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Mari, Syria

Mari (Cuneiform: ๐’ˆ ๐’Œท๐’† , ma-riki, modern Tell Hariri; Arabic: ุชู„ ุญุฑูŠุฑูŠ) was an ancient Semitic city-state in modern-day Syria. Its remains form a tell 11ย kilometers north-west of Abu Kamal on the Euphrates River western bank, some 120ย kilometers southeast of Deir ez-Zor. It flourished as a trade center and hegemonic state between 2900ย BC and 1759ย BC.[note 1] The city was purposely built in the middle of the Euphrates trade routes between Sumer in the south and the Eblaite kingdom and the Levant in the west.

Mari
ุชู„ ุญุฑูŠุฑูŠ (in Arabic)
Ruins of Mari
Shown within Near East
Mari, Syria (Syria)
Alternativeย nameTell Hariri
LocationAbu Kamal, Deir ez-Zor Governorate, Syria
Coordinates34ยฐ32โ€ฒ58โ€ณN 40ยฐ53โ€ฒ24โ€ณE / 34.54944ยฐN 40.89000ยฐE / 34.54944; 40.89000Coordinates: 34ยฐ32โ€ฒ58โ€ณN 40ยฐ53โ€ฒ24โ€ณE / 34.54944ยฐN 40.89000ยฐE / 34.54944; 40.89000
TypeSettlement
Area60 hectares (150 acres)
History
Foundedc. 2900ย BC
Abandoned3rd century BC
PeriodsBronze Age
CulturesEast-Semitic (Kish civilization), Amorite
Site notes
ArchaeologistsAndrรฉ Parrot
ConditionRuined
OwnershipPublic
Publicย accessYes

Mari was first abandoned in the middle of the 26th century BC but was rebuilt and became the capital of a hegemonic East Semitic state before 2500 BC. This second Mari engaged in a long war with its rival Ebla and is known for its strong affinity with Sumerian culture. It was destroyed in the 23rd century BC by the Akkadians, who allowed the city to be rebuilt and appointed a military governor (Shakkanakku). The governors became independent with the disintegration of the Akkadian Empire, and rebuilt the city as a regional center of the Euphrates valley. The Shakkanakkus ruled Mari until the second half of the 19th century BC, when the dynasty collapsed for unknown reasons. A short time later, Mari became the capital of the Amorite Lim dynasty. The Amorite Mari lasted only a short time before it was destroyed by Babylonia in c. 1761 BC, but it survived as a small settlement under the rule of the Babylonians and the Assyrians before being abandoned and forgotten during the Hellenistic period.

The Mariotes worshiped both Semitic and Sumerian deities and established their city as a major trading center. Although the pre-Amorite periods were characterized by heavy Sumerian cultural influence, Mari was not a city of Sumerian immigrants but a Semitic-speaking nation with a dialect similar to Eblaite. The Amorites were West Semites who began to settle the area before the 21st century BC; by the Lim dynasty (c. 1830 BC), they became the dominant population in the Fertile Crescent.

Mari's discovery in 1933 provided an important insight into the geopolitical map of ancient Mesopotamia and Syria, due to the discovery of more than 25,000 tablets explicating the state administration in the 2nd millennium BC and the nature of diplomatic relations among the political powers of the region. They also revealed the wide trading networks of the 18th century BC, which connected areas as far as Afghanistan in Southern Asia and Crete in the Mediterranean.

Name

ย 
"Country of Mari" (Cuneiform: ๐’ˆ ๐’Œท๐’† , Mari-ki), on the statue of Iddi-Ilum, c. 2090 BC

Written in Cuneiform ๐’ˆ ๐’Œท๐’†  (ma-riki),[1] the name of the city can be traced to Mer, an ancient storm deity of northern Mesopotamia and Syria, who was considered the patron deity of the city,[2] Georges Dossin noted that the name of the city was spelled identically to that of the storm god and concluded that Mari was named after him.[3]

History

The first kingdom

It is believed that Mari did not grow from a small settlement,[4] but was founded c. 2900 BC during the Mesopotamian Early Dynastic period I as a new city to control the waterways of the Euphrates trade routes connecting the Levant with the Sumerian south.[4][5] The city was built about 1 to 2 kilometers from the Euphrates river to protect it from floods,[4] and was connected to the river by an artificial canal 7 to 10 kilometers long whose route is hard to identify today.[6]

ย 
Mari's landmarks

The city is difficult to excavate as it is buried deep under later layers of habitation.[5] A circular flood embankment was unearthed,[5] containing an area 300 meters in length for gardens and craftsmen's quarters,[6] and a defensive circular internal rampart 6.7ย m thick[5] and 8 to 10 meters high, strengthened by defensive towers.[6] Other findings include one of the city gates, a street beginning at the center and ending at the gate, and residential houses.[5] Mari had a central mound,[7] but no temple or palace has been unearthed there.[5] A large building was however excavated (with dimensions of 32 m x 25 m), seemingly with an administrative function. It had stone foundations and rooms up to 12 meters long and 6 meters wide.[8] The city was abandoned c. 2550 BC at the end of the Early Dynastic period II, for unknown reasons.[5]

The second kingdom

Second Mariote Kingdom
Mari
c. 2500 BCโ€“c. 2290 BC
ย 
The second kingdom during the reign of Iblul-Il
CapitalMari
Commonย languagesMariote dialect
Religion
Mesopotamian
GovernmentMonarchy
Historical eraBronze Age
โ€ขย Established
c. 2500 BC
โ€ขย Disestablished
c. 2290 BC
Succeeded by

Around the beginning of Early Dynastic period III (earlier than 2500 BC)[9] Mari was rebuilt and populated again.[5][10] The new city kept many of the first city's exterior features, including the internal rampart and gate.[5][11] Also kept was the outer circular embankment measuring 1.9ย km in diameter, which was topped by a wall two meters thick capable of[11] protecting archers.[5]

ย 
Statue of Ebih-Il, a superintendent in Mari. (25th century BC)

However, the internal urban structure was completely changed[12] and the new city was carefully planned. First to be built were the streets that descended from the elevated center into the gates, ensuring the drainage of rain water.[5]

At the heart of the city, a royal palace was built that also served as a temple.[5] Four successive architectural levels from the second kingdom's palace have been unearthed (the oldest is designated P3, while the latest is P0). The last two levels are dated to the Akkadian period.[13] The first two levels were excavated;[13] the findings include a temple (Enceinte Sacrรฉe or Sacred Enclosure) dedicated to an unknown deity,[13][14] a pillared throne room, and a hall with three double wood pillars leading to the temple.[13]

Six smaller temples were discovered in the city, including the temple called the Massif Rouge (unknown dedication), and temples dedicated to Ninni-Zaza, Ishtarat,[15] Ishtar, Ninhursag and Shamash.[14] All the temples were located in the center of the city except for the Ishtar temple; the area between the Enceinte Sacrรฉe and the Massif Rouge is considered to have been the administrative center of the high priest.[14]

The second kingdom appears to have been a powerful and prosperous political center,[9] its kings held the title of Lugal,[16] and many are attested in the city, the most important source being the letter of king Enna-Dagan c. 2350 BC,[note 2][18] which was sent to Irkab-Damu of Ebla,[note 3]. In it, the Mariote king mentions his predecessors and their military achievements.[20] However, the reading of this letter is still uncertain and many interpretations have been presented by scholars.[21][22][23]

Mariโ€“Ebla war

ย 
Helmetted warrior with axe, Mari
ย 
Ishqi-Mari, king of the Second Kingdom of Mari, circa 2300 BC

The earliest attested king in the letter of Enna-Dagan is Ansud, who is mentioned as attacking Ebla, the traditional rival of Mari with whom it had a long war,[24] and conquering many of Ebla's cities, including the land of Belan.[note 4][23] The next king mentioned in the letter is Saสฟumu, who conquered the lands of Ra'ak and Nirum.[note 5][23] King Kun-Damu of Ebla defeated Mari in the middle of the 25th century BC.[27] The war continued with Iลกhtup-Iลกar of Mari's conquest of Emar[23] at a time of Eblaite weakness in the mid-24th century BC. King Igrish-Halam of Ebla had to pay tribute to Iblul-Il of Mari,[27][28] who is mentioned in the letter, conquering many of Ebla's cities and campaigning in the Burman region.[23]

Enna-Dagan also received tribute;[28] his reign fell entirely within the reign of Irkab-Damu of Ebla,[29] who managed to defeat Mari and end the tribute.[19] Mari defeated Ebla's ally Nagar in year seven of the Eblaite vizier Ibrium's term, causing the blockage of trade routes between Ebla and southern Mesopotamia via upper Mesopotamia.[30] The war reached a climax when the Eblaite vizier Ibbi-Sipish made an alliance with Nagar and Kish to defeat Mari in a battle near Terqa.[31] Ebla itself suffered its first destruction a few years after Terqa in c. 2300 BC,[32] during the reign of the Mariote king Hidar.[33] According to Alfonso Archi, Hidar was succeeded by Ishqi-Mari whose royal seal was discovered. It depicts battle scenes, causing Archi to suggest that he was responsible for the destruction of Ebla while still a general.[33][34]

Destruction of Mari by Sargon of Akkad

ย 
Soldiers, shell inlay. Mari

Just a decade after Ebla's destruction (c. 2300 BC middle chronology), Mari itself was destroyed and burned by Sargon of Akkad, as shown by one of his year names ("Year in which Mari was destroyed").[35][36][37][31] Michael Astour proposed the date as c. 2265 BC (short chronology).[38] Ishqi-Mari was probably the last king of Mari before the conquests by the Akkadian Empire.[39] Sargon of Akkad collected tribute from Mari and Elam:[40]

Sargon the King bowed down to Dagan in Tuttul. He (Dagan) gave to him (Sargon) the Upper Land: Mari, Iarmuti, and Ebla, as far as the Cedar Forest and the Silver Mountains

โ€”โ€‰Nippur inscription of Sargon[41][42]

The third kingdom

Third Mariote Kingdom
Mari
c. 2266 BCโ€“c. 1761 BC
ย 
The third kingdom during the reign of Zimri-Lim c. 1764 BC
CapitalMari
Commonย languagesAkkadian (official)
Amorite (ruling dynasty)
Mariote dialect (common)
Religion
ancient Levantine Religion
GovernmentMonarchy
Historical eraBronze Age
โ€ขย Established
c. 2266 BC
โ€ขย Disestablished
c. 1761 BC
Preceded by
Succeeded by

