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Hittites

The Hittites (/ˈhɪtts/) were an Anatolian Indo-European people who formed one of the first major civilizations of Bronze Age West Asia. Possibly originating from beyond the Black Sea,[2] they settled in modern day Turkey in the early 2nd millennium BC. The Hittites formed a series of polities in north-central Anatolia, including the kingdom of Kussara (before 1750 BC), the Kanesh or Nesha kingdom (c. 1750–1650 BC), and an empire centered on Hattusa (around 1650 BC).[3][4] Known in modern times as the Hittite Empire, it reached its height during the mid-14th century BC under Šuppiluliuma I, when it encompassed most of Anatolia and parts of the northern Levant and Upper Mesopotamia.

Hittite Empire
Ḫa-at-tu-ša / 𒄩𒀜𒌅𒊭
c. 1650 BCc. 1180 BC
Royal seal of the last king Šuppiluliuma II
Map of the Hittite Empire at its greatest extent, with Hittite rule c. 1300 BC
CapitalHattusa, Tarḫuntašša (under the reign of Muwatalli II)
Common languagesHittite, Hattic, Luwian, Akkadian
Religion
Hittite religion
GovernmentAbsolute monarchy (Old Kingdom)
Constitutional monarchy (Middle and New Kingdom)[1]
King 
• c. 1650 BC
Labarna I (first)
• c. 1210–1180 BC
Šuppiluliuma II (last)
Historical eraBronze Age
• Established
c. 1650 BC
• Disestablished
c. 1180 BC
Today part ofTurkey
Syria
Lebanon
Cyprus
The Great Temple in the inner city of Hattusa

Between the 15th and 13th centuries BC, the Hittites were one of the dominant powers of the Near East, coming into conflict with the New Kingdom of Egypt, the Middle Assyrian Empire and the empire of Mitanni. By the 12th century BC, much of the Hittite Empire was annexed by the Middle Assyrian Empire, with the remainder sacked by Phrygian newcomers to the region. From the late 12th century BC, during the Late Bronze Age collapse, the Hittites splintered into several small independent states, some of which survived until the eighth century BC before succumbing to the Neo-Assyrian Empire; lacking a unifying continuity, their descendants scattered and ultimately merged into the modern populations of the Levant and Mesopotamia.[5]

The Hittite language—referred to by its speakers as nešili, "the language of Nesa"—was a distinct member of the Anatolian branch of the Indo-European language family; along with the closely related Luwian language, it is the oldest historically attested Indo-European language.[6] The history of the Hittite civilization is known mostly from cuneiform texts found in their former territories, and from diplomatic and commercial correspondence found in the various archives of Assyria, Babylonia, Egypt and the broader Middle East; the decipherment of these texts was a key event in the history of Indo-European studies. Cultural links to prehistoric Scandinavia have also been suggested.[7][8]

Scholars once attributed the development of iron-smelting to the Hittites, who were believed to have monopolized ironworking during the Bronze Age. This theory has been increasingly contested in the 21st century,[9] with the Late Bronze Age collapse, and subsequent Iron Age, seeing the slow, comparatively continuous spread of ironworking technology across the region. While there are some iron objects from Bronze Age Anatolia, the number is comparable to that of iron objects found in Egypt and in other places from the same period; and only a small number of these objects are weapons.[10] X-ray fluorescence spectrometry suggests "that most or all irons from the Bronze Age are derived from" meteorites.[11] The Hittite military also made successful use of chariots.[12]

Modern interest in the Hittites increased with the founding of the Republic of Turkey in 1923. The Hittites attracted the attention of Turkish archaeologists such as Halet Çambel and Tahsin Özgüç. During this period, the new field of Hittitology also influenced the naming of Turkish institutions, such as the state-owned Etibank ("Hittite bank"),[13] and the foundation of the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations in Ankara, built 200 kilometers (124 miles) west of the Hittite capital of Hattusa, which houses the world's most comprehensive exhibition of Hittite art and artifacts.

Etymology edit

The Hittites called their kingdom Hattusa (Hatti in Akkadian), a name received from the Hattians, an earlier people who had inhabited and ruled the central Anatolian region until the beginning of the second millennium BC, and who spoke an unrelated language known as Hattic.[14] The modern conventional name "Hittites" is due to the initial identification of the people of Hattusa with the Biblical Hittites by 19th-century archaeologists. The Hittites would have called themselves something closer to "Neshites" or "Neshians" after the city of Nesha, which flourished for some two hundred years until a king named Labarna renamed himself Hattusili I (meaning "the man of Hattusa") sometime around 1650 BC and established his capital city at Hattusa.[15]

Archeological discovery edit

 
An Alaca Höyük bronze standard from a third millennium BC pre-Hittite tomb (Museum of Anatolian Civilizations, Ankara)
 
Ivory Hittite Sphinx, 18th century BC

Biblical background edit

Before the archeological discoveries that revealed the Hittite civilization, the only source of information about the Hittites had been the Hebrew Bible. Francis William Newman expressed the critical view, common in the early 19th century, that, "no Hittite king could have compared in power to the King of Judah...".[16]

As the discoveries in the second half of the 19th century revealed the scale of the Hittite kingdom, Archibald Sayce asserted that, rather than being compared to Judah, the Anatolian civilization "[was] worthy of comparison to the divided Kingdom of Egypt", and was "infinitely more powerful than that of Judah".[17] Sayce and other scholars also noted that Judah and the Hittites were never enemies in the Hebrew texts; in the Book of Kings, they supplied the Israelites with cedar, chariots, and horses, and in the Book of Genesis were friends and allies to Abraham. Uriah the Hittite was a captain in King David's army and counted as one of his "mighty men" in 1 Chronicles 11.

Initial discoveries edit

French scholar Charles Texier found the first Hittite ruins in 1834 but did not identify them as such.[13][18]

The first archaeological evidence for the Hittites appeared in tablets found at the karum of Kanesh (now called Kültepe), containing records of trade between Assyrian merchants and a certain "land of Hatti". Some names in the tablets were neither Hattic nor Assyrian, but clearly Indo-European.[19]

The script on a monument at Boğazkale by a "People of Hattusas" discovered by William Wright in 1884 was found to match peculiar hieroglyphic scripts from Aleppo and Hama in Northern Syria. In 1887, excavations at Amarna in Egypt uncovered the diplomatic correspondence of Pharaoh Amenhotep III and his son, Akhenaten. Two of the letters from a "kingdom of Kheta"—apparently located in the same general region as the Mesopotamian references to "land of Hatti"—were written in standard Akkadian cuneiform, but in an unknown language; although scholars could interpret its sounds, no one could understand it. Shortly after this, Sayce proposed that Hatti or Khatti in Anatolia was identical with the "kingdom of Kheta" mentioned in these Egyptian texts, as well as with the biblical Hittites. Others, such as Max Müller, agreed that Khatti was probably Kheta, but proposed connecting it with Biblical Kittim rather than with the Biblical Hittites. Sayce's identification came to be widely accepted over the course of the early 20th century; and the name "Hittite" has become attached to the civilization uncovered at Boğazköy.[20]

 
Hattusa ramp

During sporadic excavations at Boğazköy (Hattusa) that began in 1906, the archaeologist Hugo Winckler found a royal archive with 10,000 tablets, inscribed in cuneiform Akkadian and the same unknown language as the Egyptian letters from Kheta—thus confirming the identity of the two names. He also proved that the ruins at Boğazköy were the remains of the capital of an empire that, at one point, controlled northern Syria.[21]

 
Drinking cup in the shape of a fist; 1400–1380 BC, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Under the direction of the German Archaeological Institute, excavations at Hattusa have been under way since 1907, with interruptions during the world wars. Kültepe was successfully excavated by Professor Tahsin Özgüç from 1948 until his death in 2005. Smaller scale excavations have also been carried out in the immediate surroundings of Hattusa, including the rock sanctuary of Yazılıkaya, which contains numerous rock reliefs portraying the Hittite rulers and the gods of the Hittite pantheon.[22]

Writings edit

The Hittites used a variation of cuneiform called Hittite cuneiform. Archaeological expeditions to Hattusa have discovered entire sets of royal archives on cuneiform tablets, written either in Akkadian, the diplomatic language of the time, or in the various dialects of the Hittite confederation.[23]

Museums edit

The Museum of Anatolian Civilizations in Ankara, Turkey houses the richest collection of Hittite and Anatolian artifacts.[citation needed]

Geography edit

 
Ceremonial vessels in the shape of sacred bulls, called Hurri (Day) and Seri (Night) found in Hattusa, Hittite Old Kingdom (16th century BC) Museum of Anatolian Civilizations, Ankara

The Hittite kingdom was centered on the lands surrounding Hattusa and Neša (Kültepe), known as "the land Hatti" (URUHa-at-ti). After Hattusa was made the capital, the area encompassed by the bend of the Kızılırmak River (Hittite Marassantiya, Greek Halys) was considered the core of the Empire, and some Hittite laws make a distinction between "this side of the river" and "that side of the river". For example, the bounty for an escaped slave who had fled beyond the river is higher than for a slave caught on the near side.[citation needed]

To the west and south of the core territory lay the region known as Luwiya in the earliest Hittite texts. This terminology was replaced by the names Arzawa and Kizzuwatna with the rise of those kingdoms.[24] Nevertheless, the Hittites continued to refer to the language that originated in these areas as Luwian. Prior to the rise of Kizzuwatna, the heart of that territory in Cilicia was first referred to by the Hittites as Adaniya.[25] Upon its revolt from the Hittites during the reign of Ammuna,[26] it assumed the name of Kizzuwatna and successfully expanded northward to encompass the lower Anti-Taurus Mountains as well. To the north lived the mountain people called the Kaskians. To the southeast of the Hittites lay the Hurrian empire of Mitanni.

At its peak during the reign of Muršili II, the Hittite empire stretched from Arzawa in the west to Mitanni in the east, and included many of the Kaskian territories north as far as Hayasa-Azzi in the far north-east, as well as south into Canaan near the southern border of Lebanon.[citation needed]

History edit

 
Scheme of Indo-European language dispersals from c. 4000 to 1000 BC according to the widely held Kurgan hypothesis.
– Center: Steppe cultures
1 (black): Anatolian languages (archaic PIE)
2 (black): Afanasievo culture (early PIE)
3 (black) Yamnaya culture expansion (Pontic-Caspian steppe, Danube Valley) (late PIE)
4A (black): Western Corded Ware
4B-C (blue & dark blue): Bell Beaker; adopted by Indo-European speakers
5A-B (red): Eastern Corded ware
5C (red): Sintashta (proto-Indo-Iranian)
6 (magenta): Andronovo
7A (purple): Indo-Aryans (Mittani)
7B (purple): Indo-Aryans (India)
[NN] (dark yellow): proto-Balto-Slavic
8 (grey): Greek
9 (yellow):Iranians
– [not drawn]: Armenian, expanding from western steppe

Origins edit

The ancestors of the Hittites came into Anatolia between 4400 and 4100 BC, when the Anatolian language family split from (Proto)-Indo-European.[27] Recent genetic and archaeological research has indicated that Proto-Anatolian speakers arrived in this region sometime between 5000 and 3000 BC.[28] The Proto-Hittite language developed around 2100 BC,[29] and the Hittite language itself is believed to have been in use in Central Anatolia between the 20th and 12th centuries BC.[30]

The Hittites are first associated with the kingdom of Kussara sometime prior to 1750 BC.[31]

Hittites in Anatolia during the Bronze Age coexisted with Hattians and Hurrians, either by means of conquest or by gradual assimilation.[32][33] In archaeological terms, relationships of the Hittites to the Ezero culture of the Balkans and Maykop culture of the Caucasus had previously been considered within the migration framework.[34]

Analyses by David W. Anthony in 2007 concluded that steppe herders who were archaic Indo-European speakers spread into the lower Danube valley about 4200–4000 BC, either causing or taking advantage of the collapse of Old Europe.[35] He thought their languages "probably included archaic Proto-Indo-European dialects of the kind partly preserved later in Anatolian,"[36] and that their descendants later moved into Anatolia at an unknown time but maybe as early as 3000 BC.[37]

