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Amorites

The Amorites (/ˈæməˌrts/; Sumerian: 𒈥𒌅[1], romanized: MAR.TU; Akkadian: 𒀀𒈬𒊒𒌝, romanized: Amurrūm or 𒋾𒀉𒉡𒌝/𒊎 Tidnum; Hebrew: אֱמֹרִי, romanizedʾĔmōrī; Ancient Greek: Ἀμορραῖοι) were an ancient Northwest Semitic-speaking Bronze Age people from the Levant. Initially appearing in Sumerian records c. 2500 BC, they expanded and ruled most of the Levant, Mesopotamia and parts of Egypt from the 21st century BC to the late 17th century BC.

Cuneiform clay tablets from the Amorite Kingdom of Mari, 1st half of the 2nd millennium BC.

They established several prominent city-states in existing locations, such as Isin, Larsa, Mari and Ebla, and later founded Babylon and the Old Babylonian Empire. They also founded the Fourteenth Dynasty of Egypt in the Nile Delta, which was characterized by rulers bearing Amorite names such as Yakbim, and were likely part of the later Hyksos.[2][3] The term Amurru in Akkadian and Sumerian texts refers to the Amorites, their principal deity, and an Amorite kingdom. The Amorites are mentioned in the Hebrew Bible as inhabitants of Canaan both before and after the conquest of the land under Joshua.[4]

History edit

 
Various Amorite states (Yamhad, Qatna, Mari, Andarig, Babylon and Eshnunna) and Assyria c. 1764 BC

Third millennium BC edit

In two Sumerian literary compositions written long afterward in the Old Babylonian period, Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta and Lugalbanda and the Anzu Bird, the Early Dynastic ruler of Uruk Enmerkar (listed in the Sumerian King List) mentions "the land of the mar.tu". It is not known to what extent these reflect historical facts.[5]

 
Fifteenth dynasty of Egypt of the Hyksos, of whom the Amorites were part.

There are also sparse mentions about Amorites (often as MAR-DUki) in tablets from the East Semitic-speaking kingdom of Ebla, dating from 2500 BC to the destruction of the city in c. 2250 BC.[6] From the perspective of the Eblaites, the Amorites were a rural group living in the narrow basin of the middle and upper Euphrates in northern Syria.[7] The Eblaites used the term MAR.TU in an early time for a state and people east to Ebla (around Emar and Tuttul), which means the name Amurru for the west is later than the name for the state or the people.[8]

For the Akkadian kings of central Mesopotamia, MAR.TU was one of the "Four Quarters" surrounding Akkad, along with Subartu (north), Sumer (south), and Elam (east).[8] Naram-Sin of Akkad records in a royal inscription defeating a coalition of Sumerian cities and Amorites near Jebel Bishri in northern Syria c. 2240 BC.[9] His successor, Shar-Kali-Sharri, recorded in one of his year names "In the year in which Szarkaliszarri was victorious over Amurru in the Djebel Biszri".[10]

 
Artifacts from Amorite Kingdom of Mari, first half of 2nd millennium BC

By the time of the last days of the Third Dynasty of Ur, the immigrating Amorites had become such a force that kings such as Shu-Sin were obliged to construct a 270-kilometre (170 mi) wall from the Tigris to the Euphrates to hold them off.[11][12] The Amorites are depicted in contemporary records as nomadic tribes under chiefs, who forced themselves into lands they needed to graze their herds. Some of the Akkadian literature of this era speaks disparagingly of the Amorites and implies that the Akkadian- and Sumerian-speakers of Mesopotamia viewed their nomadic and primitive way of life with disgust and contempt. In the Sumerian myth "Marriage of Martu", written early in the 2nd millennium BC, a goddess considering marriage to the god of the Amorites is warned:

Now listen, their hands are destructive and their features are those of monkeys; (An Amorite) is one who eats what (the Moon-god) Nanna forbids and does not show reverence. They never stop roaming about ..., they are an abomination to the gods’ dwellings. Their ideas are confused; they cause only disturbance. (The Amorite) is clothed in sack-leather ... , lives in a tent, exposed to wind and rain, and cannot properly recite prayers. He lives in the mountains and ignores the places of gods, digs up truffles in the foothills, does not know how to bend the knee (in prayer), and eats raw flesh. He has no house during his life, and when he dies he will not be carried to a burial-place. My girlfriend, why would you marry Martu?[13]

As the centralized structure of the Third Dynasty of Ur slowly collapsed, the city-states of the south such as Isin, Larsa and Eshnunna, began to reassert their former independence, and the areas in southern Mesopotamia with Amorites were no exception.[14] Elsewhere, the armies of Elam were attacking and weakening the empire, making it vulnerable. Ur was eventually occupied by the Elamites. They remained until they were rejected by the Isin ruler Ishbi-Erra, which marked the beginning of the Isin-Larsa period.[15]

2nd millennium BC edit

 
One of the Ramesses III prisoner tiles, which is speculated by some scholars to represent an Amorite man.[16]

After the decline of Ur III, Amorite rulers gained power in a number of Mesopotamian city-states beginning in the Isin-Larsa period and peaking in the Old Babylonian period. In the north, the Amorite ruler of Ekallatum, Shamshi-Adad I conquered Assur and formed the large, though short-lived Kingdom of Upper Mesoptamia.[17] In the south, Babylon became the major power under the Amorite ruler Sumu-la-El and his successors, including the notable Hammurabi. Higher up the Euphrates, to the northwest, the Amorite kingdom of Mari arose, later to be destroyed by Hammurabi. Babylon itself would later be sacked by the Hittites, with its empire assumed by the Kassites. West of Mari, Yamhad ruled from its capital Halab, today's Aleppo, until it was destroyed by the Hittites in 16th century BC. The city of Ebla, under the control of Yamhad in this period, also had Amorite rulership.[18]

There is thought to have been an Amorite presence in Egypt from the 19th century BC. The Fourteenth Dynasty of Egypt, centred in the Nile Delta, had rulers bearing Amorite names such as Yakbim. Furthermore, increasing evidence suggests that the succeeding Hyksos of Egypt were an amalgam of peoples from Syria of which the Amorites were also part.[2] Based on temple architecture, Manfred Bietak argues for strong parallels between the religious practices of the Hyksos at Avaris with those of the area around Byblos, Ugarit, Alalakh and Tell Brak and defines the "spiritual home" of the Hyksos as "in northernmost Syria and northern Mesopotamia", areas typically associated with Amorites at the time.[3]

In 1650 BC, the Hyksos established the Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt and ruled most of Lower and Middle Egypt contemporaneously with the Sixteenth and Seventeenth dynasties of Thebes during the chaotic Second Intermediate Period.[19]

Fall edit

In the 16th century BC, the Amorite era ended in Mesopotamia with the decline and fall of Babylon and other Amorite-ruled cities. The Kassites occupied Babylon and reconstituted it under the Kassite dynasty under the name of Karduniaš around 1595 BC. In far southern Mesopotamia, the native First Sealand dynasty had reigned over the Mesopotamian Marshes region until the Kassites brought the region under their control. In northern Mesopotamia, the power vacuum left by the Amorites brought the rise of the Mitanni (Ḫanigalbat) c. 1600 BC.

