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Les environs:

Ebla, Remains of archiveEbla, Abarsal TreatyEbla, Remains of archiveEbla, Remains of archiveEbla Royal Palace GRoyal palace G courtyardThe western palace Ebla, The vizier palace, 2010Third Kingdom Royal Graves, EblaEbla, Remains of North temple of IstharEbla, Remains of North temple of IstharEbla, Remains of North temple of IstharEbla, Remains of North temple of IstharEbla, Remains of North temple of IstharEbla, Remains of North temple of IstharEbla, Remains of North temple of IstharEbla, Remains of North temple of IstharEbla, Remains of Amorite GateEbla, Remains of Amorite GateEbla, Remains of Amorite GateEbla, Remains of Amorite GateEbla, Remains of Amorite GateEbla, Remains of Amorite GateRuins of the outer wall and the Ebla, Remains of Amorite GateDamascus Gate, EblaEbla, Ceramic Aer of a pot, men-shapedEbla, Remains of throneroomRemains of EblaEbla, Tell

Localisation:

  • Syrie, Mardīkh
  • geo:35.797691,36.79731
  • Précision ± 0-5 m.

Period or year:

  • -2000~ / -1600~

Classification:

  • Sanctuaire
  • Visible

Identificateurs:

  • vici:place=29268

Annotations

Il n'y a pas une annotation en français. Présenté est une annotation en Anglais.

"The Lower Town West, in relation with the Western Palace, one second cult area stood, including Reshap’s Temple (Area B), the god of death, plague and of the Netherworld, and the Royal Deified Ancestors’ Temple. Rashap’s Temple had also one cella, and was oriented to the South, but the Sanctuary devoted to the cult for the deified royal ancestors had a central hall for communal meals, and some peripheral cellas with small altars, meant to host small cult statues, usually made of bronze covered with gold leaf, representing deceased kings ascended among the gods"1.

According to M. M. Münnich the identification of the temple as Reshep temple is unfounded2.

  1. Maciej M. Münnich (2013). The God Resheph in the Ancient Near East. 
  2. Paolo Matthiae, http://www.ebla.it/escavi__i_templi_paleosiriani.html

Références

  1. Paolo Matthiae, http://www.ebla.it/escavi__i_templi_paleosiriani.html
  2. M>M. Munich 2013, p. 64 ff

"The Lower Town West, in relation with the Western Palace, one second cult area stood, including Reshap’s Temple (Area B), the god of death, plague and of the Netherworld, and the Royal Deified Ancestors’ Temple. Rashap’s Temple had also one cella, and was oriented to the South, but the Sanctuary devoted to the cult for the deified royal ancestors had a central hall for communal meals, and some peripheral cellas with small altars, meant to host small cult statues, usually made of bronze covered with gold leaf, representing deceased kings ascended among the gods"1.

According to M. M. Münnich the identification of the temple as Reshep temple is unfounded2.

  1. Maciej M. Münnich (2013). The God Resheph in the Ancient Near East. 
  2. Paolo Matthiae, http://www.ebla.it/escavi__i_templi_paleosiriani.html

Références

  1. Paolo Matthiae, http://www.ebla.it/escavi__i_templi_paleosiriani.html
  2. M>M. Munich 2013, p. 64 ff


Musées associés

Aleppo, National Museum

Large collection of Bronze Age (a/o Ebla, Mari, Ugarit), Iron Age (Arslan Tash), Hellenistic, and Roman finds.


À proximité

Ebla Archives

Tablets from Ebla Tell Mardihk date from the introduction of writing to the end of the third millennium B.C.

Ebla, Abarsal Treaty

XXIII BC peace treaty.

Ebla, Dead Kings Sanctuary

Ebla, Dead Kings Sanctuary