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Carchemish

Carchemish (/ˈkɑːrkəmɪʃ/ KAR-kəm-ish or /kɑːrˈkmɪʃ/ kar-KEE-mish), also spelled Karkemish (Turkish: Karkamış),[a] was an important ancient capital in the northern part of the region of Syria. At times during its history the city was independent, but it was also part of the Mitanni, Hittite and Neo-Assyrian Empires. Today it is on the frontier between Turkey and Syria.

Viceroyalty of Carchemish / Kingdom of Carchemish
Karkamiša
c. 1321 BC–717 BC
Carchemish among the Neo-Hittite states
CapitalCarchemish
Common languagesHittite, Hieroglyphic Luwian
Religion
Hittite-Luwian religion
GovernmentMonarchy
Historical eraBronze Age, Iron Age
• Established
c. 1321 BC
• Disestablished
717 BC
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofTurkey
Syria

It was the location of an important battle, about 605 BC, between the Babylonians and Egyptians, mentioned in the Bible (Jer. 46:2, 2 Chron. 35:20).[7] Modern neighbouring cities are Karkamış in Turkey and Jarabulus in Syria (also Djerablus, Jerablus, Jarablos, Jarâblos).[8]

Geography of the site edit

 
Early Hittite carving found by T. E. Lawrence and Leonard Woolley (right) in Carchemish.

Carchemish is now an extensive set of ruins (90 hectares, of which 55 lie in Turkey and 35 in Syria), located on the West bank of Euphrates River, about 60 kilometres (37 mi) southeast of Gaziantep, Turkey, and 100 kilometres (62 mi) northeast of Aleppo, Syria. The site is crossed by the Baghdad Railway that now forms the Turco-Syrian border. The site includes an acropolis along the river, an Inner Town encircled by earthen ramparts and an Outer Town (most of which lies in Syrian territory). A Turkish military base has been established at the site and access but only the acropolis is presently of restricted access.

History of research edit

 
T. E. Lawrence and Leonard Woolley (right) in Carchemish, Spring 1913



qꜣrjqꜣmjꜥšꜣ[5][6]
in hieroglyphs
Era: New Kingdom
(1550–1069 BC)

Carchemish has always been well known to scholars because of several references to it in the Bible (Jer. 46:2; 2 Chr. 35:20; Isa. 10:9) and in Egyptian and Assyrian texts. In 1874, James H. Skene, British Consul at Aleppo proposed its identification. This was confirmed in 1876 by George Smith.[9][10] Carchemish had been previously identified, incorrectly, with the Classical city of Circesium, at the confluence of the Khabur River and the Euphrates.[11]

Between 1878 and 1881 soundings were conducted by Consul Patrick Henderson on behalf of the British Museum.[9] Between 1911 and 1914 full excavations were conducted under the direction of D. G. Hogarth. In 1911 on the field there were D. G. Hogarth himself, R. C. Thompson, and T. E. Lawrence ("Lawrence of Arabia"), from 1912 to 1914 C. L. Woolley and T. E. Lawrence, while a last campaign took place in 1920 with C. L. Woolley and Philip Langstaffe Ord Guy.[12][13][14][15] Excavations were interrupted in 1914 by World War I and then ended in 1920 with the Turkish War of Independence.[16] These expeditions uncovered substantial remains of the Assyrian and Neo-Hittite periods, including defensive structures, temples, palaces, and numerous basalt statues and reliefs with Luwian hieroglyphic inscriptions.[17] Between 1956 and 1998, the whole site had been mined by the Turkish Land Forces.

With the completion in February 2011 of mine clearing operations on the Turkish portion of the site, archaeological work was resumed in September 2011.[18] Excavations in the Inner and Outer Towns were carried out by a joint Turco-Italian team from the Universities of Bologna, Gaziantep, and University of Istanbul under the direction of Prof. Dr. Nicolò Marchetti.[19]

The second season, from August to November 2012, brought several new art findings and archaeological discoveries, the most remarkable of which is Katuwa's Palace (c. 900 BC) to the east of the Processional Entry.

The third season, from May to October 2013, extended the exposure of Katuwa's palace, retrieving a cuneiform tablet with an exorcism in the name of the god Marduk, as well as the ruins of Lawrence's excavation house in the Inner Town, from which literally hundreds of fragments of sculptures and hieroglyphic inscriptions have been retrieved.

The fourth season started in May 2014 and continued through October 2014: in Katuwa's palace several orthostats exquisitely carved with a procession of gazelle-bearers have been found, some of them in situ, next to a courtyard paved with squared slabs. In the Neo Assyrian period that courtyard was covered by a mosaic floor made of river pebbles forming squares alternating in black and white color. Lawrence's excavation house was completely excavated.

During the fifth season, April to October 2015, more significant discoveries have been made in the palace area, both for Late Hittite sculptures, and Neo Assyrian refurbishments, with tens of items—including two fragments of clay prismatical cylinders inscribed with a unique cuneiform text by Sargon, intended for display, telling how he captured and reorganized the city of Karkemish—retrieved in a 14-m-deep well, sealed in 605 BC at the time of the Late Babylonian takeover.[20]

The sixth season, May to July 2016, saw a number of excavation areas opened also near the border, due to the added security represented by the construction of the wall (see below). Thus, in 2016 a complete stratigraphic record was obtained also for peripheral areas, greatly adding to our understanding of urban development between LB II and the Achaemenid period.

In the seventh season, from 7 May to 18 July 2017, the major breakthroughs were the beginning of the excavations on the north-western end of the acropolis and the discovery in the eastern Lower Palace area of a monumental building dating from the LB II. Among the finds, in addition to new sculpted complete artworks from the Iron Age, fragments of Imperial Hittite clay cuneiform tablets and c. 250 inscribed bullae should be mentioned.

The eighth season lasted from 4 May to 20 July 2019 and revealed a massive palace on the top of the acropolis dating from Late Bronze II, exposed more architecture and finds from the LB II administrative building in area C East (which seems to be the Hittite E2.KIŠIB) and more of the Iron I storage facility in area S.

Archaeological investigations on the Syrian side have been conducted as part of the Land of Carchemish project:[21] investigations of the Outer Town of Carchemish were undertaken in conjunction with the DGAM in Damascus and with the funding and sponsorship of the Council for British Research in the Levant and of the British Academy, under the direction of the late Professors T. J. Wilkinson and E. Peltenburg.[22]

Current status edit

Conservation and presentation works have now been completed and the archaeological park at the site is finally open since 13 July 2019, thanks to the support also of Gaziantep Metropolitan Municipality and Gaziantep Province: the site may be visited between 9 am and one hour before sunset through guided tours every two hours for security reasons. Financial support has been received by the three Universities mentioned above, by the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs,[23] and the Sanko Holding,[24] with the technical support also of Şahinbey Municipality and Inta A.Ş.

The Outer Town area lying in Syria has been designated, already before the Syrian Civil War, an endangered cultural heritage site and labelled "at risk" by the Global Heritage Fund,[25] due to agricultural expansion and, especially, urban encroachment. The field assessment of the Syrian part of the Outer Town documented that parts of the modern border town of Jerablus encroached upon the Outer Town.[26] In July 2019, a scientific visit to the outer town in Syria by the Turco-Italian Archaeological Expedition at Karkemish, entailed the protection of the area from further encroachment by the sprawling town of Jerablus and by the facilities for trucks which were being built to the South of the border: the City Council of Jerablus declared all the area enclosed by the Iron Age city walls a "first degree protected site", meaning the complete ban of any activity on it.

In February 2016, a prefabricated security wall (thus with no foundations that could have damaged the ancient site) was completed by the Turkish Army to the south of the railway, stretching between the Euphrates bridge and the train station of Karkamış.

History edit

36°49′47″N 38°00′54″E / 36.82972°N 38.01500°E / 36.82972; 38.01500

 
Basalt lion head from the monument to King Katuwa at Carchemish, now in the British Museum[27]
 
Map of Syria in the second millennium BC, showing the location of Carchemish, or "Karkemish."

The site has been occupied since the Neolithic and Chalcolithic periods[28] (pot burials).

Early Bronze edit

Cist tombs from ca. 2400 BC (Early Bronze Age). The city is mentioned in documents found in the Ebla archives of the 3rd millennium BC.[7]

Middle Bronze edit

Middle Bronze IIA edit

According to documents from the archives of Mari and Alalakh, dated from c. 1800 BC, Carchemish was then ruled by a king named Aplahanda, followed by his son, Yatar-Ami, (a contemporary of Mari ruler Zimri-Lim) and was an important center of timber trade. It had treaty relationships with Ugarit and Mitanni (Hanilgalbat). Another ruler of Carchemish in that period was Iahdun-Lim.[29] In ancient times, the city commanded the main ford in the region across the Euphrates, a situation which must have contributed greatly to its historical and strategic importance. After about 1745 BC, and the reign of Yahdul-Lim, not much is further known about Carchemish.