J. P. Mallory also thought it was likely that the Anatolians reached the Near East from the north either via the Balkans or the Caucasus in the 3rd millennium BC.[38] According to Parpola, the appearance of Indo-European speakers from Europe into Anatolia, and the appearance of Hittite, was related to later migrations of Proto-Indo-European speakers from the Yamnaya culture into the Danube Valley at c. 2800 BC,[39][40] which was in line with the "customary" assumption that the Anatolian Indo-European language was introduced into Anatolia sometime in the third millennium BC.[41]

However, Petra Goedegebuure has shown that the Hittite language has borrowed many words related to agriculture from cultures on their eastern borders, which is evidence of having taken a route across the Caucasus.[42]

The dominant indigenous inhabitants in central Anatolia were Hurrians and Hattians who spoke non-Indo-European languages. Some have argued that Hattic was a Northwest Caucasian language, but its affiliation remains uncertain, whilst the Hurrian language was a near-isolate (i.e. it was one of only two or three languages in the Hurro-Urartian family). There were also Assyrian colonies in the region during the Old Assyrian Empire (2025–1750 BC); it was from the Assyrian speakers of Upper Mesopotamia that the Hittites adopted the cuneiform script. It took some time before the Hittites established themselves following the collapse of the Old Assyrian Empire in the mid-18th century BC, as is clear from some of the texts included here. For several centuries there were separate Hittite groups, usually centered on various cities. But then strong rulers with their center in Hattusa (modern Boğazkale) succeeded in bringing these together and conquering large parts of central Anatolia to establish the Hittite kingdom.[43]

Early period edit

 
The Sphinx Gate (Alaca Höyük, Çorum, Turkey)
 
Reliefs and hieroglyphs from Chamber 2 at Hattusa built and decorated by Šuppiluliuma II, the last king of the Hittites
 
Hittite chariot, from an Egyptian relief

The Hittite state was formed from many small polities in North-Central Anatolia, at the banks of the Kızılırmak River, during the Middle Bronze Age (ca. 1900–1650 BC).[44] The early history of the Hittite kingdom is known through four "cushion-shaped" tablets, (classified as KBo 3.22, KBo 17.21+, KBo 22.1, and KBo 22.2), not made in Ḫattuša, but probably created in Kussara, Nēša, or another site in Anatolia, that may first have been written in the 18th century BC,[45][4] in Old Hittite language, and three of them using the so-called "Old Script" (OS);[46] although most of the remaining tablets survived only as Akkadian copies made in the 14th and 13th centuries BC. These reveal a rivalry within two branches of the royal family up to the Middle Kingdom; a northern branch first based in Zalpuwa and secondarily Hattusa, and a southern branch based in Kussara (still not found) and the former Assyrian colony of Kanesh. These are distinguishable by their names; the northerners retained language isolate Hattian names, and the southerners adopted Indo-European Hittite and Luwian names.[47]

Zalpuwa first attacked Kanesh under Uhna in 1833 BC.[48] And during this kārum period, when the merchant colony of the Old Assyrian Empire was flourishing in the site, and before the conquest of Pithana, the following local kings reigned in Kaneš: Ḫurmili (prior to 1790 BC), Paḫanu (a short time in 1790 BC), Inar (c. 1790–1775 BC), and Waršama (c. 1775–1750 BC).[49]

One set of tablets, known collectively as the Anitta text,[50] begin by telling how Pithana the king of Kussara conquered neighbouring Neša (Kanesh),[31] this conquest took place around 1750 BC.[51] However, the real subject of these tablets is Pithana's son Anitta (r. 1745–1720 BC),[52] who continued where his father left off and conquered several northern cities: including Hattusa, which he cursed, and also Zalpuwa. This was likely propaganda for the southern branch of the royal family, against the northern branch who had fixed on Hattusa as capital.[53] Another set, the Tale of Zalpuwa, supports Zalpuwa and exonerates the later Ḫattušili I from the charge of sacking Kanesh.[53]

Anitta was succeeded by Zuzzu (r. 1720–1710 BC);[52] but sometime in 1710–1705 BC, Kanesh was destroyed, taking the long-established Assyrian merchant trading system with it.[48] A Kussaran noble family survived to contest the Zalpuwan/Hattusan family, though whether these were of the direct line of Anitta is uncertain.[54]

Meanwhile, the lords of Zalpa lived on. Huzziya I, descendant of a Huzziya of Zalpa, took over Hatti. His son-in-law Labarna I, a southerner from Hurma usurped the throne but made sure to adopt Huzziya's grandson Ḫattušili as his own son and heir. The location of the land of Hurma is believed to be in the mountains south of Kussara.[55]

Old Kingdom edit

 
Hattusa ramp

The founding of the Hittite Kingdom is attributed to either Labarna I or Hattusili I (the latter might also have had Labarna as a personal name),[56] who conquered the area south and north of Hattusa. Hattusili I campaigned as far as the Semitic Amorite kingdom of Yamkhad in Syria, where he attacked, but did not capture, its capital of Aleppo. Hattusili I did eventually capture Hattusa and was credited for the foundation of the Hittite Empire.

"Hattusili was king, and his sons, brothers, in-laws, family members, and troops were all united. Wherever he went on campaign he controlled the enemy land with force. He destroyed the lands one after the other, took away their power, and made them the borders of the sea. When he came back from campaign, however, each of his sons went somewhere to a country, and in his hand the great cities prospered. But, when later the princes' servants became corrupt, they began to devour the properties, conspired constantly against their masters, and began to shed their blood."

This excerpt from The Edict of Telepinu, dating to the 16th century BC, is supposed to illustrate the unification, growth, and prosperity of the Hittites under his rule. It also illustrates the corruption of "the princes", believed to be his sons. The lack of sources leads to uncertainty of how the corruption was addressed. On Hattusili I's deathbed, he chose his grandson, Mursili I (or Murshilish I), as his heir.[57]

 
The İnandık vase, also known as a Hüseyindede vase, a large, four-handled Hittite terracotta vase with scenes in relief depicting a sacred wedding ceremony, mid 17th century BC, İnandıktepe, Museum of Anatolian Civilizations, Ankara

Mursili continued the conquests of Hattusili I. In 1595 BC (middle chronology) or 1587 BC (low middle chronology), Mursili I conducted a great raid down the Euphrates River, bypassing Assyria and sacking Mari and Babylon, ejecting the Amorite rulers of the Old Babylonian Empire in the process. Rather than incorporate Babylonia into Hittite domains, Mursili seems to have instead turned control of Babylonia over to his Kassite allies, who were to rule it for the next four centuries. Due to fear of revolts at home, he did not remain in Babylon for long. This lengthy campaign strained the resources of Hatti, and left the capital in a state of near-anarchy. Mursili was assassinated by his brother-in-law Hantili I during his journey back to Hattusa or shortly after his return home, and the Hittite Kingdom was plunged into chaos. Hantili took the throne. He was able to escape multiple murder attempts on himself, however, his family did not. His wife, Harapsili and her son were murdered. In addition, other members of the royal family were killed by Zidanta I, who was then murdered by his own son, Ammuna. All of the internal unrest among the Hittite royal family led to a decline of power. The Hurrians, a people living in the mountainous region along the upper Tigris and Euphrates rivers in modern south east Turkey, took advantage of the situation to seize Aleppo and the surrounding areas for themselves, as well as the coastal region of Adaniya, renaming it Kizzuwatna (later Cilicia). Throughout the remainder of the 16th century BC, the Hittite kings were held to their homelands by dynastic quarrels and warfare with the Hurrians. The Hurrians became the center of power in Anatolia.[58][59] The campaigns into Amurru and southern Mesopotamia may be responsible for the reintroduction of cuneiform writing into Anatolia, since the Hittite script is quite different from that of the preceding Assyrian colonial period.

The Hittites entered a weak phase of obscure records, insignificant rulers, and reduced domains. This pattern of expansion under strong kings followed by contraction under weaker ones, was to be repeated over and over through the Hittite Kingdom's 500-year history, making events during the waning periods difficult to reconstruct. The political instability of these years of the Old Hittite Kingdom can be explained in part by the nature of the Hittite kingship at that time. During the Old Hittite Kingdom prior to 1400 BC, the king of the Hittites was not viewed by his subjects as a "living god" like the Pharaohs of Egypt, but rather as a first among equals.[60] Only in the later period from 1400 BC until 1200 BC did the Hittite kingship become more centralized and powerful. Also in earlier years the succession was not legally fixed, enabling "War of the Roses"-style rivalries between northern and southern branches.

The next monarch of note following Mursili I was Telepinu (c. 1500 BC), who won a few victories to the southwest, apparently by allying himself with one Hurrian state (Kizzuwatna) against another (Mitanni). Telepinu also attempted to secure the lines of succession.[61]

Middle Kingdom edit

 
Twelve Hittite gods of the Underworld in the nearby Yazılıkaya, a sanctuary of Hattusa

The last monarch of the Old Kingdom, Telepinu, reigned until about 1500 BC. Telepinu's reign marked the end of the "Old Kingdom" and the beginning of the lengthy weak phase known as the "Middle Kingdom".[62] The period of the 15th century BC is largely unknown with few surviving records.[63] Part of the reason for both the weakness and the obscurity is that the Hittites were under constant attack, mainly from the Kaskians, a non-Indo-European people settled along the shores of the Black Sea. The capital once again went on the move, first to Sapinuwa and then to Samuha. There is an archive in Sapinuwa, but it has not been adequately translated to date.

It segues into the "Hittite Empire period" proper, which dates from the reign of Tudhaliya I from c. 1430 BC.

One innovation that can be credited to these early Hittite rulers is the practice of conducting treaties and alliances with neighboring states; the Hittites were thus among the earliest known pioneers in the art of international politics and diplomacy. This is also when the Hittite religion adopted several gods and rituals from the Hurrians.

New Kingdom edit

 
Tudhaliya IV (relief in Hattusa)
 
Exact replica of a Hittite monument from Fasıllar, c. 1300 BC (Museum of Anatolian Civilizations)

With the reign of Tudhaliya I (who may actually not have been the first of that name; see also Tudhaliya), the Hittite Kingdom re-emerged from the fog of obscurity and entered the "Hittite Empire period". Many changes were afoot during this time, not the least of which was a strengthening of the kingship. Settlement of the Hittites progressed in the Empire period.[60] However, the Hittite people tended to settle in the older lands of south Anatolia rather than the lands of the Aegean. As this settlement progressed, treaties were signed with neighboring peoples.[60] During the Hittite Empire period the kingship became hereditary and the king took on a "superhuman aura" and began to be referred to by the Hittite citizens as "My Sun". The kings of the Empire period began acting as a high priest for the whole kingdom – making an annual tour of the Hittite holy cities, conducting festivals and supervising the upkeep of the sanctuaries.[60]

During his reign (c. 1400 BC), King Tudhaliya I, again allied with Kizzuwatna, then vanquished the Hurrian states of Aleppo and Mitanni, and expanded to the west at the expense of Arzawa (a Luwian state).