From the 15th century BC onward, the term Amurru is usually applied to the region extending north of Canaan as far as Kadesh on the Orontes River in northern Syria.[20]

After the mid-2nd millennium BC, Syrian Amorites came under the domination of first the Hittites and, from the 14th century BC, the Middle Assyrian Empire. They then appear to have been displaced or absorbed by other semi-nomadic West Semitic-speaking peoples, known collectively as the Ahlamu during the Late Bronze Age collapse. The Arameans rose to be the prominent group amongst the Ahlamu.[20] From c. 1200 BC onward, the Amorites disappeared from the pages of history, but the name reappeared in the Hebrew Bible.[21]

Language edit

The language was first attested in the 21st-20th centuries BC and was found to be closely related to the Canaanite, Aramaic and Sam'alian languages.[22] In the 18th century BC at Mari Amorite scribes wrote in an Eshnunna dialect of east Semitic Akkadian language. Since the texts contain northwest Semitic forms, words and constructions, the Amorite language is thought to be a Northwest Semitic language. The main sources for the extremely limited extant knowledge of the Amorite language are the proper names and loanwords, not Akkadian in style, that are preserved in such texts.[23][15][24] Amorite proper names were found throughout Mesopotamia in the Old Babylonian period, as well as places as far afield as Alalakh in Turkey and modern day Bahrain (Dilmun).[25] They are also found in Egyptian records.[26]

Ugaritic is also a Northwest Semitic language and is possibly an Amorite dialect.[27]

Religion edit

A bilingual list of the names of ten Amorite deities alongside Akkadian counterparts from the Old Babylonian period was translated in 2022. These deities are as follows:[28]: 118–119 

  • Dagan, who is identified with Enlil. Dagan was the supreme god in many cities in the Upper Euphrates, especially at sites such as Mari, Tuttul, and Terqa. Babylonian texts refer to the chief god of the Amorites as Amurru (Ilu Amurru, DMAR.TU), corresponding to their name for the ethnic group. They also identify his consort as the goddess Asheratum.[29]
  • Kamiš, an otherwise poorly attested deity largely known from Akkadian and Amorite theophoric names. He was significant at Ebla, where a month was named after him. The bilingual identifies him with the god Ea though other god lists identify him with Nergal.
  • Aṯeratum, whose name is cognate with Asherah and is identified with Belet-ili.
  • Yaraḫum, the moon god, who is named Yarikh at Ugarit. He is identified with the Mesopotamian Sin.
  • Rašapum, equated with Nergal and also known from Ebla.
  • A god with an incompletely reconstructed name (possibly /ʔārum/) who is identified with Išum.
  • Ḫalamu, identified with Šubula, a deity in the netherworld god's circle.
  • Ḫanatum, who is here identified with Ištar.
  • Pidray, previously known only from the Late Bronze Age Ugaritic texts and later. In the bilingual list she is identified with Nanaya.
  • Aštiulḫālti, who is identified with Ištaran, the tutelary deity of the city of Der.

This list is not thought to represent a full Amorite pantheon, as it does not include important members such as the sun and weather deities.[28]: 139 

Biblical Amorites edit

 
Destruction of the Army of the Amorites by Gustave Doré.

The term Amorites is used in the Bible to refer to certain highland mountaineers who inhabited the land of Canaan, described in Genesis as descendants of Canaan, the son of Ham (Gen. 10:16). This aligns with Akkadian and Babylonian traditions that equated Syro-Palestine with the "land of the Amorites".[30] They are described as a powerful people of great stature "like the height of the cedars" (Amos 2:9) who had occupied the land east and west of the Jordan. The height and strength mentioned in Amos 2:9 has led some Christian scholars, including Orville J. Nave, who wrote the Nave's Topical Bible, to refer to the Amorites as "giants".[31]

In Deuteronomy, the Amorite king, Og, was described as the last "of the remnant of the Rephaim" (Deut 3:11). The terms Amorite and Canaanite seem to be used more or less interchangeably but sometimes, Amorite refers to a specific tribe living in Canaan[32]

The Biblical Amorites seem to have originally occupied the region stretching from the heights west of the Dead Sea (Gen. 14:7) to Hebron (Gen. 13:8; Deut. 3:8; 4:46–48), embracing "all Gilead and all Bashan" (Deut. 3:10), with the Jordan valley on the east of the river (Deut. 4:49), the land of the "two kings of the Amorites", Sihon and Og (Deut. 31:4 and Joshua 2:10; 9:10). Sihon and Og were independent kings whose people were displaced from their land in battle with the Israelites (Numbers 21:21–35)—though in the case of the war led by Og/Bashan it appears none of them survived and the land became part of Israel (Numbers 21:35). The Amorites seem to have been linked to the Jerusalem region, and the Jebusites may have been a subgroup of them (Ezek. 16:3). The southern slopes of the mountains of Judea are called the "mount of the Amorites" (Deut. 1:7, 19, 20).

The Book of Joshua speaks of the five kings of the Amorites were first defeated with great slaughter by Joshua (Josh. 10:5). Then, more Amorite kings were defeated at the waters of Merom by Joshua (Josh. 11:8). It is mentioned that in the days of Samuel, there was peace between them and the Israelites (1 Sam. 7:14). The Gibeonites were said to be their descendants, being an offshoot of the Amorites who made a covenant with the Hebrews (2 Samuel 21:2). When Saul later broke that vow and killed some of the Gibeonites, God is said to have sent a famine to Israel (2 Samuel 21:1).