Yamhad influence edit

Little is known until the 1620s, when the city is mentioned in connection with the siege of Urshu (Ursha) by the Hittite king Hattusili I.[30] At that time, Carchemish was allied with the kingdom of Yamhad, centered in Aleppo, in supporting Urshu, but their efforts were unsuccessful, and the city fell, along with many other Syrian cities. Hattusili and his successor Mursili I campaigned several years against Yamhad.

Late Bronze edit

Egyptian influence edit

Pharaoh Thutmose I of the Eighteenth Dynasty erected a stele near Carchemish to celebrate his conquest of Syria and other lands beyond the Euphrates.

Mitanni influence edit

Under the Mitanni Empire, the city was a stronghold of Tushratta of Mitanni until its siege and conquest by Šuppiluliuma I (c. 1345 BC).

Hittite influence edit

Around the end of the reign of Pharaoh Tutankhamen, Carchemish was captured by king Šuppiluliuma I of the Hittites (c. 14th century BC), who made it into a kingdom ruled by his son Piyassili.

Piyassili (Šarri-Kušuḫ) was followed by his son Shakhurunuwa (fr:Sahurunuwa), about whom relatively little is known. He participated in the Battle of Kadesh (1274 BC). He was followed by Ini-Teššub.[31]

Iron Age edit

The city became one of the most important centres in the Hittite Empire, during the Late Bronze Age, and reached its apogee around the 13th century BC. While the Hittite empire fell to the Sea Peoples during the Bronze Age collapse, Carchemish survived the Sea Peoples' attacks to continue to be the capital of an important Neo-Hittite kingdom in the Iron Age, and a trading center.[32]

Although Ramesses III states in an inscription dating to his 8th Year from his Medinet Habu mortuary temple that Carchemish was destroyed by the Sea Peoples, the city evidently survived the onslaught.[33]

Kuzi-Teshub I edit

King Kuzi-Teshub (Kuzi-Tesup) is attested in power here and was the son of Talmi-Teshub who was a contemporary of the last Hittite king, Šuppiluliuma II.[34] He and his successors ruled a "mini-empire" stretching from Southeast Asia Minor to Northern Syria and the West bend of the Euphrates[35] under the title "Great King". This suggests that Kuzi-Tesub saw himself as the true heir of the line of the great Šuppiluliuma I and that the central dynasty at Hattusa was now defunct.[36] This powerful polity lasted from c. 1175 to 975 BC when it began losing control of its farther possessions and became gradually a more local city state centered around Carchemish.[37][38]

After Kuzi-Teshub, some of the kings of Carchemish, such as Tuthaliya I, Sapaziti, and Ura-Tarhunza, continued to use the title ‘Great King’ in order to advance their power interests.[39]

House of Suhi edit

Suhi I was the first known ruler of the dynasty of Carchemish that followed. He ruled in early 10th century BC, and was followed by Astuwalamanza.

Katuwa, son of Suhi II, is the best known ruler of this dynasty as known in the Hieroglyphic Luwian sources. He reigned around 880 BC.

Relations with Assyria edit

In the mid-13th century BC, after the fall of the Mitanni, Shalmaneser I visited Carchemish together with Prince Tukultī-Ninurta.[40]

In the 9th century BC, King Sangara (870-848 BC), the last member of the dynasty, paid tribute to Kings Ashurnasirpal II and Shalmaneser III of Assyria.[41]

Sangara already appeared in the Balawat Bronze Bands of Ashurnasirpal II as a tributary probably at some time before 868 BC. According to the archaeologist Shigeo Yamada, Karkamish may have been known during this period as 'Sazabê', “a fortified city of Sangara the Karkamishean”. Nevertheless, Sangara failed to leave any inscriptions at the city of Karkamish itself as far as is known.[42] Still, in 2015 his name was identified in Hieroglyphic Luwian for the first time in a local inscription.

Following this period, Karkamish does not appear in Assyrian sources until the mid-8th century BC. The only exception was a brief mention by Samši-Adad V (824–811 BC). Nevertheless, only 20 km downstream the Euphrates river, at the city of Til-Barsip (modern Tell Ahmar), the Assyrians established an important provincial capital. They renamed their new city as 'Kar-Shalmaneser', yet the old name was also used.[42]

Stele of Kubaba edit

In 2015, for the first time, the name of Sangara has been documented in a hieroglyphic Luwian inscription originally erected in Carchemish, itself.[39] The six extant pieces of the basalt stele of the goddess Kubaba from Karkemish, currently housed in three different museums, have finally been all discovered and assembled together. This stele was made by king Kamani of Karkemish around 790 BC.[39] The top part of this stele was drawn in 1876 by George Smith and transported in 1881 to the British Museum.

In 1876, this was the longest hieroglyphic Luwian inscription known until then. Based on it, Smith was the first to link the site with the Hittites as mentioned in the Bible, and also to identify it as Carchemish.[39]

The House of Suhi are known for their extensive building program. They left a prominent set of monuments, with sculptures and inscriptions.[43] Among the monuments they left, there are portal lions, inscriptions, relief orthostats and freestanding statues.

House of Astiruwa edit

The House of Astiruwa was the last known dynasty of rulers of Carchemish, and king Astiruwa (ca 848-790 BC) was the founder of this dynasty. Then came kings Yariri, Kamani, and Sastura.

King Yariri started to reign after 790 BC.[44] He was a great scholar, and left extensive records of his time.[45]

Carchemish was conquered by Sargon II in 717 BC in the reign of King Pisiri, the last ruler of the House of Astiruwa.

Battle of Carchemish edit

In the summer of 605 BC, the Battle of Carchemish was fought there by the Babylonian army of Nebuchadnezzar II and that of Pharaoh Necho II of Egypt and the remnants of the Assyrian army (Jer. 46:2). The aim of Necho's campaign was to contain the Westward advance of the Babylonian Empire and cut off its trade route across the Euphrates. However, the Egyptians were defeated by the unexpected attack of the Babylonians and were eventually expelled from Syria.

After a brief Neo-Babylonian occupation, the Turco-Italian excavations found evidence for three phases of Achaemenid occupation, a significant reconstruction in Hellenistic times, a monumental phase from the Late Roman period, an Early Byzantine and three Abbasid phases before the final abandonment of the site until the early 1900s.[46]

Kings of Carchemish edit

[47]

 
Yariri (r.) and Kamani (l.), resp. regent and future-ruler of Carchemish
Ruler Proposed reign (BC) Notes
Adni-anda (?) c. ? to 1786
Aplah-anda I c. 1786 to 1764 son of Adni-anda
Yatar-Ami c. 1764 to 1763 son of Aplah-anda I
Yahdun-Lim, or possibly Yahdul-Lim c. 1763 to 1745? son of Bin-Ami
Aplah-anda II c. 1745? to ? son of Yahdun-Lim?
Piyassili or Sharri-Kushukh c. 1315 son of the Hittite king Šuppiluliuma I
[ ... ]sharruma son of Piyassilis
Shakhurunuwa son of Piyassilis
Ini-Teshub I c. 1230s
Talmi-Teshub c. 1200
Kuzi-Teshub c. 1170 claimed the title of "Great King" after the fall of Hatti
Ini-Teshub II c. 1100
Tudhaliya c. 1100 either before or after Ini-Teshub II
Sapaziti c. 1025
Uratarhunda c. 1000
Suhi I c. 975
Astuwalamanza c. 950
Suhi II c. 925
Katuwa c. 900
Suhi III c. 890
Sangara c. 870–848
Isarwilamuwa c. 840
Kuwalanamuwa c. 835
Astiru c. 830
Yariri (regent) c. 815
Kamani c. 790
Sastura c. 760
Astiru II (?)
Pisiri c. 730s the last king, defeated in 717 by Sargon II

Goddess Kubaba edit

 
Old Syrian seal, dedicated to goddess Kubaba by Matrunna, daughter of Aplahanda, early 18th century BCE.

The patron goddess of Carchemish was Kubaba, a deity of apparently Hurrian origins.[48] She was represented as a dignified woman wearing a long robe, standing or seated, and holding a mirror. The main male deity of the town was Karhuha, akin to the Hittite stag-god Kurunta.

