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Batnoam sarcophagus

Sarcophagus of a Phoenician royal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Batnoam sarcophagus
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The Batnoam inscription is a Phoenician inscription (KAI 11 and TSSI III 26) on a sarcophagus. It is dated to c. 450-425 BCE.

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Batnoam inscription

It was published in Maurice Dunand's Fouilles de Byblos (volume I, 1926-1932, numbers 1142, plate XXVIII).[1]

Text of the inscription

The inscription reads:[2][3]

B’RN ZN ’NK BTN‘MIn this coffin I, Batno‘am,
’M MLK ‘ZB‘L MLK GBL  mother of King Azbaal, King of Byblos,
BN PLṬB‘L KHN B‘LT    son of Pilletbaal, Priest of Baalat
ŠKBT      lie,
BSWT WMR’Š ‘LYwearing a garment and a head-piece on me,
WMḤSM ḤRṢ LPY  and a muzzle[4] of gold on my mouth
KM ’Š LMLKYT ’Š KN LPNY    like those of the queens who were before me.
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