Melqart stele
| Melqart stele | |
|---|---|
The stele | |
| Writing | Aramaic inscription |
| Created | 9th century BCE |
| Period/culture | Aramaean |
| Discovered | 1939 |
| Place | Burayj, 7km north of Aleppo, Syria |
| Present location | National Museum of Aleppo |
| Identification | AO 8185 |
The Melqart stele, also known as the Ben-Hadad or Bir-Hadad stele is an Aramaic stele which was created during the 9th century BCE and was discovered in 1939 in Roman ruins in Bureij Syria (7 km north of Aleppo). The Old Aramaic inscription is known as KAI 201; its five lines reads:
“The stele which Bar-Had-
-ad, son of [...]
king of Aram, erected to his Lord Melqar-
-t, to whom he made a vow and who heard his voi-
-ce.”
According to William Foxwell Albright, the stele should be attributed to Ben-Hadad I, an Aramean king mentioned in the First Book of Kings. However, Kenneth Kitchen disagrees and states that there is no actual evidence that connects the Melqart stele to Ben-Hadad I. a recent re-analysis of the stele indicated that the Ben-Hadad referred to is actually the king of Arpad.
Hackett and Wilson-Wright reconstitute the first two lines of the inscription as,
"1. The statue which Bir-Ha-
2. dad, son of ʕAttar-sumkī, Bir-Gūš,"
According to them,
"Attar-sumkī was a king from the line of Gūš, the founder of a dynasty originally from the tribe of Yaḫan in the early ninth century BCE."