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Historically Thinking
Love, War, and Diplomacy
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Love, War, and Diplomacy

Eric H. Cline on the Discovery of the Amarna Letters and the Bronze Age World They Revealed

Published on November 12, 2025 (Episode 432)

Introduction

While sailing down the Nile in 1887, the English linguist and semi-invalid Archibald Henry Sayce stopped at Tell el-Amarna. There among the ruins of the short-lived capital of Pharaoh Akhenaten he noticed the foundations of a large building newly exposed by local laborers. A few months later someone—or many someones—uncovered hundreds of clay tablets inscribed with wedge-shaped characters never before seen in Egypt.

Sayce had stumbled upon the “Amarna Letters”: a cache of royal correspondence from the fourteenth century BC, written in cuneiform on behalf of the pharaohs Amenhotep III and Akhenaten. The tablets revealed the workings of an ancient world of diplomacy, alliances, and intrigue—an international network that linked Egypt, Babylonia, the Hittites, and the petty kingdoms of Canaan.

My guest, Eric H. Cline, tells the story of the Amarna Letters in his new book Love, War, and Diplomacy: The Discovery of the Amarna Letters and the Bronze Age World They Revealed (Princeton University Press, 2024). He traces the illicit nineteenth-century excavations that brought the letters to light, the rival scholars who raced to decipher them, and the remarkable portrait of the Late Bronze Age that emerged—a world at once distant and hauntingly familiar.

Subscribe to Historically Thinking to hear conversations like this one with Eric H. Cline—and to join the ongoing discussion about how historians recover and interpret the worlds of the past.


About the Guest

Eric H. Cline is Professor of Classics and Anthropology and Director of the Capitol Archaeological Institute at George Washington University. An archaeologist and historian of the ancient Mediterranean, he is the author of 1177 BC: The Year Civilization Collapsed and After 1177 BC: The Survival of Civilization. This is his third appearance on Historically Thinking.


For Further Investigation


Reflection Questions

  1. What made the discovery of the Amarna Letters such a transformative moment for archaeology and for ancient history?

  2. How do these tablets reveal the diplomacy and politics of the Late Bronze Age?

  3. In what ways do the Amarna Letters remind us that the concerns of ancient rulers—alliances, resources, prestige—are still our own?


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Tags: Eric H. Cline; Amarna Letters; Bronze Age; Archaeology; Diplomacy; Historically Thinking

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