Letter from Tushratta to Amenhotep III
Mitannian, about 1370-1350 BC
From Tell el-Amarna, Egypt
Diplomatic links between Mesopotamia and Egypt
This clay tablet is part of a collection of 382 cuneiform
documents discovered in 1887 in Egypt, at the site of Tell
el-Amarna. They are mainly letters spanning a fifteen- to
thirty-year period. The first dates to around year 30 of the reign
of Amenhotep III (1390-1352 BC), and the last to no later than the
first year of the reign of Tutankhamun (1336-1327 BC). The majority
date to the reign of Amenhotep IV (Akhenaten) (1352-1336 BC), the
heretic pharaoh who founded a new capital at Tell el-Amarna.
This letter is written in Akkadian, the diplomatic language of
Mesopotamia at the time. It is addressed to Amenhotep III from
Tushratta, king of Mitanni (centred in modern Syria). Tushratta
calls the pharaoh his 'brother', with the suggestion that they are
of equal rank. The letter starts with greetings to various members
of the royal house including Tushratta's daughter Tadu-Heba, who
had become one of Amenhotep's many brides. Diplomatic marriages
were the standard way in which countries formed alliances with
Egypt.
Tushratta goes on to inform Amenhotep that, with the consent of
the goddess Ishtar, he has sent a statue of her to Egypt. He hopes
that the goddess will be held in great honour in Egypt and that the
statue may be sent back safely to Mitanni.
Three lines of Egyptian, written in black ink, have been added,
presumably when the letter arrived in Egypt. The addition includes
the date 'Year 36' of the king.
W.L. Moran, The Amarna letters (John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 1992)