Kubaba was also the goddess of Alalakh, located in the coastal Amik Valley.

In 2015, a basalt stele of Kubaba, originally from Karkemish, was assembled back together from six separate broken pieces currently housed in three different museums around the world. This stele was originally made by king Kamani of Karkemish around 790 BC. The Luwian hieroglyphic inscription on this stele can now be read more fully, and it carries some important information about Karkemish history.[39]

Kubaba appears to be one of the three main deities worshipped in Carchemish during the Middle Bronze Age. The other two were Nergal and Nubandag. The chief god was the Mesopotamian-influenced Nergal, who was the city-god of Carchemish. He was also called Il-Karkamis, “God of Karkemish”, as is evidenced on an Old Babylonian hematite cylinder seal in the British Museum collections (BM 89172).[49]

The warrior god Nubandag has Hurrian roots. According to the Mari texts, he was worshipped at Carchemish in the Old Babylonian period along with Nergal.[49]

Later, beginning in the mid-14th century BC, the city-god of Carchemish became the warrior god Karhuha, similar to Kurunta (god). He was seen as a Stag-god, and his cult was probably introduced to Carchemish under the Mitannian influence.[49]

These deities clearly reflect the geographical position of Carchemish at the crossing of important trade routes; because of this, the city became a mixed cultural and religious centre.

Material Culture edit

Among the many artefacts recovered at Karkemish, typical of this territory are the Handmade Syrian Horses and Riders and the Syrian Pillar Figurines. These are clay figurines dating from mid-8th-7th centuries BCE that have been found in several hundreds in the town. These terracottas were manufactured during the Neo-Assyrian phase of Karkemish and it is currently believed they might have represented male and female characters performing distinguished public roles.[50]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hittite: 𒋼𒀀𒅗𒈩 Kargamiš;[1] Hieroglyphic Luwian: 𔕢‎𔗧𔖻𔑺 Karkamisà, 𔗧𔖱𔗧𔖻𔑶 Karakamisà/Karikamisà;[2][3] Akkadian:     Gargamiš;[4] Egyptian: qꜣrjqꜣmjꜥšꜣ;[5][6] Hebrew: כַּרְכְּמִישׁ Karkəmīš

References edit

  1. ^ "Kargamiš." Hawkins J.D., 1980.
  2. ^ Hawkins, John D (2000). Corpus of Hieroglyphic Luwian Inscriptions. Vol. 1: Inscriptions of the Iron Age. Part 1: Text, Introduction, Karatepe, Karkamis, Tell Ahmar, Maras, Malatya, Commagene. Walter de Gruyter. p. 74. ISBN 978-3-110-80420-1.
  3. ^ Hawkins, John D (2000). Corpus of Hieroglyphic Luwian Inscriptions. Vol. 1: Inscriptions of the Iron Age. Part 3: Plates. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 80, 83. ISBN 978-3-110-10864-4.
  4. ^ Parpola, Simo (1970). Neo-Assyrian Toponyms. Kevaeler: Butzon & Bercker. pp. 364–365.
  5. ^ a b Gauthier, Henri (1928). Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hiéroglyphiques. Vol. 5. pp. 157–158.
  6. ^ a b Wallis Budge, E. A. (1920). An Egyptian hieroglyphic dictionary: with an index of English words, king list and geological list with indexes, list of hieroglyphic characters, coptic and semitic alphabets, etc. Vol II. John Murray. p. 1042.
  7. ^ a b Lemche, Niels Peter (2004). Historical dictionary of ancient Israel. Historical dictionaries of ancient civilizations and historical eras. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-8108-4848-1.
  8. ^ "Lawrence of Arabia . Locations . Syria". Pbs.org.
  9. ^ a b Alessandra Gilibert, "Carchemish". in Syro-Hittite Monumental Art and the Archaeology of Performance: The Stone Reliefs at Carchemish and Zincirli in the Earlier First Millennium BCE, Berlin, New York: De Gruyter, pp. 19-54,2011
  10. ^ Wm. Hayes Ward, "Unpublished or Imperfectly Published Hittite Monuments. III. Reliefs at Carchemish=Jerablûs", The American Journal of Archaeology and of the History of the Fine Arts, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 172–74, 1888
  11. ^ Issac H Hall, "Proceedings at Boston, May 30th, 1877", Journal of the American Oriental Society, vol. 10, pp. cxxxiv–cxlv, 1872
  12. ^ H. Frowde (1911). David George Hogarth, Hittite problems and the excavation of Carchemish (PDF). Nabu Press. ISBN 978-1-171-63699-1.
  13. ^ Hogarth D.G. 1914, repr. 1969.
  14. ^ Woolley C.L., 1921, repr. 1969.
  15. ^ "C.L. Woolley C.L. & Barnett R.D., 1952, repr. 1978" (PDF). Archive.org.
  16. ^ Güterbock H.G., 1954, pp. 102–114.
  17. ^ Wright, William (1886). The Empire of the Hittites: with Decipherment of Hittite inscriptions (PDF). Nisbet.
  18. ^ Ancient city to rise in SE Turkey area cleared of mines. Daily News & Economic Review 31.03.2011
  19. ^ Nicolò Marchetti (2012). "Karkemish on the Euphrates: Excavating a City's History". Near Eastern Archaeology. 75 (3): 132–147. doi:10.5615/neareastarch.75.3.0132. JSTOR 10.5615/neareastarch.75.3.0132. S2CID 163384370.
  20. ^ Frame, Grant, "Carchemish", in The Royal Inscriptions of Sargon II, King of Assyria (721–705 BC), University Park, USA: Penn State University Press, pp. 421-426, 2021
  21. ^ "Land of Carchemish (Syria) Project". Durham University. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  22. ^ Edgar Peltenburg, Euphrates River Valley Settlement: The Carchemish Sector in the Third Millennium BC, Oxbow Books, 2007, ISBN 1-84217-272-7
  23. ^ "Italian archaeological, anthropological and ethnological missions abroad". Esteri.it.
  24. ^ "xcavations in Zeugma and Carchemish Ancient City". Retrieved 8 April 2023.
  25. ^ "Satellite Imagery Briefing: Monitoring Endangered Cultural Heritage Sites - Global Heritage Fund | GHF" (PDF).
  26. ^ T.J. Wilkinson; E. Peltenberg (November 2010). ""Carchemish in Context: Surveys in the Hinterland of a Major Iron Age City."". Bulletin of the Council for British Research in the Levant. 5 (1): 11–20(10). doi:10.1179/175272710X12828116505919.
  27. ^ "figure | British Museum". Britishmuseum.org. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  28. ^ Langer, William L., ed. (1972). An Encyclopedia of World History (5th ed.). Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Company. pp. 9. ISBN 0-395-13592-3.
  29. ^ Douglas Frayne, "Carchemish", in Old Babylonian Period (2003-1595 B.C.): Early Periods, Volume 4, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, pp. 773-778, 2016
  30. ^ Seton Lloyd (21 August 2007). Hittite Warrior. Bloomsbury USA. p. 44. ISBN 9781846030819.
  31. ^ [1] Mora, Clelia, Maria ElenaBalza, and Marco De Pietri, "The Court and Administration of Karkemish in the Late Bronze Age", Administrative Practices and Political Control in Anatolian and Syro-Anatolian Polities in the 2nd and 1st Millennium BCE: pp. 93-126, 2023
  32. ^ Federico Giusfredi, Sources for a Socio-Economic History of the Neo-Hittite States, Winter Verlag, 2010, pp. 35-51.
  33. ^ Gary Beckman, "Hittite Chronology", Akkadica, pp.119–120 (2000), p.23
  34. ^ K.A. Kitchen, On the Reliability of the Old Testament, William B. Eerdsman Publishing Co, pp.99 & 140
  35. ^ Kitchen, op. cit., p.99
  36. ^ Trevor R. Bryce, The Kingdom of the Hittites, Oxford University Press, p.384
  37. ^ Kitchen, op. cit., p.100
  38. ^ Giusfredi, op.cit., pp. 37-44
  39. ^ a b c d e Marchetti, Nicolò; Peker, Hasan (16 July 2018). "The Stele of Kubaba by Kamani and the Kings of Karkemish in the 9th Century BC". Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und vorderasiatische Archäologie. 108 (1). Walter de Gruyter GmbH: 81–99. doi:10.1515/za-2018-0006. ISSN 0084-5299. S2CID 165166999.
  40. ^ Shibata, Daisuke, "An Expedition of King Shalmaneser I and Prince Tukultī-Ninurta to Carchemish", in At the Dawn of History: Ancient Near Eastern Studies in Honour of J. N. Postgate, edited by Yağmur Heffron, Adam Stone and Martin Worthington, University Park, USA: Penn State University Press, pp. 491-506, 2017
  41. ^ Trevor Bryce: The World of the Neo-Hittite Kingdoms: A Political and Military History. Oxford, New York 2012, p. 302.
  42. ^ a b J.D. Hawkins, M. Weeden (2016), Sketch history of Karkamish in the earlier Iron Age (Iron I–IIB). in Tony J. Wilkinson, Edgar Peltenburg 2016 (eds), CARCHEMISH IN CONTEXT - THE LAND OF CARCHEMISH PROJECT, 2006–2010. Oxbow Books, ISBN 1785701118 p.13
  43. ^ Sanna Pauliina Aro-Valjus (1 January 2013). "Carchemish Before and After 1200 BC". Luwian Identities. BRILL. pp. 233–276. doi:10.1163/9789004253414_013. ISBN 9789004253414. at academia.edu
  44. ^ Gilibert, Alessandra (2011). Syro-Hittite Monumental Art and the Archaeology of Performance. De Gruyter. p. 135
  45. ^ Zsolt Simon (2012), Where is the Land of Sura of the Hieroglyphic Luwian inscription KARKAMIŠ A4b and Why Were Cappadocians Called Syrians by Greeks? Altoriental. Forsch., Akademie Verlag 39
  46. ^ Zaina F. (ed.) 2019.
  47. ^ H. Peker, Texts from Karkemish I. Luwian Hieroglyphic Inscriptions from the 2011-2015 Excavations (OrientLab Series Maior 1), Disci-Ante Quem, Bologna, 2016, pp. 47-49
  48. ^ Hutter M. 2003, pp. 211-280.
  49. ^ a b c Marchesi, Gianni; Marchetti, Nicolò (2019). "The Deities of Karkemish in the Middle Bronze Age according to Glyptic and Textual Evidence". Pearls of the past: studies on Near Eastern art and archaeology in honour of Frances Pinnock. Münster: Zaphon. ISBN 978-3-96327-058-1. OCLC 1099837791.
  50. ^ Bolognani B. 2017, pp.172, 220, 246-247; 2020a; 2020b.

