From: 2024 National Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum
(November 29, 2024) The stela was discovered in 1881 in the Athenian port city of Piraeus. It was not a part of a modern archaeological excavation so its date is based on art and letter styles. The text style is standard Hellenistic Greek.
This is a melancholy image on a funerary stele, possibly only partly completed. The image a warrior coming back from battle sitting on the bow of a trireme. His shield and helmet are behind him. He seems to be contemplating the source of the war which from the text appears to be a drought. For some reason the fertility fluids flowing through the life network are not getting through to trigger life form manifestations from Yahu/Yahweh.
The text is Druid Akkadian which by then was the Latin of the ancient world being an old text used mainly for religiously themed and governmental texts. The text reads:
(November 29, 2024)
In English
The traditional translation is:
Problems
Names are not translations in themselves because they can cluster almost any set of arbitrary letters.
The word "son" (Greek huios) does not appear between the names
The assumption that the text is Greek changes the letter ayin /'/ to an /o/. The Akkadian letter het (Ḫ) is assumed to be a part of the dual-use letter he (H or E) despite that letter also being written as an E in the text.