• Thumbnail for Arslan Tash
    Arslan Tash (Turkish: Arslan Taş "Lion Stone"), ancient Hadātu, is an archaeological site in Aleppo Governorate in northern Syria, around 30 kilometres...
    9 KB (928 words) - 22:22, 15 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Arslan Tash amulets
    The Arslan Tash amulets are talismans found at Arslan Tash (Turkish: Arslan Taş, literally "Lion Stone") in northwest Syria, the site of ancient Hadatu...
    8 KB (990 words) - 01:34, 13 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Arslan Tash reliefs
    The Arslan Tash reliefs are bas-reliefs of human figures and animals which adorned the city gates and temple portals of ancient Hadatu; the modern archeological...
    3 KB (310 words) - 18:58, 10 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Hazael
    were found in 1928 in Arslan Tash in northern Syria (ancient Hadātu) by a team of French archaeologists. Among them is the Arslan Tash ivory inscription in...
    11 KB (1,200 words) - 03:42, 12 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Lilith
    Jewish lilith to an Akkadian lilītu – the Gilgamesh appendix and the Arslan Tash amulets (see below for discussion of these two problematic sources)....
    95 KB (12,775 words) - 23:23, 16 May 2024
  • Arslan Tash ivory inscription is a small ivory plaque with an Aramaic language inscription found in 1928 in Arslan Tash in northern Syria (ancient Hadātu)...
    4 KB (408 words) - 13:26, 13 August 2023
  • Thumbnail for Malik-Shah I
    Alamut fortress near Qazvin, and the army under the command of the emir Arslan-Tash, sent by Malik Shah, could not recapture it. The Sultan's ghilman, Kizil...
    25 KB (3,016 words) - 10:19, 30 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for El (deity)
    Great One' A Phoenician inscribed amulet of the seventh century BCE from Arslan Tash may refer to ʼĒl. The text was translated by Rosenthal (1969, p. 658)...
    54 KB (6,532 words) - 17:53, 16 May 2024
  • 1980s Aslan, Izeh, a village in Izeh County, Khuzestan Province, Iran Arslan Tash, archaeological site in Aleppo, Syria Aslan Duz, the capital of Aslan...
    6 KB (795 words) - 19:35, 15 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Asherah
    needed] It's such a common motif in Syrian and Phoenician ivories that the Arslan Tash horde had at least four; they can be seen in the Louvre. Early scholarship...
    57 KB (6,308 words) - 09:53, 16 May 2024