BRITISH MUSEUM EXPEDITION

  • [2] Hogarth D.G., Carchemish I: Introductory, The British Museum Press, London 1914, repr. 1969.
  • [3] Woolley C.L., Carchemish II: Town Defences: Report on the Excavations at Jerablus on Behalf of the British Museum, British Museum Press, London 1921, repr. 1969, ISBN 0-7141-1002-7. Carchemish II
  • [4] Woolley C.L. & Barnett R.D., Carchemish III: Excavations in the Inner Town: Report on the Excavations at Jerablus on Behalf of the British Museum, British Museum Press, London 1952, repr. 1978, ISBN 0-7141-1003-5. Carchemish III

TURCO-ITALIAN EXPEDITION

  • Bitelli G., Girardi F., Girelli V.A., Digital enhancement of the 3D scan of Suhi I's stele from Karkemish, in Orientalia 83/2 (2014), pp. 154–161.
  • Bolognani B.,The Iron Age Figurines from Karkemish (2011–2015 Campaigns) and the Coroplastic Art of the Syro-Anatolian Region, unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Bologna, Bologna (2017). amsdottorato.unibo.it/8222/7/Bolognani_Barbara_tesi.pdf
  • Bolognani B., "The Iron Age Female Figurines from Karkemish and the Middle Euphrates Valley. Preliminary Notes on Some Syrian Pillar Figurines", in Donnat S., Hunziker-Rodewald R., Weygand I. (eds), Figurines féminines nues : Proche-Orient, Égypte, Nubie, Méditerranée, Asie centrale (VIIIe millénaire av. J.-C. - IVe siècle ap. J.-C.), Proceedings of the International Conference “Figurines féminines nues. Proche-Orient, Egypte, Nubie, Méditerranée, Asie centrale”, June 25th-26th 2015, MISHA, Strasbourg, Études d’archéologie et d’histoire ancienne (EAHA), De Boccard, Paris, pp. 209–223 (2020a). Bolognani 2020a
  • Bolognani, B., "Figurines as Social Markers: The Neo-Assyrian Impact on the Northern Levant as Seen from the Material Culture", in Gavagnin K., Palermo R. (eds), Imperial Connections. Interactions and Expansions from Assyria to the Roman Period. Proceedings of the 5th “Broadening Horizons” Conference, 5–8 June 2017, Udine(West & East Monografie 2), University of Udine, Udine, pp. 43–57 (2020b).Bolognani 2020b
  • Dinçol A., Dinçol B., Hawkins J.D., Marchetti N., Peker H., A Stele by Suhi I from Karkemish, in Orientalia 83/2 (2014), pp. 143–153.
  • Dinçol A., Dinçol B., Peker H., An Anatolian Hieroglyphic Cylinder Seal from the Hilani at Karkemish, in Orientalia 83/2 (2014), pp. 162–165.
  • Marchesi G., Epigraphic Materials of Karkemish from the Middle Bronze Age, in Orientalia 83/2 (2014), pp. 166–181.
  • Marchesi G., A Bilingual Literary Text from Karmenish Featuring Marduk (with contributions by W.R. Mayer and S.V. Panayotov), in Orientalia 83/4 (2014), pp. 333–340.
  • Marchetti N., "The 2011 Joint Turco-Italian Excavations at Karkemish", in 34. kazı sonuçları toplantısı, 28 Mayıs-1 Haziran 2012, Çorum. 1. cilt, T.C. Kültür ve Turizm Bakanlığı, Ankara (2013), pp. 349–364. kulturvarliklari.gov.tr/Eklenti/7332,34kazi1.pdf?0
  • Marchetti N., The 2012 Joint Turco-Italian Excavations at Karkemish, in 35. kazı sonuçları toplantısı, 27–31 Mayıs 2013, Muğla. 3. cilt, T.C. Kültür ve Turizm Bakanlığı, Ankara (2014), pp. 233–248. kulturvarliklari.gov.tr/Eklenti/27148,35kazi3.pdf?0
  • Marchetti N., Karkemish. An Ancient Capital on the Euphrates (OrientLab 2), Ante Quem, Bologna (2014). free download orientlab.net/pubs (free download)
  • Marchetti N., Bronze Statuettes from the Temples of Karkemish, in Orientalia 83/3 (2014), pp. 305–320.
  • Marchetti N., Karkemish. New Discoveries in the Last Hittite Capital, in Current World Archaeology 70 (2015), pp 18–24. world-archaeology.com/issue-70/cwa-70.htm
  • Marchetti N., Les programmes publics de communication visuelle à Karkemish entre la fin du IIe millénaire et le début du Ier millénaire avant J.-C., in V. Blanchard (ed.), Royaumes oubliés. De l'Empire hittite aux Araméens, Louvre éditions, Paris, (2019), pp. 154–161.
  • Marchetti N. et al., Karkemish on the Euphrates: Excavating a City's History, in Near Eastern Archaeology 75/3 (2012), pp. 132–147.jstor.org/stable/10.5615/neareastarch.75.issue-3
  • Marchetti N., Peker H., A Stele from Gürçay near Karkemish, in Orientalia 83/2 (2014), pp. 182–188.
  • [5]Peker, Hasan, "A New Funerary Stele from Karkemish and New Values for Some Anatolian Hieroglyphic Signs", Belleten 87.309, pp. 357-383, 2023
  • Peker H., A Funerary Stele from Yunus, in Orientalia 83/2 (2014), pp. 189–193.
  • Peker H., Texts from Karkemish I. Luwian Hieroglyphic Inscriptions from the 2011-2015 Excavations (OrientLab Series Maior 1), Ante Quem, Bologna (2016).
  • Pizzimenti S., Three Glyptic Documents from Karkemish, in Orientalia 83/2 (2014), pp. 194–201.
  • Zaina F. (ed.), Excavations at Karkemish I. The Stratigraphic Sequence of Area G (OrientLab Series Maior 3), Ante Quem, Bologna, (2019).
  • Zecchi M., A Note on Two Egyptian Seal Impressions from Karkemish, in Orientalia 83/2 (2014), pp. 202–206.

