Ahiram

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Sarcophagus of Ahiram in the National Museum of Beirut
Sarcophagus of Ahiram in the National Museum of Beirut

Ahiram or Ahirom was the Phoenician king of Byblos (ca. 1000 BC[1]). Ahiram was succeeded by his son Ittobaal as king of Byblos.[2]

[edit] Sarcophagus

The sarcophagus of Ahiram was discovered by the French archaeologist Pierre Montet in 1923[3] in Jebeil, the historic Byblos.[4]. Its low relief carved panels make it "the major artistic document for the Early Iron Age" in Phoenicia.[5] Associated items dating to the Late Bronze Age either support an early dating, in the thirteenth century or attest the reuse of an early shaft tomb in the eleventh century. The major scene represents a king seated on a throne carved with winged sphinxes. A priestess offers him a lotus flower. On the lid two male figures confront one another with addorsed seated lions between them, read by Glenn Markoe as a reference to the father and son of the inscription. Egyptian influence that is a character of Late Bronze Age art in northwest Canaan is replaced here by Assyrian influences in the rendering of figures and the design of the throne and a table.[5] A total absence of Egyptian objects of the 20th and 21st dynasties in Phoenicia[6] contrasts sharply with the resumption of Phoenician-Egyptian ties in the 22nd Dynasty.

The inscription on the sarcophagus[7] is the oldest evidence of the Phoenician alphabet discovered to date:

The following is the translation of the inscription:

Coffin which Ittobaal, son of Ahiram, king of Byblos, made for Ahiram, his father, when he placed him in the 'house of eternity'. Now if a king among kings or a governor among governors or a commander of an army should come up against Byblos and uncovers this coffin, may the sceptre of his rule be torn away, may the throne of his kingdom be overturned, and may peace flee from Byblos! And as for him, if he destroys this inscription, then the...![8]

The formulas of the inscription were immediately recognised as literary in nature, and the assured cutting of the archaic letters suggested to Charles Torrey[3] a form of writing already in common use. A tenth-century date for the inscription has become widely accepted.

[edit] References

  1. ^ The date remains the subject of controversy, according to Glenn E. Markoe, "The Emergence of Phoenician Art" Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research No. 279 (August 1990):13-26) p. 13. "Most scholars have taken the Ahiram inscription to date from around 1000 B.C.E.", notes Edward M. Cook, "On the Linguistic Dating of the Phoenician Ahiram Inscription (KAI 1)", Journal of Near Eastern Studies 53.1 (January 1994:33-36) p. 33 JSTOR. Cook analyses and dismisses the date in the thirteenth century adopted by C. Garbini, "Sulla datazione della'inscrizione di Ahiram", Annali (Istituto Universitario Orientale, Naples) 37 (1977:81-89), which was the prime source for early dating urged in Bernal, Martin (1990). Cadmean Letters: The Transmission of the Alphabet to the Aegean and further West before 1400 BC. Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns. ISBN 0931464471. 
  2. ^ Vance, Donald R. (1994). "Literary Sources for the History of Palestine and Syria: The Phœnician Inscriptions". The Biblical Archaeologist 57 (1): 2-19. 
  3. ^ a b Torrey, Charles C. (1925). "The Ahiram Inscription of Byblos". Journal of the American Oriental Society 45: 269-279. 
  4. ^ Pritchard, James B. (1968). Archaeology and the Old Testament. Princeton: Univ. Press. ; Moscati, Sabatino (2001). The Phoenicians. London: Tauris. ISBN 1850435332. ; Reinhard G. Lehmann, Die Inschrift(en) des Ahirom-Sarkophags und die Schachtinschrift des Grabes V in Jbeil (Byblos), (Mainz), 2005 (Forschungen zur phönizisch-punischen und zyprischen Plastik, hg. von Renate Bol, II.1. Dynastensarkophage mit szenischen Reliefs aus Byblos und Zypern Teil 1.2)
  5. ^ a b Markoe, Glenn E. (1990). "The Emergence of Phoenician Art". Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 279: 13-26.  [pp. 13, 19-22]
  6. ^ J. Leclant, "Les relations entre l'Égypte et la Phénicie du voyage de Ounamon à l'expédition d'Alexandre", in The role of the Phoenicians in the Interaction of Mediterranean Civilisations, W. Ward, ed. (Beirut: American University) 1968:11.
  7. ^ Torrey (1925) described another brief inscription "halfway down the shaft" in which the sarcophagus was found; it had been first published, as a warning to an excavator not to proceed further, by Reneé Dussaud, in Syria 5 (1924:135-57).
  8. ^ Kuhrt, Amélie (1995). The Ancient Near East: c.3000-330 B.C.. London: Routledge, 404. ISBN 0415167620.