Another weak phase followed Tudhaliya I, and the Hittites' enemies from all directions were able to advance even to Hattusa and raze it. However, the kingdom recovered its former glory under Šuppiluliuma I (c. 1350 BC), who again conquered Aleppo. Mitanni was reduced to vassalage by the Assyrians under his son-in-law, and he defeated Carchemish, another Amorite city-state. With his own sons placed over all of these new conquests and Babylonia still in the hands of the allied Kassites, this left Šuppiluliuma the supreme power broker in the known world, alongside Assyria and Egypt, and it was not long before Egypt was seeking an alliance by marriage of another of his sons with the widow of Tutankhamen. That son was evidently murdered before reaching his destination, and this alliance was never consummated. However, the Middle Assyrian Empire (1365–1050 BC) once more began to grow in power with the ascension of Ashur-uballit I in 1365 BC. Ashur-uballit I attacked and defeated Mattiwaza the Mitanni king despite attempts by the Hittite king Šuppiluliuma I, now fearful of growing Assyrian power, attempting to preserve his throne with military support. The lands of the Mitanni and Hurrians were duly appropriated by Assyria, enabling it to encroach on Hittite territory in eastern Asia Minor, and Adad-nirari I annexed Carchemish and northeast Syria from the control of the Hittites.[64]

While Šuppiluliuma I reigned, the Hittite Empire was devastated by an epidemic of tularemia. The epidemic afflicted the Hittites for decades and tularemia killed Šuppiluliuma I and his successor, Arnuwanda II.[65] After Šuppiluliuma I's rule, and the brief reign of his eldest son, Arnuwanda II, another son, Mursili II, became king (c. 1330 BC). Having inherited a position of strength in the east, Mursili was able to turn his attention to the west, where he attacked Arzawa. At a point when the Hittites were weakened by the tularemia epidemic, the Arzawans attacked the Hittites, who repelled the attack by sending infected rams to the Arzawans. This was the first recorded use of biological warfare. Mursili also attacked a city known as Millawanda (Miletus), which was under the control of Ahhiyawa. More recent research based on new readings and interpretations of the Hittite texts, as well as of the material evidence for Mycenaean contacts with the Anatolian mainland, came to the conclusion that Ahhiyawa referred to Mycenaean Greece, or at least to a part of it.[66][67][68][69]

Battle of Kadesh edit

 
Egyptian pharaoh Ramesses II storming the Hittite fortress of Dapur

Hittite prosperity was mostly dependent on control of the trade routes and metal sources. Because of the importance of Northern Syria to the vital routes linking the Cilician gates with Mesopotamia, defense of this area was crucial, and was soon put to the test by Egyptian expansion under Pharaoh Ramesses II. The outcome of the Battle of Kadesh is uncertain, though it seems that the timely arrival of Egyptian reinforcements prevented total Hittite victory.[70] The Egyptians forced the Hittites to take refuge in the fortress of Kadesh, but their own losses prevented them from sustaining a siege. This battle took place in the 5th year of Ramesses (c. 1274 BC by the most commonly used chronology).

Downfall and demise of the kingdom edit

 
Egypto-Hittite Peace Treaty (c. 1258 BC) between Hattusili III and Ramesses II, the earliest known surviving peace treaty, sometimes called the Treaty of Kadesh after the Battle of Kadesh (Istanbul Archaeology Museum).
 
Chimera with a human head and a lion's body; Late Hittite period in Museum of Anatolian Civilizations, Ankara

After this date, the power of both the Hittites and Egyptians began to decline yet again because of the power of the Assyrians.[71] The Assyrian king Shalmaneser I had seized the opportunity to vanquish Hurria and Mitanni, occupy their lands, and expand up to the head of the Euphrates, while Muwatalli was preoccupied with the Egyptians. The Hittites had vainly tried to preserve the Mitanni Kingdom with military support.[64] Assyria now posed just as great a threat to Hittite trade routes as Egypt ever had. Muwatalli's son, Urhi-Teshub, took the throne and ruled as king for seven years as Mursili III before being ousted by his uncle, Hattusili III after a brief civil war. In response to increasing Assyrian annexation of Hittite territory, he concluded a peace and alliance with Ramesses II (also fearful of Assyria), presenting his daughter's hand in marriage to the Pharaoh.[71] The Treaty of Kadesh, one of the oldest completely surviving treaties in history, fixed their mutual boundaries in southern Canaan, and was signed in the 21st year of Rameses (c. 1258 BC). Terms of this treaty included the marriage of one of the Hittite princesses to Ramesses.[71][72]

Hattusili's son, Tudhaliya IV, was the last strong Hittite king able to keep the Assyrians out of the Hittite heartland to some degree at least, though he too lost much territory to them, and was heavily defeated by Tukulti-Ninurta I of Assyria in the Battle of Nihriya. He even temporarily annexed the island of Cyprus, before that too fell to Assyria. The last king, Šuppiluliuma II also managed to win some victories, including a naval battle against Alashiya off the coast of Cyprus.[73] But the Assyrians, under Ashur-resh-ishi I had by this time annexed much Hittite territory in Asia Minor and Syria, driving out and defeating the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar I in the process, who also had eyes on Hittite lands.[dubious ]

The Sea Peoples had already begun their push down the Mediterranean coastline, starting from the Aegean, and continuing all the way to Canaan, founding the state of Philistia – taking Cilicia and Cyprus away from the Hittites en route and cutting off their coveted trade routes. This left the Hittite homelands vulnerable to attack from all directions, and Hattusa was burnt to the ground sometime around 1180 BC following a combined onslaught from new waves of invaders: the Kaskians, Phrygians and Bryges. The Hittite Kingdom thus vanished from historical records, much of the territory being seized by Assyria.[74] Alongside with these attacks, many internal issues also led to the end of the Hittite Kingdom. The end of the kingdom was part of the larger Bronze Age Collapse.[75] A study of tree rings of juniper trees growing in the region showed a change to drier conditions from the 13th century BC into the 12th century BC with three years consecutive drought in 1196, 1197 and 1198 BC.[76]

Post-Hittite period edit

 
Luwian storm god Tarḫunz in the National Museum of Aleppo

By 1160 BC, the political situation in Asia Minor looked vastly different from that of only 25 years earlier. In that year, the Assyrian king Tiglath-Pileser I was defeating the Mushki (Phrygians) who had been attempting to press into Assyrian colonies in southern Anatolia from the Anatolian highlands, and the Kaska people, the Hittites' old enemies from the northern hill-country between Hatti and the Black Sea, seem to have joined them soon after. The Phrygians had apparently overrun Cappadocia from the West, with recently discovered epigraphic evidence confirming their origins as the Balkan "Bryges" tribe, forced out by the Macedonians.

Although the Hittite Kingdom disappeared from Anatolia at this point, there emerged a number of so-called Syro-Hittite states in Anatolia and northern Syria. They were the successors of the Hittite Kingdom. The most notable Syro-Hittite kingdoms were those at Carchemish and Melid. With the ruling family in Carchemish believed to have been an cadet branch of the then defunct central ruling Hittite line. These Syro-Hittite states gradually fell under the control of the Neo-Assyrian Empire (911–608 BC). Carchemish and Melid were made vassals of Assyria under Shalmaneser III (858–823 BC), and fully incorporated into Assyria during the reign of Sargon II (722–705 BC).

A large and powerful state known as Tabal occupied much of southern Anatolia. Known as Greek Tibarenoi (Ancient Greek: Τιβαρηνοί), Latin Tibareni, Thobeles in Josephus, their language may have been Luwian,[77] testified to by monuments written using Anatolian hieroglyphs.[78] This state too was conquered and incorporated into the vast Neo-Assyrian Empire.

Ultimately, both Luwian hieroglyphs and cuneiform were rendered obsolete by an innovation, the alphabet, which seems to have entered Anatolia simultaneously from the Aegean (with the Bryges, who changed their name to Phrygians), and from the Phoenicians and neighboring peoples in Syria.

Government edit

 
Bronze Hittite figures of animals (Museum of Anatolian Civilizations)
 
Alaca Höyük bronze standard deer with gold nose and two lions/panthers (Museum of Anatolian Civilizations)

The earliest known constitutional monarchy was developed by the Hittites.[79][80] The head of the Hittite state was the king, followed by the heir-apparent. The king was the supreme ruler of the land, in charge of being a military commander, judicial authority, as well as a high priest.[81] However, some officials exercised independent authority over various branches of the government. One of the most important of these posts in the Hittite society was that of the gal mesedi (Chief of the Royal Bodyguards).[82] It was superseded by the rank of the gal gestin (Chief of the Wine Stewards), who, like the gal mesedi, was generally a member of the royal family. The kingdom's bureaucracy was headed by the gal dubsar (Chief of the Scribes), whose authority did not extend over the lugal dubsar, the king's personal scribe.

Egyptian monarchs engaged in diplomacy with two chief Hittite seats, located at Kadesh (a city located on the Orontes River) and Carchemish (located on the Euphrates river in Southern Anatolia).[83]

 
Map of the Hittite Empire at its greatest extent under Suppiluliuma I (c.1350–1322) and Mursili II (c.1321–1295).

Religion of the early Hittites edit

In the Central Anatolian settlement of Ankuwa, home of the pre-Hittite goddess Kattaha and the worship of other Hattic deities illustrates the ethnic differences in the areas the Hittites tried to control. Kattaha was originally given the name Hannikkun. The usage of the term Kattaha over Hannikkun, according to Ronald Gorny (head of the Alisar regional project in Turkey), was a device to downgrade the pre-Hittite identity of this female deity, and to bring her more in touch with the Hittite tradition. Their reconfiguration of Gods throughout their early history such as with Kattaha was a way of legitimizing their authority and to avoid conflicting ideologies in newly included regions and settlements. By transforming local deities to fit their own customs, the Hittites hoped that the traditional beliefs of these communities would understand and accept the changes to become better suited for the Hittite political and economic goals.[84]

The Pankus edit

King Telipinu (reigned c. 1525 – c. 1500 BC) is considered to be the last king of the Old Kingdom of the Hittites. He seized power during a dynastic power struggle. During his reign, he wanted to take care of lawlessness and regulate royal succession. He then issued the Edict of Telipinus. In this edict, he designated the Pankus, which was a general assembly, as the high court for constitutional crimes. Crimes such as murder were observed and judged by the Pankus. Kings themselves were also subject to jurisdiction under the Pankus. The Pankus also served as an advisory council for the king. The rules and regulations set out by the edict, and the establishment of the Pankus proved to be very successful and lasted all the way through to end of the New Kingdom.[85]

The Pankus established a legal code where violence was not a punishment for a crime. Crimes such as a murder and theft, which at the time were punishable by death, in other southwest Asian Kingdoms, were not capital crimes under the Hittite law code. Most criminal penalties involved restitution. For example, in cases of thievery, the punishment of that crime would to be to repay what was stolen in equal value.[86]

Language edit

 
Bronze tablet from Çorum-Boğazköy dating from 1235 BC, photographed at Museum of Anatolian Civilizations, Ankara
 
Indo-European family tree in order of first attestation. Hittite belongs to the family of Anatolian languages and the oldest written Indo-European language.

The Hittite language is recorded fragmentarily from about the 19th century BC (in the Kültepe texts, see Ishara). It remained in use until about 1100 BC. Hittite is the best attested member of the Anatolian branch of the Indo-European language family, and the Indo-European language for which the earliest surviving written attestation exists, with isolated Hittite loanwords and numerous personal names appearing in an Old Assyrian context from as early as the 20th century BC.[citation needed]

The language of the Hattusa tablets was eventually deciphered by a Czech linguist, Bedřich Hrozný (1879–1952), who, on 24 November 1915, announced his results in a lecture at the Near Eastern Society of Berlin. His book about the discovery was printed in Leipzig in 1917, under the title The Language of the Hittites; Its Structure and Its Membership in the Indo-European Linguistic Family.[87] The preface of the book begins with:

"The present work undertakes to establish the nature and structure of the hitherto mysterious language of the Hittites, and to decipher this language [...] It will be shown that Hittite is in the main an Indo-European language."

The decipherment famously led to the confirmation of the laryngeal theory in Indo-European linguistics, which had been predicted several decades before. Due to its marked differences in its structure and phonology, some early philologists, most notably Warren Cowgill, had even argued that it should be classified as a sister language to Indo-European languages (Indo-Hittite), rather than a daughter language. By the end of the Hittite Empire, the Hittite language had become a written language of administration and diplomatic correspondence. The population of most of the Hittite Empire by this time spoke Luwian, another Indo-European language of the Anatolian family that had originated to the west of the Hittite region.[88]

According to Craig Melchert, the current tendency is to suppose that Proto-Indo-European evolved, and that the "prehistoric speakers" of Anatolian became isolated "from the rest of the PIE speech community, so as not to share in some common innovations."[89] Hittite, as well as its Anatolian cousins, split off from Proto-Indo-European at an early stage, thereby preserving archaisms that were later lost in the other Indo-European languages.[90]

In Hittite there are many loanwords, particularly religious vocabulary, from the non-Indo-European Hurrian and Hattic languages. The latter was the language of the Hattians, the local inhabitants of the land of Hatti before being absorbed or displaced by the Hittites. Sacred and magical texts from Hattusa were often written in Hattic, Hurrian, and Luwian, even after Hittite became the norm for other writings.[citation needed]

Art edit

 
Monument over a spring at Eflatun Pınar

Given the size of the empire, there are relatively few remains of Hittite art. These include some impressive monumental carvings, a number of rock reliefs, as well as metalwork, in particular the Alaca Höyük bronze standards, carved ivory, and ceramics, including the Hüseyindede vases. The Sphinx Gates of Alaca Höyük and Hattusa, with the monument at the spring of Eflatun Pınar, are among the largest constructed sculptures, along with a number of large recumbent lions, of which the Lion of Babylon statue at Babylon is the largest, if it is indeed Hittite. Nearly all are notably worn. Rock reliefs include the Hanyeri relief, and Hemite relief. The Niğde Stele from the end of the 8th century BC is a Luwian monument, from the Post-Hittite period, found in the modern Turkish city of Niğde.