In 2017, Philippe Bohstrom of Haaretz observed similarities between the Amorites and the Jews, since both historically existed as well-connected disaporic communities. He also believes that Abraham was among the Amorites who migrated to the Levant, around the same time that the Amorites conquered Ur at 1750 BC, due to his north Syrian heritage and shepherding-based lifestyles. Nonetheless, the Biblical authors only applied the Amorite ethnonym to the pre-Israelite inhabitants of the high mountains. Reasons include the polemical need to associate them with the "barbaric raw meat eating" Amorites that the Sumerians imagined them as. The authors also wanted to portray these inhabitants as having an ancient history. [33]

Origin edit

 
Terracotta of a couple, probably Inanna and Dumuzi, Girsu, Amorite period, 2000-1600 BC. Louvre Museum AO 16676.

There are a wide range of views regarding the Amorite homeland.[34] One extreme is the view that kur mar.tu/māt amurrim covered the whole area between the Euphrates and the Mediterranean Sea, the Arabian Peninsula included. The most common view is that the "homeland" of the Amorites was a limited area in central Syria identified with the mountainous region of Jebel Bishri.[35][36]

Genetics edit

Ancient DNA analysis on 28 human remains dating to the Middle and Late Bronze Age from ancient Alalakh, an Amorite city with a Hurrian minority, found that the inhabitants of Alalakh were a mixture of Copper age Levantines and Mesopotamians, and were genetically similar to contemporaneous Levantines.[37]

Racialism edit

The view that Amorites were fierce and tall nomads led to an anachronistic theory among some racialist writers in the 19th century that they were a tribe of "Aryan" warriors, who at one point dominated the Israelites. This belief, which originated with Felix von Luschan, fit models of Indo-European migrations posited during his time, but Luschan later abandoned that theory.[38] Houston Stewart Chamberlain claimed that King David and Jesus were both Aryans of Amorite extraction. The argument was repeated by the Nazi ideologue Alfred Rosenberg.[39]

However, the Amorites certainly spoke exclusively a Semitic language, followed Semitic religions of the Near East and had distinctly Semitic personal names. Their origins are believed to have been the lands immediately to the west of Mesopotamia, in the Levant (now Syria), and so they are regarded as one of the ancient Semitic-speaking peoples.[40][41][42]

