The Canaanite city of Hazor, mentioned in…
1341 BCE to 1198 BCE
The Canaanite city of Hazor, mentioned in eighteenth century BCE documents found in Mari on the Tigris River, reaches its peak in the fourteenth and thirteenth centuries with the construction of several temples, some containing unusual cult objects and furnished with such objects as Mycenaean pottery, Egyptian scarabs, jewelry, and statuettes.
During the Egyptian Second Intermediate Period and early New Kingdoms (together running between the eighteenth century BCE and thirteenth century BCE), Canaan is an Egyptian vassal state, and thus fourteenth century documents, from the Tell Amarna archive in Egypt, describe the king of Hazor (in Amarna letters called Hasura), Abdi-Tirshi, as swearing loyalty to the Egyptian Pharaoh.
In these documents, Hazor is described as an important city in Canaan.