Forgotten Ancient Ugarit: One Of The Flourishing And Oldest Cities Of Canaan

Kane Khanh | Archeaology
June 17, 2023
Artifacts from the ancient city of Ugarit. Credits: National Museum Of Damascus

Soon, the site, called by the residents of Ras Shamra, became an important place for discoveries of a cemetery only 150 meters from the Mediterranean Sea, an ancient city of Ugarit, and a royal palace built on a trapezoid-shaped mound about 20 meters high.

Ugarit was one of the significant Canaanite city-states during the second millennium BC. At first, the vaulted tombs found at the site and the painted pottery of Ugarit’s cemetery suggested that the ancient city was a Mycenaean colony. However, as the first texts were unearthed, deciphered, and translated, it became evident that Ugarit was a Semitic city.

In the graves, they discovered Egyptian artifacts dated to the 2nd millennium BC, including Phoenician, Mycenean, and Cypriot items.

A duck container made from hippopotamus tusk dated to the 13th century BC was found at Minet el-Beida, a place that served as the harbor town and necropolis for Ugarit. Image credit: Marie-Lan Nguyen –  Public Domain

The city was located in a large artificial mound called Ras Shamra (Raʾs Shamrah), about 10 km (6 miles) north of Latakia, on the Mediterranean coast of northern Syria. Archaeological excavations since then have also uncovered ruins of temples, libraries, and private houses.

The most important discovery of the French archaeologists working at the site was a collection of tablets carved with an unknown (at that time) cuneiform script. The excavations of the area revealed finds of ancient records in cuneiform script.

The texts are written on clay tablets in the Babylonian cuneiform script or the particular alphabetic 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, characters, seems to have been used by 13th-century traders.

The most important with the Ugaritic alphabet is that it was developed from cuneiform writing and was one of the most significant achievements in human culture because it enabled scribes to write based on only a few memorized letters, which were combined into words without the large and complex vocabulary of hieroglyphs or cuneiform patterns.

 

Ruins of Ugarit. Image credit: – LorisRomito –  

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 multicultural character of the city.

A few years later, some of the Ugaritic texts were deciphered and revealed they belonged to the famous city of Ugarit.

The Ugaritic texts helped reveal an entirely new mythological and religious literature, and several palatial and private libraries were found, along with archives dealing with all aspects of the city’s political, social, economic, and cultural life.

Today, the Ugaritic alphabet – closely related to Aramaic, Syriac, and Hebrew – no longer exists, but the Greek alphabet became its reincarnation.

Ugarit experienced a very long history. A city was built on the site in the Neolithic period around 6000 BC. The oldest written evidence of the town is found in some texts from the nearby city of Ebla, written around 1800 BC. Many texts discovered at Ugarit revealed an Old Canaanite mythology, which played an essential role in the city. A tablet names the Ugaritic pantheon with the principal deities: Babylonian equivalents –  El, the supreme god of the Canaanites, Asherah of the Sea, and Baal.

The population of Ugarit at that time was roughly almost 8000 people. Ugarit traded with Egypt, Cyprus, the Aegean, Syria, the Hittites, and much of the eastern Mediterranean region.

The city of Ugarit continued to be dominated by the Egyptians through 1400 BC.  Soon after 1200 BC, Ugarit came to an end.

During the last Bronze Age, the king of Ugarit, Ammurapi, who reigned circa 1215 to 1180 BC, wrote:

‘My father, behold, the enemy’s ships came (here); my cities(?) were burned, and they did evil things in my country. Does not my father know that all my troops and chariots(?) are in the Land of Hatti, and all my ships are in the Land of Lukka?… Thus, the country is abandoned itself. May my father know it: the seven enemy ships that came here inflicted much damage upon us…’

No help arrived at Ugarit, which was burned to the ground at the end of the Bronze Age.

Written by A. Sutherland – AncientPages.com Senior Staff Writer