One of a collection of clay tablets from Ras Shamra, the ancient Ugarit. This is described as the 'Legend of Aqhat', son of Dan'el, a Canaanite epic from around 1400 BC.
Dan'el may be identified as the famous wise man named by Ezekiel as Danel, together with Noah and Job (Ezek 14:14,20). These were three pious and righteous men from the past, important in Hebrew tradition. Noah was described as, "A righteous man, blameless in his generation, who walked with God" (Gen 6:9). Job was known as the man who was, "blameless and upright, one who feared God, and turned away from evil" (Job 1:1).
Many scholars think that Ezekiel was referring to the prophet Daniel, but this is unlikely, as Daniel was contemporary with Ezekiel, not a figure from the distant past, and his name is spelt differently in Hebrew.
In the Legend of Aqhat, Danel is described as a dispenser of fertility, but also the upright one, judging the cause of the widow and the fatherless.
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