OTHER REFERENCES

  • GüterbockH.G., Carchemish, in Journal of Near Eastern Studies 13/2 (1954), pp. 102–114.
  • Hayes Ward W.M., Unpublished or Imperfectly Published Hittite Monuments. III. Reliefs at Carchemish=Jerablûs, The American Journal of Archaeology and of the History of the Fine Arts, vol. 4, pp. 172–174, (1988).*[6]
  • Hawkins J.D.,"Kargamiš.", Reallexikon der Assyriologie und Vorderasiatischen Archäologie, Walter de Gruyter, Berlin (1980).
  • Hawkins J.D., Corpus of Hieroglyphic Luwian Inscriptions I. Inscriptions of the Iron Age. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin (2000), ISBN 978-3-11-010864-4.
  • Hutter M., "Aspects of Luwian Religion", in H.C. Melchert (ed.), The Luwians, Brill, (2003).
  • Peltenburg E., Euphrates River Valley Settlement: The Carchemish Sector in the Third Millennium BC, Oxbow Books, (2007).
  • Wilson D.M., The British Museum. A history. The British Museum Press, London, 2002.
  • Woolley, C. Leonard, "The Prehistoric Pottery of Carchemish", Iraq, vol. 1, no. 2, pp. 146–62, 1934

External links edit

  • Official website of the Turco-Italian Archaeological Expedition to Karkemish
  • Land of Carchemish Project, Syria
  • Carchemish images

