-Amarna, the short-lived capital of ancient …

  8. Amarna Letters - World History Encyclopedia

    Nov 6, 2015 · The Amarna Letters are a body of 14th-century BCE correspondence exchanged between the rulers of the Ancient Near East and Egypt. They are perhaps the earliest examples of international diplomacy …

  9. Amarna letter EA 364 - Wikipedia

  10. Amarna Letters - Ancient Egypt Online

    The Amarna Letters (also known as the “Amarna tablets”) are a set of clay tablets that were discovered in 1887 near to the ruins of Akhenaten’s city, Akhetaten (Amarna). A total of 382 tablets have been recovered, but many more were …

  11. El-Amarna - Jewish Virtual Library

  12. Category : Amarna letters - Wikimedia

  13. Amarna letters - New World Encyclopedia

  14. Mitanni Letter - Wikipedia

  15. Missives to the Egyptian Court - Biblical Archaeology Society

  16. Artifacts | Amarna Letters

  17. Amarna Letters Timeline - World History Encyclopedia

  18. Category:Amarna letters - Wikipedia

  19. Amarna letter EA 9 - Wikipedia

  20. Amarna letters - Wikipedia - Al-Quds University