Amorite states edit

References edit

  1. ^ Frankfort, H. (1939). Cylinder seals: a Documentary Essay on the Art and Religion of the Ancient Near East. MacMillan and Co., Pl. XXVIII e+i
  2. ^ a b Burke, Aaron A. (2019). "Amorites in the Eastern Nile Delta: The Identity of Asiatics at Avaris during the Early Middle Kingdom". In Bietak, Manfred; Prell, Silvia (eds.). The Enigma of the Hyksos. Harrassowitz. pp. 67–91. ISBN 9783447113328.
  3. ^ a b Bietak, Manfred (2019). "The Spiritual Roots of the Hyksos Elite: An Analysis of Their Sacred Architecture, Part I". In Bietak, Manfred; Prell, Silvia (eds.). The Enigma of the Hyksos. Harrassowitz. pp. 47–67. ISBN 9783447113328.
  4. ^ van Seters, John, "The Terms ‘Amorite’ and ‘Hittite’ in the Old Testament", Vetus Testamentum, vol. 22, no. 1, pp. 64–81, 1972
  5. ^ Katz, Dina, "Ups and Downs in the Career of Enmerkar, King of Uruk", Fortune and Misfortune in the Ancient Near East: Proceedings of the 60th Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale Warsaw, 21–25 July 2014, edited by Olga Drewnowska and Malgorzata Sandowicz, University Park, USA: Penn State University Press, pp. 201-210, 2017
  6. ^ Archi, Alfonso, "Mardu in the Ebla Texts", Orientalia, vol. 54, no. 1/2, pp. 7–13, 1985
  7. ^ Giorgio Bucellati, "Ebla and the Amorites", Eblaitica 3, pp. 83-104, 1992
  8. ^ a b Streck, Michael P., Das amurritische Onomastikon der altbabylonischen Zeit. Band 1: Die Amurriter, die onomastische Forschung, Orthographie und Phonologie, Nominalmorphologie, Ugarit-Verlag, 2000, p. 26
  9. ^ Westenholz, Joan Goodnick, "Chapter 6. Naram-Sin and the Lord of Apišal", Legends of the Kings of Akkade: The Texts, University Park, USA: Penn State University Press, pp. 173-188, 1997
  10. ^ F. Thureau-Dangin, Recueil des tablettes chaldéennes, Paris, 1903
  11. ^ Lieberman, Stephen J., "An Ur III Text from Drēhem Recording ‘Booty from the Land of Mardu.’", Journal of Cuneiform Studies, vol. 22, no. 3/4, pp. 53–62, 1968
  12. ^ Buccellati, G., "The Amorites of the Ur III Period", Naples: Istituto Orientale di Napoli. Pubblicazioni del Semionario di Semitistica, Richerche 1, 1966
  13. ^ Gary Beckman, "Foreigners in the Ancient Near East", Journal of the American Oriental Society, vol. 133, no. 2, pp. 203–16, 2013
  14. ^ [1] Clemens Reichel, "Political Change and Cultural Continuity in Eshnunna from the Ur III to the Old Babylonian Period", Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, University of Chicago, 1996
  15. ^ a b Michalowski, Piotr, "Chapter 5. The Amorites in Ur III Times", The Correspondence of the Kings of Ur: An Epistolary History of an Ancient Mesopotamian Kingdom, University Park, USA: Penn State University Press, pp. 82-121, 2011 ISBN 978-1575061948
  16. ^ L. E. R. (1908). "Egyptian Portraiture of the XX Dynasty". Museum of Fine Arts Bulletin. 6 (36): 48. JSTOR 4423408.
  17. ^ Wygnańska, Zuzanna, "Burial in the Time of the Amorites. The Middle Bronze Age Burial Customs From a Mesopotamian Perspective", Ägypten Und Levante / Egypt and the Levant, vol. 29, pp. 381–422, 2019
  18. ^ Matthiae, Paolo, "New Discoveries at Ebla: The Excavation of the Western Palace and the Royal Necropolis of the Amorite Period", The Biblical Archaeologist, vol. 47, no. 1, pp. 18–32, 1984
  19. ^ Ryholt, K. S. B.; Bülow-Jacobsen, Adam (1997). The Political Situation in Egypt During the Second Intermediate Period, C. 1800-1550 B.C. Museum Tusculanum Press. ISBN 978-87-7289-421-8.
  20. ^ a b Lawson Younger, K., "The Late Bronze Age / Iron Age Transition and the Origins of the Arameans", Ugarit at Seventy-Five, edited by K. Lawson Younger Jr., University Park, USA: Penn State University Press, pp. 131-174, 2007
  21. ^ John Van Seters, "The Terms ‘Amorite’ and ‘Hittite’ in the Old Testament", VT 22, pp. 68–71, 1972
  22. ^ Woodard, Roger D. (10 April 2008). The Ancient Languages of Syria-Palestine and Arabia. Cambridge University Press. p. 5. ISBN 9781139469340.
  23. ^ Gelb, I. J., "An Old Babylonian List of Amorites", Journal of the American Oriental Society, vol. 88, no. 1, pp. 39–46, 1968
  24. ^ [2] Ignace J. Gelb, "Computer-aided Analysis of Amorite", Assyriological Studies 21, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1980
  25. ^ Knudsen, Ebbe Egede, "An Analysis of Amorite: A Review Article", Journal of Cuneiform Studies, vol. 34, no. 1/2, pp. 1–18, 1982
  26. ^ Burke, Aaron (2013). "Introduction to the Levant During the Middle Bronze Age". In Steiner, Margreet L.; Killebrew, Ann E. (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of the Levant: c. 8000-332 BCE. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-166255-3.
  27. ^ Pardee, Dennis. "Ugaritic", in The Ancient Languages of Syria-Palestine and Arabia (2008) (pp. 5–6). Roger D. Woodard, editor. Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-68498-6, ISBN 978-0-521-68498-9 (262 pages).
  28. ^ a b George, Andrew; Krebernik, Manfred (2022). "Two Remarkable Vocabularies: Amorite-Akkadian Bilinguals!". Revue d'assyriologie et d'archéologie orientale. 116 (1): 113–66. doi:10.3917/assy.116.0113. S2CID 255918382.
  29. ^ Paul-Alain Beaulieu, The God Amurru as Emblem of Ethnic and Cultural Identity in "Ethnicity in Ancient Mesopotamia" (W. van Soldt, R. Kalvelagen, and D. Katz, eds.) Papers Read at the 48th Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Leiden, July 1–4, 2002 (PIHANS 102; Nederlands Instituut voor her Nabije Oosten, 2005) 31-46
  30. ^ Barton, George A. (1906). "Palestine before the Coming of Israel". The Biblical World. 28 (6): 360–373 – via JSTOR.
  31. ^ Nave's Topical Bible: Amorites, Nave, Orville J., Retrieved:2013-03-14
  32. ^ Levin, Yigal (8 October 2013). . TheTorah.com. Archived from the original on 28 January 2024.
  33. ^ Bohstrom, Philippe (6 February 2017). . Haaretz. Archived from the original on 26 January 2024.
  34. ^ Alfred Haldar, Who Were the Amorites (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1971), p. 7
  35. ^ Minna Lönnqvist, Markus Törmä, Kenneth Lönnqvist and Milton Nunez, Jebel Bishri in Focus: Remote sensing, archaeological surveying, mapping and GIS studies of Jebel Bishri in central Syria by the Finnish project SYGIS. BAR International Series 2230, Oxford: Archaeopress, 2011 ISBN 9781407307923
  36. ^ Zarins, Juris, "Early Pastoral Nomadism and the Settlement of Lower Mesopotamia", Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, no. 280, pp. 31–65, 1990
  37. ^ Skourtanioti, Eirini; Erdal, Yilmaz S.; Frangipane, Marcella; Balossi Restelli, Francesca; Yener, K. Aslıhan; Pinnock, Frances; Matthiae, Paolo; Özbal, Rana; Schoop, Ulf-Dietrich; Guliyev, Farhad; Akhundov, Tufan (28 May 2020). "Genomic History of Neolithic to Bronze Age Anatolia, Northern Levant, and Southern Caucasus". Cell. 181 (5): 1158–1175.e28. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2020.04.044. hdl:20.500.12154/1254. ISSN 0092-8674. PMID 32470401. S2CID 219105572.
  38. ^ "Are the Jews a Race?" by Sigmund Feist in "Jews and Race: Writings on Identity and Difference, 1880-1940", edited by Mitchell Bryan Hart, UPNE, 2011, p. 88
  39. ^ [3] Hans Jonas, "Chamberlain and the Jews", New York Review of Books, 5 June 1981
  40. ^ Who Were the Amorites?, by Alfred Haldar, 1971, Brill Archive
  41. ^ Semitic Studies, Volume 1, by Alan Kaye, Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, 1991, p.867 ISBN 9783447031684
  42. ^ The Semitic Languages, by Stefan Weninger, Walter de Gruyter, 23 Dec 2011, p.361 ISBN 9783110251586

Further reading edit

  • Albright, W. F., "The Amorite Form of the Name Ḫammurabi", The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures, vol. 38, no. 2, pp. 140–41, 1922
  • Bailey, Lloyd R, "Israelite ’Ēl Šadday and Amorite Bêl Šadê", Journal of Biblical Literature, vol. 87, no. 4, pp. 434–38, 1968
  • Burke, S., "Entanglement, the Amorite koine, and the Amorite Cultures in the Levant", Aram Society for the Syro-Mesopotamian Studies 26, pp. 357–373, 2014
  • Burke, Aaron A., "Amorites and Canaanites: Memory, Tradition, and Legacy in Ancient Israel and Judah", The Ancient Israelite World. Routledge, pp. 523–536, 2022 ISBN 9780367815691
  • George, Andrew, and Manfred Krebernik, "Two Remarkable Vocabularies: Amorite-Akkadian Bilinguals!", Revue d’assyriologie et d’archéologie orientale 116.1, pp. 113–166, 2022
  • Højlund, Flemming, "The Formation Of The Dilmun State And The Amorite Tribes", Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies, vol. 19, pp. 45–59, 1989
  • Homsher, R. and Cradic, M., "The Amorite Problem: Resolving a Historical Dilemma", Levant 49, pp. 259–283, 2018
  • [4] Howard, J. Caleb, "Amorite Names through Time and Space", Journal of Semitic Studies, 2023
  • Streck, Michael P., Das amurritische Onomastikon der altbabylonischen Zeit. Band 1: Die Amurriter, die onomastische Forschung, Orthographie und Phonologie, Nominalmorphologie, Ugarit-Verlag, 2000
  • Torczyner, H. Tur-Sinai, "The Amorite and the Amurrû of the Inscriptions", The Jewish Quarterly Review, vol. 39, no. 3, pp. 249–258, 1949
  • Vidal, Jordi, "Prestige Weapons in an Amorite Context", Journal of Near Eastern Studies, vol. 70, no. 2, pp. 247–52, 2011
  • Wallis, Louis, "Amorite Influence in the Religion of the Bible", The Biblical World, vol. 45, no. 4, pp. 216–23, 1915
  • Wasserman, Nathan, and Yigal Bloch, "The Amorites: A Political History of Mesopotamia in the Early Second Millennium BCE", The Amorites, Brill, 2023 ISBN 978-90-04-54658-5
  • Zeynivand, Mohsen, "A Cylinder Seal With An Amorite Name From Tepe Musiyan, Deh Luran Plain", Journal of Cuneiform Studies, vol. 71, pp. 77–83, 2019