Mari was deserted for two generations before being restored by the Akkadian king Manishtushu.[43] A governor was appointed to govern the city who held the title Shakkanakku (military governor).[44] Akkad kept direct control over the city, which is evident by Naram-Sin of Akkad's appointment of two of his daughters to priestly offices in the city.[44]

The Shakkanakku dynasty

ย 
Puzur-Ishtar, Shakkanakku (Military Governor) of Mari, circa 2050 BC

The first member of the Shakkanakku dynasty on the lists is Ididish, who was appointed in c. 2266 BC.[note 6][46] According to the lists, Ididish ruled for 60 years[47] and was succeeded by his son, making the position hereditary.[48]

The third Mari followed the second city in terms of general structure,[49] phase P0 of the old royal palace was replaced by a new palace for the Shakkanakku.[50] Another smaller palace was built in the eastern part of the city,[7] and contained royal burials that date to the former periods.[51] The ramparts were rebuilt and strengthened while the embankment was turned into a defensive wall that reached 10 meters in width.[50] The former sacred inclosure was maintained,[50] so was the temple of Ninhursag. However, the temples of Ninni-Zaza and Ishtarat disappeared,[50] while a new temple called the "temple of lions" (dedicated to Dagan),[52] was built by the Shakkanakku Ishtup-Ilum and attached to it, was a rectangular terrace that measured 40 x 20 meters for sacrifices.[50][7][53]

Akkad disintegrated during Shar-Kali-Sharri's reign,[54] and Mari gained its independence, but the use of the Shakkanakku title continued during the following Third Dynasty of Ur period.[55] A princess of Mari married the son of king Ur-Nammu of Ur,[56][57] and Mari was nominally under Ur hegemony.[58] However, the vassalage did not impede the independence of Mari,[59][60] and some Shakkanakkus used the royal title Lugal in their votive inscriptions, while using the title of Shakkanakku in their correspondence with the Ur's court.[61] The dynasty ended for unknown reasons not long before the establishment of the next dynasty, which took place in the second half of the 19th century BC.[62][63][64]

The Lim dynasty

The second millennium BC in the Fertile Crescent was characterized by the expansion of the Amorites, which culminated with them dominating and ruling most of the region,[65] including Mari which in c. 1830 BC, became the seat of the Amorite Lim dynasty under king Yaggid-Lim.[64][66] However, the epigraphical and archaeological evidences showed a high degree of continuity between the Shakkanakku and the Amorite eras.[note 7][56]

Yaggid-Lim was the ruler of Suprum before establishing himself in Mari,[note 8][note 9][69] he entered an alliance with Ila-kabkabu of Ekallatum, but the relations between the two monarchs changed to an open war.[68][70] The conflict ended with Ila-kabkabu capturing Yaggid-Lim's heir Yahdun-Lim and according to a tablet found in Mari, Yaggid-Lim who survived Ila-kabkabu was killed by his servants.[note 10][68] However, in c. 1820 BC Yahdun-Lim was firmly in control as king of Mari.[note 11][70]

ย 
Goddess of the vase, Mari, 18th century BC

Yahdun-Lim started his reign by subduing seven of his rebelling tribal leaders, and rebuilding the walls of Mari and Terqa in addition to building a new fort which he named Dur-Yahdun-Lim.[72] He then expanded west and claimed to have reached the Mediterranean,[73][74] however he later had to face a rebellion by the Banu-Yamina nomads who were centered at Tuttul, and the rebels were supported by Yamhad's king Sumu-Epuh, whose interests were threatened by the recently established alliance between Yahdun-Lim and Eshnunna.[59][73] Yahdun-Lim defeated the Yamina but an open war with Yamhad was avoided,[75] as the Mariote king became occupied by his rivalry with Shamshi-Adad I of Shubat-Enlil, the son of the late Ila-kabkabu.[76] The war ended in a defeat for Mari,[76][77] and Yahdun-Lim was assassinated in c. 1798 BC by his possible son Sumu-Yamam,[78][79] who himself got assassinated two years after ascending the throne while Shamshi-Adad advanced and annexed Mari.[80]

The Assyrian era and the Lim restoration

Shamshi-Adad appointed his son Yasmah-Adad on the throne of Mari, the new king married Yahdun-Lim's daughter,[81][82] while the rest of the Lim family took refuge in Yamhad,[83] and the annexation was officially justified by what Shamshi-Adad considered sinful acts on the side of the Lim family.[84] To strengthen his position against his new enemy Yamhad, Shamshi-Adad married Yasmah-Adad to Betlum, the daughter of Ishi-Addu of Qatna.[82] However, Yasmah-Adad neglected his bride causing a crisis with Qatna, and he proved to be an unable leader causing the rage of his father who died in c. 1776 BC,[82][85][86] while the armies of Yarim-Lim I of Yamhad were advancing in support of Zimri-Lim, the heir of the Lim dynasty.[note 12][86]

ย 
Investiture of Zimri-Lim (18th century BC)

As Zimri-Lim advanced, a leader of the Banu-Simaal (Zimri-Lim's tribe) overthrew Yasmah-Adad,[88] opening the road for Zimri-Lim who arrived a few months after Yasmah-Adad's escape,[89] and married princess Shibtu the daughter of Yarim-Lim I a short time after his enthronement in c. 1776 BC.[86] Zimri-Lim's ascension to the throne with the help of Yarim-Lim I affected Mari's status, Zimri-Lim referred to Yarim-Lim as his father, and the Yamhadite king was able to order Mari as the mediator between Yamhad's main deity Hadad and Zimri-Lim, who declared himself a servant of Hadad.[90]

Zimri-Lim started his reign with a campaign against the Banu-Yamina, he also established alliances with Eshnunna and Hammurabi of Babylon,[83] and sent his armies to aid the Babylonians.[91] The new king directed his expansion policy toward the north in the Upper Khabur region, which was named Idamaraz,[92] where he subjugated the local petty kingdoms in the region such as Urkesh,[93] and Talhayum, forcing them into vassalage.[94] The expansion was met by the resistance of Qarni-Lim, the king of Andarig,[95] whom Zimri-Lim defeated, securing the Mariote control over the region in c. 1771 BC,[96] and the kingdom prospered as a trading center and entered a period of relative peace.[86] Zimri-Lim's greatest heritage was the renovation of the Royal Palace, which was expanded greatly to contain 275 rooms,[7][97] exquisite artifacts such as The Goddess of the Vase statue,[98] and a royal archive that contained thousands of tablets.[99]

The relations with Babylon worsened with a dispute over the city of Hฤซt that consumed much time in negotiations,[100] during which a war against Elam involved both kingdoms in c. 1765 BC.[101] Finally, the kingdom was invaded by Hammurabi who defeated Zimri-Lim in battle in c. 1761 BC and ended the Lim dynasty,[102] while Terqa became the capital of a rump state named the Kingdom of Hana.[103]

Later periods

ย 
Shamash-Risha-Usur (c. 760 BC)

Mari survived the destruction and rebelled against Babylon in c. 1759 BC, causing Hammurabi to destroy the whole city.[104] However, by an act of mercy Hammurabi allowed Mari to survive as a small village under Babylonian administration.[104] Later, Mari became part of Assyria and was listed among the territories conquered by the Assyrian king Tukulti-Ninurta I (reigned 1243โ€“1207 BC).[105] Afterward, Mari constantly changed hands between Assyria and Babylon.[105]

In the middle of the eleventh century BC, Mari became part of Hana whose king Tukulti-Mer took the title king of Mari and rebelled against Assyria, causing the Assyrian king Ashur-bel-kala to attack the city.[105] Mari came firmly under the authority of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, and was assigned in the first half of the 8th century BC to a certain Nergal-Erish to govern under the authority of king Adad-Nirari III (reigned 810โ€“783 BC).[105] In c. 760 BC, Shamash-Risha-Usur,[106] an autonomous governor ruling parts of the upper middle Euphrates under the nominal authority of Ashur-dan III, styled himself the governor of the lands of Suhu and Mari, so did his son Ninurta-Kudurri-Usur.[105] However, by that time, Mari was known to be located in the so-called Land of Laqe,[note 13] making it unlikely that the Usur family actually controlled it, and suggesting that the title was employed out of historical reasons.[105] The city continued as a small settlement until the Hellenistic period before disappearing from records.[105]

By 2015, ISIS devasted and looted systematically the site and specially the royal palace.[108] It was one of the first archaeological sites to be occupied by this group.[109]

People, language and government

ย 
A Mariote from the second kingdom. (25th century BC)

The founders of the first city may have been Sumerians or more probably East Semitic speaking people from Terqa in the north.[4] I. J. Gelb relates Mari's foundation with the Kish civilization,[110] which was a cultural entity of East Semitic speaking populations, that stretched from the center of Mesopotamia to Ebla in the western Levant.[111]

At its height, the second city was the home of about 40,000 people.[112] This population was East-Semitic speaking one, and used a dialect much similar to the language of Ebla (the Eblaite language),[10][113] while the Shakkanakku period had an East-Semitic Akkadian speaking population.[114] West Semitic names started to be attested in Mari since the second kingdom era,[115] and by the middle Bronze-Age, the west Semitic Amorite tribes became the majority of the pastoral groups in the middle Euphrates and Khabur valleys.[116] Amorite names started to be observed in the city toward the end of the Shakkanakku period, even among the ruling dynasty members.[117]

ย 
Statues from Mari in the National Museum of Aleppo.

