Category
page 1Kings of Byblos
Ahiram sarcophage
Sarcophagus of Phoenician king
Story of Wenamun
literary work

Rib-Hadda
Rib-Hadda (also rendered Rib-Addi, Rib-Addu, Rib-Adda) was king of Byblos during the mid fourteenth century BCE. He is the author of some sixty of the Amarna letters all to Akhenaten. His name is Akkadian in form and may invoke the Northwest Semitic god Hadad, though his letters invoke only Ba'alat Gubla, the "Lady of Byblos" (probably another name for Asherah).
Statue of Pharaoh Osorkon I
Pharaoh Osorkon I, second king of Egypt's 22nd Dynasty (reigned 922–887 BC). The statue bears the cartouche of the king and a Phoenician inscription in the name of Elibaal, king of Byblos, fromerly in the Peytel collection
list of King of Byblos
Wikimedia list article
Yantin-'Ammu
'''Yantin-'Ammu''' was a local ruler of the Levantine town Byblos in the Middle Bronze Age, circa 18th century BCE. He is known from a cuneiform text in the Syrian city of Mari. The cuneiform texts from Mari are mostly datable to the reign of King Zimri-Lim, a contemporary of the Babylonian king Hammurabi.
Byblian royal inscriptions
Five inscriptions from Byblos written in an early type of Phoenician script