Religion and mythology edit

 
Stag statuette, symbol of a Hittite male god. This figure is used for the Hacettepe University emblem.
 
Early Hittite artifact found by T. E. Lawrence and Leonard Woolley (right) in Carchemish

Hittite religion and mythology were heavily influenced by their Hattic, Mesopotamian, Canaanite, and Hurrian counterparts. In earlier times, Indo-European elements may still be clearly discerned.

Storm gods were prominent in the Hittite pantheon. Tarhunt (Hurrian's Teshub) was referred to as 'The Conqueror', 'The king of Kummiya', 'King of Heaven', 'Lord of the land of Hatti'. He was chief among the gods and his symbol is the bull. As Teshub he was depicted as a bearded man astride two mountains and bearing a club. He was the god of battle and victory, especially when the conflict involved a foreign power.[91] Teshub was also known for his conflict with the serpent Illuyanka.[92]

The Hittite gods are also honoured with festivals, such as Puruli in the spring, the nuntarriyashas festival in the autumn, and the KI.LAM festival of the gate house where images of the Storm God and up to thirty other idols were paraded through the streets.[93]

Law edit

Hittite laws, much like other records of the empire, are recorded on cuneiform tablets made from baked clay. What is understood to be the Hittite Law Code comes mainly from two clay tablets, each containing 186 articles, and are a collection of practiced laws from across the early Hittite Kingdom.[94] In addition to the tablets, monuments bearing Hittite cuneiform inscriptions can be found in central Anatolia describing the government and law codes of the empire.[95] The tablets and monuments date from the Old Hittite Kingdom (1650–1500 BC) to what is known as the New Hittite Kingdom (1500–1180 BC).[96] Between these time periods, different translations can be found that modernize the language[97] and create a series of legal reforms in which many crimes[94][96] are given more humane punishments. These changes could possibly be attributed to the rise of new and different kings throughout the history empire or to the new translations that change the language used in the law codes.[96] In either case, the law codes of the Hittites provide very specific fines or punishments that are to be issued for specific crimes[96][98] and have many similarities to Biblical laws found in the books of Exodus and Deuteronomy.[98] In addition to criminal punishments, the law codes also provide instruction on certain situations such as inheritance and death.[citation needed]

Use of laws edit

The law articles used by the Hittites most often outline very specific crimes or offenses, either against the state or against other individuals, and provide a sentence for these offenses. The laws carved in the tablets are an assembly of established social conventions from across the empire. Hittite laws at this time have a prominent lack of equality in punishments in many cases, distinct punishments or compensations for men and women are listed.[94][98] Free men most often received more compensation for offenses against them than free women did. Slaves, male or female, had very few rights, and could easily be punished or executed by their masters for crimes.[94][98] Most articles describe destruction of property and personal injury, to which the most common sentence was payment for compensation of the lost property. Again, in these cases men oftentimes receive a greater amount of compensation than women.[94][98] Other articles describe how marriage of slaves and free individuals should be handled. In any case of separation or estrangement, the free individual, male or female, would keep all but one child that resulted from the marriage.[96][98]

Cases in which capital punishment is recommended in the articles most often seem to come from pre-reform sentences for severe crimes and prohibited sexual pairings. Many of these cases include public torture and execution as punishment for serious crimes against religion. Most of these sentences would begin to go away in the later stages of the Hittite Empire as major law reforms began to occur.[94][96]

Law reform edit

 
Post-Hittite period statue of king Šuppiluliuma of the Luwian state of Pattin (Hatay Archaeology Museum)

While different translations of laws can be seen throughout the history of the empire,[97] the Hittite outlook of law was originally founded on religion and were intended to preserve the authority of the state.[94] Additionally, punishments had the goal of crime prevention and the protection of individual property rights.[94] The goals of crime prevention can be seen in the severity of the punishments issued for certain crimes. Capital punishment and torture are specifically mentioned as punishment for more severe crimes against religion and harsh fines for the loss of private property or life. The tablets also describe the ability of the king to pardon certain crimes, but specifically prohibit an individual being pardoned for murder.[94][96]

At some point in the 16th or 15th century BC, Hittite law codes move away from torture and capital punishment and to more humanitarian forms of punishments, such as fines.[94][96] Where the old law system was based on retaliation and retribution for crimes, the new system saw punishments that were much more mild, favoring monetary compensation over physical or capital punishment.[94] Why these drastic reforms happened is not exactly clear, but it is likely that punishing murder with execution was deemed not to benefit any individual or family involved.[94][96] These reforms were not just seen in the realm of capital punishment. Where major fines were to be paid, a severe reduction in penalty can be seen. For example, prior to these major reforms, the payment to be made for the theft of an animal was thirty times the animal's value; after the reforms, the penalty was reduced to half the original fine. Simultaneously, attempts to modernize the language and change the verbiage used in the law codes can be seen during this period of reform.[94][95][96][97]

Examples of laws edit

 
Sphinx Gate entrance of the city of Hattusa

Under both the old and reformed Hittite law codes, three main types of punishment can be seen: Death, torture, or compensation/fines.[94] The articles outlined on the cuneiform tablets provide very specific punishments for crimes committed against the Hittite religion or against individuals. In many, but not all cases, articles describing similar laws are grouped together. More than a dozen consecutive articles describe what are known to be permitted and prohibited sexual pairings.[96][98] These pairings mostly describe men (sometimes specifically referred to as free men, sometimes just men in general)[98] having relations, be they consensual or not, with animals, step-family, relatives of spouses, or concubines.[94] Many of these articles do not provide specific punishments but, prior to the law reforms, crimes against religion were most often punishable by death. These include incestuous marriages and sexual relations with certain animals.[96][98] For example, one article states, "If a man has sexual relations with a cow, it is an unpermitted sexual pairing: he will be put to death."[98] Similar relations with horses and mules were not subject to capital punishment, but the offender could not become a priest afterwards.[94][96] Actions at the expense of other individuals most often see the offender paying some sort of compensation, be it in the form money, animals, or land. These actions could include the destruction of farmlands, death or injury of livestock, or assault of an individual.[98] Several articles also specifically mention acts of the gods. If an animal were to die by certain circumstances, the individual could claim that it died by the hand of a god. Swearing that what they claim was true, it seems that they were exempt from paying compensation to the animal's owner.[96][98] Injuries inflicted upon animals owned by another individual are almost always compensated with either direct payment, or trading the injured animal with a healthy one owned by the offender.[98]

Not all laws prescribed in the tablets deal with criminal punishment. For example, the instructions of how the marriage of slaves and division of their children are given in a group of articles, "The slave woman shall take most of the children, with the male slave taking one child."[98] Similar instructions are given to the marriage of free individuals and slaves. Other actions include how breaking of engagements are to be handled.[96][98]

Biblical Hittites edit

The Bible refers to "Hittites" in several passages, ranging from Genesis to the post-Exilic Ezra–Nehemiah. The Hittites are usually depicted as a people living among the Israelites – Abraham purchases the Patriarchal burial-plot of Machpelah from "Ephron HaChiti", Ephron the Hittite; and Hittites serve as high military officers in David's army. In 2 Kings 7:6, however, they are a people with their own kingdoms (the passage refers to "kings" in the plural), apparently located outside geographic Canaan, and sufficiently powerful to put a Syrian army to flight.[99]

It is a matter of considerable scholarly debate whether the biblical "Hittites" signified any or all of: 1) the original Hattians; 2) their Indo-European conquerors, who retained the name "Hatti" for Central Anatolia, and are today referred to as the "Hittites" (the subject of this article); or 3) a Canaanite group who may or may not have been related to either or both of the Anatolian groups, and who also may or may not be identical with the later Syro-Hittite states.[100][101]

Other biblical scholars (following Max Müller) have argued that, rather than being connected with Heth, son of Canaan, the Anatolian land of Hatti was instead mentioned in Hebrew Bible literature and apocrypha as "Kittim" (Chittim), a people said to be named for a son of Javan.[102]

In ancient Greek mythology edit

One single mention of a Trojan ally named Ceteians (Greek: Κητειοι) is made by Homer in the Odyssey. Various scholars agree that the Homeric Ceteians correspond to the Bronze Age Hittites.[103][104]

See also edit

References edit

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  69. ^ Beckman, Gary M.; Bryce, Trevor R.; Cline, Eric H. (2012). "Writings from the Ancient World: The Ahhiyawa Texts" (PDF). Writings from the Ancient World. Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature: 6. ISSN 1570-7008. (PDF) from the original on 23 April 2016. Retrieved 2 April 2016. At the very least, perhaps we can say that the Ahhiyawa Problem/Question has been solved and answered after all, for there is now little doubt that Ahhiyawa was a reference by the Hittites to some or all of the Bronze Age Mycenaean world.
  70. ^ Gurney 1966, p. 110.
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  88. ^ Hawkins, David (February 1986). "Writing in Anatolia: Imported and Indigenous Systems". World Archaeology. 17 (3): 363–376. doi:10.1080/00438243.1986.9979976. JSTOR 124701.
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  97. ^ a b c Hoffner, Harry A. (1981). "The Old Hittite Version of Laws 164–166". Journal of Cuneiform Studies. 33 (3/4): 206–209. doi:10.2307/1359903. JSTOR 1359903. S2CID 159932628.
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  99. ^ King James Bible, 2 Kings 7:6: For the Lord had made the host of the Syrians to hear a noise of chariots, and a noise of horses, even the noise of a great host: and they said one to another, Lo, the king of Israel hath hired against us the kings of the Hittites, and the kings of the Egyptians, to come upon us.
  100. ^ Bryce 2005, pp. 355–356.
  101. ^ Woudstra, Marten (1981). The Book of Joshua. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 60. ISBN 978-0802825254. from the original on 16 May 2016. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
  102. ^ "Full text of "Hittites, Mittanis & Aryans Indo Aryan Superstrate in Mitanni Internet"". archive.org. Retrieved 14 August 2018.
  103. ^ Kelder, Jorrid (2005). "The Chariots of Ahhiyawa". Talanta: 65. Retrieved 4 June 2023.
  104. ^ Peled, Ilan (4 November 2019). "HL (Hittite Laws)". Law and Gender in the Ancient Near East and the Hebrew Bible. Routledge. p. 85. ISBN 9781000733457.