During the Lim era, the population became predominantly Amorite but also included Akkadian named people,[note 14] and although the Amorite language became the dominant tongue, Akkadian remained the language of writing.[118][119][120] The pastoral Amorites in Mari were called the Haneans, a term that indicate nomads in general,[121] those Haneans were split into the Banu-Yamina (sons of the right) and Banu-Simaal (sons of the left), with the ruling house belonging to the Banu-Simaal branch.[121] The kingdom was also a home to tribes of Suteans who lived in the district of Terqa.[122]

Mari was an absolute monarchy, with the king controlling every aspect of the administration, helped by the scribes who played the role of administrators.[123][124] During the Lim era, Mari was divided into four provinces in addition to the capital, the provincial seats were located at Terqa, Saggaratum, Qattunan and Tuttul. Each province had its own bureaucracy,[124] the government supplied the villagers with ploughs and agricultural equipments, in return for a share in the harvest.[125]

Culture and religion

ย 
A Mariote woman. (25th century BC)

The first and second kingdoms were heavily influenced by the Sumerian south.[126] The society was led by an urban oligarchy,[127] and the citizens were well known for elaborate hair styles and dress.[128][129] The calendar was based on a solar year divided into twelve months, and was the same calendar used in Ebla "the old Eblaite calendar".[130][131] Scribes wrote in Sumerian language and the art was indistinguishable from Sumerian art, so was the architectural style.[132]

Mesopotamian influence continued to affect Mari's culture during the Amorite period,[133] which is evident in the Babylonian scribal style used in the city.[134] However, it was less influential than the former periods and a distinct Syrian style prevailed, which is noticeable in the seals of kings, which reflect a clear Syrian origin.[133] The society was a tribal one,[135] it consisted mostly of farmers and nomads (Haneans),[136] and in contrast to Mesopotamia, the temple had a minor role in everyday life as the power was mostly invested in the palace.[137] Women enjoyed a relative equality to men,[138] queen Shibtu ruled in her husband's name while he was away, and had an extensive administrative role and authority over her husband's highest officials.[139]

The Pantheon included both Sumerian and Semitic deities,[140] and throughout most of its history, Dagan was Mari's head of the Pantheon,[141] while Mer was the patron deity.[2] Other deities included the Semitic deities; Ishtar the goddess of fertility,[140] Athtar,[142] and Shamash, the Sun god who was regarded among the city most important deities,[143] and believed to be all-knowing and all-seeing.[144] Sumerian deities included Ninhursag,[140] Dumuzi,[145] Enki, Anu, and Enlil.[146] Prophecy had an important role for the society, temples included prophets,[147] who gave council to the king and participated in the religious festivals.[148]

Economy

The first Mari provided the oldest wheel workshop yet discovered in Syria,[149] and was a center of bronze metallurgy.[4] The city also contained districts devoted to smelting, dyeing and pottery manufacture,[13] using charcoal brought by river boats from the upper Khabur and Euphrates area.[4]

The second kingdom's economy was based on both agriculture and trade.[119] It was centralized and directed through a communal organization,[119] with grain stored in communal granaries and distributed according to social status.[119] The organization also controlled the animal herds in the kingdom.[119] Some groups were direct beneficiaries of the palace instead of the communal organization, including the metal and textile producers and military officials.[119] Ebla was an important trading partner and rival,[150] Mari's position made it an important trading center astride the road linking the Levant and Mesopotamia.[151]

The Amorite Mari maintained the older aspects of the economy, still largely based on irrigated agriculture along the Euphrates valley.[119] The city remained a trading center for merchants from Babylonia and other kingdoms,[152] with goods from the south and east transported on riverboats bound for the north, northwest and west.[153] The main trade was metals and tin from the Iranian Plateau exported west as far as Crete. Other goods included copper from Cyprus, silver from Anatolia, wood from Lebanon, gold from Egypt, olive oil, wine, and textiles, and even precious stones from modern Afghanistan.[153]

Excavations and archive

ย 
Excavations by the archaeological team of Andrรฉ Parrot in 1936. Discovery of the statue of military Governor Ishtup-Ilum

Mari was discovered in 1933, on the eastern flank of Syria, near the Iraqi border.[154] A Bedouin tribe was digging through a mound called Tell Hariri for a gravestone that would be used for a recently deceased tribesman, when they came across a headless statue.[154] After the news reached the French authorities currently in control of Syria, the report was investigated, and digging on the site was started on December 14, 1933 by archaeologists from the Louvre in Paris.[154] The location of the fragment was excavated, revealing the temple of Ishtar, which led to the commencing of the full scale excavations.[155] Mari was classified by the archaeologists as the "most westerly outpost of Sumerian culture".[156]

Since the beginning of excavations, over 25,000 clay tablets in Akkadian language written in cuneiform were discovered.[157] Finds from the excavation are on display in the Louvre,[158] the National Museum of Aleppo,[159] the National Museum of Damascus,[144] and the Deir ez-Zor Museum. In the latter, the southern faรงade of the Court of the Palms room from Zimri-Lim's palace has been reconstructed, including the wall paintings.[160]

Mari has been excavated in annual campaigns in 1933โ€“1939, 1951โ€“1956, and since 1960.[161] Andrรฉ Parrot conducted the first 21 seasons up to 1974,[162] and was followed by Jean-Claude Margueron (1979โ€“2004),[163] and Pascal Butterlin (starting in 2005).[161] A journal devoted to the site, released in 8 volumes between 1982 and 1997, was Mari: Annales de recherches interdisciplinaires.[164][165] Archaeologists have tried to determine how many layers the site descends, according to French archaeologist Andrรฉ Parrot, "each time a vertical probe was commenced in order to trace the site's history down to virgin soil, such important discoveries were made that horizontal digging had to be resumed."[166]

Mari tablets

Over 25,000 tablets were found in the burnt library of Zimri-Lim written in Akkadian[167] from a period of 50 years between circa 1800 โ€“ 1750 BC.[168] They give information about the kingdom, its customs, and the names of people who lived during that time.[66] More than 3000 are letters, the remainder includes administrative, economic, and judicial texts.[169] Almost all the tablets found were dated to the last 50ย years of Mari's independence,[169] and most have now been published.[170] The language of the texts is official Akkadian, but proper names and hints in syntax show that the common language of Mari's inhabitants was Northwest Semitic.[171] Six of the tablets found were in the Hurrian language.[172]

Current situation

Excavations stopped from 2011 as a result of the Syrian Civil War and have not restarted.[173] The site came under the control of armed gangs and suffered large scale looting. A 2014 official report revealed that robbers were focusing on the royal palace, the public baths, the temple of Ishtar and the temple of Dagan.[174] Based on satelite imagery, looting continued until at least 2017.[175]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Dates are estimated according to the Middle chronology unless otherwise stated.
  2. ^ In old readings, it was thought that Enna-Dagan was a general of Ebla. However, the deciphering of Ebla's tablets showed him in Mari and receiving gifts from Ebla during the reigns of his Mariote predecessors.[17]
  3. ^ Irkab-Damu is not named in the letter but it is almost certain that he was the recipient.[19]
  4. ^ Located 26 km west of Raqqa.[25]
  5. ^ Located in the Euphrates middle valley close to Sweyhat.[26]
  6. ^ According to Jean-Marie Durand, this Shakkanakku was appointed by Manishtushu, other opinions consider Naram-Sin as the appointer of Ididish.[45]
  7. ^ This ruled out the former theory that there was an abandonment of Mari during the transition period.[56]
  8. ^ Suprum is 12 kilometers upstream from Mari, perhaps the modern Tel Abu Hasan.[67]
  9. ^ It is not certain that Yaggid-Lim controlled Mari, however he is traditionally considered the first king of the dynasty.[68]
  10. ^ The credibility of the tablet is doubted as it was written by Yasmah-Adad who was Ila-kabkabu grandson.[68]
  11. ^ The transition of the Lim family from Suprum to Mari could have been the work of Yahdun-Lim after the war with Ila-kabkabu.[71]
  12. ^ Although officially a son of Yahdun-Lim, in reality he was a grandchild or nephew.[87]
  13. ^ An ancient designation for the land that include the confluence of the Khabur and the Euphrates rivers.[107]
  14. ^ Jean-Marie Durand, although not speculating the fate of the East-Semitic population, believe that the Akkadians during the Lim dynasty are not descended from the East-Semites of the Shakkanakku period.[114]

References

Citations

  1. ^ Tinney et al. 2020.
  2. ^ a b Green 2003, p.ย 62.
  3. ^ Oldenburg 1969, p.ย 60.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Viollet 2007, p.ย 36.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Margueron 2003, p.ย 136.
  6. ^ a b c Margueron 2013, p.ย 520.
  7. ^ a b c d Akkermans & Schwartz 2003, p.ย 286.
  8. ^ Margueron 2013, p.ย 522.
  9. ^ a b Akkermans & Schwartz 2003, p.ย 267.
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External links

  • Mari Mari passage on the Syrian ministry of culture website (in Arabic).
  • Syrie - Mari Mari page on Britannica.
  • Mari (Tell Hariri) Suggestion to have Mari (Tell Hariri) recognized as a UNESCO world heritage site, in 1999

mari, syria, mari, cuneiform, ๐’ˆ ๐’Œท๐’† , riki, modern, tell, hariri, arabic, ุชู„, ุญุฑูŠุฑูŠ, ancient, semitic, city, state, modern, syria, remains, form, tell, kilometers, north, west, kamal, euphrates, river, western, bank, some, kilometers, southeast, deir, flourished,. Mari Cuneiform ๐’ˆ ๐’Œท๐’†  ma riki modern Tell Hariri Arabic ุชู„ ุญุฑูŠุฑูŠ was an ancient Semitic city state in modern day Syria Its remains form a tell 11 kilometers north west of Abu Kamal on the Euphrates River western bank some 120 kilometers southeast of Deir ez Zor It flourished as a trade center and hegemonic state between 2900 BC and 1759 BC note 1 The city was purposely built in the middle of the Euphrates trade routes between Sumer in the south and the Eblaite kingdom and the Levant in the west Mariุชู„ ุญุฑูŠุฑูŠ in Arabic Ruins of MariShown within Near EastShow map of Near EastMari Syria Syria Show map of SyriaAlternative nameTell HaririLocationAbu Kamal Deir ez Zor Governorate SyriaCoordinates34 32 58 N 40 53 24 E 34 54944 N 40 89000 E 34 54944 40 89000 Coordinates 34 32 58 N 40 53 24 E 34 54944 N 40 89000 E 34 54944 40 89000TypeSettlementArea60 hectares 150 acres HistoryFoundedc 2900 BCAbandoned3rd century BCPeriodsBronze AgeCulturesEast Semitic Kish civilization AmoriteSite notesArchaeologistsAndre ParrotConditionRuinedOwnershipPublicPublic accessYesMari was first abandoned in the middle of the 26th century BC but was rebuilt and became the capital of a hegemonic East Semitic state before 2500 BC This second Mari engaged in a long war with its rival Ebla and is known for its strong affinity with Sumerian culture It was destroyed in the 23rd century BC by the Akkadians who allowed the city to be rebuilt and appointed a military governor Shakkanakku The governors became independent with the disintegration of the Akkadian Empire and rebuilt the city as a regional center of the Euphrates valley The Shakkanakkus ruled Mari until the second half of the 19th century BC when the dynasty collapsed for unknown reasons A short time later Mari became the capital of the Amorite Lim dynasty The Amorite Mari lasted only a short time before it was destroyed by Babylonia in c 1761 BC but it survived as a small settlement under the rule of the Babylonians and the Assyrians before being abandoned and forgotten during the Hellenistic period The Mariotes worshiped both Semitic and Sumerian deities and established their city as a major trading center Although the pre Amorite periods were characterized by heavy Sumerian cultural influence Mari was not a city of Sumerian immigrants but a Semitic speaking nation with a dialect similar to Eblaite The Amorites were West Semites who began to settle the area before the 21st century BC by the Lim dynasty c 1830 BC they became the dominant population in the Fertile Crescent Mari s discovery in 1933 provided an important insight into the geopolitical map of ancient Mesopotamia and Syria due to the discovery of more than 25 000 tablets explicating the state administration in the 2nd millennium BC and the nature of diplomatic relations among the political powers of the region They also revealed the wide trading networks of the 18th century BC which connected areas as far as Afghanistan in Southern Asia and Crete in the Mediterranean Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 The first kingdom 2 2 The second kingdom 2 2 1 Mari Ebla war 2 2 2 Destruction of Mari by Sargon of Akkad 2 3 The third kingdom 2 3 1 The Shakkanakku dynasty 2 3 2 The Lim dynasty 2 3 3 The Assyrian era and the Lim restoration 2 4 Later periods 3 People language and government 4 Culture and religion 5 Economy 6 Excavations and archive 6 1 Mari tablets 7 Current situation 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Sources 11 External linksName Edit Country of Mari Cuneiform ๐’ˆ ๐’Œท๐’†  Mari ki on the statue of Iddi Ilum c 2090 BC Written in Cuneiform ๐’ˆ ๐’Œท๐’†  ma riki 1 the name of the city can be traced to Mer an ancient storm deity of northern Mesopotamia and Syria who was considered the patron deity of the city 2 Georges Dossin noted that the name of the city was spelled identically to that of the storm god and concluded that Mari was named after him 3 History EditThe first kingdom Edit It is believed that Mari did not grow from a small settlement 4 but was founded c 2900 BC during the Mesopotamian Early Dynastic period I as a new city to control the waterways of the Euphrates trade routes connecting the Levant with the Sumerian south 4 5 The city was built about 1 to 2 kilometers from the Euphrates river to protect it from floods 4 and was connected to the river by an artificial canal 7 to 10 kilometers long whose route is hard to identify today 6 Mari s landmarks The city is difficult to excavate as it is buried deep under later layers of habitation 5 A circular flood embankment was unearthed 5 containing an area 300 meters in length for gardens and craftsmen s quarters 6 and a defensive circular internal rampart 6 7 m thick 5 and 8 to 10 meters high strengthened by defensive towers 6 Other findings include one of the city gates a street beginning at the center and ending at the gate and residential houses 5 Mari had a central mound 7 but no temple or palace has been unearthed there 5 A large building was however excavated with dimensions of 32 m x 25 m seemingly with an administrative function It had stone foundations and rooms up to 12 meters long and 6 meters wide 8 The city was abandoned c 2550 BC at the end of the Early Dynastic period II for unknown reasons 5 The second kingdom Edit Second Mariote KingdomMaric 2500 BC c 2290 BC The second kingdom during the reign of Iblul IlCapitalMariCommon languagesMariote dialectReligionMesopotamianGovernmentMonarchyHistorical eraBronze Age Establishedc 2500 BC Disestablishedc 2290 BCSucceeded byAkkadian Empire Around the beginning of Early Dynastic period III earlier than 2500 BC 9 Mari was rebuilt and populated again 5 10 The new city kept many of the first city s exterior features including the internal rampart and gate 5 11 Also kept was the outer circular embankment measuring 1 9 km in diameter which was topped by a wall two meters thick capable of 11 protecting archers 5 Statue of Ebih Il a superintendent in Mari 25th century BC However the internal urban structure was completely changed 12 and the new city was carefully planned First to be built were the streets that descended from the elevated center into the gates ensuring the drainage of rain water 5 At the heart of the city a royal palace was built that also served as a temple 5 Four successive architectural levels from the second kingdom s palace have been unearthed the oldest is designated P3 while the latest is P0 The last two levels are dated to the Akkadian period 13 The first two levels were excavated 13 the findings include a temple Enceinte Sacree or Sacred Enclosure dedicated to an unknown deity 13 14 a pillared throne room and a hall with three double wood pillars leading to the temple 13 Six smaller temples were discovered in the city including the temple called the Massif Rouge unknown dedication and temples dedicated to Ninni Zaza Ishtarat 15 Ishtar Ninhursag and Shamash 14 All the temples were located in the center of the city except for the Ishtar temple the area between the Enceinte Sacree and the Massif Rouge is considered to have been the administrative center of the high priest 14 The second kingdom appears to have been a powerful and prosperous political center 9 its kings held the title of Lugal 16 and many are attested in the city the most important source being the letter of king Enna Dagan c 2350 BC note 2 18 which was sent to Irkab Damu of Ebla note 3 In it the Mariote king mentions his predecessors and their military achievements 20 However the reading of this letter is still uncertain and many interpretations have been presented by scholars 21 22 23 Mari Ebla war Edit Helmetted warrior with axe Mari Ishqi Mari king of the Second Kingdom of Mari circa 2300 BC The earliest attested king in the letter of Enna Dagan is Ansud who is mentioned as attacking Ebla the traditional rival of Mari with whom it had a long war 24 and conquering many of Ebla s cities including the land of Belan note 4 23 The next king mentioned in the letter is Saสฟumu who conquered the lands of Ra ak and Nirum note 5 23 King Kun Damu of Ebla defeated Mari in the middle of the 25th century BC 27 The war continued with Ishtup Isar of Mari s conquest of Emar 23 at a time of Eblaite weakness in the mid 24th century BC King Igrish Halam of Ebla had to pay tribute to Iblul Il of Mari 27 28 who is mentioned in the letter conquering many of Ebla s cities and campaigning in the Burman region 23 Enna Dagan also received tribute 28 his reign fell entirely within the reign of Irkab Damu of Ebla 29 who managed to defeat Mari and end the tribute 19 Mari defeated Ebla s ally Nagar in year seven of the Eblaite vizier Ibrium s term causing the blockage of trade routes between Ebla and southern Mesopotamia via upper Mesopotamia 30 The war reached a climax when the Eblaite vizier Ibbi Sipish made an alliance with Nagar and Kish to defeat Mari in a battle near Terqa 31 Ebla itself suffered its first destruction a few years after Terqa in c 2300 BC 32 during the reign of the Mariote king Hidar 33 According to Alfonso Archi Hidar was succeeded by Ishqi Mari whose royal seal was discovered It depicts battle scenes causing Archi to suggest that he was responsible for the destruction of Ebla while still a general 33 34 Destruction of Mari by Sargon of Akkad Edit Soldiers shell inlay Mari Just a decade after Ebla s destruction c 2300 BC middle chronology Mari itself was destroyed and burned by Sargon of Akkad as shown by one of his year names Year in which Mari was destroyed 35 36 37 31 Michael Astour proposed the date as c 2265 BC short chronology 38 Ishqi Mari was probably the last king of Mari before the conquests by the Akkadian Empire 39 Sargon of Akkad collected tribute from Mari and Elam 40 Sargon the King bowed down to Dagan in Tuttul He Dagan gave to him Sargon the Upper Land Mari Iarmuti and Ebla as far as the Cedar Forest and the Silver Mountains Nippur inscription of Sargon 41 42 The third kingdom Edit Third Mariote KingdomMaric 2266 BC c 1761 BC The third kingdom during the reign of Zimri Lim c 1764 BCCapitalMariCommon languagesAkkadian official Amorite ruling dynasty Mariote dialect common Religionancient Levantine ReligionGovernmentMonarchyHistorical eraBronze Age Establishedc 2266 BC Disestablishedc 1761 BCPreceded by Succeeded by Akkadian Empire First Babylonian dynasty Mari was deserted for two generations before being restored by the Akkadian king Manishtushu 43 A governor was appointed to govern the city who held the title Shakkanakku military governor 44 Akkad kept direct control over the city which is evident by Naram Sin of Akkad s appointment of two of his daughters to priestly offices in the city 44 The Shakkanakku dynasty Edit Puzur Ishtar Shakkanakku Military Governor of Mari circa 2050 BC The first member of the Shakkanakku dynasty on the lists is Ididish who was appointed in c 2266 BC note 6 46 According to the lists Ididish ruled for 60 years 47 and was succeeded by his son making the position hereditary 48 The third Mari followed the second city in terms of general structure 49 phase P0 of the old royal palace was replaced by a new palace for the Shakkanakku 50 Another smaller palace was built in the eastern part of the city 7 and contained royal burials that date to the former periods 51 The ramparts were rebuilt and strengthened while the embankment was turned into a defensive wall that reached 10 meters in width 50 The former sacred inclosure was maintained 50 so was the temple of Ninhursag However the temples of Ninni Zaza and Ishtarat disappeared 50 while a new temple called the temple of lions dedicated to Dagan 52 was built by the Shakkanakku Ishtup Ilum and attached to it was a rectangular terrace that measured 40 x 20 meters for sacrifices 50 7 53 Akkad disintegrated during Shar Kali Sharri s reign 54 and Mari gained its independence but the use of the Shakkanakku title continued during the following Third Dynasty of Ur period 55 A princess of Mari married the son of king Ur Nammu of Ur 56 57 and Mari was nominally under Ur hegemony 58 However the vassalage did not impede the independence of Mari 59 60 and some Shakkanakkus used the royal title Lugal in their votive inscriptions while using the title of Shakkanakku in their correspondence with the Ur s court 61 The dynasty ended for unknown reasons not long before the establishment of the next dynasty which took place in the second half of the 19th century BC 62 63 64 The Lim dynasty Edit The second millennium BC in the Fertile Crescent was characterized by the expansion of the Amorites which culminated with them dominating and ruling most of the region 65 including Mari which in c 1830 BC became the seat of the Amorite Lim dynasty under king Yaggid Lim 64 66 However the epigraphical and archaeological evidences showed a high degree of continuity between the Shakkanakku and the Amorite eras note 7 56 Yaggid Lim was the ruler of Suprum before establishing himself in Mari note 8 note 9 69 he entered an alliance with Ila kabkabu of Ekallatum but the relations between the two monarchs changed to an open war 68 70 The conflict ended with Ila kabkabu capturing Yaggid Lim s heir Yahdun Lim and according to a tablet found in Mari Yaggid Lim who survived Ila kabkabu was killed by his servants note 10 68 However in c 1820 BC Yahdun Lim was firmly in control as king of Mari note 11 70 Goddess of the vase Mari 18th century BC Yahdun Lim started his reign by subduing seven of his rebelling tribal leaders and rebuilding the walls of Mari and Terqa in addition to building a new fort which he named Dur Yahdun Lim 72 He then expanded west and claimed to have reached the Mediterranean 73 74 however he later had to face a rebellion by the Banu Yamina nomads who were centered at Tuttul and the rebels were supported by Yamhad s king Sumu Epuh whose interests were threatened by the recently established alliance between Yahdun Lim and Eshnunna 59 73 Yahdun Lim defeated the Yamina but an open war with Yamhad was avoided 75 as the Mariote king became occupied by his rivalry with Shamshi Adad I of Shubat Enlil the son of the late Ila kabkabu 76 The war ended in a defeat for Mari 76 77 and Yahdun Lim was assassinated in c 1798 BC by his possible son Sumu Yamam 78 79 who himself got assassinated two years after ascending the throne while Shamshi Adad advanced and annexed Mari 80 The Assyrian era and the Lim restoration Edit Shamshi Adad appointed his son Yasmah Adad on the throne of Mari the new king married Yahdun Lim s daughter 81 82 while the rest of the Lim family took refuge in Yamhad 83 and the annexation was officially justified by what Shamshi Adad considered sinful acts on the side of the Lim family 84 To strengthen his position against his new enemy Yamhad Shamshi Adad married Yasmah Adad to Betlum the daughter of Ishi Addu of Qatna 82 However Yasmah Adad neglected his bride causing a crisis with Qatna and he proved to be an unable leader causing the rage of his father who died in c 1776 BC 82 85 86 while the armies of Yarim Lim I of Yamhad were advancing in support of Zimri Lim the heir of the Lim dynasty note 12 86 Investiture of Zimri Lim 18th century BC As Zimri Lim advanced a leader of the Banu Simaal Zimri Lim s tribe overthrew Yasmah Adad 88 opening the road for Zimri Lim who arrived a few months after Yasmah Adad s escape 89 and married princess Shibtu the daughter of Yarim Lim I a short time after his enthronement in c 1776 BC 86 Zimri Lim s ascension to the throne with the help of Yarim Lim I affected Mari s status Zimri Lim referred to Yarim Lim as his father and the Yamhadite king was able to order Mari as the mediator between Yamhad s main deity Hadad and Zimri Lim who declared himself a servant of Hadad 90 Zimri Lim started his reign with a campaign against the Banu Yamina he also established alliances with Eshnunna and Hammurabi of Babylon 83 and sent his armies to aid the Babylonians 91 The new king directed his expansion policy toward the north in the Upper Khabur region which was named Idamaraz 92 where he subjugated the local petty kingdoms in the region such as Urkesh 93 and Talhayum forcing them into vassalage 94 The expansion was met by the resistance of Qarni Lim the king of Andarig 95 whom Zimri Lim defeated securing the Mariote control over the region in c 1771 BC 96 and the kingdom prospered as a trading center and entered a period of relative peace 86 Zimri Lim s greatest heritage was the renovation of the Royal Palace which was expanded greatly to contain 275 rooms 7 97 exquisite artifacts such as The Goddess of the Vase statue 98 and a royal archive that contained thousands of tablets 99 The relations with Babylon worsened with a dispute over the city of Hit that consumed much time in negotiations 100 during which a war against Elam involved both kingdoms in c 1765 BC 101 Finally the kingdom was invaded by Hammurabi who defeated Zimri Lim in battle in c 1761 BC and ended the Lim dynasty 102 while Terqa became the capital of a rump state named the Kingdom of Hana 103 Later periods Edit Shamash Risha Usur c 760 BC Mari survived the destruction and rebelled against Babylon in c 1759 BC causing Hammurabi to destroy the whole city 104 However by an act of mercy Hammurabi allowed Mari to survive as a small village under Babylonian administration 104 Later Mari became part of Assyria and was listed among the territories conquered by the Assyrian king Tukulti Ninurta I reigned 1243 1207 BC 105 Afterward Mari constantly changed hands between Assyria and Babylon 105 In the middle of the eleventh century BC Mari became part of Hana whose king Tukulti Mer took the title king of Mari and rebelled against Assyria causing the Assyrian king Ashur bel kala to attack the city 105 Mari came firmly under the authority of the Neo Assyrian Empire and was assigned in the first half of the 8th century BC to a certain Nergal Erish to govern under the authority of king Adad Nirari III reigned 810 783 BC 105 In c 760 BC Shamash Risha Usur 106 an autonomous governor ruling parts of the upper middle Euphrates under the nominal authority of Ashur dan III styled himself the governor of the lands of Suhu and Mari so did his son Ninurta Kudurri Usur 105 However by that time Mari was known to be located in the so called Land of Laqe note 13 making it unlikely that the Usur family actually controlled it and suggesting that the title was employed out of historical reasons 105 The city continued as a small settlement until the Hellenistic period before disappearing from records 105 By 2015 ISIS devasted and looted systematically the site and specially the royal palace 108 It was one of the first archaeological sites to be occupied by this group 109 People language and government EditFurther information List of kings of Mari A Mariote from the second kingdom 25th century BC The founders of the first city may have been Sumerians or more probably East Semitic speaking people from Terqa in the north 4 I J Gelb relates Mari s foundation with the Kish civilization 110 which was a cultural entity of East Semitic speaking populations that stretched from the center of Mesopotamia to Ebla in the western Levant 111 At its height the second city was the home of about 40 000 people 112 This population was East Semitic speaking one and used a dialect much similar to the language of Ebla the Eblaite language 10 113 while the Shakkanakku period had an East Semitic Akkadian speaking population 114 West Semitic names started to be attested in Mari since the second kingdom era 115 and by the middle Bronze Age the west Semitic Amorite tribes became the majority of the pastoral groups in the middle Euphrates and Khabur valleys 116 Amorite names started to be observed in the city toward the end of the Shakkanakku period even among the ruling dynasty members 117 Statues from Mari in the National Museum of Aleppo During the Lim era the population became predominantly Amorite but also included Akkadian named people note 14 and although the Amorite language became the dominant tongue Akkadian remained the language of writing 118 119 120 The pastoral Amorites in Mari were called the Haneans a term that indicate nomads in general 121 those Haneans were split into the Banu Yamina sons of the right and Banu Simaal sons of the left with the ruling house belonging to the Banu Simaal branch 121 The kingdom was also a home to tribes of Suteans who lived in the district of Terqa 122 Mari was an absolute monarchy with the king controlling every aspect of the administration helped by the scribes who played the role of administrators 123 124 During the Lim era Mari was divided into four provinces in addition to the capital the provincial seats were located at Terqa Saggaratum Qattunan and Tuttul Each province had its own bureaucracy 124 the government supplied the villagers with ploughs and agricultural equipments in return for a share in the harvest 125 Culture and religion Edit A Mariote woman 25th century BC The first and second kingdoms were heavily influenced by the Sumerian south 126 The society was led by an urban oligarchy 127 and the citizens were well known for elaborate hair styles and dress 128 129 The calendar was based on a solar year divided into twelve months and was the same calendar used in Ebla the old Eblaite calendar 130 131 Scribes wrote in Sumerian language and the art was indistinguishable from Sumerian art so was the architectural style 132 Mesopotamian influence continued to affect Mari s culture