Sam’al

E765350

Sam’al was an important Iron Age city-state and archaeological site in the Syro-Anatolian region, known for its monumental architecture and distinctive Aramaic and Luwian inscriptions.

Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Iron Age polity
ancient city-state
archaeological site
capitalOf Kingdom of Sam’al NERFINISHED
culture Aramaean NERFINISHED
Luwian
Syro-Hittite
excavatedBy German expeditions
excavationStartDate late 19th century
flourishedInCentury 8th century BCE
9th century BCE
hasArchaeologicalStratum Iron Age I NERFINISHED
Iron Age II NERFINISHED
Iron Age III
hasEvidenceType architectural remains
epigraphic evidence
sculptural remains
hasFeature city wall
gates with guardian figures
monumental stone statues
orthostat reliefs
palatial complex
hasLanguage Aramaic
Luwian NERFINISHED
hasTimePeriod Iron Age NERFINISHED
hasTypeOfInscription Aramaic-Luwian bilinguals
bilingual inscriptions
funerary inscriptions
royal dedicatory inscriptions
hasWritingSystem Aramaic alphabet NERFINISHED
Hieroglyphic Luwian NERFINISHED
knownFor Aramaic inscriptions
Luwian inscriptions
city fortifications
inscribed stone monuments
monumental architecture
royal inscriptions
laterControlledBy Neo-Assyrian Empire NERFINISHED
locatedIn Syro-Anatolian region NERFINISHED
near modern Zincirli Höyük
southeastern Turkey
modernSiteName Zincirli Höyük NERFINISHED
near Amanus Mountains NERFINISHED
partOf Syro-Hittite states NERFINISHED
politicalStatus independent kingdom in early Iron Age
region northern Levant NERFINISHED
religion Luwian-Hittite religious traditions
West Semitic religion NERFINISHED

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.