External links edit

  • Cryptic lost Canaanite language decoded on 'Rosetta Stone'-like tablets – LiveScience – Tom Metcalfe – 30 January 2023
  • Two 3,800-year-old Cuneiform Tablets Found in Iraq Give First Glimpse of Hebrew Precursor – Haaretz – Jan 20, 2023
  • Amorites in the Jewish Encyclopedia

amorites, amorite, redirects, here, language, amorite, language, sumerian, 𒈥𒌅, romanized, akkadian, 𒀀𒈬𒊒𒌝, romanized, amurrūm, 𒋾𒀉𒉡𒌝, 𒊎, tidnum, hebrew, romanized, ʾĔmōrī, ancient, greek, Ἀμορραῖοι, were, ancient, northwest, semitic, speaking, bronze, people, fr. Amorite redirects here For the language see Amorite language The Amorites ˈ ae m e ˌ r aɪ t s Sumerian 𒈥𒌅 1 romanized MAR TU Akkadian 𒀀𒈬𒊒𒌝 romanized Amurrum or 𒋾𒀉𒉡𒌝 𒊎 Tidnum Hebrew א מ ר י romanized ʾĔmōri Ancient Greek Ἀmorraῖoi were an ancient Northwest Semitic speaking Bronze Age people from the Levant Initially appearing in Sumerian records c 2500 BC they expanded and ruled most of the Levant Mesopotamia and parts of Egypt from the 21st century BC to the late 17th century BC Cuneiform clay tablets from the Amorite Kingdom of Mari 1st half of the 2nd millennium BC They established several prominent city states in existing locations such as Isin Larsa Mari and Ebla and later founded Babylon and the Old Babylonian Empire They also founded the Fourteenth Dynasty of Egypt in the Nile Delta which was characterized by rulers bearing Amorite names such as Yakbim and were likely part of the later Hyksos 2 3 The term Amurru in Akkadian and Sumerian texts refers to the Amorites their principal deity and an Amorite kingdom The Amorites are mentioned in the Hebrew Bible as inhabitants of Canaan both before and after the conquest of the land under Joshua 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Third millennium BC 1 2 2nd millennium BC 1 3 Fall 2 Language 3 Religion 4 Biblical Amorites 5 Origin 5 1 Genetics 5 2 Racialism 6 Amorite states 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory edit nbsp Various Amorite states Yamhad Qatna Mari Andarig Babylon and Eshnunna and Assyria c 1764 BCThird millennium BC edit In two Sumerian literary compositions written long afterward in the Old Babylonian period Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta and Lugalbanda and the Anzu Bird the Early Dynastic ruler of Uruk Enmerkar listed in the Sumerian King List mentions the land of the mar tu It is not known to what extent these reflect historical facts 5 nbsp Fifteenth dynasty of Egypt of the Hyksos of whom the Amorites were part There are also sparse mentions about Amorites often as MAR DUki in tablets from the East Semitic speaking kingdom of Ebla dating from 2500 BC to the destruction of the city in c 2250 BC 6 From the perspective of the Eblaites the Amorites were a rural group living in the narrow basin of the middle and upper Euphrates in northern Syria 7 The Eblaites used the term MAR TU in an early time for a state and people east to Ebla around Emar and Tuttul which means the name Amurru for the west is later than the name for the state or the people 8 For the Akkadian kings of central Mesopotamia MAR TU was one of the Four Quarters surrounding Akkad along with Subartu north Sumer south and Elam east 8 Naram Sin of Akkad records in a royal inscription defeating a coalition of Sumerian cities and Amorites near Jebel Bishri in northern Syria c 2240 BC 9 His successor Shar Kali Sharri recorded in one of his year names In the year in which Szarkaliszarri was victorious over Amurru in the Djebel Biszri 10 nbsp Artifacts from Amorite Kingdom of Mari first half of 2nd millennium BCBy the time of the last days of the Third Dynasty of Ur the immigrating Amorites had become such a force that kings such as Shu Sin were obliged to construct a 270 kilometre 170 mi wall from the Tigris to the Euphrates to hold them off 11 12 The Amorites are depicted in contemporary records as nomadic tribes under chiefs who forced themselves into lands they needed to graze their herds Some of the Akkadian literature of this era speaks disparagingly of the Amorites and implies that the Akkadian and Sumerian speakers of Mesopotamia viewed their nomadic and primitive way of life with disgust and contempt In the Sumerian myth Marriage of Martu written early in the 2nd millennium BC a goddess considering marriage to the god of the Amorites is warned Now listen their hands are destructive and their features are those of monkeys An Amorite is one who eats what the Moon god Nanna forbids and does not show reverence They never stop roaming about they are an abomination to the gods dwellings Their ideas are confused they cause only disturbance The Amorite is clothed in sack leather lives in a tent exposed to wind and rain and cannot properly recite prayers He lives in the mountains and ignores the places of gods digs up truffles in the foothills does not know how to bend the knee in prayer and eats raw flesh He has no house during his life and when he dies he will not be carried to a burial place My girlfriend why would you marry Martu 13 As the centralized structure of the Third Dynasty of Ur slowly collapsed the city states of the south such as Isin Larsa and Eshnunna began to reassert their former independence and the areas in southern Mesopotamia with Amorites were no exception 14 Elsewhere the armies of Elam were attacking and weakening the empire making it vulnerable Ur was eventually occupied by the Elamites They remained until they were rejected by the Isin ruler Ishbi Erra which marked the beginning of the Isin Larsa period 15 2nd millennium BC edit nbsp One of the Ramesses III prisoner tiles which is speculated by some scholars to represent an Amorite man 16 After the decline of Ur III Amorite rulers gained power in a number of Mesopotamian city states beginning in the Isin Larsa period and peaking in the Old Babylonian period In the north the Amorite ruler of Ekallatum Shamshi Adad I conquered Assur and formed the large though short lived Kingdom of Upper Mesoptamia 17 In the south Babylon became the major power under the Amorite ruler Sumu la El and his successors including the notable Hammurabi Higher up the Euphrates to the northwest the Amorite kingdom of Mari arose later to be destroyed by Hammurabi Babylon itself would later be sacked by the Hittites with its empire assumed by