Sources edit

  • Akurgal, Ekrem (2001). The Hattian and Hittite Civilizations. Ankara: Ministry of Culture. ISBN 9789751727565.
  • Anthony, David W. (2007), The Horse, the Wheel and Language. How Bronze-Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World, Princeton University Press
  • Archi, Alfonso (2010). "When Did the Hittites Begin to Write in Hittite?". Pax Hethitica: Studies on the Hittites and Their Neighbours in Honour of Itamar Singer. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag. pp. 37–46. ISBN 9783447061193.
  • Bachvarova, Mary R. (2010). "Manly Deeds: Hittite Admonitory History and Eastern Mediterranean Didactic Epic". Epic and History. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 66–85. ISBN 9781444315646.
  • Barjamovic, Gojko (2011). A Historical Geography of Anatolia in the Old Assyrian Colony Period. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press. ISBN 9788763536455.
  • Beal, Richard H (1986). "The History of Kizzuwatna and the Date of the Šunaššura Treaty". Orientalia. Vol. 55. pp. 424ff.
  • G Brinkman, Hittite Diplomatic Texts, Scholars Press, 1999, ISBN 0-7885-0551-3
  • UK Government Web Archive Bryce, T., 'The 'Eternal Treaty' from the Hittite perspective', BMSAES 6, pp. 1–11, 2006
  • Bryce, Trevor R. (2002). Life and Society in the Hittite World. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199241705.
  • Bryce, Trevor R. (2005) [1998]. The Kingdom of the Hittites (2nd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199279081.
  • Bryce, Trevor R. (2009). The Routledge Handbook of the Peoples and Places of Ancient Western Asia: The Near East from the Early Bronze Age to the fall of the Persian Empire. London-New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781134159079.
  • Bryce, Trevor R. (2012). The World of The Neo-Hittite Kingdoms: A Political and Military History. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780191505027.
  • Bryce, Trevor R. (2016). "The Land of Hiyawa (Que) Revisited". Anatolian Studies. 66: 67–79. doi:10.1017/S0066154616000053. JSTOR 24878364. S2CID 163486778.
  • Ceram, C. W. (2001) The Secret of the Hittites: The Discovery of an Ancient Empire. Phoenix Press, ISBN 1-84212-295-9.
  • Forlanini, Massimo (2010). "An Attempt at Reconstructing the Branches of the Hittite Royal Family of the Early Kingdom Period". Pax Hethitica: Studies on the Hittites and Their Neighbours in Honour of Itamar Singer. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag. pp. 115–135. ISBN 9783447061193.
  • Gilan, Amir. "Epic and History in Hittite Anatolia: In Search of a Local Hero". In Konstan & Raaflaub (2010), pp. 51–65.
  • Gilan, Amir (2018). "In Search of a Distant Past: Forms of Historical Consciousness in Hittite Anatolia" (PDF). Anadolu. 44: 1–23.
  • Gilibert, Alessandra (2011). 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: Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 9783110222258.
  • Goodnick-Westenholz, Joan (1997). Legends of the Kings of Akkade: The Texts. Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns. ISBN 9780931464850.
  • Goodnick-Westenholz, Joan. "Historical Events and the Process of Their Transformation in Akkadian Heroic Traditions". In Konstan & Raaflaub (2010), pp. 26–50.
  • Gurney, O.R. (1966). The Hittites. Penguin. ISBN 0-14-020259-5.
  • Güterbock, Hans Gustav (1983) "Hittite Historiography: A Survey", in H. Tadmor and M. Weinfeld eds. History, Historiography and Interpretation: Studies in Biblical and Cuneiform Literatures, Magnes Press, Hebrew University pp. 21–35.
  • Hoffner, Jr., H.A (1973) "The Hittites and Hurrians", in D. J. Wiseman Peoples of the Old Testament Times, Clarendon Press, Oxford.
  • Hittite Studies in Honor of Harry A. Hoffner Jr. on the Occasion of His 65th Birthday. Eisenbrauns, 2003, ISBN 1-57506-079-5
  • Jasanoff, Jay H. (2003). Hittite and the Indo-European Verb. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-924905-3.
  • Kloekhorst, Alwin (2007). Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-16092-7.
  • Kloekhorst, Alwin (19 June 2014). Personal names from Kaniš: the oldest Indo-European linguistic material. Farewell symposium Michiel de Vaan. Leiden.
  • Kloekhorst, Alwin; Waal, Willemijn (2019). "A Hittite Scribal Tradition Predating the Tablet Collections of Ḫattuša?". Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und vorderasiatische Archäologie. 109 (2): 189–203. doi:10.1515/za-2019-0014. hdl:1887/3199128. S2CID 208141226.
  • Kloekhorst, Alwin (2020). "The Authorship of the Old Hittite Palace Chronicle (CTH 8): A Case for Anitta". Journal of Cuneiform Studies. 72: 143–155. doi:10.1086/709313. S2CID 224830641.
  • Konstan, David; Raaflaub, Kurt A., eds. (2010). Epic and History. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9781444315646.
  • Macqueen, J. G. (1986) The Hittites, and Their Contemporaries in Asia Minor, revised and enlarged, Ancient Peoples and Places series (ed. G. Daniel), Thames and Hudson, ISBN 0-500-02108-2.
  • Mallory, J.P.; Adams, D.Q. (1997). Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-884964-98-5. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  • Melchert, Craig (2012). "The Position of Anatolian" (PDF).
  • Melchert, Craig (2020). "Luwian". A Companion to Ancient Near Eastern Languages. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 239–256. ISBN 9781119193296.
  • Mendenhall, George E. (1973) The Tenth Generation: The Origins of the Biblical Tradition, The Johns Hopkins University Press, ISBN 0-8018-1654-8.
  • Neu, Erich (1974) Der Anitta Text, (StBoT 18), Otto Harrassowitz, Wiesbaden.
  • Orlin, Louis L. (1970) Assyrian Colonies in Cappadocia, Mouton, The Hague.
  • Parpola, Asko (2015), The Roots of Hinduism. The Early Aryans and the Indus Civilization, Oxford University Press
  • UK Government Web Archive Sürenhagen, D., 'Forerunners of the Hattusili-Ramesses treaty'], BMSAES 6, pp. 59–67, 2006
  • Patri, Sylvain (2007), L'alignement syntaxique dans les langues indo-européennes d'Anatolie, (StBoT 49), Otto Harrassowitz, Wiesbaden, ISBN 978-3-447-05612-0
  • Roebuck, Carl (1966). The World of Ancient Times. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
  • Weeden, Mark (2013). "After the Hittites: The Kingdoms of Karkamish and Palistin in Northern Syria" (PDF). Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies. 56 (2): 1–20. doi:10.1111/j.2041-5370.2013.00055.x.
  • Yakubovich, Ilya (2020). "Hittite". A Companion to Ancient Near Eastern Languages. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 221–237. ISBN 9781119193296.

Further reading edit

  • Bilgin, Tayfun (2018). Officials and administration in the Hittite world. Berlin: de Gruyter. ISBN 9781501516627.
  • Jacques Freu et Michel Mazoyer, Des origines à la fin de l'ancien royaume hittite, Les Hittites et leur histoire Tome 1, Collection Kubaba, L'Harmattan, Paris, 2007
  • Jacques Freu et Michel Mazoyer, Les débuts du nouvel empire hittite, Les Hittites et leur histoire Tome 2, Collection Kubaba, L'Harmattan, Paris, 2007
  • Jacques Freu et Michel Mazoyer, L'apogée du nouvel empire hittite, Les Hittites et leur histoire Tome 3, Collection Kubaba, L'Harmattan, Paris, 2008
  • Jacques Freu et Michel Mazoyer, Le déclin et la chute de l'empire Hittite, Les Hittites et leur histoire Tome 4, Collection Kubaba, L'Harmattan, Paris, 2010
  • Jacques Freu et Michel Mazoyer, Les royaumes Néo-Hittites, Les Hittites et leur histoire Tome 5, Collection Kubaba, L'Harmattan, Paris, 2012
  • Imparati, Fiorella. "Aspects De L'organisation De L'État Hittite Dans Les Documents Juridiques Et Administratifs." Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 25, no. 3 (1982): 225–67. doi:10.2307/3632187
  • de Martino, Stefan, ed. (2022). Handbook of Hittite Empire. De Gruyter Oldenbourg. ISBN 978-3-11-066178-1.
  • Stone, Damien. The Hittites: Lost Civilizations. United Kingdom, Reaktion Books, 2023.

External links edit

  • New research suggests drought accelerated Hittite Empire collapse - Phys.org February 8, 2023
  • Video lecture at Oriental Institute – Tracking the Frontiers of the Hittite Empire
  • Pictures of Boğazköy, one of a group of important sites
  • Pictures of Yazılıkaya, one of a group of important sites
  • Der Anitta Text (at TITUS)
  • Hittites.info
  • Hethitologieportal Mainz, by the Akademie der Wissenschaften, Mainz, corpus of texts and extensive bibliographies on all things Hittite
  • "Missione Archeologica Italiana a Uşaklı Höyük | MAIAC". usaklihoyuk.org (in Italian). Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  • Map of Hittite Anatolia

