Carchemish Phoenician inscription
The Carchemish Phoenician inscription is a 5th-century BCE Phoenician inscription on glazed faience tile in Carchemish in the early 1950s during the excavations of Richard David Barnett and Leonard Woolley for the British Museum. It measured 9 x 4 cm, and was found in northwest end of the "Acropolis (or Citadel) Mount" in the northeast corner of the Carchemish mound (today on the Turkish side of the Syria–Turkey border).
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It may not have belonged to the building, as it was found in the ruins rather than on the building itself. Barnett speculated that it may have been added as a later redecoration of the Kubaba Temple.[1]
The inscription is in brown letters on a pale blue background, with a border of the tree of life; Barnett stated that the letters resembled those of the Sarcophagus of Eshmunazar II.[1]
It is known as KAI 28.
Bibliography
- Richard David Barnett and Leonard Woolley, Carchemish: report on the excavations at Jerablus on behalf of the British Museum. pt. 3: The Excavations of the inner town: The Hittite inscriptions, 1952, British Museum
- Kanaanäische und Aramäische Inschriften, number 28
Notes
- Richard David Barnett and Leonard Woolley, Carchemish: report on the excavations at Jerablus on behalf of the British Museum. pt. 3: The Excavations of the inner town: The Hittite inscriptions, 1952, British Museum, pages 211-212, 280