carchemish, modern, settlement, turkey, karkamış, ɑːr, kəm, ɑː, mish, also, spelled, karkemish, turkish, karkamış, important, ancient, capital, northern, part, region, syria, times, during, history, city, independent, also, part, mitanni, hittite, assyrian, em. For the modern settlement in Turkey see Karkamis Carchemish ˈ k ɑːr k e m ɪ ʃ KAR kem ish or k ɑː r ˈ k iː m ɪ ʃ kar KEE mish also spelled Karkemish Turkish Karkamis a was an important ancient capital in the northern part of the region of Syria At times during its history the city was independent but it was also part of the Mitanni Hittite and Neo Assyrian Empires Today it is on the frontier between Turkey and Syria Viceroyalty of Carchemish Kingdom of CarchemishKarkamisac 1321 BC 717 BCCarchemish among the Neo Hittite statesCapitalCarchemishCommon languagesHittite Hieroglyphic LuwianReligionHittite Luwian religionGovernmentMonarchyHistorical eraBronze Age Iron Age Establishedc 1321 BC Disestablished717 BCPreceded by Succeeded by Mitanni Hittites Neo Assyrian EmpireToday part ofTurkeySyria It was the location of an important battle about 605 BC between the Babylonians and Egyptians mentioned in the Bible Jer 46 2 2 Chron 35 20 7 Modern neighbouring cities are Karkamis in Turkey and Jarabulus in Syria also Djerablus Jerablus Jarablos Jarablos 8 Contents 1 Geography of the site 2 History of research 3 Current status 4 History 4 1 Early Bronze 4 2 Middle Bronze 4 2 1 Middle Bronze IIA 4 2 2 Yamhad influence 4 3 Late Bronze 4 3 1 Egyptian influence 4 3 2 Mitanni influence 4 3 3 Hittite influence 4 4 Iron Age 4 5 Kuzi Teshub I 4 6 House of Suhi 4 6 1 Relations with Assyria 4 6 2 Stele of Kubaba 4 7 House of Astiruwa 4 8 Battle of Carchemish 5 Kings of Carchemish 6 Goddess Kubaba 7 Material Culture 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksGeography of the site edit nbsp Early Hittite carving found by T E Lawrence and Leonard Woolley right in Carchemish Carchemish is now an extensive set of ruins 90 hectares of which 55 lie in Turkey and 35 in Syria located on the West bank of Euphrates River about 60 kilometres 37 mi southeast of Gaziantep Turkey and 100 kilometres 62 mi northeast of Aleppo Syria The site is crossed by the Baghdad Railway that now forms the Turco Syrian border The site includes an acropolis along the river an Inner Town encircled by earthen ramparts and an Outer Town most of which lies in Syrian territory A Turkish military base has been established at the site and access but only the acropolis is presently of restricted access History of research edit nbsp T E Lawrence and Leonard Woolley right in Carchemish Spring 1913 qꜣrjqꜣmjꜥsꜣ 5 6 in hieroglyphs Era New Kingdom 1550 1069 BC Carchemish has always been well known to scholars because of several references to it in the Bible Jer 46 2 2 Chr 35 20 Isa 10 9 and in Egyptian and Assyrian texts In 1874 James H Skene British Consul at Aleppo proposed its identification This was confirmed in 1876 by George Smith 9 10 Carchemish had been previously identified incorrectly with the Classical city of Circesium at the confluence of the Khabur River and the Euphrates 11 Between 1878 and 1881 soundings were conducted by Consul Patrick Henderson on behalf of the British Museum 9 Between 1911 and 1914 full excavations were conducted under the direction of D G Hogarth In 1911 on the field there were D G Hogarth himself R C Thompson and T E Lawrence Lawrence of Arabia from 1912 to 1914 C L Woolley and T E Lawrence while a last campaign took place in 1920 with C L Woolley and Philip Langstaffe Ord Guy 12 13 14 15 Excavations were interrupted in 1914 by World War I and then ended in 1920 with the Turkish War of Independence 16 These expeditions uncovered substantial remains of the Assyrian and Neo Hittite periods including defensive structures temples palaces and numerous basalt statues and reliefs with Luwian hieroglyphic inscriptions 17 Between 1956 and 1998 the whole site had been mined by the Turkish Land Forces With the completion in February 2011 of mine clearing operations on the Turkish portion of the site archaeological work was resumed in September 2011 18 Excavations in the Inner and Outer Towns were carried out by a joint Turco Italian team from the Universities of Bologna Gaziantep and University of Istanbul under the direction of Prof Dr Nicolo Marchetti 19 This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message The second season from August to November 2012 brought several new art findings and archaeological discoveries the most remarkable of which is Katuwa s Palace c 900 BC to the east of the Processional Entry The third season from May to October 2013 extended the exposure of Katuwa s palace retrieving a cuneiform tablet with an exorcism in the name of the god Marduk as well as the ruins of Lawrence s excavation house in the Inner Town from which literally hundreds of fragments of sculptures and hieroglyphic inscriptions have been retrieved The fourth season started in May 2014 and continued through October 2014 in Katuwa s palace several orthostats exquisitely carved with a procession of gazelle bearers have been found some of them in situ next to a courtyard paved with squared slabs In the Neo Assyrian period that courtyard was covered by a mosaic floor made of river pebbles forming squares alternating in black and white color Lawrence s excavation house was completely excavated During the fifth season April to October 2015 more significant discoveries have been made in the palace area both for Late Hittite sculptures and Neo Assyrian refurbishments with tens of items including two fragments of clay prismatical cylinders inscribed with a unique cuneiform text by Sargon intended for display telling how he captured and reorganized the city of Karkemish retrieved in a 14 m deep well sealed in 605 BC at the time of the Late Babylonian takeover 20 The sixth season May to July 2016 saw a number of excavation areas opened also near the border due to the added security represented by the construction of the wall see below Thus in 2016 a complete stratigraphic record was obtained also for peripheral areas greatly adding to our understanding of urban development between LB II and the Achaemenid period In the seventh season from 7 May to 18 July 2017 the major breakthroughs were the beginning of the excavations on the north western end of the acropolis and the discovery in the eastern Lower Palace area of a monumental building dating from the LB II Among the finds in addition to new sculpted complete artworks from the Iron Age fragments of Imperial Hittite clay cuneiform tablets and c 250 inscribed bullae should be mentioned The eighth season lasted from 4 May to 20 July 2019 and revealed a massive palace on the top of the acropolis dating from Late Bronze II exposed more architecture and finds from the LB II administrative building in area C East which seems to be the Hittite E2 KISIB and more of the Iron I storage facility in area S Archaeological investigations on the Syrian side have been conducted as part of the Land of Carchemish project 21 investigations of the Outer Town of Carchemish were undertaken in conjunction with the DGAM in Damascus and with the funding and sponsorship of the Council for British Research in the Levant and of the British Academy under the direction of the late Professors T J Wilkinson and E Peltenburg 22 Current status editConservation and presentation works have now been completed and the archaeological park at the site is finally open since 13 July 2019 thanks to the support also of Gaziantep Metropolitan Municipality and Gaziantep Province the site may be visited between 9 am and one hour before sunset through guided tours every two hours for security reasons Financial support has been received by the three Universities mentioned above by the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs 23 and the Sanko Holding 24 with the technical support also of Sahinbey Municipality and Inta A S The Outer Town area lying in Syria has been designated already before the Syrian Civil War an endangered cultural heritage site and labelled at risk by the Global Heritage Fund 25 due to agricultural expansion and especially urban encroachment The field assessment of the Syrian part of the Outer Town documented that parts of the modern border town of Jerablus encroached upon the Outer Town 26 In July 2019 a scientific visit to the outer town in Syria by the Turco Italian Archaeological Expedition at Karkemish entailed the protection of the area from further encroachment by the sprawling town of Jerablus and by the facilities for trucks which were being built to the South of the border the City Council of Jerablus declared all the area enclosed by the Iron Age city walls a first degree protected site meaning the complete ban of any activity on it In February 2016 a prefabricated security wall thus with no foundations that could have damaged the ancient site was completed by the Turkish Army to the south of the railway stretching between the Euphrates bridge and the train station of Karkamis History edit36 49 47 N 38 00 54 E 36 82972 N 38 01500 E 36 82972 38 01500 nbsp Basalt lion head from the monument to King Katuwa at Carchemish now in the British Museum 27 nbsp Map of Syria in the second millennium BC showing the location of Carchemish or Karkemish The site has been occupied since the Neolithic and Chalcolithic periods 28 pot burials Early Bronze edit Cist tombs from ca 2400 BC Early Bronze Age The city is mentioned in documents found in the Ebla archives of the 3rd millennium BC 7 Middle Bronze edit Middle Bronze IIA edit According to documents from the archives of Mari and Alalakh dated from c 1800 BC Carchemish was then ruled by a king named Aplahanda followed by his son Yatar Ami a contemporary of Mari ruler Zimri Lim and was an important center of timber trade It had treaty relationships with Ugarit and Mitanni Hanilgalbat Another ruler of Carchemish in that period was Iahdun Lim 29 In ancient times the city commanded the main ford in the region across the Euphrates a situation which must have contributed greatly to its historical and strategic importance After about 1745 BC and the reign of Yahdul Lim not much is further known about Carchemish Yamhad influence edit Little is known until the 1620s when the city is mentioned in connection with the siege of Urshu Ursha by the Hittite king Hattusili I 30 At that time Carchemish was allied with the kingdom of Yamhad centered in Aleppo in supporting Urshu but their efforts were unsuccessful and the city fell along with many other Syrian cities Hattusili and his successor Mursili I campaigned several years against Yamhad Late Bronze edit Egyptian influence edit Pharaoh