hittites, this, article, about, anatolian, culture, group, described, bible, biblical, hittite, inhabitants, anatolia, hattians, were, anatolian, indo, european, people, formed, first, major, civilizations, bronze, west, asia, possibly, originating, from, beyo. This article is about the Anatolian culture For the group described in the Bible see Biblical Hittites For the pre Hittite inhabitants of Anatolia see Hattians The Hittites ˈ h ɪ t aɪ t s were an Anatolian Indo European people who formed one of the first major civilizations of Bronze Age West Asia Possibly originating from beyond the Black Sea 2 they settled in modern day Turkey in the early 2nd millennium BC The Hittites formed a series of polities in north central Anatolia including the kingdom of Kussara before 1750 BC the Kanesh or Nesha kingdom c 1750 1650 BC and an empire centered on Hattusa around 1650 BC 3 4 Known in modern times as the Hittite Empire it reached its height during the mid 14th century BC under Suppiluliuma I when it encompassed most of Anatolia and parts of the northern Levant and Upper Mesopotamia Hittite EmpireḪa at tu sa 𒄩𒀜𒌅𒊭c 1650 BC c 1180 BCRoyal seal of the last king Suppiluliuma IIMap of the Hittite Empire at its greatest extent with Hittite rule c 1300 BCCapitalHattusa Tarḫuntassa under the reign of Muwatalli II Common languagesHittite Hattic Luwian AkkadianReligionHittite religionGovernmentAbsolute monarchy Old Kingdom Constitutional monarchy Middle and New Kingdom 1 King c 1650 BCLabarna I first c 1210 1180 BCSuppiluliuma II last Historical eraBronze Age Establishedc 1650 BC Disestablishedc 1180 BCPreceded by Succeeded byHattiansKussaraKaneshPurushandaPala Anatolia Third Eblaite KingdomKizzuwatnaAssuwaArzawaWilusaAlashiya KaskiansMushkiUrumeansSyro Hittite statesTabalKummuhCarchemishPhrygiaLydiaToday part ofTurkeySyriaLebanonCyprusThe Great Temple in the inner city of HattusaBetween the 15th and 13th centuries BC the Hittites were one of the dominant powers of the Near East coming into conflict with the New Kingdom of Egypt the Middle Assyrian Empire and the empire of Mitanni By the 12th century BC much of the Hittite Empire was annexed by the Middle Assyrian Empire with the remainder sacked by Phrygian newcomers to the region From the late 12th century BC during the Late Bronze Age collapse the Hittites splintered into several small independent states some of which survived until the eighth century BC before succumbing to the Neo Assyrian Empire lacking a unifying continuity their descendants scattered and ultimately merged into the modern populations of the Levant and Mesopotamia 5 The Hittite language referred to by its speakers as nesili the language of Nesa was a distinct member of the Anatolian branch of the Indo European language family along with the closely related Luwian language it is the oldest historically attested Indo European language 6 The history of the Hittite civilization is known mostly from cuneiform texts found in their former territories and from diplomatic and commercial correspondence found in the various archives of Assyria Babylonia Egypt and the broader Middle East the decipherment of these texts was a key event in the history of Indo European studies Cultural links to prehistoric Scandinavia have also been suggested 7 8 Scholars once attributed the development of iron smelting to the Hittites who were believed to have monopolized ironworking during the Bronze Age This theory has been increasingly contested in the 21st century 9 with the Late Bronze Age collapse and subsequent Iron Age seeing the slow comparatively continuous spread of ironworking technology across the region While there are some iron objects from Bronze Age Anatolia the number is comparable to that of iron objects found in Egypt and in other places from the same period and only a small number of these objects are weapons 10 X ray fluorescence spectrometry suggests that most or all irons from the Bronze Age are derived from meteorites 11 The Hittite military also made successful use of chariots 12 Modern interest in the Hittites increased with the founding of the Republic of Turkey in 1923 The Hittites attracted the attention of Turkish archaeologists such as Halet Cambel and Tahsin Ozguc During this period the new field of Hittitology also influenced the naming of Turkish institutions such as the state owned Etibank Hittite bank 13 and the foundation of the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations in Ankara built 200 kilometers 124 miles west of the Hittite capital of Hattusa which houses the world s most comprehensive exhibition of Hittite art and artifacts Contents 1 Etymology 2 Archeological discovery 2 1 Biblical background 2 2 Initial discoveries 2 3 Writings 2 4 Museums 3 Geography 4 History 4 1 Origins 4 2 Early period 4 3 Old Kingdom 4 4 Middle Kingdom 4 5 New Kingdom 4 5 1 Battle of Kadesh 4 5 2 Downfall and demise of the kingdom 4 6 Post Hittite period 5 Government 5 1 Religion of the early Hittites 5 2 The Pankus 6 Language 7 Art 8 Religion and mythology 9 Law 9 1 Use of laws 9 2 Law reform 9 3 Examples of laws 10 Biblical Hittites 11 In ancient Greek mythology 12 See also 13 References 14 Sources 15 Further reading 16 External linksEtymology editThe Hittites called their kingdom Hattusa Hatti in Akkadian a name received from the Hattians an earlier people who had inhabited and ruled the central Anatolian region until the beginning of the second millennium BC and who spoke an unrelated language known as Hattic 14 The modern conventional name Hittites is due to the initial identification of the people of Hattusa with the Biblical Hittites by 19th century archaeologists The Hittites would have called themselves something closer to Neshites or Neshians after the city of Nesha which flourished for some two hundred years until a king named Labarna renamed himself Hattusili I meaning the man of Hattusa sometime around 1650 BC and established his capital city at Hattusa 15 Archeological discovery edit nbsp An Alaca Hoyuk bronze standard from a third millennium BC pre Hittite tomb Museum of Anatolian Civilizations Ankara nbsp Ivory Hittite Sphinx 18th century BCBiblical background edit See also Biblical Hittites Before the archeological discoveries that revealed the Hittite civilization the only source of information about the Hittites had been the Hebrew Bible Francis William Newman expressed the critical view common in the early 19th century that no Hittite king could have compared in power to the King of Judah 16 As the discoveries in the second half of the 19th century revealed the scale of the Hittite kingdom Archibald Sayce asserted that rather than being compared to Judah the Anatolian civilization was worthy of comparison to the divided Kingdom of Egypt and was infinitely more powerful than that of Judah 17 Sayce and other scholars also noted that Judah and the Hittites were never enemies in the Hebrew texts in the Book of Kings they supplied the Israelites with cedar chariots and horses and in the Book of Genesis were friends and allies to Abraham Uriah the Hittite was a captain in King David s army and counted as one of his mighty men in 1 Chronicles 11 Initial discoveries edit French scholar Charles Texier found the first Hittite ruins in 1834 but did not identify them as such 13 18 The first archaeological evidence for the Hittites appeared in tablets found at the karum of Kanesh now called Kultepe containing records of trade between Assyrian merchants and a certain land of Hatti Some names in the tablets were neither Hattic nor Assyrian but clearly Indo European 19 The script on a monument at Bogazkale by a People of Hattusas discovered by William Wright in 1884 was found to match peculiar hieroglyphic scripts from Aleppo and Hama in Northern Syria In 1887 excavations at Amarna in Egypt uncovered the diplomatic correspondence of Pharaoh Amenhotep III and his son Akhenaten Two of the letters from a kingdom of Kheta apparently located in the same general region as the Mesopotamian references to land of Hatti were written in standard Akkadian cuneiform but in an unknown language although scholars could interpret its sounds no one could understand it Shortly after this Sayce proposed that Hatti or Khatti in Anatolia was identical with the kingdom of Kheta mentioned in these Egyptian texts as well as with the biblical Hittites Others such as Max Muller agreed that Khatti was probably Kheta but proposed connecting it with Biblical Kittim rather than with the Biblical Hittites Sayce s identification came to be widely accepted over the course of the early 20th century and the name Hittite has become attached to the civilization uncovered at Bogazkoy 20 nbsp Hattusa rampDuring sporadic excavations at Bogazkoy Hattusa that began in 1906 the archaeologist Hugo Winckler found a royal archive with 10 000 tablets inscribed in cuneiform Akkadian and the same unknown language as the Egyptian letters from Kheta thus confirming the identity of the two names He also proved that the ruins at Bogazkoy were the remains of the capital of an empire that at one point controlled northern Syria 21 nbsp Drinking cup in the shape of a fist 1400 1380 BC Museum of Fine Arts BostonUnder the direction of the German Archaeological Institute excavations at Hattusa have been under way since 1907 with interruptions during the world wars Kultepe was successfully excavated by Professor Tahsin Ozguc from 1948 until his death in 2005 Smaller scale excavations have also been carried out in the immediate surroundings of Hattusa including the rock sanctuary of Yazilikaya which contains numerous rock reliefs portraying the Hittite rulers and the gods of the Hittite pantheon 22 Writings edit The Hittites used a variation of cuneiform called Hittite cuneiform Archaeological expeditions to Hattusa have discovered entire sets of royal archives on cuneiform tablets written either in Akkadian the diplomatic language of the time or in the various dialects of the Hittite confederation 23 Museums edit The Museum of Anatolian Civilizations in Ankara Turkey houses the richest collection of Hittite and Anatolian artifacts citation needed Geography edit nbsp Ceremonial vessels in the shape of sacred bulls called Hurri Day and Seri Night found in Hattusa Hittite Old Kingdom 16th century BC Museum of Anatolian Civilizations AnkaraMain article Hittite sites The Hittite kingdom was centered on the lands surrounding Hattusa and Nesa Kultepe known as the land Hatti URUHa at ti After Hattusa was made the capital the area encompassed by the bend of the Kizilirmak River Hittite Marassantiya Greek Halys was considered the core of the Empire and some Hittite laws make a distinction between this side of the river and that side of the river For example the bounty for an escaped slave who had fled beyond the river is higher than for a slave caught on the near side citation needed To the west and south of the core territory lay the region known as Luwiya in the earliest Hittite texts This terminology was replaced by the names Arzawa and Kizzuwatna with the rise of those kingdoms 24 Nevertheless the Hittites continued to refer to the language that originated in these areas as Luwian Prior to the rise of Kizzuwatna the heart of that territory in Cilicia was first referred to by the Hittites as Adaniya 25 Upon its revolt from the Hittites during the reign of Ammuna 26 it assumed the name of Kizzuwatna and successfully expanded northward to encompass the lower Anti Taurus Mountains as well To the north lived the mountain people called the Kaskians To the southeast of the Hittites lay the Hurrian empire of Mitanni At its peak during the reign of Mursili II the Hittite empire stretched from Arzawa in the west to Mitanni in the east and included many of the Kaskian territories north as far as Hayasa Azzi in the far north east as well as south into Canaan near the southern border of Lebanon citation needed History edit nbsp Scheme of Indo European language dispersals from c 4000 to 1000 BC according to the widely held Kurgan hypothesis Center Steppe cultures1 black Anatolian languages archaic PIE 2 black Afanasievo culture early PIE 3 black Yamnaya culture expansion Pontic Caspian steppe Danube Valley late PIE 4A black Western Corded Ware4B C blue amp dark blue Bell Beaker adopted by Indo European speakers5A B red Eastern Corded ware5C red Sintashta proto Indo Iranian 6 magenta Andronovo7A purple Indo Aryans Mittani 7B purple Indo Aryans India NN dark yellow proto Balto Slavic8 grey Greek9 yellow Iranians not drawn Armenian expanding from western steppeOrigins edit The ancestors of the Hittites came into Anatolia between 4400 and 4100 BC when the Anatolian language family split from Proto Indo European 27 Recent genetic and archaeological research has indicated that Proto Anatolian speakers arrived in this region sometime between 5000 and 3000 BC 28 The Proto Hittite language developed around 2100 BC 29 and the Hittite language itself is believed to have been in use in Central Anatolia between the 20th and 12th centuries BC 30 The Hittites are first associated with the kingdom of Kussara sometime prior to 1750 BC 31 Hittites in Anatolia during the Bronze Age coexisted with Hattians and Hurrians either by means of conquest or by gradual assimilation 32 33 In archaeological terms relationships of the Hittites to the Ezero culture of the Balkans and Maykop culture of the Caucasus had previously been considered within the migration framework 34 Analyses by David W Anthony in 2007 concluded that steppe herders who were archaic Indo European speakers spread into the lower Danube valley about 4200 4000 BC either causing or taking advantage of the collapse of Old Europe 35 He thought their languages probably included archaic Proto Indo European dialects of the kind partly preserved later in Anatolian 36 and that their descendants later moved into Anatolia at an unknown time but maybe as early as 3000 BC 37 J P Mallory also thought it was likely that the Anatolians reached the Near East from the north either via the Balkans or the Caucasus in the 3rd millennium BC 38 According to Parpola the appearance of Indo European speakers from Europe into Anatolia and the appearance of Hittite was related to later migrations of Proto Indo European speakers from the Yamnaya culture into the Danube Valley at c 2800 BC 39 40 which was in line with the customary assumption that the Anatolian Indo European language was introduced into Anatolia sometime in the third millennium BC 41 However Petra Goedegebuure has shown that the Hittite language has borrowed many words related to agriculture from cultures on their eastern borders which is evidence of having taken a route across the Caucasus 42 The dominant indigenous inhabitants in central Anatolia were Hurrians and Hattians who spoke non Indo European languages Some have argued that Hattic was a Northwest Caucasian language but its affiliation remains uncertain whilst the Hurrian language was a near isolate i e it was one of only two or three languages in the Hurro Urartian family There were also Assyrian colonies in the region during the Old Assyrian Empire 2025 1750 BC it was from the Assyrian speakers of Upper Mesopotamia that the Hittites adopted the cuneiform script It took some time before the Hittites established themselves following the collapse of the Old Assyrian Empire in the mid 18th century BC as is clear from some of the texts included here For several centuries there were separate Hittite groups usually centered on various cities But then strong rulers with their center in Hattusa modern Bogazkale succeeded in bringing these together and conquering large parts of central Anatolia to establish the Hittite kingdom 43 Early period edit nbsp The Sphinx Gate Alaca Hoyuk Corum Turkey nbsp Reliefs and hieroglyphs from Chamber 2 at Hattusa built and decorated by Suppiluliuma II the last king of the Hittites nbsp Hittite chariot from an Egyptian reliefThe Hittite state was formed from many small polities in North Central Anatolia at the banks of the Kizilirmak River during the Middle Bronze Age ca 1900 1650 BC 44 The early history of the Hittite kingdom is known through four cushion shaped tablets classified as KBo 3 22 KBo 17 21 KBo 22 1 and KBo 22 2 not made in Ḫattusa but probably created in Kussara Nesa or another site in Anatolia that may