. Grand-prêtre-;-see and . Van-soldt, Studies in the Akkadian of Ugarit, 212-220. Many of ?ab ilu " s tablets were also found on the acropolis (numerous tablets found during the 5 th season; see above, note 79), but others were found in the Palais royal (RS 19.139); we further suspect that a few are probably also to be found in the Maison du prêtre aux modèles de foies et de poumon inscrits

. Pardee, Deux tablettes ougaritiques de la main d " un même scribe Un chant nuptial ougaritique, pp.9-11

. Pardee, 11-12; idem Un chant nuptial ougaritique Apart from the haste-related variants (Pardee La première tablette du cycle de Ba lu " ; see above, note 72), the paleographic characteristics of Il?milku " s hand generally much more consistent, addition to Ugaritic, ?ab ilu used the cuneiform alphabet to copy texts in Akkadian and Hurrian; see above, pp.15-17

J. See, E. Lagarce, and . Du-puytison-lagarce, Remarques sur le matériel égyptien et égyptisant de Ras Shamra Maison aux Albâtres " ) et de Ras Ibn Hani à la lumière de données récentes sur la chronologie de la fin d " Ugarit, The Bronze Age in the Lebanon. Studies on the Archaeology and Chronology of Lebanon, Syria and Egypt

R. Hawley and D. Pardee, Les dons royaux en langue ougaritique : Nouvelle étude épigraphique de RS 15 Ras Shamra-Ougarit 19 [Leuven: Peeters, 2012], 251-273) and RS 16.382 (on the form of the {g} sign, see Hawley and Pardee Le texte juridique RS 16.382 : nouvelle étude épigraphique Le sceau nominal de Amm?yi?tamrou, roi d " Ougarit See the summary in Pardee The Ugaritic Alphabetic Cuneiform Writing System, and especially the impressions of the royal nominal seal of Ammi?tamru III which carries an alphabetic inscription (P. Bordreuil and D. Pardee {G} as a Palaeographic Indicator in Ugaritic Texts Palaeography and Scribal Practices in Syro-Palestine and Anatolia in the Late Bronze Age: Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten, pp.52-53, 1984.

. See-the-summary-in-pardee, The Ugaritic Alphabetic Cuneiform Writing System On the possibility that RS 15.117 dates to the reign of Niqmêpa VI, the father of Ammi?tamru III (Márquez Rowe, Royal Deeds of Ugarit, 53-54), see now Pardee, RS 15.117 et l " origine de l " alphabet cunéiforme d " Ougarit : rapport de collation, pp.186-189, 2010.

R. Arnaud, . Shamramu, . Bi-al, . Til, . Be-al et al., 90 Though rare, such an element is nevertheless found in the colophons of locally copied Mesopotamian traditional texts: for example, RS 20 The Title ? Y, Éditions Recherche sur les Civilisations, vol.14, issue.397, pp.32-315, 2001.

D. Caquot, Un texte mythico-magique, p.397

. Roche-2008a, 210-214; see above, section 3

C. Roche, R. Biggs, J. Myers, and M. Roth, Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization 62 (Chicago: The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago This phenomenon is especially prominent in the Maison d'Urtênu. Perhaps it should be linked with the presence of Ur-Te?abu as a scribe there (Malbran-Labat and Roche Urt?nu Ur-Te?ub " )? Well-trained as he was in Mesopotamian cuneiform tradition, Ur-Te?abu was possibly attracted by the " new " alphabetic cuneiform system (as were other local scribes; see Hawley Apprendre à écrire à Ougarit); having been raised in an intellectual milieu, he perhaps " played " with the cuneiform alphabet, Proceedings of the 51st, pp.155-170, 2005.

F. Gary-beckman, January 31 to bcollin@emory And bi-graphic scribal exercises show that students learned and used both systems simultaneously, even in the proud family of Nu m?-Ra?ap. 95 95 RS 94.2273, for example, contains model letter (epistolary formulas) in alphabetic Ugaritic on one side and an extract from the Silbenalphabet A in Mesopotamian cuneiform on the other, III: Textes 1994-2002 en cunéiforme alphabétique de la Maison d'Ourtenou, Ras Shamra-Ougarit 18, pp.0-205, 2012.

R. Hawley, J. Biggs, M. Myers, and . Roth, Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization 62 [Chicago: The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago If the kinship terminology used in the model letter is to be taken literally rather than metaphorically (which we consider probable in this case, On the Alphabetic Scribal Curriculum at Ugarit Proceedings of the 51st Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale Held at the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago the scribe who did the exercise ? a woman named Ab?naya ? was the sister of Ur-Te?abu, and therefore the (cadette?) daughter of Nu m?-Ra?ap, 2005.