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The aim of this international journal is to contribute to developing the study of the interpretation and understanding of the ancient cultures of Syria, remaining as open as possible to the different methodologies and problems that characterize present-day research.
Thanks to the generous policy of international collaboration pursued by the cultural authorities of the Syrian Arab Republic, the increase in archaeological research in Syria, particularly from the 1970s on, opened up a series of new perspectives on the study of ancient Syria. The discovery of the Royal Archives of Ebla was decisive in this renaissance, as well as the role that Ebla played in establishing the very foundations of cultural development in ancient Syria. This project originates at a time of serious crisis for Syria, whose plight does not even spare the country’s magnificent, thousand-year-old cultural heritage. It is also intended as the strongest of hopes for a not-too-distant future of peace, prosperity, harmony and justice for the whole of the Syrian people. From the contents (altogether 9 contributions): Paolo Matthiae The Royal Archives of Ebla: Finding, Distribution and Arrangement of the Cuneiform Tablets Amalia Catagnoti & Pelio Fronzaroli The Ebla “Chancery” Texts from L.2769, L.2875 and L.2712 Elisabetta Cianfanelli, A Report on the Ebla Tablets in the National Museums of Damascus and Aleppo Jacopo Pasquali, L'apport des données épigraphiques éblaïtes à l’étude du culte des ancêtres et ses analogies avec l’ancien Israël et la Rome antique Klaus Wagensonner Coping with Copies: A Look at the Transmission(s) of Early Word Lists |