first have been written in the 18th century BC 45 4 in Old Hittite language and three of them using the so called Old Script OS 46 although most of the remaining tablets survived only as Akkadian copies made in the 14th and 13th centuries BC These reveal a rivalry within two branches of the royal family up to the Middle Kingdom a northern branch first based in Zalpuwa and secondarily Hattusa and a southern branch based in Kussara still not found and the former Assyrian colony of Kanesh These are distinguishable by their names the northerners retained language isolate Hattian names and the southerners adopted Indo European Hittite and Luwian names 47 Zalpuwa first attacked Kanesh under Uhna in 1833 BC 48 And during this karum period when the merchant colony of the Old Assyrian Empire was flourishing in the site and before the conquest of Pithana the following local kings reigned in Kanes Ḫurmili prior to 1790 BC Paḫanu a short time in 1790 BC Inar c 1790 1775 BC and Warsama c 1775 1750 BC 49 One set of tablets known collectively as the Anitta text 50 begin by telling how Pithana the king of Kussara conquered neighbouring Nesa Kanesh 31 this conquest took place around 1750 BC 51 However the real subject of these tablets is Pithana s son Anitta r 1745 1720 BC 52 who continued where his father left off and conquered several northern cities including Hattusa which he cursed and also Zalpuwa This was likely propaganda for the southern branch of the royal family against the northern branch who had fixed on Hattusa as capital 53 Another set the Tale of Zalpuwa supports Zalpuwa and exonerates the later Ḫattusili I from the charge of sacking Kanesh 53 Anitta was succeeded by Zuzzu r 1720 1710 BC 52 but sometime in 1710 1705 BC Kanesh was destroyed taking the long established Assyrian merchant trading system with it 48 A Kussaran noble family survived to contest the Zalpuwan Hattusan family though whether these were of the direct line of Anitta is uncertain 54 Meanwhile the lords of Zalpa lived on Huzziya I descendant of a Huzziya of Zalpa took over Hatti His son in law Labarna I a southerner from Hurma usurped the throne but made sure to adopt Huzziya s grandson Ḫattusili as his own son and heir The location of the land of Hurma is believed to be in the mountains south of Kussara 55 Old Kingdom edit nbsp Hattusa rampThe founding of the Hittite Kingdom is attributed to either Labarna I or Hattusili I the latter might also have had Labarna as a personal name 56 who conquered the area south and north of Hattusa Hattusili I campaigned as far as the Semitic Amorite kingdom of Yamkhad in Syria where he attacked but did not capture its capital of Aleppo Hattusili I did eventually capture Hattusa and was credited for the foundation of the Hittite Empire Hattusili was king and his sons brothers in laws family members and troops were all united Wherever he went on campaign he controlled the enemy land with force He destroyed the lands one after the other took away their power and made them the borders of the sea When he came back from campaign however each of his sons went somewhere to a country and in his hand the great cities prospered But when later the princes servants became corrupt they began to devour the properties conspired constantly against their masters and began to shed their blood This excerpt from The Edict of Telepinu dating to the 16th century BC is supposed to illustrate the unification growth and prosperity of the Hittites under his rule It also illustrates the corruption of the princes believed to be his sons The lack of sources leads to uncertainty of how the corruption was addressed On Hattusili I s deathbed he chose his grandson Mursili I or Murshilish I as his heir 57 nbsp The Inandik vase also known as a Huseyindede vase a large four handled Hittite terracotta vase with scenes in relief depicting a sacred wedding ceremony mid 17th century BC Inandiktepe Museum of Anatolian Civilizations AnkaraMursili continued the conquests of Hattusili I In 1595 BC middle chronology or 1587 BC low middle chronology Mursili I conducted a great raid down the Euphrates River bypassing Assyria and sacking Mari and Babylon ejecting the Amorite rulers of the Old Babylonian Empire in the process Rather than incorporate Babylonia into Hittite domains Mursili seems to have instead turned control of Babylonia over to his Kassite allies who were to rule it for the next four centuries Due to fear of revolts at home he did not remain in Babylon for long This lengthy campaign strained the resources of Hatti and left the capital in a state of near anarchy Mursili was assassinated by his brother in law Hantili I during his journey back to Hattusa or shortly after his return home and the Hittite Kingdom was plunged into chaos Hantili took the throne He was able to escape multiple murder attempts on himself however his family did not His wife Harapsili and her son were murdered In addition other members of the royal family were killed by Zidanta I who was then murdered by his own son Ammuna All of the internal unrest among the Hittite royal family led to a decline of power The Hurrians a people living in the mountainous region along the upper Tigris and Euphrates rivers in modern south east Turkey took advantage of the situation to seize Aleppo and the surrounding areas for themselves as well as the coastal region of Adaniya renaming it Kizzuwatna later Cilicia Throughout the remainder of the 16th century BC the Hittite kings were held to their homelands by dynastic quarrels and warfare with the Hurrians The Hurrians became the center of power in Anatolia 58 59 The campaigns into Amurru and southern Mesopotamia may be responsible for the reintroduction of cuneiform writing into Anatolia since the Hittite script is quite different from that of the preceding Assyrian colonial period The Hittites entered a weak phase of obscure records insignificant rulers and reduced domains This pattern of expansion under strong kings followed by contraction under weaker ones was to be repeated over and over through the Hittite Kingdom s 500 year history making events during the waning periods difficult to reconstruct The political instability of these years of the Old Hittite Kingdom can be explained in part by the nature of the Hittite kingship at that time During the Old Hittite Kingdom prior to 1400 BC the king of the Hittites was not viewed by his subjects as a living god like the Pharaohs of Egypt but rather as a first among equals 60 Only in the later period from 1400 BC until 1200 BC did the Hittite kingship become more centralized and powerful Also in earlier years the succession was not legally fixed enabling War of the Roses style rivalries between northern and southern branches The next monarch of note following Mursili I was Telepinu c 1500 BC who won a few victories to the southwest apparently by allying himself with one Hurrian state Kizzuwatna against another Mitanni Telepinu also attempted to secure the lines of succession 61 Middle Kingdom edit nbsp Twelve Hittite gods of the Underworld in the nearby Yazilikaya a sanctuary of HattusaThe last monarch of the Old Kingdom Telepinu reigned until about 1500 BC Telepinu s reign marked the end of the Old Kingdom and the beginning of the lengthy weak phase known as the Middle Kingdom 62 The period of the 15th century BC is largely unknown with few surviving records 63 Part of the reason for both the weakness and the obscurity is that the Hittites were under constant attack mainly from the Kaskians a non Indo European people settled along the shores of the Black Sea The capital once again went on the move first to Sapinuwa and then to Samuha There is an archive in Sapinuwa but it has not been adequately translated to date It segues into the Hittite Empire period proper which dates from the reign of Tudhaliya I from c 1430 BC One innovation that can be credited to these early Hittite rulers is the practice of conducting treaties and alliances with neighboring states the Hittites were thus among the earliest known pioneers in the art of international politics and diplomacy This is also when the Hittite religion adopted several gods and rituals from the Hurrians New Kingdom edit nbsp Tudhaliya IV relief in Hattusa nbsp Exact replica of a Hittite monument from Fasillar c 1300 BC Museum of Anatolian Civilizations With the reign of Tudhaliya I who may actually not have been the first of that name see also Tudhaliya the Hittite Kingdom re emerged from the fog of obscurity and entered the Hittite Empire period Many changes were afoot during this time not the least of which was a strengthening of the kingship Settlement of the Hittites progressed in the Empire period 60 However the Hittite people tended to settle in the older lands of south Anatolia rather than the lands of the Aegean As this settlement progressed treaties were signed with neighboring peoples 60 During the Hittite Empire period the kingship became hereditary and the king took on a superhuman aura and began to be referred to by the Hittite citizens as My Sun The kings of the Empire period began acting as a high priest for the whole kingdom making an annual tour of the Hittite holy cities conducting festivals and supervising the upkeep of the sanctuaries 60 During his reign c 1400 BC King Tudhaliya I again allied with Kizzuwatna then vanquished the Hurrian states of Aleppo and Mitanni and expanded to the west at the expense of Arzawa a Luwian state Another weak phase followed Tudhaliya I and the Hittites enemies from all directions were able to advance even to Hattusa and raze it However the kingdom recovered its former glory under Suppiluliuma I c 1350 BC who again conquered Aleppo Mitanni was reduced to vassalage by the Assyrians under his son in law and he defeated Carchemish another Amorite city state With his own sons placed over all of these new conquests and Babylonia still in the hands of the allied Kassites this left Suppiluliuma the supreme power broker in the known world alongside Assyria and Egypt and it was not long before Egypt was seeking an alliance by marriage of another of his sons with the widow of Tutankhamen That son was evidently murdered before reaching his destination and this alliance was never consummated However the Middle Assyrian Empire 1365 1050 BC once more began to grow in power with the ascension of Ashur uballit I in 1365 BC Ashur uballit I attacked and defeated Mattiwaza the Mitanni king despite attempts by the Hittite king Suppiluliuma I now fearful of growing Assyrian power attempting to preserve his throne with military support The lands of the Mitanni and Hurrians were duly appropriated by Assyria enabling it to encroach on Hittite territory in eastern Asia Minor and Adad nirari I annexed Carchemish and northeast Syria from the control of the Hittites 64 While Suppiluliuma I reigned the Hittite Empire was devastated by an epidemic of tularemia The epidemic afflicted the Hittites for decades and tularemia killed Suppiluliuma I and his successor Arnuwanda II 65 After Suppiluliuma I s rule and the brief reign of his eldest son Arnuwanda II another son Mursili II became king c 1330 BC Having inherited a position of strength in the east Mursili was able to turn his attention to the west where he attacked Arzawa At a point when the Hittites were weakened by the tularemia epidemic the Arzawans attacked the Hittites who repelled the attack by sending infected rams to the Arzawans This was the first recorded use of biological warfare Mursili also attacked a city known as Millawanda Miletus which was under the control of Ahhiyawa More recent research based on new readings and interpretations of the Hittite texts as well as of the material evidence for Mycenaean contacts with the Anatolian mainland came to the conclusion that Ahhiyawa referred to Mycenaean Greece or at least to a part of it 66 67 68 69 Battle of Kadesh edit nbsp Egyptian pharaoh Ramesses II storming the Hittite fortress of DapurMain article Battle of Kadesh Hittite prosperity was mostly dependent on control of the trade routes and metal sources Because of the importance of Northern Syria to the vital routes linking the Cilician gates with Mesopotamia defense of this area was crucial and was soon put to the test by Egyptian expansion under Pharaoh Ramesses II The outcome of the Battle of Kadesh is uncertain though it seems that the timely arrival of Egyptian reinforcements prevented total Hittite victory 70 The Egyptians forced the Hittites to take refuge in the fortress of Kadesh but their own losses prevented them from sustaining a siege This battle took place in the 5th year of Ramesses c 1274 BC by the most commonly used chronology Downfall and demise of the kingdom edit nbsp Egypto Hittite Peace Treaty c 1258 BC between Hattusili III and Ramesses II the earliest known surviving peace treaty sometimes called the Treaty of Kadesh after the Battle of Kadesh Istanbul Archaeology Museum nbsp Chimera with a human head and a lion s body Late Hittite period in Museum of Anatolian Civilizations AnkaraAfter this date the power of both the Hittites and Egyptians began to decline yet again because of the power of the Assyrians 71 The Assyrian king Shalmaneser I had seized the opportunity to vanquish Hurria and Mitanni occupy their lands and expand up to the head of the Euphrates while Muwatalli was preoccupied with the Egyptians The Hittites had vainly tried to preserve the Mitanni Kingdom with military support 64 Assyria now posed just as great a threat to Hittite trade routes as Egypt ever had Muwatalli s son Urhi Teshub took the throne and ruled as king for seven years as Mursili III before being ousted by his uncle Hattusili III after a brief civil war In response to increasing Assyrian annexation of Hittite territory he concluded a peace and alliance with Ramesses II also fearful of Assyria presenting his daughter s hand in marriage to the Pharaoh 71 The Treaty of Kadesh one of the oldest completely surviving treaties in history fixed their mutual boundaries in southern Canaan and was signed in the 21st year of Rameses c 1258 BC Terms of this treaty included the marriage of one of the Hittite princesses to Ramesses 71 72 Hattusili s son Tudhaliya IV was the last strong Hittite king able to keep the Assyrians out of the Hittite heartland to some degree at least though he too lost much territory to them and was heavily defeated by Tukulti Ninurta I of Assyria in the Battle of Nihriya He even temporarily annexed the island of Cyprus before that too fell to Assyria The last king Suppiluliuma II also managed to win some victories including a naval battle against Alashiya off the coast of Cyprus 73 But the Assyrians under Ashur resh ishi I had by this time annexed much Hittite territory in Asia Minor and Syria driving out and defeating the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar I in the process who also had eyes on Hittite lands dubious discuss The Sea Peoples had already begun their push down the Mediterranean coastline starting from the Aegean and continuing all the way to Canaan founding the state of Philistia taking Cilicia and Cyprus away from the Hittites en route and cutting off their coveted trade routes This left the Hittite homelands vulnerable to attack from all directions and Hattusa was burnt to the ground sometime around 1180 BC following a combined onslaught from new waves of invaders the Kaskians Phrygians and Bryges The Hittite Kingdom thus vanished from historical records much of the territory being seized by Assyria 74 Alongside with these attacks many internal issues also led to the end of the Hittite Kingdom The end of the kingdom was part of the larger Bronze Age Collapse 75 A study of tree rings of juniper trees growing in the region showed a change to drier conditions from the 13th century BC into the 12th century BC with three years consecutive drought in 1196 1197 and 1198 BC 76 Post Hittite period edit nbsp Luwian storm god Tarḫunz in the National Museum of AleppoMain article Syro Hittite states By 1160 BC the political situation in Asia Minor looked vastly different from that of only 25 years earlier In that year the Assyrian king Tiglath Pileser I was defeating the Mushki Phrygians who had been attempting to press into Assyrian colonies in southern Anatolia from the Anatolian highlands and the Kaska people the Hittites old