Amarna letter EA 282


Amarna letter EA 282, is a relatively short ovate clay tablet Amarna letter, located in the British Museum, no. 29851.
The letter contains only 16 lines of cuneiform text, in Akkadian, with lines 12 to 16 covering half of the tablet's reverse. Of note, the scribe, though the tablet is unparagraphed, inscribed a line along the bottom of the front side below line 11; and likewise, at the start of the letter, a line is inscribed above the top of line 1, on the obverse.
Letter EA 282 is from Šuwardata, of Qiltu, URU-Qiltu-, the "Govern-or" or 'Man of the -City-, to the Pharaoh of Egypt, and is from one of the vassal states in Canaan. Visually, the tablet is ovate, with even the inscribed cuneiform signs having ovate form, almost over the entire letter. Consequently, though EA 282 is topical, and tells a story, its first appearance is more like a piece of art, rather than a "diplomatic letter". The identified older photo, also shows an art-like appearance. Most Amarna letters are much more standard, and like a text, though the many styles of letters, as well as clay-types, leads to dramatic differences in Amarna letter's visual appearances.
The Amarna letters, about 300, numbered up to EA 382, are a mid 14th century BC, about 1350 BC and 20 years later, correspondence. The initial corpus of letters were found at Akhenaten's city Akhetaten, in the floor of the Bureau of Correspondence of Pharaoh; others were later found, adding to the body of letters.

The letter

EA 282: ''"Alone"''

One of eight letters from Šuwardata A translation from 1982, Biblical Archaeologist magazine:
The cuneiform signs, :

List of Šuwardata's 8-letters

and from the later corpus: