- Ebla (Sumerian: 𒌈𒆷 eb₂-la, Arabic: إبلا, modern: تل مرديخ, Tell
Mardikh) was one of the
earliest kingdoms in Syria. Its
remains constitute a tell located...
-
Mardikh (Arabic: مرديخ) (Mardhuk in Sanskrit) is a
village in the
Idlib Governorate of Syria. It is the
nearest village to the site of
historical Ebla...
-
about the religion,
supplemented by
inscriptions from the
Levant and Tel
Mardikh archive (excavated in the
early 1960s). Like
other peoples of the ancient...
- Ibbit-Lim is only
known by a
fragmentary basalt torso found in 1968 at Tell
Mardikh and now in Aleppo,
which was part of a
votive statue for Ishtar, once placed...
-
through cuneiform tablets found in Ebla. The 1964
discovery at the Tell
Mardikh site in
Northern Syria of an
ancient city from the
second half of the third...
- his team in 1974–75
during their excavations at the
ancient city at Tell
Mardikh. The tablets,
which were
found in situ on
collapsed shelves,
retained many...
-
ancient Middle East.
Tablets discovered in the
ancient city of Ebla (Tell
Mardikh in modern-day Syria)
provide the
earliest known evidence of a law code...
- from the Ebla tablets, a
series of
texts inscribed on clay,
found at Tell
Mardikh,
Syria and
dated to the
second half of the 3rd
millennium BCE. They include...
- (Pethor?)
Dhiban (Dibon) Dor (D-jr, Dora) Dura-Europos (Dur) Ebla (Tell
Mardikh)
Edessa (Ar-Ruha, Urfa) Ein Gedi (Hazazon-tamar, Tel Goren) En Esur Enfeh...
- ga-na-na" in the
Semitic Ebla
tablets (dated 2350Â BC) from the
archive of Tell
Mardikh has been
interpreted by some
scholars to
mention the
deity Dagon by the...