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  2. Ma'sub inscription - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ma'sub_inscription

    1887. Northern Israel. Present location. The Louvre. Language. Phoenician. The Ma'sub inscription is a Phoenician-language inscription found at Khirbet Ma'sub (French: Masoub) near Al-Bassa. [1] The inscription is from 222/21 BC. [2] [1] Written in Phoenician script, [3] it is also known as KAI 19.

  3. Deir Alla Inscription - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deir_Alla_Inscription

    The Deir 'Alla Plaster Inscription (or Balaam Inscription, or Bal'am Son of Be'or Inscription ), known as KAI 312, is a famous [1] inscription discovered during a 1967 excavation in Deir 'Alla, Jordan. It is currently at the Jordan Archaeological Museum. It is written in a peculiar Northwest Semitic dialect, and has provoked much debate among ...

  4. Harran inscription - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harran_inscription

    The Harrān inscription (not to be confused with the Babylonian Harran Stela) is an Arabic-Greek bilingual Christian dedicatory at a martyrium in the Harran village, which is in the city of as-Suwayda (south of Damascus) in Syria. It dates to 567–568. The inscription has one section in Greek and another in Paleo-Arabic and, while the content ...

  5. Mandsaur stone inscription of Yashodharman-Vishnuvardhana

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandsaur_stone_inscription...

    The Mandsaur stone inscription of Yashodharman-Vishnuvardhana, is a Sanskrit inscription in the Gupta script dated to about 532 CE, on a slate stone measuring about 2 feet broad, 1.5 feet high and 2.5 inches thick found in the Malwa region of India, now a large part of the southwestern Madhya Pradesh. [1] On the back are engraved a sign of sun ...

  6. Maktar and Mididi inscriptions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maktar_and_Mididi_inscriptions

    The Maktar and Mididi inscriptions are a number of Punic language inscriptions, found in the 1890s at Maktar and Mididi, Tunisia. A number of the most notable inscriptions have been collected in Kanaanäische und Aramäische Inschriften, and are known as are known as KAI 145-158. More than 150 such inscriptions were known by the end of the 19th ...

  7. Mandasor Pillar Inscriptions of Yasodharman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandasor_Pillar...

    The Mandasor Pillar Inscriptions of Yashodharman are a set of Sanskrit inscriptions from early 6th-century discovered at an archaeological site at the village of Sondani (सोंधनी), about 4 kilometers south of Mandsaur (Mandasor) in northwestern Madhya Pradesh, India. These record the victory of Aulikara king Yasodharman over the Huna ...

  8. Umm al-Jimal Paleo-Arabic inscription - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umm_al-Jimal_Paleo-Arabic...

    The Umm al-Jimāl inscription (or Umm al-Ǧimāl inscription) is an undated Paleo-Arabic inscription from Umm al-Jimal in the Hauran region of Jordan. [1] It is located on the pillars base of a basalt slab in the northern part of the "Double Church" (so-named by the excavators) at the site of Umm al-Jimal and was partly covered with plaster on ...

  9. Myazedi inscription - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myazedi_inscription

    Myazedi inscription ( Burmese: မြစေတီ ကျောက်စာ [mja̰ zèdì tɕaʊʔ sà]; also Yazakumar Inscription or the Gubyaukgyi Inscription ), inscribed in 1113, is the oldest surviving stone inscription of the Burmese language. [dubious – discuss] "Myazedi" means "emerald stupa" ("zedi" being akin to the Pali "cetiya ...