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By Jacob Lauinger and Tyler Yoder

 

During Egypt’s Eighteenth Dynasty (ca. 1550–1292 BCE), the New Kingdom pharaohs campaigned repeatedly in Syria and the Levant, establishing political control over much of the region. As a result of these conquests, the rulers of Levantine city-states sent letters written in Akkadian in the cuneiform script on clay tablets to the Egyptian pharaohs. So, too, did the kings of the other great geopolitical powers of the time—Assyria, Babylonia, Hatti, and Mittani—maintain an active diplomatic correspondence with Egypt’s pharaohs.

Beginning in the nineteenth century CE, local farmers and, later, archaeologists working at Akhetaten (modern Tell el-Amarna), the one-time Egyptian capital, discovered remnants of this correspondence, mostly dating to the reigns of Amenhotep III (ca. 1388–1350 BCE) and his son and successor Akhenaten (ca. 1350–1333 BCE), with some dating to Tutankhamun (ca. 1333–1323). This is a period of increasing friction as the great powers sought to extend their borders. The Amarna Letters thus illuminate a pivotal point in Egypt’s foreign relations during the Late Bronze Age. Even though they provide us with a narrow window of only about thirty years’ time (1358–1325 BCE), they are an important witness to the general nature of Egypt’s diplomatic relations during the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Dynasties.

This new, digitally borne edition of the Amarna Letters offers the first complete collection of the letters with responsible transliterations that have been checked against available photographs and hand copies; clear and consistent translations; and an up-to-date and extensive bibliography. As such it is, and will remain, an essential resource.

The Amarna Letters: The Syro-Levantine Correspondence

$125.00Price
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    7 x 10 inches

    590 pages

    978-1-957454-83-2 (hardcover)

    978-1-957454-20-7(PDF)

    April 2025

  • Reviews

    “this monumental undertaking should pass the test of time and become the new standard in the field, because their translations are measured and seem to strike the ideal balance between a literal translation and the best way to express the thoughts of the original authors in vernacular English. The reviewer heartily recommends this welcome new volume on the Amarna Letters.”—Douglas Petrovich Brookes Bible College, St. Louis, MO, in Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 68 (2025): 779–81

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