during the Amorite period 133 which is evident in the Babylonian scribal style used in the city 134 However it was less influential than the former periods and a distinct Syrian style prevailed which is noticeable in the seals of kings which reflect a clear Syrian origin 133 The society was a tribal one 135 it consisted mostly of farmers and nomads Haneans 136 and in contrast to Mesopotamia the temple had a minor role in everyday life as the power was mostly invested in the palace 137 Women enjoyed a relative equality to men 138 queen Shibtu ruled in her husband s name while he was away and had an extensive administrative role and authority over her husband s highest officials 139 The Pantheon included both Sumerian and Semitic deities 140 and throughout most of its history Dagan was Mari s head of the Pantheon 141 while Mer was the patron deity 2 Other deities included the Semitic deities Ishtar the goddess of fertility 140 Athtar 142 and Shamash the Sun god who was regarded among the city most important deities 143 and believed to be all knowing and all seeing 144 Sumerian deities included Ninhursag 140 Dumuzi 145 Enki Anu and Enlil 146 Prophecy had an important role for the society temples included prophets 147 who gave council to the king and participated in the religious festivals 148 Economy EditThe first Mari provided the oldest wheel workshop yet discovered in Syria 149 and was a center of bronze metallurgy 4 The city also contained districts devoted to smelting dyeing and pottery manufacture 13 using charcoal brought by river boats from the upper Khabur and Euphrates area 4 The second kingdom s economy was based on both agriculture and trade 119 It was centralized and directed through a communal organization 119 with grain stored in communal granaries and distributed according to social status 119 The organization also controlled the animal herds in the kingdom 119 Some groups were direct beneficiaries of the palace instead of the communal organization including the metal and textile producers and military officials 119 Ebla was an important trading partner and rival 150 Mari s position made it an important trading center astride the road linking the Levant and Mesopotamia 151 The Amorite Mari maintained the older aspects of the economy still largely based on irrigated agriculture along the Euphrates valley 119 The city remained a trading center for merchants from Babylonia and other kingdoms 152 with goods from the south and east transported on riverboats bound for the north northwest and west 153 The main trade was metals and tin from the Iranian Plateau exported west as far as Crete Other goods included copper from Cyprus silver from Anatolia wood from Lebanon gold from Egypt olive oil wine and textiles and even precious stones from modern Afghanistan 153 Excavations and archive Edit Excavations by the archaeological team of Andre Parrot in 1936 Discovery of the statue of military Governor Ishtup Ilum Mari was discovered in 1933 on the eastern flank of Syria near the Iraqi border 154 A Bedouin tribe was digging through a mound called Tell Hariri for a gravestone that would be used for a recently deceased tribesman when they came across a headless statue 154 After the news reached the French authorities currently in control of Syria the report was investigated and digging on the site was started on December 14 1933 by archaeologists from the Louvre in Paris 154 The location of the fragment was excavated revealing the temple of Ishtar which led to the commencing of the full scale excavations 155 Mari was classified by the archaeologists as the most westerly outpost of Sumerian culture 156 Since the beginning of excavations over 25 000 clay tablets in Akkadian language written in cuneiform were discovered 157 Finds from the excavation are on display in the Louvre 158 the National Museum of Aleppo 159 the National Museum of Damascus 144 and the Deir ez Zor Museum In the latter the southern facade of the Court of the Palms room from Zimri Lim s palace has been reconstructed including the wall paintings 160 Mari has been excavated in annual campaigns in 1933 1939 1951 1956 and since 1960 161 Andre Parrot conducted the first 21 seasons up to 1974 162 and was followed by Jean Claude Margueron 1979 2004 163 and Pascal Butterlin starting in 2005 161 A journal devoted to the site released in 8 volumes between 1982 and 1997 was Mari Annales de recherches interdisciplinaires 164 165 Archaeologists have tried to determine how many layers the site descends according to French archaeologist Andre Parrot each time a vertical probe was commenced in order to trace the site s history down to virgin soil such important discoveries were made that horizontal digging had to be resumed 166 Mari tablets Edit Over 25 000 tablets were found in the burnt library of Zimri Lim written in Akkadian 167 from a period of 50 years between circa 1800 1750 BC 168 They give information about the kingdom its customs and the names of people who lived during that time 66 More than 3000 are letters the remainder includes administrative economic and judicial texts 169 Almost all the tablets found were dated to the last 50 years of Mari s independence 169 and most have now been published 170 The language of the texts is official Akkadian but proper names and hints in syntax show that the common language of Mari s inhabitants was Northwest Semitic 171 Six of the tablets found were in the Hurrian language 172 Current situation EditExcavations stopped from 2011 as a result of the Syrian Civil War and have not restarted 173 The site came under the control of armed gangs and suffered large scale looting A 2014 official report revealed that robbers were focusing on the royal palace the public baths the temple of Ishtar and the temple of Dagan 174 Based on satelite imagery looting continued until at least 2017 175 See also Edit Asia portalTourism in Syria Cities of the Ancient Near East Short chronology timeline Statue of Iddi Ilum OrninaNotes Edit Dates are estimated according to the Middle chronology unless otherwise stated In old readings it was thought that Enna Dagan was a general of Ebla However the deciphering of Ebla s tablets showed him in Mari and receiving gifts from Ebla during the reigns of his Mariote predecessors 17 Irkab Damu is not named in the letter but it is almost certain that he was the recipient 19 Located 26 km west of Raqqa 25 Located in the Euphrates middle valley close to Sweyhat 26 According to Jean Marie Durand this Shakkanakku was appointed by Manishtushu other opinions consider Naram Sin as the appointer of Ididish 45 This ruled out the former theory that there was an abandonment of Mari during the transition period 56 Suprum is 12 kilometers upstream from Mari perhaps the modern Tel Abu Hasan 67 It is not certain that Yaggid Lim controlled Mari however he is traditionally considered the first king of the dynasty 68 The credibility of the tablet is doubted as it was written by Yasmah Adad who was Ila kabkabu grandson 68 The transition of the Lim family from Suprum to Mari could have been the work of Yahdun Lim after the war with Ila kabkabu 71 Although officially a son of Yahdun Lim in reality he was a grandchild or nephew 87 An ancient designation for the land that include the confluence of the Khabur and the Euphrates rivers 107 Jean Marie Durand although not speculating the fate of the East Semitic population believe that the Akkadians during the Lim dynasty are not descended from the East Semites of the Shakkanakku period 114 References EditCitations Edit Tinney et al 2020 a b Green 2003 p 62 Oldenburg 1969 p 60 a b c d e f Viollet 2007 p 36 a b c d e f g h i j k l Margueron 2003 p 136 a b c Margueron 2013 p 520 a b c d Akkermans amp Schwartz 2003 p 286 Margueron 2013 p 522 a b Akkermans amp Schwartz 2003 p 267 a b Liverani 2013 p 117 a b Margueron 2013 p 523 Margueron 2013 p 524 a b c d e Margueron 2003 p 137 a b c Margueron 2013 p 527 Aruz amp Wallenfels 2003 p 531 Nadali 2007 p 354 Frayne 2008 p 335 Michalowski 2003 p 463 a b Podany 2010 p 26 Roux 1992 p 142 Astour 2002 p 57 Matthews amp Benjamin 2006 p 261 a b c d e Liverani 2013 p 119 Astour 2002 p 58 Frayne 2001 p 233 Frayne 2008 p 307 310 a b Dolce 2008 p 68 a b Michalowski 2003 p 462 Podany 2010 p 315 Bretschneider Van Vyve amp Leuven 2009 p 5 a b Liverani 2013 p 123 Stieglitz 2002 p 219 a b Bretschneider Van Vyve amp Leuven 2009 p 7 Archi amp Biga 2003 p 33 35 Year Names of Sargon cdli ox ac uk Potts D T 2016 The Archaeology of Elam Formation and Transformation of an Ancient Iranian State Cambridge University Press pp 92 93 ISBN 978 1 107 09469 7 Alvarez Mon Javier Basello Gian Pietro Wicks Yasmina 2018 The Elamite World Routledge p 247 ISBN 978 1 317 32983 1 Astour 2002 p 75 Bretschneider Van Vyve amp Leuven 2009 p 18 Frayne Douglas Sargonic and Gutian Periods pp 10 12 Buck Mary E 2019 The Amorite Dynasty of Ugarit Historical Implications of Linguistic and Archaeological Parallels BRILL p 169 ISBN 978 90 04 41511 9 See also Inscription of Sargon E2 1 1 1 Frayne Douglas Sargonic and Gutian Periods pp 10 12 Astour 2002 p 71 64 a b Astour 2002 p 64 Michalowski 1993 p 83 Leick 2002 p 77 Oliva 2008 p 86 Leick 2002 p 152 Margueron 2003 p 138 a b c d e Margueron 2013 p 530 Suriano 2010 p 56 Strommenger 1964 p 167 Margueron 2013 p 531 Bryce 2009 p xli Cooper 1999 p 65 a b c Wossink 2009 p 31 Tetlow 2004 p 10 Bryce 2014 p 18 a b Bryce 2009 p 451 Astour 2002 p 127 Astour 2002 p 132 Roux 1992 p 188 189 Frayne 1990 p 597 a b Astour 2002 p 139 Sicker 2000 p 25 a b DeVries 2006 p 27 Bryce 2009 p 673 a b c d Porter 2012 p 31 Frayne 1990 p 601 a b Roux 1992 p 189 Feliu 2003 p 86 Frayne 1990 p 603 a b Frayne 1990 p 606 Fowden 2014 p 93 Bryce 2014 p 19 a b Pitard 2001 p 38 Van Der Meer 1955 p 29 Dale 2003 p 271 sfn error no target CITEREFDale2003 help Frayne 1990 p 613 Bryce 2014 p 20 Van De Mieroop 2011 p 109 a b c Tetlow 2004 p 125 a b Bryce 2009 p 452 Grayson 1972 p 27 Harris 2003 p 141 a b c d Hamblin 2006 p 258 Charpin 2011 p 252 Liverani 2013 p 228 Dalley 2002 p 143 Malamat 1980 p 75 Van Der Toorn 1996 p 101 Kupper 1973 p 9 Bryce 2009 p 329 Bryce 2009 p 687 Bryce 2009 p 45 Charpin 2012 p 39 Burns 2009 p 198 Gates 2003 p 65 Shaw 1999 p 379 Van De Mieroop 2007 p 68 Van De Mieroop 2007 p 70 Van De Mieroop 2007 p 76 139 152 Fleming 2012 p 226 a b Van De Mieroop 2007 p 76 a b c d e f g Bryce 2009 p 453 Dalley 2002 p 201 Bryce 2009 p 408 Curry Andrew 1 September 2015 Here Are the Ancient Sites ISIS Has Damaged and Destroyed National Geographic National Geographic Society Retrieved 24 October 2022 Shepperson Mary 19 April 2018 Destruction at the ancient site of Mari in Syria The Guardian Guardian News amp Media Limited Retrieved 24 October 2022 Hasselbach 2005 p 3 Van De Mieroop 2002 p 133 Chew 2007 p 67 McMahon 2013 p 469 a b Heimpel 2003 p 21 Haldar 1971 p 8 Liverani 2013 p 222 