Khirbet Ataruz inscriptions

E834355

The Khirbet Ataruz inscriptions are ancient West Semitic texts discovered at the site of Khirbet Ataruz in modern-day Jordan, providing important evidence for the Moabite language and culture.

Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Moabite inscriptions
West Semitic inscriptions
ancient inscription corpus
approximateDate early 8th century BCE
late 9th century BCE
archaeologicalContext cultic context
associatedWithDeity Chemosh NERFINISHED
Yahweh NERFINISHED
associatedWithPeople Moabites NERFINISHED
associatedWithSiteType sanctuary
temple
chronology Iron Age II
culturalContext Moabite kingdom NERFINISHED
discoveredAt Khirbet Ataruz temple complex NERFINISHED
discoveredBy archaeologists
discoveredInCountry Jordan NERFINISHED
epigraphicType monumental inscription
short dedicatory text
geographicalContext central Jordanian plateau
inscriptionMedium architectural elements
portable objects
language Moabite
linguisticFamily Northwest Semitic languages NERFINISHED
locatedIn Dhiban region NERFINISHED
Jordan NERFINISHED
Khirbet Ataruz NERFINISHED
material metal
plaster
stone
mentionedInDiscipline Ancient Near Eastern history
Biblical studies
Northwest Semitic epigraphy
paleographicDatingMethod letter-form comparison
providesEvidenceFor Moabite epigraphy
Moabite language NERFINISHED
Moabite onomastics
Moabite religion
region Transjordan NERFINISHED
relatedTo Mesha Stele NERFINISHED
religiousFunction cultic legitimation
votive
scriptDirection right-to-left
scriptType consonantal alphabet
significance earliest direct evidence for Moabite cult at Atarot
usedFor cultic record
religious dedication
writingSystem West Semitic alphabet NERFINISHED
writingSystemFamily Northwest Semitic scripts

Referenced by (1)

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

Moabite language attestedIn Khirbet Ataruz inscriptions