This artifact was likely a gift
if anything to an important shrine. What
it does is clearly confirm the existence of active sea travel between the
Levant and Malta which is a
natural stopover on the way to Gibraltar . The time was during the posited heyday of the
Atlantean trade empire that we have shown to be operational throughout both the
Atlantic littoral and the Mediterranean littoral for a period of around two
thousand years ending abruptly with Hekla in
1159BCE.
Please note that the high period
of the empire likely was during the last five centuries and that it was a
maritime trade driven system completely unlike any land based empire of the
time, such as existed and those were scant, and operated on a common currency
using copper ingots and a palace based factory system such as exemplified by
Crete and Mycenae.
Unfortunately it appears that
cuneiform tablets were not used by this empire, or we would have an
imperishable record of their actual sites.
Instead we have stone works wherever they prospered.
Rare Cuneiform Script Found on Island of Malta
Thu, Dec 22, 2011
A small-sized find in an ancient megalithic temple stirs the
imagination.
Excavations among what many scholars consider to be the world's oldest
monumental buildings on the island
of Malta continue to
unveil surprises and raise new questions about the significance of these
megalithic structures and the people who built them. Not least is the latest
find - a small but rare, crescent-moon shaped agate stone featuring a
13th-century B.C.E. cuneiform inscription, the likes of which would normally be
found much farther east in Mesopotamia.
Led by palaeontology professor Alberto Cazzella of the University of Rome “La Sapienza”, the archaeological
team found the inscribed stone in the sancturary site of Tas-Silg, a megalithic
temple built during the late Neolithic period, and which has been used for
various religious and ceremonial purposes by the ancients from the third
millennium BC to the Byzantine era. The inscription was translated as a
dedication to the Mesopotamian moon god Sin, the father of Ninurta who, for
centuries, was the main deity worshiped far to the east in the city of
Nippur in Mesopotamia. Nippur
was considered a holy city and a pilgrimage site with a scribal school that
generated literary texts.
The location of the find makes it the farthest west the ancient script
has ever been discovered, raising questions about how it ended up in the remote
location. Some scholars theorize that the inscribed stone was likely
looted from the temple of Nippur during military conflict and then transported
westward through an exchange of hands by Cypriot or Mycenaean merchants,
thought to have had trading relations with the central Mediterranean at the
time.
Moreover, because cuneiform-inscribed agate would have been considered
highly valued during the late Bronze Age, its presence within the Tas-Silg
sanctuary, according to some scholars, suggests that the sanctuary had a much
wider significance than for those who lived on Malta at this time. The sanctuary
is already known to have been an important place of worship in the Mediterranean during the Phoenician and Roman eras.
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