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  2. Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Richly_Annotated...

    Amarna: The Amarna Texts: Provides searchable transliterations of the cuneiform texts found at Tell el-Amarna. Contributed by Shlomo Izre'el CAMS: Corpus of Ancient Mesopotamian Scholarship: Offers searchable editions of texts, divided into sub-projects (some of which also include contextual information and interpretations).

  3. Amarna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amarna

    English Egyptologist Sir John Gardner Wilkinson visited Amarna twice in the 1820s and identified it as Alabastron, [6] following the sometimes contradictory descriptions of Roman-era authors Pliny (On Stones) and Ptolemy , [7] [8] although he was not sure about the identification and suggested Kom el-Ahmar as an alternative location.

  4. Amarna art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amarna_art

    Amarna art, or the Amarna style, is a style adopted in the Amarna Period during and just after the reign of Akhenaten (r. 1351–1334 BC) in the late Eighteenth Dynasty, during the New Kingdom. Whereas ancient Egyptian art was famously slow to change, the Amarna style was a significant and sudden break from its predecessors both in the style of ...

  5. Amarna letters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amarna_letters

    The Amarna letters (/ ə ˈ m ɑːr n ə /; sometimes referred to as the Amarna correspondence or Amarna tablets, and cited with the abbreviation EA, for "El Amarna") are an archive, written on clay tablets, primarily consisting of diplomatic correspondence between the Egyptian administration and its representatives in Canaan and Amurru, or ...

  6. Aten - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aten

    The sole worship of Aten can be referred to as Atenism. Many of the core principles of Atenism were recorded in the capital city Akhenaten founded and moved his dynastic government to, Akhetaten, referred to as either Amarna, El-Amarna, or Tell el-Amarna by modern scholars. In Atenism, night is a time to fear. [11]

  7. Mitanni Letter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitanni_Letter

    They compared the text to other documents of Tushratta written in Akkadian and found in Tell el-Amarna alongside the Mitanni Letter. All the letters from the Mitanni king followed a consistent pattern, using identical phrases, and addressed similar matters. [6] This facilitated the creation of a quasi-bilingual Akkadian-Hurrian dictionary. [3]

  8. Amarna letter EA 16 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amarna_letter_EA_16

    Amarna Letter EA 16 is part of the corpus of the Amarna Letters, a set of letters written mostly in Akkadian found at the Egyptian capital of Tell El-Amarna. [1] The text records a correspondence from Ashur-uballit I, Founder of the Middle Assyrian Empire, to an uncertain ruler of Ancient Egypt.

  9. Royal Wadi and tombs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Wadi_and_tombs

    Map of the Royal Wadi, Amarna. The Royal Wadi (known locally as Wadi Abu Hassah el-Bahari) is a necropolis in Amarna, Egypt. It is the burial place of the Ancient Egyptian royal family of Amarna, which reigned during the 18th Dynasty. The cemetery is a local parallel to the Valley of the Kings.