Tall Bazi
| Location | Raqqa Governorate, Syria | 
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 36°25′38.3″N 38°16′35.4″E / 36.427306°N 38.276500°E | 
| Type | settlement | 
| History | |
| Founded | c. 2400 BC | 
| Abandoned | 1200 BC | 
| Periods | Bronze Age | 
| Cultures | Mitanni, Early Dynastic | 
| Site notes | |
| Excavation dates | 1993-2010 | 
| Archaeologists | B. Einwag, A. Otto | 
| Condition | Ruined | 
| Ownership | Public | 
| Public access | Yes | 
Tall Bazi, is an ancient Near East archaeological site in Raqqa Governorate of Syria in the same general area as Mari and Ebla. It is located on the east bank of Euphrates river in upper Syria, about 60 kilometers south of Turkey border. It is considered a twin site to the adjacent Tell Banat Complex. Both were occupied in the 3rd and 2nd millennium BC with Banat being the focus in the early part and Bazi in the later. Tall Bazi has been proposed as the location of Armanum, known from texts of Sargon and Naram-Sin in the Akkadian period, during the reign of Naram-Sin of Akkad. It was occupied into the Mitanni period, with an occupational gap after c. 2300 BC, at which time it was destroyed. In the Late Roman Empire a large building was constructed at the top of the main mound, using the remaining Late Bronze Age fortification walls.