the Kassites West of Mari Yamhad ruled from its capital Halab today s Aleppo until it was destroyed by the Hittites in 16th century BC The city of Ebla under the control of Yamhad in this period also had Amorite rulership 18 There is thought to have been an Amorite presence in Egypt from the 19th century BC The Fourteenth Dynasty of Egypt centred in the Nile Delta had rulers bearing Amorite names such as Yakbim Furthermore increasing evidence suggests that the succeeding Hyksos of Egypt were an amalgam of peoples from Syria of which the Amorites were also part 2 Based on temple architecture Manfred Bietak argues for strong parallels between the religious practices of the Hyksos at Avaris with those of the area around Byblos Ugarit Alalakh and Tell Brak and defines the spiritual home of the Hyksos as in northernmost Syria and northern Mesopotamia areas typically associated with Amorites at the time 3 In 1650 BC the Hyksos established the Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt and ruled most of Lower and Middle Egypt contemporaneously with the Sixteenth and Seventeenth dynasties of Thebes during the chaotic Second Intermediate Period 19 Fall edit In the 16th century BC the Amorite era ended in Mesopotamia with the decline and fall of Babylon and other Amorite ruled cities The Kassites occupied Babylon and reconstituted it under the Kassite dynasty under the name of Kardunias around 1595 BC In far southern Mesopotamia the native First Sealand dynasty had reigned over the Mesopotamian Marshes region until the Kassites brought the region under their control In northern Mesopotamia the power vacuum left by the Amorites brought the rise of the Mitanni Ḫanigalbat c 1600 BC From the 15th century BC onward the term Amurru is usually applied to the region extending north of Canaan as far as Kadesh on the Orontes River in northern Syria 20 After the mid 2nd millennium BC Syrian Amorites came under the domination of first the Hittites and from the 14th century BC the Middle Assyrian Empire They then appear to have been displaced or absorbed by other semi nomadic West Semitic speaking peoples known collectively as the Ahlamu during the Late Bronze Age collapse The Arameans rose to be the prominent group amongst the Ahlamu 20 From c 1200 BC onward the Amorites disappeared from the pages of history but the name reappeared in the Hebrew Bible 21 Language editMain article Amorite language The language was first attested in the 21st 20th centuries BC and was found to be closely related to the Canaanite Aramaic and Sam alian languages 22 In the 18th century BC at Mari Amorite scribes wrote in an Eshnunna dialect of east Semitic Akkadian language Since the texts contain northwest Semitic forms words and constructions the Amorite language is thought to be a Northwest Semitic language The main sources for the extremely limited extant knowledge of the Amorite language are the proper names and loanwords not Akkadian in style that are preserved in such texts 23 15 24 Amorite proper names were found throughout Mesopotamia in the Old Babylonian period as well as places as far afield as Alalakh in Turkey and modern day Bahrain Dilmun 25 They are also found in Egyptian records 26 Ugaritic is also a Northwest Semitic language and is possibly an Amorite dialect 27 Religion editA bilingual list of the names of ten Amorite deities alongside Akkadian counterparts from the Old Babylonian period was translated in 2022 These deities are as follows 28 118 119 Dagan who is identified with Enlil Dagan was the supreme god in many cities in the Upper Euphrates especially at sites such as Mari Tuttul and Terqa Babylonian texts refer to the chief god of the Amorites as Amurru Ilu Amurru DMAR TU corresponding to their name for the ethnic group They also identify his consort as the goddess Asheratum 29 Kamis an otherwise poorly attested deity largely known from Akkadian and Amorite theophoric names He was significant at Ebla where a month was named after him The bilingual identifies him with the god Ea though other god lists identify him with Nergal Aṯeratum whose name is cognate with Asherah and is identified with Belet ili Yaraḫum the moon god who is named Yarikh at Ugarit He is identified with the Mesopotamian Sin Rasapum equated with Nergal and also known from Ebla A god with an incompletely reconstructed name possibly ʔarum who is identified with Isum Ḫalamu identified with Subula a deity in the netherworld god s circle Ḫanatum who is here identified with Istar Pidray previously known only from the Late Bronze Age Ugaritic texts and later In the bilingual list she is identified with Nanaya Astiulḫalti who is identified with Istaran the tutelary deity of the city of Der This list is not thought to represent a full Amorite pantheon as it does not include important members such as the sun and weather deities 28 139 Biblical Amorites edit nbsp Destruction of the Army of the Amorites by Gustave Dore The term Amorites is used in the Bible to refer to certain highland mountaineers who inhabited the land of Canaan described in Genesis as descendants of Canaan the son of Ham Gen 10 16 This aligns with Akkadian and Babylonian traditions that equated Syro Palestine with the land of the Amorites 30 They are described as a powerful people of great stature like the height of the cedars Amos 2 9 who had occupied the land east and west of the Jordan The height and strength mentioned in Amos 2 9 has led some Christian scholars including Orville J Nave who wrote the Nave s Topical Bible to refer to the Amorites as giants 31 In Deuteronomy the Amorite king Og was described as the last of the remnant of the Rephaim Deut 3 11 The terms Amorite and Canaanite seem to be used more or less interchangeably but sometimes Amorite refers to a specific tribe living in Canaan 32 The Biblical Amorites seem to have originally occupied the region stretching from the heights west of the Dead Sea Gen 14 7 to Hebron Gen 13 8 Deut 3 8 4 46 48 embracing all Gilead and all Bashan Deut 3 10 with the Jordan valley on the east of the river Deut 4 49 the land of the two kings of the Amorites Sihon and Og Deut 31 4 and Joshua 2 10 9 10 Sihon and Og were independent kings whose people were displaced from their land in battle with the Israelites Numbers 21 21 35 though in the case of the war led by Og