Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Hatra' has mentioned 'Aramaic' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
It is recorded as xe1xb8xa5xe1xb9xadrxcaxbe xf0x90xa3xa7xf0x90xa3xa8xf0x90xa3xa3xf0x90xa3xa0 (xe1xb8xa4axe1xb9xadrxc4x81) in Hatran Aramaic inscriptions, probably meaning "enclosure, hedge, fence". | WIKI |
The city was officially called Beit xcaxbeElxc4x81hxc4x81xcaxbe xf0x90xa3xa1xf0x90xa3xa9xf0x90xa3xb5 xf0x90xa3xa0xf0x90xa3xabxf0x90xa3xa4xf0x90xa3xa0 "House of God", in Hatran Aramaic inscriptions[2] and once recorded as "Enclosure of Shamash" (xe1xb8xa5trxcaxbe d-xc5xa1mxc5xa1 xf0x90xa3xa7xf0x90xa3xa8xf0x90xa3xa3xf0x90xa3xa0 xf0x90xa3xa3xf0x90xa3xb4xf0x90xa3xacxf0x90xa3xb4) on a coin. | WIKI |
The city was famed for its fusion of Greek, Mesopotamian, Canaanite, Aramean and Arabian pantheons, known in Aramaic as Beixe1xb9xaf xc4x94lxc4x81hxc4x81 ("House of God"). | WIKI |
[3] Other deities mentioned in the Hatran Aramaic inscriptions were the Aramaean Ba'al Shamayn, and the female deity known as Ashurbel, which was perhaps the assimilation of the two deities the Assyrian god Ashur and the Babylonian Belxe2x80x94despite their being individually masculine. | WIKI |