Vici.org

Les environs:

The western palace Royal palace G courtyardEbla Royal Palace GEbla, 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 archiveEbla, Remains of archiveEbla, Remains of archiveEbla, Abarsal TreatyEbla, The vizier palace, 2010Archaic Palace P5Ebla, Amorite stratumRemains of EblaEbla, Remains of throneroom with stairsRemains of EblaEbla, Remains of wooden carvings from furnitureEbla, sites and buildings.Ebla, Amorite stratumRemains of EblaRemains of EblaEbla, Jug from theroyal  palace GEbla, Fotograph of archive with tablets at placeRemains of EblaRemains of Ebla

Localisation:

  • Syrie, Mardīkh
  • geo:35.798679,36.797306
  • Précision ± 0-5 m.

Classification:

  • Tombeau ou tombes
  • Visible

Identificateurs:

  • vici:place=29289

Annotations

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

The Tomb of the Princess in Western Palace belongs to a young woman died ca 1800 BC. It is the smallest grave and the one not plundered furnished with the jewerly and funerary equipments. It consits of a stepped dromos, partially cut into the bedrock and partly built up of stones and covered with five stone slabs.

Sources:

  1. Paolo Matthiae, "Jugs of the North-Syrian - Cilician and Levantine painted wares from the Middle Bronze II royal tombs at Ebla" in:  Emre, Kutlu; Hrouda, Barthel; Mellink, Machteld; Özgüç, Nimet. Anatolia and the ancient Near East: studies in honor of Tahsin Özgüç. Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi,  Ankara 1989, p. 303
  2. Paolo Matthiae,"New Discoveries at Ebla: The Excavation of the Western Palace and the Royal. Necropolis of the Amorite Period". The Biblical Archaeologist. American Schools of Oriental Research 47, 1984, p. 24
  3. Lorenzo Nigro, he Eighteenth Century BC Princes of Byblos and Ebla and the Chronology of the Middle Bronze Age in: Interconnections in the Eastern Mediterranean. Lebanon in the Bronze and Iron Ages. Proceedings of the International Symposium – Beirut 2008 (BAAL Hors-Série VI), Beirut 2009, pp. 161-164 - https://www.academia.edu/1096021

The Tomb of the Princess in Western Palace belongs to a young woman died ca 1800 BC. It is the smallest grave and the one not plundered furnished with the jewerly and funerary equipments. It consits of a stepped dromos, partially cut into the bedrock and partly built up of stones and covered with five stone slabs.

Sources:

  1. Paolo Matthiae, "Jugs of the North-Syrian - Cilician and Levantine painted wares from the Middle Bronze II royal tombs at Ebla" in:  Emre, Kutlu; Hrouda, Barthel; Mellink, Machteld; Özgüç, Nimet. Anatolia and the ancient Near East: studies in honor of Tahsin Özgüç. Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi,  Ankara 1989, p. 303
  2. Paolo Matthiae,"New Discoveries at Ebla: The Excavation of the Western Palace and the Royal. Necropolis of the Amorite Period". The Biblical Archaeologist. American Schools of Oriental Research 47, 1984, p. 24
  3. Lorenzo Nigro, he Eighteenth Century BC Princes of Byblos and Ebla and the Chronology of the Middle Bronze Age in: Interconnections in the Eastern Mediterranean. Lebanon in the Bronze and Iron Ages. Proceedings of the International Symposium – Beirut 2008 (BAAL Hors-Série VI), Beirut 2009, pp. 161-164 - https://www.academia.edu/1096021

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, Western Palace, Tomb of the Lord of the Goats -

Ebla, Western Palace, Tomb of the Lord of the Goats