ARSLAN TAS AMULET NO. 1 (AT1) C.G. HÄBERL This amulet bears a Phoenician incantation (or perhaps more accurately, two or more incantations) inscribed in an Aramaic script, on the basis of which it is dated to the 7th c. BCE. Together with a companion piece, it is one of the only stone tablet text amuletsto bear an inscription in any Canaanite dialect, and is therefore unique in several respects. The incantation takes the form of a contract with several beneficent beings against two maleficent beings, the ‘Fliers’ and the ‘Stranglers’. The author of the editio princeps, le Comte du Mesnil du Boisson, acquired the two amulets in 1933 from a local dealer at the archaeological site of Arslan Taş (Akk. Ḫadāttu new (town)). This site, located near the town of ʻAyn al-ʻArab in the Aleppo Governorate of Syria, was the seat of an Assyrian governor during the 8 th c. BCE. Figure 1: Obverse (Sections A, E, and F) Figure 2: Reverse (Section B) Figure 3: Bottom (Section C) Figure 4: Left (Section D) Figure 5: Top (Section D) Figure 6: Right (Section D)