Tell el Amarna and the Bible
BAKER STUDIES IN BIBLICAL ARCHAEOLOGY
by Charles F. Pfeiffer
BAKER BOOK HOUSE Grand Rapids, Michigan
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 62-20014
Copyright, 1963, by Baker Book House Company
ISBN: 0-8010-7002-3
Fourth printing, April 1980
PHOTOLITHOPRINTED BY CUSHING-MALLOY, INC. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 1980
The Amarna Age—the fifteenth and fourteenth centuries before Christ—provides the archaeologist rich resources for the study of ancient cultures. The epic and mythological literature from Ras Shamra, ancient Ugarit on the Phoenician coast, dates from this period, as do the Nuzi tablets written by Hurrian scribes in Mitanni. The Ugaritic texts give us an insight into the language and religious thought of ancient Canaan, and the archives from Nuzi offer a wealth of information concerning the social, economic, and legal structure of northern Mesopotamia in Patriarchal times.
During the Amarna Age the Hittite Empire was pushing southward from its center in Asia Minor, seeking to incorporate into its domains both independent states and areas that had acknowledged Egyptian sovereignty. Minoan Crete had already reached her highest achievements and was fast approaching her end. Babylon had already enjoyed a period of prosperity and power under the great Hammurabi, but she would not again become a major power for seven centuries—when Nebuchadnezzar would lead her to fresh victories. Assyria was soon to send her armies into Syria and Palestine and challenge Egypt for control of the East, but she was still a minor power during the Amarna Age.
The present study is limited to events in Egypt and to Egypt’s political and military relations with her vassals in Syria and Palestine. The Amarna Tablets are our primary source of information for Egypt’s external affairs, and the artifacts and tomb inscriptions from Amarna (ancient Akhetaton) help us to reconstruct life at the court of Akhenaton—the Pharaoh whose personality is apparent in every chapter.
Charles F. Pfeiffer
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CONTENTS
Illustrations
PREFACE
The Beginnings
The Amarna Tablets
Excavations at Amarna
The New Kingdom
Young Amenhotep IV
The Break with Amon
The New Capital
The End of an Era
The Boundaries of Akhetaton
The Move to the New Capital
The Plan of the City
The Rock Tombs
Ancient Egyptian Religion
Aton Worship
The Triumph of Aton
Moses and Aton
The Death of Aton
The Splendor and Power of Aton
Nighttime
Daytime
The Creation: Man
The Creation: Animal Life
Aton’s Glory in Creation
Aton Waters the Earth
Aton: Lord of the Seasons
Aton’s Providence
The Kings of Mitanni
Emerging Assyria
The Hittite Challenge
Rib-Addi of Byblos
Lab‘ayu of Shechem
Abdi-Khepa of Jerusalem
Amarna Age Palestine
The ‘Apiru
Minoan Crete
The Phoenicians
Sunken Relief
Realism
Caricature
Transitional Art Forms
The Development of Amarna Art
Smenkhkare
Tutankhaton-Tutankhamon
Eye and Horemhab
Written Records
Canaanite Glosses
Amarna Age Palestine
Affairs of Government
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Archaeology
History
Art and Tomb Inscriptions
Religion
The Amarna Tablets
FOOTNOTES
INDEX
Baker Studies in Biblical Archaeology
Transcriber’s Notes