Amarna letter EA 252

Amarna letter EA 252, titled: Sparing One's Enemies,[1] is a square, mostly flat clay tablet letter written on both sides, and the bottom edge. Each text line was written with a horizontal line scribed below the text line, as well as a vertical left margin-line, (beginning of text at left) scribe line on the obverse of the tablet. The letter contains 14 (15) lines on the obverse, continuing on the bottom tablet edge to conclude at line 31 on the reverse, leaving a small space before the final tablet edge. At least 4 lines from the obverse intrude into the text of the reverse (appearing as upside-down cuneiform into the text of the reverse), actually dividing the reverse into a top half and bottom half, and even creating a natural spacing segue to the reverse's text, and the story.

EA 365, equivalent-sized, rectangular letter to Labaya's letter EA 252.
(very high-resolution expandable photo)

Letter EA 252 is authored by Labaya, by the 'Man, city-state' (of) Šakmu (Shechem today), and written to the Pharaoh. The letter is one of three letters authored by him, to the Pharaoh.

The Amarna letters, about 300, numbered up to EA 382, are a mid 14th century BC, about 1350 BC and 20–25 years later, correspondence. The initial corpus of letters were found at Akhenaten's city Akhetaten, in the floor of the Bureau of Correspondence of Pharaoh; others were later found, adding to the body of letters.

Brief letter summary

The topic of the letter is Labaya's defense against other governors of city-states that he is engaged with. A town and statue were taken, and he defends his then follow-up actions of pursuit, to the pharaoh's commissioner. He states: "my parts are eaten/ I'm being slandered". The exact quote is "...he has slandered me, (and/ u), I am slandered-(ši-ir-ti)."

Directly next, an allegory, lines 16-19, follows concerning "a pinched ant-defending itself". Basically, if an ant is attacked, should it just sit quiet, or defend against the "hand of the man" that attacks? Labaya then explains his justification for pursuing the men in warfare (Akkadian nukurtu, nu-KÚR-te, (last syllable most variable in spellings)),[2] and the events to follow.

The letter

EA 252: "Sparing One's Enemies"

EA 252, letter one of three. (Not a linear, line-by-line translation, and English from French.)[3] (Obverse only, Paragraphs I, ~II; about a 3-paragraph letter):

Obverse: (see here: )

(Lines 1-4)--Say to the king, my lord: Message of Lab'ayu, your servant. I fall at the feet of the king, my lord.
(5-9)--As to your having written me, "Guard the men who seized the city;" how am I to guard (such) men? It was in war (nukurtu) the city was seized.
(10-15)--When I had sworn my peaceand when I swore the magnate swore with methe city, along with my god, was seized. He has slandered me: gl (and) (ši-ir-ti) (I am slandered) before the king, my lord.
(16-22)--Moreover, when an ant is struck....

EA 252, Reverse: (Photo in Rohl[4])

(16-22)--Moreover, when an ant is struck, does it not fight back and bite the hand of the man that struck it? How at this time can I show deference and then another city of mine will be seized?
(23-31)--On the other hand, if you also order, "Fall down beneath them so they can strike you," I will d<o> (it). I will guard the men that seized the city (and) my god. They are the despoilers of my father, but I will guard them.-(!) --(complete EA 252, with no lacunae, lines 1-31)

Akkadian text

The Akkadian language text:

English:

(Line 1)--To "King-Lord-mine"
(2)--'speaking'
(3)--'message thus' 1. Labaya, SERVANT-yours
(4)--at feet(s)(pl.) "King-Lord-mine" I bow
(5)--Now, (you) messaged
(6)--to Me: "Guard!
(7)--men who en-sieged (the City)!"
(8)--"How to guard (the) Men, ...
(9)--..in conflict(warfare) en-sieged\ \"sworn" City?"
(10)--"How to swear peace? ..and.. How to swear, "sworn" City?"
(11)--"Commissioner(Man-Great) 'assigned with'-me
(12)--(the) captured, sworn City ! ?"
(13)--And, god(s) 'spoke/heard'
(14)--"(my) parts (are) eaten-mine" \ \ : (gl) "I AM SLANDERED"
(15)--before "The King", "Lord-Mine"

Akkadian:

(Line 1)--a-na "LUGAL-EN-ia"
(2)---bil-ma
(3)--um-ma ILa-aB-A-iYa ARAD-ka
(4)--a-na GÌR.MEŠ "LUGAL-be-lí-ia" am-qú-ut
(5)--i-nu-ma šap-ra-ta
(6)--a-na ia-a-ši ú-ṣur-me
(7)--LÚ.MEŠ ša ṣa-ab-tu URU
(8)-- ki-i uṣ-ṣur-ru-na LÚ.MEŠ
(9)--i-na nu-KÚR-te ṣa-ab-te at-me URU
(10)--ki it- ša-li-me u ki at-at-me URU
(11)--1. LUGAL.GAL it-ti-ia
(12)--ṣa-ab-ta at-me URU
(13)--ù i-li qa-bi
(14)--qa-ar-ṣí-ia : (gl) ši-ir-ti
(15)--i-na pa-ni "1. LUGAL-ma" "be-li-ia"
gollark: Perhaps someone should design a non-Markdown-only standard for it.
gollark: emacs > vim
gollark: Um, I mean, it's... a non-satire discord?
gollark: This is a satire discord.
gollark: Please delete that, I'm out of eyebleach.

See also

References

  1. Moran, William L. 1987, 1992. The Amarna Letters. EA 252, Sparing One's Enemies, pp. 305-306.
  2. Parpola, 197l. The Standard Babylonian Epic of Gilgamesh, Glossary, pp. 119-145, nukurtu, p. 135.
  3. Moran 1987, 1992. The Amarna Letters. EA 252, Sparing One's Enemies, pp. 305-306.
  4. Rohl, 1995. Pharaohs and Kings: A Biblical Quest, p. 208.
  • Moran, William L. The Amarna Letters. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1987, 1992. (softcover, ISBN 0-8018-6715-0)
  • Parpola, 197l. The Standard Babylonian Epic of Gilgamesh, Parpola, Simo, Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, c 1997, Tablet I thru Tablet XII, Index of Names, Sign List, and Glossary-(pp. 119–145), 165 pages.
  • Rohl, 1995. Pharaohs and Kings: A Biblical Quest, Rohl, David M., c 1995, Crown Publishers, Inc., 426 pages. (hardcover, ISBN 0-517-70315-7)
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