Emar (modern
Tell Meskene,
Aleppo Governorate,
Syria) was an ancient
Amorite city on the great bend in the mid-
Euphrates in northeastern
Syria, now on the shoreline of the man-made
Lake Assad. It has been the source of many
cuneiform tablet, making it rank with
Ugarit,
Mari and
Ebla among the most important
archeological sites of
Syria. In these texts, dating from the 14th century BC to the fall of Emar in 1187 BC,Jean-Claude Margueron and Veronica Boutte, "Emar, Capital of Aštata in the Fourteenth Century BCE"
The Biblical Archaeologist 58.3 (September 1995:126-138); a single
Old Babylonian tablet was recovered. and in excavations in several campaigns since the 1970s, Emar emerges as an important
Bronze Age trade center, occupying a liminal position between the power centers of Upper Mesopotamia and Anatolia-Syria. Unlike other cities, the tablets preserved at Emar, most of them in
Akkadian and of the thirteenth century BC, are not royal or official, but record private transactions, judicial records, dealings in real estate, marriages, last wills, formal adoptions. In the house of a priest, a library contained literary and lexical texts in the Mesopotamian tradition, and ritual texts for local
cults.
History
Emar was strategically sited as a trans-shipping point where trade on the Euphrates was reloaded for shipping by overland route. In the middle of the third millennium BC Emar came under the influence of the rulers of
Ebla; the city...
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