Heimpel 2003 p 22 Nemet Nejat 1998 p 114 a b c d e f g Riehl et al 2013 p 117 Michalowski 2000 p 55 a b Liverani 2013 p 223 Heimpel 2003 p 26 Finer 1997 p 173 a b Liverani 2013 p 224 Maisels 2005 p 322 Armstrong 1996 p 457 Chavalas 2005 p 43 Pardee amp Glass 1984 p 95 Matthiae 2003 p 170 Pettinato 1981 p 147 Cohen 1993 p 23 Kramer 2010 p 30 a b Green 2003 p 161 Larsen 2008 p 16 Wossink 2009 p 126 Heimpel 2003 p 29 Grabbe 2004 p 3 Dougherty amp Ghareeb 2013 p 657 Tetlow 2004 p 84 a b c Feliu 2003 p 90 Feliu 2003 p 304 171 Smith 1995 p 629 Thompson 2007 p 245 a b Darke 2010 p 293 Feliu 2003 p 92 Feliu 2003 p 170 Nissinen Seow amp Ritner 2003 p 79 Walton 1990 p 209 Margueron 2013 p 521 Otto amp Biga 2010 p 486 Liverani 2013 p 126 Aubet 2013 p 141 a b Teissier 1996 p 6 a b c Dalley 2002 p 10 Evans 2012 p 180 Gadd 1971 p 97 Malamat 1998 p 45 Frayne 1990 p xxviii Gates 2003 p 143 Bonatz Kuhne amp Mahmoud 1998 p 93 a b Daniels amp Hanson 2015 p 87 Margueron 1992 p 217 Crawford 2013 p xvii Dalley 2002 p 2 Heintz Bodi amp Millot 1990 p 48 McLerran 2011 Ochterbeek 1996 p 214 Sasson Jack M From the Mari Archives An Anthology of Old Babylonian Letters University Park USA Penn State University Press 2015 a b Fleming 2004 p 48 Feliu 2003 p 63 Gates 2003 p 62 Campbell Dennis R M and Sebastian Fischer A HURRIAN RITUAL AGAINST TOOTHACHE A REANALYSIS OF MARI 5 Revue d Assyriologie et d archeologie Orientale vol 112 pp 31 48 2018 Simons 2016 Cockburn 2014 Casana J Laugier EJ 2017 Satellite imagery based monitoring of archaeological site damage in the Syrian civil war PLoS ONE 12 11 e0188589 https doi org 10 1371 journal pone 0188589 Sources Edit Akkermans Peter M M G Schwartz Glenn M 2003 The Archaeology of Syria From Complex Hunter Gatherers to Early Urban Societies c 16 000 300 BC Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 79666 8 Archi Alfonso Biga Maria Giovanna 2003 A Victory over Mari and the Fall of Ebla Journal of Cuneiform Studies The American Schools of Oriental Research 55 1 44 doi 10 2307 3515951 ISSN 2325 6737 JSTOR 3515951 S2CID 164002885 Armstrong James A 1996 Sumer and Akkad In Fagan Brian M ed The Oxford Companion to Archaeology Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 507618 9 Aruz Joan Wallenfels Ronald eds 2003 Art of the First Cities The Third Millennium B C from the Mediterranean to the Indus Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 1 58839 043 1 Astour Michael C 2002 A Reconstruction of the History of Ebla Part 2 In Gordon Cyrus Herzl Rendsburg Gary eds Eblaitica Essays on the Ebla Archives and Eblaite Language Vol 4 Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1 57506 060 6 Aubet Maria Eugenia 2013 Commerce and Colonization in the Ancient Near East Translated by Turton Mary Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 51417 0 Bonatz Dominik Kuhne Hartmut Mahmoud Asสปad 1998 Rivers and Steppes Cultural Heritage and Environment of the Syrian Jezireh Catalogue to the Museum of Deir ez Zor Damascus Ministry of Culture Directorate General of Antiquities and Museums OCLC 41317024 Bretschneider Joachim Van Vyve Anne Sophie Leuven Greta Jans 2009 War of the lords The Battle of Chronology Trying to Recognize Historical Iconography in the 3rd Millennium Glyptic Art in seals of Ishqi Mari and from Beydar Ugarit Forschungen Ugarit Verlag 41 ISBN 978 3 86835 042 5 Bryce Trevor 2009 The Routledge Handbook of the Peoples and Places of Ancient Western Asia Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 15908 6 Bryce Trevor 2014 Ancient Syria A Three Thousand Year History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 100292 2 Burns Ross 2009 1992 Monuments of Syria A Guide revised ed I B Tauris ISBN 978 0 85771 489 3 Charpin Dominique 2011 Patron and Client Zimri Lim and Asqudum the Diviner In Radner Karen Robson Eleanor eds The Oxford Handbook of Cuneiform Culture Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 955730 1 Charpin Dominique 2012 2003 Hammurabi of Babylon I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84885 752 0 Chavalas Mark 2005 The Age of Empires 3100 900 BCE In Snell Daniel C ed A Companion to the Ancient Near East Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1 4051 3739 3 Chew Sing C 2007 The Recurring Dark Ages Ecological Stress Climate Changes and System Transformation Trilogy on world ecological degradation Vol 2 Altamira Press ISBN 978 0 7591 0452 5 Cockburn Patrick February 11 2014 The Destruction of the Idols Syria s Patrimony at Risk From Extremists The Independent Retrieved January 6 2017 Cohen Mark E 1993 The Cultic Calendars of the Ancient Near East CDL Press The University Press of Maryland ISBN 978 1 883053 00 0 Cooper Jerrold S 1999 Sumerian and Semitic Writing in Most Ancient Syro Mesopotamia In van Lerberghe Karel Voet Gabriela eds Languages and Cultures in Contact At the Crossroads of Civilizations in the Syro Mesopotamian realm Proceedings of the 42th RAI Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta Vol 92 Peeters Publishers amp Department of Oriental Studies Leuven ISBN 978 90 429 0719 5 Crawford Harriet ed 2013 The Sumerian World Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 21912 2 Dalley Stephanie 2002 1984 Mari and Karana Two Old Babylonian Cities 2 ed Gorgias Press ISBN 978 1 931956 02 4 Daniels Brian I Hanson Katryn 2015 Archaeological Site Looting in Syria and Iraq A Review of the Evidence In Desmarais France ed Countering Illicit Traffic in Cultural Goods The Global Challenge of Protecting the World s Heritage The International Council of Museums ISBN 978 92 9012 415 3 Darke Diana 2010 2006 Syria 2 ed Bradt Travel Guides ISBN 978 1 84162 314 6 Deschaumes Ghislaine Glasson Butterlin Pascal Face aux patrimoines culturels detruits du Proche Orient ancien defis de la reconstitution et de la restitution numeriques The Conversation in French Retrieved 2021 08 07 DeVries LaMoine F 2006 Cities of the Biblical World An Introduction to the Archaeology Geography and History of Biblical Sites Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 978 1 55635 120 4 Dolce Rita 2008 Ebla before the Achievement of Palace G Culture An Evaluation of the Early Syrian Archaic Period In Kuhne Hartmut Czichon Rainer Maria Kreppner Florian Janoscha eds Proceedings of the 4th International Congress of the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East 29 March 3 April 2004 Freie Universitat Berlin Vol 2 Otto Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 978 3 447 05757 8 Dougherty Beth K Ghareeb Edmund A 2013 Woronoff Jon ed Historical Dictionary of Iraq Historical Dictionaries of Asia Oceania and the Middle East 2 ed Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 7942 3 Evans Jean M 2012 The Lives of Sumerian Sculpture An Archaeology of the Early Dynastic Temple Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 78942 4 Feliu Lluis 2003 The God Dagan in Bronze Age Syria Translated by Watson Wilfred GE Brill ISBN 978 90 04 13158 3 Finer Samuel Edward 1997 Ancient monarchies and empires The History of Government from the Earliest Times Vol 1 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 820664 4 Fleming Daniel E 2004 Prophets and Temple Personnel in the Mari Archives In Grabbe Lester L Bellis Alice Ogden eds The Priests in the Prophets The Portrayal of Priests Prophets and Other Religious Specialists in the Latter Prophets T amp T Clark International ISBN 978 0 567 40187 8 Fleming Daniel E 2012 The Legacy of Israel in Judah s Bible History Politics and the Reinscribing of Tradition Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 53687 5 Fowden Garth 2014 Before and After Muhammad The First Millennium Refocused Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 4816 4 Frayne Douglas 1990 Old Babylonian Period 2003 1595 BC The Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia Early Periods Vol 4 University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 5873 7 Frayne Douglas 2001 In Abraham s Footsteps In Daviau Paulette Maria Michele Wevers John W Weigl Michael eds The World of the Aramaeans Biblical Studies in Honour of Paul Eugene Dion Vol 1 Sheffield Academic Press ISBN 978 0 567 20049 5 Frayne Douglas 2008 Pre Sargonic Period Early Periods 2700 2350 BC The Royal inscriptions of Mesopotamia Early Periods Vol 1 University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1 4426 9047 9 Gadd Cyril John 1971 The Cities of Babylonia In Edwards Iorwerth Eiddon Stephen Gadd Cyril John Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere eds Part 2 Early History of the Middle East The Cambridge Ancient History Second Revised Series Vol 1 3 ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 07791 0 Gates Charles 2003 Ancient Cities The Archaeology of Urban Life in the Ancient Near East and Egypt Greece and Rome Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 67662 0 Grabbe Lester L 2004 Introduction and Overview In Grabbe Lester L Bellis Alice Ogden eds The Priests in the Prophets The Portrayal of Priests Prophets and Other Religious Specialists in the Latter Prophets T amp T Clark International ISBN 978 0 567 40187 8 Grayson Albert Kirk 1972 Assyrian Royal Inscriptions From the Beginning to Ashur Resha Ishi I Records of the Ancient Near East Vol 1 Otto Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 978 3 447 01382 6 ISSN 0340 8450 Green Alberto Ravinell Whitney 2003 The Storm god in the Ancient Near East Biblical and Judaic studies from the University of California San Diego Vol 8 Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1 57506 069 9 Haldar Alfred 1971 Who Were the Amorites Monographs on the ancient Near East Vol 1 Brill OCLC 2656977 Hamblin William J 2006 Warfare in the Ancient Near East to 1600 BC Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 52062 6 Harris Rivkah 2003 2000 Gender and Aging in Mesopotamia The Gilgamesh Epic and Other Ancient Literature University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 3539 7 Hasselbach Rebecca 2005 Sargonic Akkadian A Historical and Comparative Study of the Syllabic Texts Otto Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 978 3 447 05172 9 Heimpel Wolfgang 2003 Letters to the King of Mari A New Translation with Historical Introduction Notes and Commentary Mesopotamian civilizations Vol 12 Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1 57506 080 4 ISSN 1059 7867 Heintz Jean Georges Bodi Daniel Millot Lison 1990 Bibliographie de Mari Archeologie et Textes 1933 1988 Travaux du Groupe de Recherches et d Etudes Semitiques Anciennes G R E S A Universite des Sciences Humaines de Strasbourg in French Vol 3 Otto Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 978 3 447 03009 0 Kramer Samuel Noah 2010 1963 The Sumerians Their History Culture and Character University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 45232 6 Kupper Jean Robert 1973 Northern Mesopotamia