Amarna letter EA 299

Amarna letter EA 299, titled: "A Plea for Help",[1] is a fairly short clay tablet Amarna letter from "governor" Yapahu of city-state Gazru. The clay tablet surface has been partially eroded, but the cuneiform is still mostly legible.

Amarna letter EA 299. Letter from Yapahu (ruler of Gezer) to the Egyptian pharaoh Amenhotep III or son Akhenaten. 14th century BCE. From Tell el-Amarna, Egypt. British Museum, London. ME 29832
EA 161, Obverse (slightly out-of-focus)
(Similar to EA 299)

The tablet is medium in color (lt tan—medium lt chocolate: (see here: )) and is about 12 cm tall, and a wide tablet, about 8.5 cm. The tablet is located in the British Museum, no. 29832.

The Amarna letters, about 300, numbered up to EA 382, are a mid 14th century BC, about 1360 BC and 30–35 years later, correspondence. The initial corpus of letters were found at Akhenaten's city Akhetaten, in the floor of the Bureau of Correspondence of Pharaoh; others were later found, adding to the body of letters.

The letter

EA 299: "A Plea for Help"

EA 299, letter number three of four from Yapahu of Gazru. (Not a linear, line-by-line translation.)[2]

Obverse (See here: ) (or High Def: )

Paragraph I
(Lines 1-11)To the king, my lord, my god, the Sun, the Sun [f]rom the sky: Message of Yapahu, the ruler of Gazru, your servant, the dirt at your feet, the groom of your horses. Truly I fall at the feet of the king, my lord, my god, my Sun, the Sun from the sky, 7 times and 7 times, on the stomach and on the back.
Paragraph II
(12-21)I have listened to the words of the messenger of the king, my lord, very carefully. May the king, my lord, the Sun from the sky, take thought for his land. Since the 'Apiru-(Habiru) are stronger than we, may the king, my lord, (g)ive1 me his help,..

Bottom Edge & Reverse (See here: )

(22-26)..and may the king, my lord, get me2 away from the 'Apiru lest the 'Apiru destroy us.(complete EA 299, with minor lacunae restored, lines 1-26)

Akkadian & Cuneiform text

Paragraph I
(Line 1)A-na[3] diš-lugal-EN-ia dingir-meš-ia( To Diš-King-Lord-mine, (of) dGod(S)-mine.. )
(2){d}-meš-ia {d}-utu ša -tu......( dGod{S}-mine, dSun-God, .. Which .. From .. )
(3)an-{ša10-me} um-ma diš-Ya-Pa-iYa.(..{d}-Sky; --///-- Message 1-Yapahu ! ..)
(4) ša iri-GaZ-Ri-ki.....( Man(Governor), .. "Which-(of)" iri-GaZRu-ki !! ) ( Town-GaZRu-ki )
(5)ARAD2-ka ep-ri ša giri3-meš-ka(.. Servant-yours, .. "The Dirt" Which-(at) Feet(S)-yours .. )
(6)-ku8- anše-KUR-ra-meš
(7)a-na 2(diš) giri3-meš Lugal-EN-ia
(8)dingir-meš-ia {d}-utu-ia {d}-utu
(9)ša -tu an-{ša10-me} 7(diš)-šu
(10)u 7(diš)-ta-a-an lu-ú am-qut-ma
(11)ka-bat-tum u s,e-ru-ma
Paragraph II
(12)-te-me a-wa-ti7-meš
(13)-dumu-ší-ip-ri ša Lugal
(14)EN-ia ma-gal ma-gal
(15)u li-im-li-ik Lugal-EN-ia
(16){d}-utu ša -tu an-{ša10-me}
(17)a-na kur-{ki}-šu a-nu-ma
(18)da-an-nu -SA-GAZ-meš

Akkadian

(1)Ana[4] 1-lugal-EN-ia dingir-meš-ia
(2){d}-meš-ia {d}-utu ša tu
(3)an-{ša10-me}, .. --///-- umma diš-YaPaiYa-(Yapahu) !
(4), .. ša iri-GaZ-Ri-ki-(Gazru) !!

Cuneiform score, Akkadian, English

Cuneiform score (per CDLI, Chicago Digital Library Initiative),[5] and Akkadian, and English.


Amarna letter EA 299. Letter from Yapahu (ruler of Gezer) to the Egyptian pharaoh Amenhotep III or son Akhenaten. 14th century BCE. From Tell el-Amarna, Egypt. British Museum, London. ME 29832

Obverse

Paragraph I, (lines 1-11)

1.A-na 1=dišlugal _EN_-ia _DINGIR-MEŠ_-ia
___Ana 1=dišŠÀR-ru Bēlu-ia, _DINGIR-MEŠ_-ia
___To 1=King Lord-mine, (of) Godspl.-mine
2. _{d}UTU_-ia _{d}UTU_ ša #-tu
___{d}dingir-ia,
___{d}God-mine,
2.4.------------ _{d}UTU_ ša #-tu
___---------------{d}Dingir, ša #tu
___---------------God, which from
3.an-{ša10-me} um-ma diš-Ya-Pa-iYa
___dingir-{ša10-me}
___(the)-Sky
3.4.-------------um-ma 1=dišYa-Pa-'i3
___-------------umma 1=dišYa-Pa-'i3
___---------------message 1Yapahu
4. ša iri-GaZ-Ri-ki



The Habiru/'Apiru

The mention of the Habiru shows the conflict of the time, as the takeover of city-states or regions by the Habiru. The map shows various cities and regions, and their respective dealings with the Habiru. (There are only 3 letters from Labaya of Šakmu/Shechem.) The next closest mention of the Habiru is from the Jerusalem letters of Abdi-Heba, directly south at Jerusalem, letters EA 286, 287, 288, 289, and EA 290.

Spellings for Habiru in the Amarna letters

See also

References

  1. Moran, William L. 1987, 1992. The Amarna Letters. EA 158, "A Plea for Help", pp. 340-341.
  2. Moran, William L. 1987, 1992. The Amarna Letters. EA 299, "A Plea for Help", pp. 340-341.
  3. EA 299 cuneiform text, CDLI (Digital Library)
  4. EA 299 cuneiform text, CDLI (Digital Library)
  5. EA 299, (Chicago Digital Library Initiative) CDLI page for EA 299
  • Moran, William L. The Amarna Letters. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1987, 1992. (softcover, ISBN 0-8018-6715-0)


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