Bashan it appears none of them survived and the land became part of Israel Numbers 21 35 The Amorites seem to have been linked to the Jerusalem region and the Jebusites may have been a subgroup of them Ezek 16 3 The southern slopes of the mountains of Judea are called the mount of the Amorites Deut 1 7 19 20 The Book of Joshua speaks of the five kings of the Amorites were first defeated with great slaughter by Joshua Josh 10 5 Then more Amorite kings were defeated at the waters of Merom by Joshua Josh 11 8 It is mentioned that in the days of Samuel there was peace between them and the Israelites 1 Sam 7 14 The Gibeonites were said to be their descendants being an offshoot of the Amorites who made a covenant with the Hebrews 2 Samuel 21 2 When Saul later broke that vow and killed some of the Gibeonites God is said to have sent a famine to Israel 2 Samuel 21 1 In 2017 Philippe Bohstrom of Haaretz observed similarities between the Amorites and the Jews since both historically existed as well connected disaporic communities He also believes that Abraham was among the Amorites who migrated to the Levant around the same time that the Amorites conquered Ur at 1750 BC due to his north Syrian heritage and shepherding based lifestyles Nonetheless the Biblical authors only applied the Amorite ethnonym to the pre Israelite inhabitants of the high mountains Reasons include the polemical need to associate them with the barbaric raw meat eating Amorites that the Sumerians imagined them as The authors also wanted to portray these inhabitants as having an ancient history 33 Origin edit nbsp Terracotta of a couple probably Inanna and Dumuzi Girsu Amorite period 2000 1600 BC Louvre Museum AO 16676 There are a wide range of views regarding the Amorite homeland 34 One extreme is the view that kur mar tu mat amurrim covered the whole area between the Euphrates and the Mediterranean Sea the Arabian Peninsula included The most common view is that the homeland of the Amorites was a limited area in central Syria identified with the mountainous region of Jebel Bishri 35 36 Genetics edit Ancient DNA analysis on 28 human remains dating to the Middle and Late Bronze Age from ancient Alalakh an Amorite city with a Hurrian minority found that the inhabitants of Alalakh were a mixture of Copper age Levantines and Mesopotamians and were genetically similar to contemporaneous Levantines 37 Racialism edit The view that Amorites were fierce and tall nomads led to an anachronistic theory among some racialist writers in the 19th century that they were a tribe of Aryan warriors who at one point dominated the Israelites This belief which originated with Felix von Luschan fit models of Indo European migrations posited during his time but Luschan later abandoned that theory 38 Houston Stewart Chamberlain claimed that King David and Jesus were both Aryans of Amorite extraction The argument was repeated by the Nazi ideologue Alfred Rosenberg 39 However the Amorites certainly spoke exclusively a Semitic language followed Semitic religions of the Near East and had distinctly Semitic personal names Their origins are believed to have been the lands immediately to the west of Mesopotamia in the Levant now Syria and so they are regarded as one of the ancient Semitic speaking peoples 40 41 42 Amorite states editIn the Levant Amurru kingdom Ebla s Third Dynasty Mukish Qatna Ugarit Yamhad In Mesopotamia Andarig Apum First Babylonian Dynasty Ekallatum Mari s Lim Dynasty Ṭabetu Kingdom of Upper Mesopotamia In Egypt Fourteenth Dynasty of Egypt Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt References edit Frankfort H 1939 Cylinder seals a Documentary Essay on the Art and Religion of the Ancient Near East MacMillan and Co Pl XXVIII e i a b Burke Aaron A 2019 Amorites in the Eastern Nile Delta The Identity of Asiatics at Avaris during the Early Middle Kingdom In Bietak Manfred Prell Silvia eds The Enigma of the Hyksos Harrassowitz pp 67 91 ISBN 9783447113328 a b Bietak Manfred 2019 The Spiritual Roots of the Hyksos Elite An Analysis of Their Sacred Architecture Part I In Bietak Manfred Prell Silvia eds The Enigma of the Hyksos Harrassowitz pp 47 67 ISBN 9783447113328 van Seters John The Terms Amorite and Hittite in the Old Testament Vetus Testamentum vol 22 no 1 pp 64 81 1972 Katz Dina Ups and Downs in the Career of Enmerkar King of Uruk Fortune and Misfortune in the Ancient Near East Proceedings of the 60th Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale Warsaw 21 25 July 2014 edited by Olga Drewnowska and Malgorzata Sandowicz University Park USA Penn State University Press pp 201 210 2017 Archi Alfonso Mardu in the Ebla Texts Orientalia vol 54 no 1 2 pp 7 13 1985 Giorgio Bucellati Ebla and the Amorites Eblaitica 3 pp 83 104 1992 a b Streck Michael P Das amurritische Onomastikon der altbabylonischen Zeit Band 1 Die Amurriter die onomastische Forschung Orthographie und Phonologie Nominalmorphologie Ugarit Verlag 2000 p 26 Westenholz Joan Goodnick Chapter 6 Naram Sin and the Lord of Apisal Legends of the Kings of Akkade The Texts University Park USA Penn State University Press pp 173 188 1997 F Thureau Dangin Recueil des tablettes chaldeennes Paris 1903 Lieberman Stephen J An Ur III Text from Drehem Recording Booty from the Land of Mardu Journal of Cuneiform Studies vol 22 no 3 4 pp 53 62 1968 Buccellati G The Amorites of the Ur III Period Naples Istituto Orientale di Napoli Pubblicazioni del Semionario di Semitistica Richerche 1 1966 Gary Beckman Foreigners in the Ancient Near East Journal of the American Oriental Society vol 133 no 2 pp 203 16 2013 1 Clemens Reichel Political Change and Cultural Continuity in Eshnunna from the Ur III to the Old Babylonian Period Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations University of Chicago 1996 a b Michalowski Piotr Chapter 5 The Amorites in Ur III Times The Correspondence of the Kings of Ur An Epistolary History of an Ancient Mesopotamian Kingdom University Park USA Penn State University Press pp 82 121 2011 ISBN 978 1575061948 L E R 1908 Egyptian Portraiture of the XX Dynasty Museum of Fine Arts Bulletin 6 36 48 JSTOR 4423408 Wygnanska Zuzanna Burial in the Time of the Amorites The Middle Bronze Age Burial Customs From a Mesopotamian Perspective Agypten Und Levante Egypt and the Levant vol 29 pp 381 422 2019 Matthiae