and Syria In Edwards Iorwerth Eiddon Stephen Gadd Cyril John Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere Sollberger Edmond eds Part 1 The Middle East and the Aegean Region c 1800 1380 BC The Cambridge Ancient History Second Revised Series Vol 2 3 ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 05426 3 Larsen Mogens Trolle 2008 The Middle Bronze Age In Aruz Joan Benzel Kim Evans Jean M eds Beyond Babylon Art Trade and Diplomacy in the Second Millennium B C Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 1 58839 295 4 Launderville Dale 2003 Piety and Politics The Dynamics of Royal Authority in Homeric Greece Biblical Israel and Old Babylonian Mesopotamia William B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 0 8028 3994 7 Leick Gwendolyn 2002 Who s Who in the Ancient Near East Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 78796 8 Liverani Mario 2013 The Ancient Near East History Society and Economy Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 75084 9 Maisels Charles Keith 2005 1990 The Emergence of Civilisation From Hunting and Gathering to Agriculture Cities and the State of the Near East Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 86328 0 Malamat Abraham 1980 A Mari Prophecy and Nathan s Dynastic Oracle In Emerton John Adney ed Prophecy Essays presented to Georg Fohrer on his Sixty Fifth Birthday Beihefte zur Zeitschrift fur die Alttestamentliche Wissenschaft Vol CL Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 083741 4 Malamat Abraham 1998 Mari and the Bible Studies in the History and Culture of the Ancient Near East Vol 12 Brill ISBN 978 90 04 10863 9 ISSN 0169 9024 Margueron Jean Claude 1992 The 1979 1982 Excavations at Mari New Perspectives and Results In Young Gordon Douglas ed Mari in Retrospect Fifty Years of Mari and Mari Studies Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 0 931464 28 7 Margueron Jean Claude 2003 Mari and the Syro Mesopotamian World In Aruz Joan Wallenfels Ronald eds Art of the First Cities The Third Millennium B C from the Mediterranean to the Indus Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 1 58839 043 1 Margueron Jean Claude 2013 The Kingdom of Mari In Crawford Harriet ed The Sumerian World Translated by Crawford Harriet Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 21912 2 Matthews Victor Harold Benjamin Don C 2006 1994 Old Testament Parallels Laws and Stories from the Ancient Near East 3 ed Paulist Press ISBN 978 0 8091 4435 8 Matthiae Paolo 2003 Ebla and the Early Urbanization of Syria In Aruz Joan Wallenfels Ronald eds Art of the First Cities The Third Millennium B C from the Mediterranean to the Indus Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 1 58839 043 1 McLerran Dan September 13 2011 Ancient Mesopotamian City in Need of Rescue Popular Archaeology Magazine Archived from the original on November 5 2016 Retrieved January 6 2017 McMahon Augusta 2013 North Mesopotamia in the Third Millennium BC In Crawford Harriet ed The Sumerian World Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 21912 2 Michalowski Piotr 1993 Memory and Deed The Historiography of the Political Expansion of the Akkad State In Liverani Mario ed Akkad the First World Empire Structure Ideology Traditions History of the Ancient Near East Studies Vol 5 Padua S a r g o n Editrice Libreria OCLC 32011634 Michalowski Piotr 2000 Amorites In Freedman David Noel Myers Allen C eds Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 90 5356 503 2 Michalowski Piotr 2003 The Earliest Scholastic Tradition In Aruz Joan Wallenfels Ronald eds Art of the First Cities The Third Millennium B C from the Mediterranean to the Indus Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 1 58839 043 1 Nadali Davide 2007 Monuments of War War of Monuments Some Considerations on Commemorating War in the Third Millennium BC Orientalia Pontificium Institutum Biblicum 76 4 OCLC 557711946 Nemet Nejat Karen Rhea 1998 Daily Life in Ancient Mesopotamia Daily Life Through History Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 29497 6 ISSN 1080 4749 Nissinen Martti Seow Choon Leong Ritner Robert Kriech 2003 Machinist Peter ed Prophets and Prophecy in the Ancient Near East Writings from the Ancient World Vol 12 Society of Biblical Literature Atlanta ISBN 978 1 58983 027 1 Ochterbeek Cynthia 1996 Dan In Berney Kathryn Ann Ring Trudy Watson Noelle Hudson Christopher La Boda Sharon eds Middle East and Africa International Dictionary of Historic Places Vol 4 Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 25993 9 Oldenburg Ulf 1969 The Conflict between El and Ba al in Canaanite Religion Dissertationes ad Historiam Religionum Pertinentes Vol 3 Brill ISSN 0419 4233 OCLC 63449 Oliva Juan 2008 Textos Para Una Historia Politica de Siria Palestina I in Spanish Ediciones Akal ISBN 978 84 460 1949 7 Otto Adelheid Biga Maria Giovanna 2010 Thoughts About the Identification of Tall Bazi with Armi of the Ebla Texts In Matthiae Paolo Pinnock Frances Nigro Lorenzo Marchetti Nicolo Romano Licia eds Proceedings of the 6th International Congress of the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East Near Eastern archaeology in the past present and future heritage and identity ethnoarchaeological and interdisciplinary approach results and perspectives visual expression and craft production in the definition of social relations and status Vol 1 Otto Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 978 3 447 06175 9 Pardee Dennis Glass Jonathan T 1984 Literary Sources for the History of Palestine and Syria The Mari Archives The Biblical Archaeologist The American Schools of Oriental Research 47 2 ISSN 2325 534X Pettinato Giovanni 1981 The archives of Ebla an empire inscribed in clay Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 13152 0 Pitard Wayne T 2001 1998 Before Israel Syria Palestine in the Bronze Age In Coogan Michael David ed The Oxford History of the Biblical World revised ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 513937 2 Podany Amanda H 2010 Brotherhood of Kings How International Relations Shaped the Ancient Near East Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 979875 9 Porter Anne 2012 Mobile Pastoralism and the Formation of Near Eastern Civilizations Weaving Together Society Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 76443 8 Riehl Simone Pustovoytov Konstantin Dornauer Aron Sallaberger Walther 2013 Mid to Late Holocene Agricultural System Transformations in the Northern Fertile Crescent A Review of the Archaeobotanical Geoarchaeological and Philological Evidence In Giosan Liviu Fuller Dorian Q Nicoll Kathleen Flad Rowan K Clift Peter D eds Climates Landscapes and Civilizations Geophysical Monograph Series Vol IICC American Geophysical Union ISBN 978 0 87590 488 7 ISSN 0065 8448 Roux Georges 1992 1964 Ancient Iraq 3 ed Penguin Putnam ISBN 978 0 14 012523 8 Shaw Ian 1999 Mari In Shaw Ian Jameson Robert eds A Dictionary of Archaeology John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 470 75196 1 Sicker Martin 2000 The Pre Islamic Middle East Praeger ISBN 978 0 275 96890 8 Simons Marlise December 31 2016 Damaged by War Syria s Cultural Sites Rise Anew in France The New York Times Retrieved January 6 2017 Smith Mark S 1995 The God Athtar in the Ancient Near East and His Place in KTU 1 6 I In Zevit Ziony Gitin Seymour Sokoloff Michael eds Solving Riddles and Untying Knots Biblical Epigraphic and Semitic Studies in Honor of Jonas C Greenfield Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 0 931464 93 5 Stieglitz Robert R 2002 The Deified Kings of Ebla In Gordon Cyrus Herzl Rendsburg Gary eds Eblaitica Essays on the Ebla Archives and Eblaite Language Vol 4 Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1 57506 060 6 Strommenger Eva 1964 1962 5000 Years of the Art of Mesopotamia Translated by Haglund Christina Harry N Abrams OCLC 505796 Suriano Matthew J 2010 The Politics of Dead Kings Dynastic Ancestors in the Book of Kings and Ancient Israel Forschungen zum Alten Testament Vol 48 Mohr Siebeck ISBN 978 3 16 150473 0 ISSN 1611 4914 Teissier Beatrice 1996 1995 Egyptian Iconography on Syro Palestinian Cylinder Seals of the Middle Bronze Age Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis Series Archaeologica Vol 11 University Press Fribourg Switzerland ISBN 978 3 525 53892 0 ISSN 1422 4399 Tetlow Elisabeth Meier 2004 Women Crime and Punishment in Ancient Law and Society The Ancient Near East Vol 1 Continuum ISBN 978 0 8264 1628 5 Thompson Thomas L 2007 A Testimony of the Good King Reading the Mesha Stela In Grabbe Lester L ed Ahab Agonistes The Rise and Fall of the Omri Dynasty T amp T Clark International ISBN 978 0 567 04540 9 Tinney Steve Novotny Jamie Robson Eleanor Veldhuis Niek eds 2020 Mari 1 SN Oracc Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus Oracc Steering Committee Van De Mieroop Marc 2002 Foreign Contacts and the Rise of an Elite in Early Dynastic Babylonia In Ehrenberg Erica ed Leaving No Stones Unturned Essays on the Ancient Near East and Egypt in Honor of Donald P Hansen Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1 57506 055 2 Van De Mieroop Marc 2007 2005 King Hammurabi of Babylon A Biography Blackwell Ancient Lives Vol 19 Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 0 470 69534 0 Van De Mieroop Marc 2011 2003 A History of the Ancient Near East ca 3000 323 BC Blackwell History of the Ancient World Vol 6 2 ed Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4443 2709 0 Van Der Meer Petrus 1955 1947 The Chronology of Ancient Western Asia and Egypt Documenta et Monumenta Orientis Antiqui Vol 2 2 ed Brill OCLC 4727997 Van Der Toorn Karel 1996 Family Religion in Babylonia Ugarit and Israel Continuity and Changes in the Forms of Religious Life Studies in the History of the Ancient Near East Vol 7 Brill ISBN 978 90 04 10410 5 ISSN 0169 9024 Viollet Pierre Louis 2007 2005 Water Engineering in Ancient Civilizations 5 000 Years of History IAHR Monographs Vol 7 Translated by Holly Forrest M CRC Press ISBN 978 90 78046 05 9 Walton John H 1990 1989 Ancient Israelite Literature in Its Cultural Context A Survey of Parallels Between Biblical and Ancient Near Eastern Texts Zondervan Publishing House ISBN 978 0 310 36591 4 Wossink Arne 2009 Challenging Climate Change Competition and Cooperation Among Pastoralists and Agriculturalists in Northern Mesopotamia c 3000 1600 BC Sidestone Press ISBN 978 90 8890 031 0 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mari Mari Mari passage on the Syrian ministry of culture website in Arabic Syrie Mari Mari page on Britannica Mari Tell Hariri Suggestion to have Mari Tell Hariri recognized as a UNESCO world heritage site in 1999 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mari Syria amp oldid 1126751099, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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