Thutmose I of the Eighteenth Dynasty erected a stele near Carchemish to celebrate his conquest of Syria and other lands beyond the Euphrates Mitanni influence edit Under the Mitanni Empire the city was a stronghold of Tushratta of Mitanni until its siege and conquest by Suppiluliuma I c 1345 BC Hittite influence edit Around the end of the reign of Pharaoh Tutankhamen Carchemish was captured by king Suppiluliuma I of the Hittites c 14th century BC who made it into a kingdom ruled by his son Piyassili Piyassili Sarri Kusuḫ was followed by his son Shakhurunuwa fr Sahurunuwa about whom relatively little is known He participated in the Battle of Kadesh 1274 BC He was followed by Ini Tessub 31 Iron Age edit The city became one of the most important centres in the Hittite Empire during the Late Bronze Age and reached its apogee around the 13th century BC While the Hittite empire fell to the Sea Peoples during the Bronze Age collapse Carchemish survived the Sea Peoples attacks to continue to be the capital of an important Neo Hittite kingdom in the Iron Age and a trading center 32 Although Ramesses III states in an inscription dating to his 8th Year from his Medinet Habu mortuary temple that Carchemish was destroyed by the Sea Peoples the city evidently survived the onslaught 33 Kuzi Teshub I edit King Kuzi Teshub Kuzi Tesup is attested in power here and was the son of Talmi Teshub who was a contemporary of the last Hittite king Suppiluliuma II 34 He and his successors ruled a mini empire stretching from Southeast Asia Minor to Northern Syria and the West bend of the Euphrates 35 under the title Great King This suggests that Kuzi Tesub saw himself as the true heir of the line of the great Suppiluliuma I and that the central dynasty at Hattusa was now defunct 36 This powerful polity lasted from c 1175 to 975 BC when it began losing control of its farther possessions and became gradually a more local city state centered around Carchemish 37 38 After Kuzi Teshub some of the kings of Carchemish such as Tuthaliya I Sapaziti and Ura Tarhunza continued to use the title Great King in order to advance their power interests 39 House of Suhi edit Main article House of Suhi Suhi I was the first known ruler of the dynasty of Carchemish that followed He ruled in early 10th century BC and was followed by Astuwalamanza Katuwa son of Suhi II is the best known ruler of this dynasty as known in the Hieroglyphic Luwian sources He reigned around 880 BC Relations with Assyria edit In the mid 13th century BC after the fall of the Mitanni Shalmaneser I visited Carchemish together with Prince Tukulti Ninurta 40 In the 9th century BC King Sangara 870 848 BC the last member of the dynasty paid tribute to Kings Ashurnasirpal II and Shalmaneser III of Assyria 41 Sangara already appeared in the Balawat Bronze Bands of Ashurnasirpal II as a tributary probably at some time before 868 BC According to the archaeologist Shigeo Yamada Karkamish may have been known during this period as Sazabe a fortified city of Sangara the Karkamishean Nevertheless Sangara failed to leave any inscriptions at the city of Karkamish itself as far as is known 42 Still in 2015 his name was identified in Hieroglyphic Luwian for the first time in a local inscription Following this period Karkamish does not appear in Assyrian sources until the mid 8th century BC The only exception was a brief mention by Samsi Adad V 824 811 BC Nevertheless only 20 km downstream the Euphrates river at the city of Til Barsip modern Tell Ahmar the Assyrians established an important provincial capital They renamed their new city as Kar Shalmaneser yet the old name was also used 42 Stele of Kubaba edit In 2015 for the first time the name of Sangara has been documented in a hieroglyphic Luwian inscription originally erected in Carchemish itself 39 The six extant pieces of the basalt stele of the goddess Kubaba from Karkemish currently housed in three different museums have finally been all discovered and assembled together This stele was made by king Kamani of Karkemish around 790 BC 39 The top part of this stele was drawn in 1876 by George Smith and transported in 1881 to the British Museum In 1876 this was the longest hieroglyphic Luwian inscription known until then Based on it Smith was the first to link the site with the Hittites as mentioned in the Bible and also to identify it as Carchemish 39 The House of Suhi are known for their extensive building program They left a prominent set of monuments with sculptures and inscriptions 43 Among the monuments they left there are portal lions inscriptions relief orthostats and freestanding statues House of Astiruwa edit Main article House of Astiruwa The House of Astiruwa was the last known dynasty of rulers of Carchemish and king Astiruwa ca 848 790 BC was the founder of this dynasty Then came kings Yariri Kamani and Sastura King Yariri started to reign after 790 BC 44 He was a great scholar and left extensive records of his time 45 Carchemish was conquered by Sargon II in 717 BC in the reign of King Pisiri the last ruler of the House of Astiruwa Battle of Carchemish edit Main article Battle of Carchemish In the summer of 605 BC the Battle of Carchemish was fought there by the Babylonian army of Nebuchadnezzar II and that of Pharaoh Necho II of Egypt and the remnants of the Assyrian army Jer 46 2 The aim of Necho s campaign was to contain the Westward advance of the Babylonian Empire and cut off its trade route across the Euphrates However the Egyptians were defeated by the unexpected attack of the Babylonians and were eventually expelled from Syria After a brief Neo Babylonian occupation the Turco Italian excavations found evidence for three phases of Achaemenid occupation a significant reconstruction in Hellenistic times a monumental phase from the Late Roman period an Early Byzantine and three Abbasid phases before the final abandonment of the site until the early 1900s 46 Kings of Carchemish edit 47 nbsp Yariri r and Kamani l resp regent and future ruler of Carchemish Ruler Proposed reign BC Notes Adni anda c to 1786 Aplah anda I c 1786 to 1764 son of Adni anda Yatar Ami c 1764 to 1763 son of Aplah anda I Yahdun Lim or possibly Yahdul Lim c 1763 to 1745 son of Bin Ami Aplah anda II c 1745 to son of Yahdun Lim Piyassili or Sharri Kushukh c 1315 son of the Hittite king Suppiluliuma I sharruma son of Piyassilis Shakhurunuwa son of Piyassilis Ini Teshub I c 1230s Talmi Teshub c 1200 Kuzi Teshub c 1170 claimed the title of Great King after the fall of Hatti Ini Teshub II c 1100 Tudhaliya c 1100 either before or after Ini Teshub II Sapaziti c 1025 Uratarhunda c 1000 Suhi I c 975 Astuwalamanza c 950 Suhi II c 925 Katuwa c 900 Suhi III c 890 Sangara c 870 848 Isarwilamuwa c 840 Kuwalanamuwa c 835 Astiru c 830 Yariri regent c 815 Kamani c 790 Sastura c 760 Astiru II Pisiri c 730s the last king defeated in 717 by Sargon IIGoddess Kubaba editMain article Kubaba goddess nbsp Old Syrian seal dedicated to goddess Kubaba by Matrunna daughter of Aplahanda early 18th century BCE The patron goddess of Carchemish was Kubaba a deity of apparently Hurrian origins 48 She was represented as a dignified woman wearing a long robe standing or seated and holding a mirror The main male deity of the town was Karhuha akin to the Hittite stag god Kurunta Kubaba was also the goddess of Alalakh located in the coastal Amik Valley In 2015 a basalt stele of Kubaba originally from Karkemish was assembled back together from six separate broken pieces currently housed in three different museums around the world This stele was originally made by king Kamani of Karkemish around 790 BC The Luwian hieroglyphic inscription on this stele can now be read more fully and it carries some important information about Karkemish history 39 Kubaba appears to be one of the three main deities worshipped in Carchemish during the Middle Bronze Age The other two were Nergal and Nubandag The chief god was the Mesopotamian influenced Nergal who was the city god of Carchemish He was also called Il Karkamis God of Karkemish as is evidenced on an Old Babylonian hematite cylinder seal in the British Museum collections BM 89172 49 The warrior god Nubandag has Hurrian roots According to the Mari texts he was worshipped at Carchemish in the Old Babylonian period along with Nergal 49 Later beginning in the mid 14th century BC the city god of Carchemish became the warrior god Karhuha similar to Kurunta god He was seen as a Stag god and his cult was probably introduced to Carchemish under the Mitannian influence 49 These deities clearly reflect the geographical position of Carchemish at the crossing of important trade routes because of this the city became a mixed cultural and religious centre Material Culture editAmong the many artefacts recovered at Karkemish typical of this territory are the Handmade Syrian Horses and Riders and the Syrian Pillar Figurines These are clay figurines dating from mid 8th 7th centuries BCE that have been found in several hundreds in the town These terracottas were manufactured during the Neo Assyrian phase of Karkemish and it is currently believed they might have represented male and female characters performing distinguished public roles 50 See also edit nbsp Asia portal Cities of the ancient Near East Short chronology timeline Jerablus Tahtani Karkamis Carchemish Phoenician inscriptionNotes edit Hittite 𒋼𒀀𒅗𒈩 Kargamis 1 Hieroglyphic Luwian 𔕢 𔗧𔖻𔑺 Karkamisa 𔗧𔖱𔗧𔖻𔑶 Karakamisa Karikamisa 2 3 Akkadian nbsp nbsp nbsp Gargamis 4 Egyptian qꜣrjqꜣmjꜥsꜣ 5 6 Hebrew כ ר כ מ יש KarkemisReferences edit Kargamis Hawkins J D 1980 Hawkins John D 2000 Corpus of Hieroglyphic Luwian Inscriptions Vol 1 Inscriptions of the Iron Age Part 1 Text Introduction Karatepe Karkamis Tell Ahmar Maras Malatya Commagene Walter de Gruyter p 74 ISBN 978 3 110 80420 1 Hawkins John D 2000 Corpus of Hieroglyphic Luwian Inscriptions Vol 1 Inscriptions of the Iron Age Part 3 Plates Walter de Gruyter pp 80 83 ISBN 978 3 110 10864 4 Parpola Simo 1970 Neo Assyrian Toponyms Kevaeler Butzon amp Bercker pp 364 365 a b Gauthier Henri 1928 Dictionnaire des Noms Geographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hieroglyphiques Vol 5 pp 157 158 a b Wallis Budge E A 1920 An Egyptian hieroglyphic dictionary with an index of English words king list and geological list with indexes list of hieroglyphic characters coptic and semitic alphabets etc Vol II John Murray p 1042 a b Lemche Niels Peter 2004 Historical dictionary of ancient Israel Historical dictionaries of ancient civilizations and historical eras Lanham Md Scarecrow Press p 91 ISBN 978 0 8108 4848 1 Lawrence of Arabia Locations Syria Pbs org a b Alessandra Gilibert Carchemish in Syro Hittite Monumental Art and the Archaeology of