Ugarit was a major Bronze Age city located near today’s Ras Shamra on the Syrian coast. It flourished as a trading center and cultural hub and was destroyed around the end of the second millennium BCE. Archaeological discoveries at Ugarit uncovered thousands of clay tablets written in a local alphabetic script. These texts include myths, prayers, ritual instructions, and administrative records. The religious writings are especially important because they describe gods, divine councils, and storm-god imagery that closely resemble themes found in biblical literature. Ugarit provides direct evidence of the cultural and religious environment shared by many peoples of the ancient Near East.
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References
- Hesier, Michael S., Deuteronomy 32:8 and the Sons of God
- Noegel, Scott B., “More Geminate Ballast and Clustering in Biblical Hebrew” in Ian Wilson and Diana Edelman (eds.) History, Memory, and Hebrew Scriptures: Studies in Honor of Ehud Ben Zvi
- Baden, Joel S., Jeffrey Stackert, and Christoph Berner (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of the Pentateuch
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