Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ebla> ?p ?o }
- Ebla abstract "Ebla (Arabic: إبلا, modern: تل مرديخ, Tell Mardikh), was one of the earliest kingdoms in Syria. Its remains constitute a tell located about 55 km (34 mi) southwest of Aleppo near the village of Mardikh. Ebla was an important center throughout the third millennium BC and in the first half of the second millennium BC. Its discovery proved the Levant was a center of ancient, centralized civilization equal to Egypt and Mesopotamia, and ruled out the view that the latter two were the only important centers in the Near East during the early Bronze Age. Karl Moore described the first Eblaite kingdom as the first recorded world power.Starting as a small settlement in the early Bronze Age (c. 3500 BC), Ebla developed into a trading empire and later into an expansionist power that imposed its hegemony over much of northern and eastern Syria. Its language, Eblaite, is now considered the earliest attested Semitic language after Akkadian. Ebla was destroyed during the 23rd century BC; it was then rebuilt and was mentioned in the records of the Third Dynasty of Ur. The second Ebla was a continuation of the first, ruled by a new royal dynasty. It was destroyed at the end of the third millennium BC, which paved the way for the Amorite tribes to settle in the city, forming the third Ebla. The third kingdom also flourished as a trade center; it became a subject and an ally of Yamhad (modern-day Aleppo) until its final destruction by the Hittite king Mursili I in c. 1600 BC.Ebla maintained its prosperity through a vast trading network. Artifacts from Sumer, Cyprus, Egypt and as far as Afghanistan were recovered from the city's palaces. The political organization of Ebla had features different from the Sumerian model. Women enjoyed a special status and the queen had major influence in the state and religious affairs. The pantheon of gods was mainly north Semitic and included deities exclusive to Ebla. The city was excavated starting in 1964, and became famous for the Ebla tablets, an archive of about 20,000 cuneiform tablets found there, dated to around 2350 BC. Written in both Sumerian and Eblaite and using the cuneiform, the archive has allowed a better understanding of the Sumerian language and provided important information over the political organization and social customs of the mid third millennium BC's Levant.".
- Ebla dissolutionYear "-1600".
- Ebla dissolutionYear "-2000".
- Ebla dissolutionYear "-2300".
- Ebla foundingYear "-2000".
- Ebla foundingYear "-2300".
- Ebla foundingYear "-3000".
- Ebla thumbnail HPIM3078_1.JPG?width=300.
- Ebla wikiPageExternalLink ebla.html.
- Ebla wikiPageExternalLink 1293.
- Ebla wikiPageExternalLink ascalone.pdf.
- Ebla wikiPageExternalLink pinnock.pdf.
- Ebla wikiPageID "306533".
- Ebla wikiPageLength "97979".
- Ebla wikiPageOutDegree "252".
- Ebla wikiPageRevisionID "701591399".
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink 2nd_millennium_BC.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink 3rd_millennium_BC.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Abarsal.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Abugar.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Abur-Lim.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Adamma_(Goddess).
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Adub-Damu.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Afghanistan.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Agur-Lim.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Akademie_Verlag.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Akkadian_Empire.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Akkadian_language.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Alalakh.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Aleppo.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Alfonso_Archi.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Amar-Sin.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Ammitaqum.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Amorite_language.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Amorites.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Canaanite_religion.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Egypt.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Near_East.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Armani_(kingdom).
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Armi_(Syria).
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Arrukum.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Ashtapi.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Assanu.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Azi_(scribe).
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Baga-Damu.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Baram_(Ebla).
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Biblical_archaeology.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Bronze_Age.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Byblos.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Cambridge_University_Press.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Carchemish.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Category:Amorite_cities.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ebla.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Category:Former_populated_places_in_Syria.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Category:Tells.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Chemosh.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Cities_of_the_ancient_Near_East.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Cuneiform_script.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Cyprus.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Da_(.)_(.).
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Dagon.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Damascus.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Damu.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Damu_(Semetic_deity).
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Daneum.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Donkey.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Dumudar.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Eannatum.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink East_Semitic_languages.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Ebla_tablets.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Eblaite_language.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Egypt.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Eisenbrauns.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Emar.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Enar-Damu.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Enmanu.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Ensí.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Entrepôt.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Eshar-Malik.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Giovanni_Pettinato.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Gudea.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Habadu.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Hadad.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Haddu.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Halabiye.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Hammu(....).
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Harrassowitz_Verlag.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Hittites.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Hotepibre.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Hurrians.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Ib-Damu.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Ibal.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Ibbi-Sipish.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Ibbini-Lim.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Ibbit-Lim.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Ibla_(king).
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Iblul-Il.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Ibrium.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Idlib_Governorate.
- Ebla wikiPageWikiLink Ignace_Gelb.