Haapi


Haapi, also Haip and Ha'ip was a commissioner of the 1350-1335 BC Amarna letters correspondence. The name "Hapi" in Egyptian is the name for the Nile god Hapi.
Haapi is referenced in 3 letters from the Byblos- corpus of the prolific writer Rib-Hadda, of 68 letters. Haapi is also referenced in letter EA 149 of Abimilku of Tyre-,.
The following letters are referenced to Haapi/Ha'ip:

The letters of commissioner: Haapi/Ha'ip

EA 149">Amarna letter EA 149">EA 149, "Neither water nor wood", letter no. 4 of 10

Letter no. 4 of 10 by Abimilku of Tyre.

EA 132, "The hope for peace"

Rib-Hadda letter; see Egyptian commissioner: Pahura.

EA 107, "[Chariot]eers, but no horses"

See also Maryannu; in letter: mar-ia-nu-ma, =charioteer.
EA 107 is a virtually undamaged tablet-letter. 107 also shows the precise spelling of the term: charioteer/Maryannu.
The 'matters'/'discussions', Ha'ip justification, or appropriateness as a commissioner, and 2) the events in Damascus/Dimašqu with the warring Aziru.