History
The golden age of Ugarit:
Ugarit was probably occupied from the first appearance of
humans in Syria, but the most
prosperous and the best-documented age in Ugarit's history, dated
from about 1450 to about 1200 BC, produced great royal palaces
and temples and shrines, with a high priests'
library and other libraries on the acropolis. Some of the
family vaults built under the stone houses show strong Mycenaean
influence. Mycenaean and Cypriot pottery in great amounts has also
been found.
After the discovery of the temple library, which revealed a hitherto unknown cuneiform alphabetic script as well as an entirely new mythological and religious literature, several other palatial as well as private libraries were found, along with archives dealing with all aspects of the city's political, social, economic, and cultural life.
The art of Ugarit in its golden age is best illustrated by a golden cup and patera (bowl) ornamented with incised Ugaritic scenes; by carved stone stelae and bronze statuettes and ceremonial axes; by carved ivory panels depicting royal activities; and by other fine-carved ivories. Despite Egyptian influence, Ugaritic art exhibits a Syrian style of its own.
Soon after 1200 BC Ugarit came to an end. Its fall coincided with the invasion of the Northern and Sea Peoples and certainly with earthquakes and famines. In the Iron Age and during the 6th-4th century BC, there were small settlements on the site (Leukos Limen).
The excavators of the site were fortunate in the number and variety of finds of ancient records in cuneiform script. The excavations continue, and each season throws some new and often unexpected light on the ancient north Canaanite civilization. The texts are written on clay tablets either in the Babylonian cuneiform script or in the special alphabetic cuneiform script invented in Ugarit. Several copies of this alphabet, with its 30 signs, were found in 1949 and later. A shorter alphabet, with 25, or even 22, signs, seems to have been used by 13th-century traders.
Scribes used four languages: Ugaritic, Akkadian, Sumerian, and
Hurrian, and seven different scripts were used in Ugarit in this
period: Egyptian and Hittite hieroglyphic and Cypro-Minoan,
Sumerian, Akkadian, Hurrian, and Ugaritic cuneiform. These show
clearly the cosmopolitan character of the city.
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