Paolo New Discoveries at Ebla The Excavation of the Western Palace and the Royal Necropolis of the Amorite Period The Biblical Archaeologist vol 47 no 1 pp 18 32 1984 Ryholt K S B Bulow Jacobsen Adam 1997 The Political Situation in Egypt During the Second Intermediate Period C 1800 1550 B C Museum Tusculanum Press ISBN 978 87 7289 421 8 a b Lawson Younger K The Late Bronze Age Iron Age Transition and the Origins of the Arameans Ugarit at Seventy Five edited by K Lawson Younger Jr University Park USA Penn State University Press pp 131 174 2007 John Van Seters The Terms Amorite and Hittite in the Old Testament VT 22 pp 68 71 1972 Woodard Roger D 10 April 2008 The Ancient Languages of Syria Palestine and Arabia Cambridge University Press p 5 ISBN 9781139469340 Gelb I J An Old Babylonian List of Amorites Journal of the American Oriental Society vol 88 no 1 pp 39 46 1968 2 Ignace J Gelb Computer aided Analysis of Amorite Assyriological Studies 21 Chicago University of Chicago Press 1980 Knudsen Ebbe Egede An Analysis of Amorite A Review Article Journal of Cuneiform Studies vol 34 no 1 2 pp 1 18 1982 Burke Aaron 2013 Introduction to the Levant During the Middle Bronze Age In Steiner Margreet L Killebrew Ann E eds The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of the Levant c 8000 332 BCE Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 166255 3 Pardee Dennis Ugaritic in The Ancient Languages of Syria Palestine and Arabia 2008 pp 5 6 Roger D Woodard editor Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 68498 6 ISBN 978 0 521 68498 9 262 pages a b George Andrew Krebernik Manfred 2022 Two Remarkable Vocabularies Amorite Akkadian Bilinguals Revue d assyriologie et d archeologie orientale 116 1 113 66 doi 10 3917 assy 116 0113 S2CID 255918382 Paul Alain Beaulieu The God Amurru as Emblem of Ethnic and Cultural Identity in Ethnicity in Ancient Mesopotamia W van Soldt R Kalvelagen and D Katz eds Papers Read at the 48th Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale Leiden July 1 4 2002 PIHANS 102 Nederlands Instituut voor her Nabije Oosten 2005 31 46 Barton George A 1906 Palestine before the Coming of Israel The Biblical World 28 6 360 373 via JSTOR Nave s Topical Bible Amorites Nave Orville J Retrieved 2013 03 14 Levin Yigal 8 October 2013 Who Was Living in the Land When Abraham Arrived TheTorah com Archived from the original on 28 January 2024 Bohstrom Philippe 6 February 2017 Peoples of the Bible The Legend of the Amorites Haaretz Archived from the original on 26 January 2024 Alfred Haldar Who Were the Amorites Leiden E J Brill 1971 p 7 Minna Lonnqvist Markus Torma Kenneth Lonnqvist and Milton Nunez Jebel Bishri in Focus Remote sensing archaeological surveying mapping and GIS studies of Jebel Bishri in central Syria by the Finnish project SYGIS BAR International Series 2230 Oxford Archaeopress 2011 ISBN 9781407307923 Zarins Juris Early Pastoral Nomadism and the Settlement of Lower Mesopotamia Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research no 280 pp 31 65 1990 Skourtanioti Eirini Erdal Yilmaz S Frangipane Marcella Balossi Restelli Francesca Yener K Aslihan Pinnock Frances Matthiae Paolo Ozbal Rana Schoop Ulf Dietrich Guliyev Farhad Akhundov Tufan 28 May 2020 Genomic History of Neolithic to Bronze Age Anatolia Northern Levant and Southern Caucasus Cell 181 5 1158 1175 e28 doi 10 1016 j cell 2020 04 044 hdl 20 500 12154 1254 ISSN 0092 8674 PMID 32470401 S2CID 219105572 Are the Jews a Race by Sigmund Feist in Jews and Race Writings on Identity and Difference 1880 1940 edited by Mitchell Bryan Hart UPNE 2011 p 88 3 Hans Jonas Chamberlain and the Jews New York Review of Books 5 June 1981 Who Were the Amorites by Alfred Haldar 1971 Brill Archive Semitic Studies Volume 1 by Alan Kaye Otto Harrassowitz Verlag 1991 p 867 ISBN 9783447031684 The Semitic Languages by Stefan Weninger Walter de Gruyter 23 Dec 2011 p 361 ISBN 9783110251586Further reading editAlbright W F The Amorite Form of the Name Ḫammurabi The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures vol 38 no 2 pp 140 41 1922 Bailey Lloyd R Israelite El Sadday and Amorite Bel Sade Journal of Biblical Literature vol 87 no 4 pp 434 38 1968 Burke S Entanglement the Amorite koine and the Amorite Cultures in the Levant Aram Society for the Syro Mesopotamian Studies 26 pp 357 373 2014 Burke Aaron A Amorites and Canaanites Memory Tradition and Legacy in Ancient Israel and Judah The Ancient Israelite World Routledge pp 523 536 2022 ISBN 9780367815691 George Andrew and Manfred Krebernik Two Remarkable Vocabularies Amorite Akkadian Bilinguals Revue d assyriologie et d archeologie orientale 116 1 pp 113 166 2022 Hojlund Flemming The Formation Of The Dilmun State And The Amorite Tribes Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies vol 19 pp 45 59 1989 Homsher R and Cradic M The Amorite Problem Resolving a Historical Dilemma Levant 49 pp 259 283 2018 4 Howard J Caleb Amorite Names through Time and Space Journal of Semitic Studies 2023 Streck Michael P Das amurritische Onomastikon der altbabylonischen Zeit Band 1 Die Amurriter die onomastische Forschung Orthographie und Phonologie Nominalmorphologie Ugarit Verlag 2000 Torczyner H Tur Sinai The Amorite and the Amurru of the Inscriptions The Jewish Quarterly Review vol 39 no 3 pp 249 258 1949 Vidal Jordi Prestige Weapons in an Amorite Context Journal of Near Eastern Studies vol 70 no 2 pp 247 52 2011 Wallis Louis Amorite Influence in the Religion of the Bible The Biblical World vol 45 no 4 pp 216 23 1915 Wasserman Nathan and Yigal Bloch The Amorites A Political History of Mesopotamia in the Early Second Millennium BCE The Amorites Brill 2023 ISBN 978 90 04 54658 5 Zeynivand Mohsen A Cylinder Seal With An Amorite Name From Tepe Musiyan Deh Luran Plain Journal of Cuneiform Studies vol 71 pp 77 83 2019External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Amorites Cryptic lost Canaanite language decoded on Rosetta Stone like tablets LiveScience Tom Metcalfe 30 January 2023 Two 3 800 year old Cuneiform Tablets Found in Iraq Give First Glimpse of Hebrew Precursor Haaretz Jan 20 2023 Amorites in the Jewish Encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Amorites amp oldid 1206713515, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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