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Dating back to around 2500 BC, the Ebla tablets provide very important
information regarding the history of religions. The most important feature
of the Ebla tablets, discovered by archaeologists in 1975 and which have
been the subject of much research and debate ever since, is that they
contain the names of three prophets referred to in holy scriptures.
The discovery after thousands of years of the Ebla tablets and the information
they contain is extremely important from the point of view of clarifying
the geographical location of societies revealed in the Qur'an.
Around 2500 BC, Ebla was a kingdom covering an area that included the
Syrian capital Damascus and south-east Turkey. This kingdom reached a
cultural and economic peak but later, as happened to a great many civilizations,
it disappeared from the stage of history. It was apparent from the records
that were kept that the Kingdom of Ebla was a major cultural and commercial
center of the time. (1) The people of Ebla possessed a civilization that
established state archives, built libraries and recorded commercial contracts
in written form. They even had their own language, known as Eblaite.
The History of Buried Religions
The true importance of the Kingdom of Ebla, regarded as a great success
for classical archaeology when first discovered in 1975, came to light
with the finding of some 20,000 cuneiform tablets and fragments. This
archive was four times greater than all the cuneiform texts known to archaeologists
over the last 3,000 years.
When the language used in the tablets was deciphered by the Italian Giovanni
Pettinato, an epigrapher from the University of Rome, the scale of their
importance was better understood. As a result of this, the finding of
the Kingdom of Ebla and this magnificent state archive became a matter
not just of archaeological interest, but one of interest to religious
circles, too. That was because as well as the names Michael (Mi-ka-il)
and Talut (Sa-u-lum), who struggled alongside the Prophet David, they
also contained the names of prophets mentioned in the three holy books:
The Prophet Abraham (Ab-ra-mu), the Prophet David (Da-u-dum) and the Prophet
Ishamel (Ish-ma-il). (2)
The Importance of the Names on the Ebla Tablets
The names of the prophets identified in the Ebla tablets are of the greatest
importance as this was the first time that they had been encountered in
historical documents of such age. This information, dating back to 1500
years before the Torah, was most striking. The appearance in the tablets
of the name of the Prophet Abraham recorded that the Prophet Abraham and
the religion brought by him had existed before the Torah.
Historians analyzed the Ebla tablets from this perspective, and this
major discovery regarding the Prophet Abraham and his mission became the
subject of research with regard to the history of religions. David Noel
Freedman, an American archaeologist and researcher into the history of
religions, reported, based on his studies, the names of such prophets
as Abraham and Ishmael in the tablets. (3)
Other Names in the Tablets
As stated above the names in the tablets were those of prophets referred
to in the three holy books, and the tablets were far older than the Torah.
In addition to these names there were also other subjects and place names
in the tablets, from which it can be seen that the Eblaites were very
successful traders. The names Sinai, Gaza and Jerusalem, not too distant
from Ebla, also appeared in the texts, showing that the Eblaites enjoyed
commercial and cultural links with these places. (4)
One important detail seen in the tablets was the names of the areas of
Sodom and Gomorrah, where the people of Lot lived. It is known that Sodom
and Gomorrah was a region on the shore of the Dead Sea where the people
of Lot lived and where the Prophet Lot communicated his message and called
people to live by religious moral values. In addition to these two names,
that of the city of Iram, which appears in the verses of the Qur'an, is
also among those in the Ebla tablets.
The most noteworthy aspect of these names is that apart from in the texts
communicated by the prophets, they had never before appeared in any other
text. This is important documentary evidence showing that reports of the
prophets who communicated the message of the one true religion at that
time had reached those areas. In an article in Reader's Digest magazine
it was recorded that that there had been a change in the Eblaites' religion
during the reign of King Ebrum and that people had begun to add prefixes
to their names in order to exalt the name of Almighty God.
God's Promise Is True
The history of Ebla and the Ebla tablets which came to light after some
4,500 years actually point to one major truth: God sent messengers to
Ebla, as He did to every community, and these called their peoples to
the true religion.
Some people adhered to the religion that came to them and thus attained
the true path, while others opposed the message of the prophets and preferred
a wicked life. God, Lord of the heavens, the earth, and all that lies
between, reveals this fact in the Qur'an:
We sent a Messenger among every people saying: "Worship
God and keep clear of all false deities." Among them were some whom
God guided but others received the misguidance they deserved. Travel about
the earth and see the final fate of the deniers. (Qur'an, 16: 36)
References
1) "Ebla", Funk & Wagnalls New Encyclopaedia, ©
1995 Funk & Wagnalls Corporation, Infopedia 2.0, SoftKey Multimedia
Inc.
2) Howard La Fay, "Ebla: Splendour of an Unknown Empire," National
Geographic Magazine, December 1978, p. 736; C. Bermant and M. Weitzman,
Ebla: A Revelation in Archaeology, Times Books, 1979, Wiedenfeld
and Nicolson, Great Britain, pp. 184.
3) Bilim ve Teknik magazine (Science and Technology), No. 118,
September 1977 and No. 131 October 1978
4) For detailed information, please see Harun Yahya's Miracles of the
Qur'an.
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