Performance The Stone Reliefs at Carchemish and Zincirli in the Earlier First Millennium BCE Berlin New York De Gruyter pp 19 54 2011 Wm Hayes Ward Unpublished or Imperfectly Published Hittite Monuments III Reliefs at Carchemish Jerablus The American Journal of Archaeology and of the History of the Fine Arts vol 4 no 2 pp 172 74 1888 Issac H Hall Proceedings at Boston May 30th 1877 Journal of the American Oriental Society vol 10 pp cxxxiv cxlv 1872 H Frowde 1911 David George Hogarth Hittite problems and the excavation of Carchemish PDF Nabu Press ISBN 978 1 171 63699 1 Hogarth D G 1914 repr 1969 Woolley C L 1921 repr 1969 C L Woolley C L amp Barnett R D 1952 repr 1978 PDF Archive org Guterbock H G 1954 pp 102 114 Wright William 1886 The Empire of the Hittites with Decipherment of Hittite inscriptions PDF Nisbet Ancient city to rise in SE Turkey area cleared of mines Daily News amp Economic Review 31 03 2011 Nicolo Marchetti 2012 Karkemish on the Euphrates Excavating a City s History Near Eastern Archaeology 75 3 132 147 doi 10 5615 neareastarch 75 3 0132 JSTOR 10 5615 neareastarch 75 3 0132 S2CID 163384370 Frame Grant Carchemish in The Royal Inscriptions of Sargon II King of Assyria 721 705 BC University Park USA Penn State University Press pp 421 426 2021 Land of Carchemish Syria Project Durham University Retrieved 15 September 2019 Edgar Peltenburg Euphrates River Valley Settlement The Carchemish Sector in the Third Millennium BC Oxbow Books 2007 ISBN 1 84217 272 7 Italian archaeological anthropological and ethnological missions abroad Esteri it xcavations in Zeugma and Carchemish Ancient City Retrieved 8 April 2023 Satellite Imagery Briefing Monitoring Endangered Cultural Heritage Sites Global Heritage Fund GHF PDF T J Wilkinson E Peltenberg November 2010 Carchemish in Context Surveys in the Hinterland of a Major Iron Age City Bulletin of the Council for British Research in the Levant 5 1 11 20 10 doi 10 1179 175272710X12828116505919 figure British Museum Britishmuseum org Retrieved 26 June 2022 Langer William L ed 1972 An Encyclopedia of World History 5th ed Boston MA Houghton Mifflin Company pp 9 ISBN 0 395 13592 3 Douglas Frayne Carchemish in Old Babylonian Period 2003 1595 B C Early Periods Volume 4 Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 773 778 2016 Seton Lloyd 21 August 2007 Hittite Warrior Bloomsbury USA p 44 ISBN 9781846030819 1 Mora Clelia Maria ElenaBalza and Marco De Pietri The Court and Administration of Karkemish in the Late Bronze Age Administrative Practices and Political Control in Anatolian and Syro Anatolian Polities in the 2nd and 1st Millennium BCE pp 93 126 2023 Federico Giusfredi Sources for a Socio Economic History of the Neo Hittite States Winter Verlag 2010 pp 35 51 Gary Beckman Hittite Chronology Akkadica pp 119 120 2000 p 23 K A Kitchen On the Reliability of the Old Testament William B Eerdsman Publishing Co pp 99 amp 140 Kitchen op cit p 99 Trevor R Bryce The Kingdom of the Hittites Oxford University Press p 384 Kitchen op cit p 100 Giusfredi op cit pp 37 44 a b c d e Marchetti Nicolo Peker Hasan 16 July 2018 The Stele of Kubaba by Kamani and the Kings of Karkemish in the 9th Century BC Zeitschrift fur Assyriologie und vorderasiatische Archaologie 108 1 Walter de Gruyter GmbH 81 99 doi 10 1515 za 2018 0006 ISSN 0084 5299 S2CID 165166999 Shibata Daisuke An Expedition of King Shalmaneser I and Prince Tukulti Ninurta to Carchemish in At the Dawn of History Ancient Near Eastern Studies in Honour of J N Postgate edited by Yagmur Heffron Adam Stone and Martin Worthington University Park USA Penn State University Press pp 491 506 2017 Trevor Bryce The World of the Neo Hittite Kingdoms A Political and Military History Oxford New York 2012 p 302 a b J D Hawkins M Weeden 2016 Sketch history of Karkamish in the earlier Iron Age Iron I IIB in Tony J Wilkinson Edgar Peltenburg 2016 eds CARCHEMISH IN CONTEXT THE LAND OF CARCHEMISH PROJECT 2006 2010 Oxbow Books ISBN 1785701118 p 13 Sanna Pauliina Aro Valjus 1 January 2013 Carchemish Before and After 1200 BC Luwian Identities BRILL pp 233 276 doi 10 1163 9789004253414 013 ISBN 9789004253414 at academia edu Gilibert Alessandra 2011 Syro Hittite Monumental Art and the Archaeology of Performance De Gruyter p 135 Zsolt Simon 2012 Where is the Land of Sura of the Hieroglyphic Luwian inscription KARKAMIS A4b and Why Were Cappadocians Called Syrians by Greeks Altoriental Forsch Akademie Verlag 39 Zaina F ed 2019 H Peker Texts from Karkemish I Luwian Hieroglyphic Inscriptions from the 2011 2015 Excavations OrientLab Series Maior 1 Disci Ante Quem Bologna 2016 pp 47 49 Hutter M 2003 pp 211 280 a b c Marchesi Gianni Marchetti Nicolo 2019 The Deities of Karkemish in the Middle Bronze Age according to Glyptic and Textual Evidence Pearls of the past studies on Near Eastern art and archaeology in honour of Frances Pinnock Munster Zaphon ISBN 978 3 96327 058 1 OCLC 1099837791 Bolognani B 2017 pp 172 220 246 247 2020a 2020b BRITISH MUSEUM EXPEDITION 2 Hogarth D G Carchemish I Introductory The British Museum Press London 1914 repr 1969 3 Woolley C L Carchemish II Town Defences Report on the Excavations at Jerablus on Behalf of the British Museum British Museum Press London 1921 repr 1969 ISBN 0 7141 1002 7 Carchemish II 4 Woolley C L amp Barnett R D Carchemish III Excavations in the Inner Town Report on the Excavations at Jerablus on Behalf of the British Museum British Museum Press London 1952 repr 1978 ISBN 0 7141 1003 5 Carchemish III TURCO ITALIAN EXPEDITION Bitelli G Girardi F Girelli V A Digital enhancement of the 3D scan of Suhi I s stele from Karkemish in Orientalia 83 2 2014 pp 154 161 Bolognani B The Iron Age Figurines from Karkemish 2011 2015 Campaigns and the Coroplastic Art of the Syro Anatolian Region unpublished doctoral dissertation University of Bologna Bologna 2017 amsdottorato unibo it 8222 7 Bolognani Barbara tesi pdf Bolognani B The Iron Age Female Figurines from Karkemish and the Middle Euphrates Valley Preliminary Notes on Some Syrian Pillar Figurines in Donnat S Hunziker Rodewald R Weygand I eds Figurines feminines nues Proche Orient Egypte Nubie Mediterranee Asie centrale VIIIe millenaire av J C IVe siecle ap J C Proceedings of the International Conference Figurines feminines nues Proche Orient Egypte Nubie Mediterranee Asie centrale June 25th 26th 2015 MISHA Strasbourg Etudes d archeologie et d histoire ancienne EAHA De Boccard Paris pp 209 223 2020a Bolognani 2020a Bolognani B Figurines as Social Markers The Neo Assyrian Impact on the Northern Levant as Seen from the Material Culture in Gavagnin K Palermo R eds Imperial Connections Interactions and Expansions from Assyria to the Roman Period Proceedings of the 5th Broadening Horizons Conference 5 8 June 2017 Udine West amp East Monografie 2 University of Udine Udine pp 43 57 2020b Bolognani 2020b Dincol A Dincol B Hawkins J D Marchetti N Peker H A Stele by Suhi I from Karkemish in Orientalia 83 2 2014 pp 143 153 Dincol A Dincol B Peker H An Anatolian Hieroglyphic Cylinder Seal from the Hilani at Karkemish in Orientalia 83 2 2014 pp 162 165 Marchesi G Epigraphic Materials of Karkemish from the Middle Bronze Age in Orientalia 83 2 2014 pp 166 181 Marchesi G A Bilingual Literary Text from Karmenish Featuring Marduk with contributions by W R Mayer and S V Panayotov in Orientalia 83 4 2014 pp 333 340 Marchetti N The 2011 Joint Turco Italian Excavations at Karkemish in 34 kazi sonuclari toplantisi 28 Mayis 1 Haziran 2012 Corum 1 cilt T C Kultur ve Turizm Bakanligi Ankara 2013 pp 349 364 kulturvarliklari gov tr Eklenti 7332 34kazi1 pdf 0 Marchetti N The 2012 Joint Turco Italian Excavations at Karkemish in 35 kazi sonuclari toplantisi 27 31 Mayis 2013 Mugla 3 cilt T C Kultur ve Turizm Bakanligi Ankara 2014 pp 233 248 kulturvarliklari gov tr Eklenti 27148 35kazi3 pdf 0 Marchetti N Karkemish An Ancient Capital on the Euphrates OrientLab 2 Ante Quem Bologna 2014 free download orientlab net pubs free download Marchetti N Bronze Statuettes from the Temples of Karkemish in Orientalia 83 3 2014 pp 305 320 Marchetti N Karkemish New Discoveries in the Last Hittite Capital in Current World Archaeology 70 2015 pp 18 24 world archaeology com issue 70 cwa 70 htm Marchetti N Les programmes publics de communication visuelle a Karkemish entre la fin du IIe millenaire et le debut du Ier millenaire avant J C in V Blanchard ed Royaumes oublies De l Empire hittite aux Arameens Louvre editions Paris 2019 pp 154 161 Marchetti N et al Karkemish on the Euphrates Excavating a City s History in Near Eastern Archaeology 75 3 2012 pp 132 147 jstor org stable 10 5615 neareastarch 75 issue 3 Marchetti N Peker H A Stele from Gurcay near Karkemish in Orientalia 83 2 2014 pp 182 188 5 Peker Hasan A New Funerary Stele from Karkemish and New Values for Some Anatolian Hieroglyphic Signs Belleten 87 309 pp 357 383 2023 Peker H A Funerary Stele from Yunus in Orientalia 83 2 2014 pp 189 193 Peker H Texts from Karkemish I Luwian Hieroglyphic Inscriptions from the 2011 2015 Excavations OrientLab Series Maior 1 Ante Quem Bologna 2016 Pizzimenti S Three Glyptic Documents from Karkemish in Orientalia 83 2 2014 pp 194 201 Zaina F ed Excavations at Karkemish I The Stratigraphic Sequence of Area G OrientLab Series Maior 3 Ante Quem Bologna 2019 Zecchi M A Note on Two Egyptian Seal Impressions from Karkemish in Orientalia 83 2 2014 pp 202 206 OTHER REFERENCES GuterbockH G Carchemish in Journal of Near Eastern Studies 13 2 1954 pp 102 114 Hayes Ward W M Unpublished or Imperfectly Published Hittite Monuments III Reliefs at Carchemish Jerablus The American Journal of Archaeology and of the History of the Fine Arts vol 4 pp 172 174 1988 6 Hawkins J D Kargamis Reallexikon der Assyriologie und Vorderasiatischen Archaologie Walter de Gruyter Berlin 1980 Hawkins J D Corpus of Hieroglyphic Luwian Inscriptions I Inscriptions of the Iron Age Walter de Gruyter Berlin 2000 ISBN 978 3 11 010864 4 Hutter M Aspects of Luwian Religion in H C Melchert ed The Luwians Brill 2003 Peltenburg E Euphrates River Valley Settlement The Carchemish Sector in the Third Millennium BC Oxbow Books 2007 Wilson D M The British Museum A history The British Museum Press London 2002 Woolley C Leonard The Prehistoric Pottery of Carchemish Iraq vol 1 no 2 pp 146 62 1934External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carchemish Official website of the Turco Italian Archaeological Expedition to Karkemish Land of Carchemish Project Syria Activities of the joint Turkish Italian Archaeological Mission in Italian Carchemish images Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carchemish amp oldid 1222886304, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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