enemies from the northern hill country between Hatti and the Black Sea seem to have joined them soon after The Phrygians had apparently overrun Cappadocia from the West with recently discovered epigraphic evidence confirming their origins as the Balkan Bryges tribe forced out by the Macedonians Although the Hittite Kingdom disappeared from Anatolia at this point there emerged a number of so called Syro Hittite states in Anatolia and northern Syria They were the successors of the Hittite Kingdom The most notable Syro Hittite kingdoms were those at Carchemish and Melid With the ruling family in Carchemish believed to have been an cadet branch of the then defunct central ruling Hittite line These Syro Hittite states gradually fell under the control of the Neo Assyrian Empire 911 608 BC Carchemish and Melid were made vassals of Assyria under Shalmaneser III 858 823 BC and fully incorporated into Assyria during the reign of Sargon II 722 705 BC A large and powerful state known as Tabal occupied much of southern Anatolia Known as Greek Tibarenoi Ancient Greek Tibarhnoi Latin Tibareni Thobeles in Josephus their language may have been Luwian 77 testified to by monuments written using Anatolian hieroglyphs 78 This state too was conquered and incorporated into the vast Neo Assyrian Empire Ultimately both Luwian hieroglyphs and cuneiform were rendered obsolete by an innovation the alphabet which seems to have entered Anatolia simultaneously from the Aegean with the Bryges who changed their name to Phrygians and from the Phoenicians and neighboring peoples in Syria Government edit nbsp Bronze Hittite figures of animals Museum of Anatolian Civilizations nbsp Alaca Hoyuk bronze standard deer with gold nose and two lions panthers Museum of Anatolian Civilizations The earliest known constitutional monarchy was developed by the Hittites 79 80 The head of the Hittite state was the king followed by the heir apparent The king was the supreme ruler of the land in charge of being a military commander judicial authority as well as a high priest 81 However some officials exercised independent authority over various branches of the government One of the most important of these posts in the Hittite society was that of the gal mesedi Chief of the Royal Bodyguards 82 It was superseded by the rank of the gal gestin Chief of the Wine Stewards who like the gal mesedi was generally a member of the royal family The kingdom s bureaucracy was headed by the gal dubsar Chief of the Scribes whose authority did not extend over the lugal dubsar the king s personal scribe Egyptian monarchs engaged in diplomacy with two chief Hittite seats located at Kadesh a city located on the Orontes River and Carchemish located on the Euphrates river in Southern Anatolia 83 nbsp Map of the Hittite Empire at its greatest extent under Suppiluliuma I c 1350 1322 and Mursili II c 1321 1295 Religion of the early Hittites edit In the Central Anatolian settlement of Ankuwa home of the pre Hittite goddess Kattaha and the worship of other Hattic deities illustrates the ethnic differences in the areas the Hittites tried to control Kattaha was originally given the name Hannikkun The usage of the term Kattaha over Hannikkun according to Ronald Gorny head of the Alisar regional project in Turkey was a device to downgrade the pre Hittite identity of this female deity and to bring her more in touch with the Hittite tradition Their reconfiguration of Gods throughout their early history such as with Kattaha was a way of legitimizing their authority and to avoid conflicting ideologies in newly included regions and settlements By transforming local deities to fit their own customs the Hittites hoped that the traditional beliefs of these communities would understand and accept the changes to become better suited for the Hittite political and economic goals 84 The Pankus edit King Telipinu reigned c 1525 c 1500 BC is considered to be the last king of the Old Kingdom of the Hittites He seized power during a dynastic power struggle During his reign he wanted to take care of lawlessness and regulate royal succession He then issued the Edict of Telipinus In this edict he designated the Pankus which was a general assembly as the high court for constitutional crimes Crimes such as murder were observed and judged by the Pankus Kings themselves were also subject to jurisdiction under the Pankus The Pankus also served as an advisory council for the king The rules and regulations set out by the edict and the establishment of the Pankus proved to be very successful and lasted all the way through to end of the New Kingdom 85 The Pankus established a legal code where violence was not a punishment for a crime Crimes such as a murder and theft which at the time were punishable by death in other southwest Asian Kingdoms were not capital crimes under the Hittite law code Most criminal penalties involved restitution For example in cases of thievery the punishment of that crime would to be to repay what was stolen in equal value 86 Language editMain articles Hittite language and Anatolian hieroglyphs nbsp Bronze tablet from Corum Bogazkoy dating from 1235 BC photographed at Museum of Anatolian Civilizations Ankara nbsp Indo European family tree in order of first attestation Hittite belongs to the family of Anatolian languages and the oldest written Indo European language The Hittite language is recorded fragmentarily from about the 19th century BC in the Kultepe texts see Ishara It remained in use until about 1100 BC Hittite is the best attested member of the Anatolian branch of the Indo European language family and the Indo European language for which the earliest surviving written attestation exists with isolated Hittite loanwords and numerous personal names appearing in an Old Assyrian context from as early as the 20th century BC citation needed The language of the Hattusa tablets was eventually deciphered by a Czech linguist Bedrich Hrozny 1879 1952 who on 24 November 1915 announced his results in a lecture at the Near Eastern Society of Berlin His book about the discovery was printed in Leipzig in 1917 under the title The Language of the Hittites Its Structure and Its Membership in the Indo European Linguistic Family 87 The preface of the book begins with The present work undertakes to establish the nature and structure of the hitherto mysterious language of the Hittites and to decipher this language It will be shown that Hittite is in the main an Indo European language The decipherment famously led to the confirmation of the laryngeal theory in Indo European linguistics which had been predicted several decades before Due to its marked differences in its structure and phonology some early philologists most notably Warren Cowgill had even argued that it should be classified as a sister language to Indo European languages Indo Hittite rather than a daughter language By the end of the Hittite Empire the Hittite language had become a written language of administration and diplomatic correspondence The population of most of the Hittite Empire by this time spoke Luwian another Indo European language of the Anatolian family that had originated to the west of the Hittite region 88 According to Craig Melchert the current tendency is to suppose that Proto Indo European evolved and that the prehistoric speakers of Anatolian became isolated from the rest of the PIE speech community so as not to share in some common innovations 89 Hittite as well as its Anatolian cousins split off from Proto Indo European at an early stage thereby preserving archaisms that were later lost in the other Indo European languages 90 In Hittite there are many loanwords particularly religious vocabulary from the non Indo European Hurrian and Hattic languages The latter was the language of the Hattians the local inhabitants of the land of Hatti before being absorbed or displaced by the Hittites Sacred and magical texts from Hattusa were often written in Hattic Hurrian and Luwian even after Hittite became the norm for other writings citation needed Art edit nbsp Monument over a spring at Eflatun PinarMain article Hittite art Given the size of the empire there are relatively few remains of Hittite art These include some impressive monumental carvings a number of rock reliefs as well as metalwork in particular the Alaca Hoyuk bronze standards carved ivory and ceramics including the Huseyindede vases The Sphinx Gates of Alaca Hoyuk and Hattusa with the monument at the spring of Eflatun Pinar are among the largest constructed sculptures along with a number of large recumbent lions of which the Lion of Babylon statue at Babylon is the largest if it is indeed Hittite Nearly all are notably worn Rock reliefs include the Hanyeri relief and Hemite relief The Nigde Stele from the end of the 8th century BC is a Luwian monument from the Post Hittite period found in the modern Turkish city of Nigde Religion and mythology edit nbsp Stag statuette symbol of a Hittite male god This figure is used for the Hacettepe University emblem nbsp Early Hittite artifact found by T E Lawrence and Leonard Woolley right in CarchemishMain article Hittite mythology Hittite religion and mythology were heavily influenced by their Hattic Mesopotamian Canaanite and Hurrian counterparts In earlier times Indo European elements may still be clearly discerned Storm gods were prominent in the Hittite pantheon Tarhunt Hurrian s Teshub was referred to as The Conqueror The king of Kummiya King of Heaven Lord of the land of Hatti He was chief among the gods and his symbol is the bull As Teshub he was depicted as a bearded man astride two mountains and bearing a club He was the god of battle and victory especially when the conflict involved a foreign power 91 Teshub was also known for his conflict with the serpent Illuyanka 92 The Hittite gods are also honoured with festivals such as Puruli in the spring the nuntarriyashas festival in the autumn and the KI LAM festival of the gate house where images of the Storm God and up to thirty other idols were paraded through the streets 93 Law editMain article Hittite laws Hittite laws much like other records of the empire are recorded on cuneiform tablets made from baked clay What is understood to be the Hittite Law Code comes mainly from two clay tablets each containing 186 articles and are a collection of practiced laws from across the early Hittite Kingdom 94 In addition to the tablets monuments bearing Hittite cuneiform inscriptions can be found in central Anatolia describing the government and law codes of the empire 95 The tablets and monuments date from the Old Hittite Kingdom 1650 1500 BC to what is known as the New Hittite Kingdom 1500 1180 BC 96 Between these time periods different translations can be found that modernize the language 97 and create a series of legal reforms in which many crimes 94 96 are given more humane punishments These changes could possibly be attributed to the rise of new and different kings throughout the history empire or to the new translations that change the language used in the law codes 96 In either case the law codes of the Hittites provide very specific fines or punishments that are to be issued for specific crimes 96 98 and have many similarities to Biblical laws found in the books of Exodus and Deuteronomy 98 In addition to criminal punishments the law codes also provide instruction on certain situations such as inheritance and death citation needed Use of laws edit The law articles used by the Hittites most often outline very specific crimes or offenses either against the state or against other individuals and provide a sentence for these offenses The laws carved in the tablets are an assembly of established social conventions from across the empire Hittite laws at this time have a prominent lack of equality in punishments in many cases distinct punishments or compensations for men and women are listed 94 98 Free men most often received more compensation for offenses against them than free women did Slaves male or female had very few rights and could easily be punished or executed by their masters for crimes 94 98 Most articles describe destruction of property and personal injury to which the most common sentence was payment for compensation of the lost property Again in these cases men oftentimes receive a greater amount of compensation than women 94 98 Other articles describe how marriage of slaves and free individuals should be handled In any case of separation or estrangement the free individual male or female would keep all but one child that resulted from the marriage 96 98 Cases in which capital punishment is recommended in the articles most often seem to come from pre reform sentences for severe crimes and prohibited sexual pairings Many of these cases include public torture and execution as punishment for serious crimes against religion Most of these sentences would begin to go away in the later stages of the Hittite Empire as major law reforms began to occur 94 96 Law reform edit nbsp Post Hittite period statue of king Suppiluliuma of the Luwian state of Pattin Hatay Archaeology Museum While different translations of laws can be seen throughout the history of the empire 97 the Hittite outlook of law was originally founded on religion and were intended to preserve the authority of the state 94 Additionally punishments had the goal of crime prevention and the protection of individual property rights 94 The goals of crime prevention can be seen in the severity of the punishments issued for certain crimes Capital punishment and torture are specifically mentioned as punishment for more severe crimes against religion and harsh fines for the loss of private property or life The tablets also describe the ability of the king to pardon certain crimes but specifically prohibit an individual being pardoned for murder 94 96 At some point in the 16th or 15th century BC Hittite law codes move away from torture and capital punishment and to more humanitarian forms of punishments such as fines 94 96 Where the old law system was based on retaliation and retribution for crimes the new system saw punishments that were much more mild favoring monetary compensation over physical or capital punishment 94 Why these drastic reforms happened is not exactly clear but it is likely that punishing murder with execution was deemed not to benefit any individual or family involved 94 96 These reforms were not just seen in the realm of capital punishment Where major fines were to be paid a severe reduction in penalty can be seen For example prior to these major reforms the payment to be made for the theft of an animal was thirty times the animal s value after the reforms the penalty was reduced to half the original fine Simultaneously attempts to modernize the language and change the verbiage used in the law codes can be seen during this period of reform 94 95 96 97 Examples of laws edit nbsp Sphinx Gate entrance of the city of HattusaUnder both the old and reformed Hittite law codes three main types of punishment can be seen Death torture or compensation fines 94 The articles outlined on the cuneiform tablets provide very specific punishments for crimes committed against the Hittite religion or against individuals In many but not all cases articles describing similar laws are grouped together More than a dozen consecutive articles describe what are known to be permitted and prohibited sexual pairings 96 98 These pairings mostly describe men sometimes specifically referred to as free men sometimes just men in general 98 having relations be they consensual or not with animals step family relatives of spouses or concubines 94 Many of these articles do not provide specific punishments but prior to the law reforms crimes against religion were most often punishable by death These include incestuous marriages and sexual relations with certain animals 96 98 For example one article states If a man has sexual relations with a cow it is an unpermitted sexual pairing he will be put to death 98 Similar relations with horses and mules were not subject to capital punishment but the offender could not become a priest afterwards 94 96 Actions at the expense of other individuals most often see the offender paying some sort of compensation be it in the form money animals or land These actions could include the destruction of farmlands death or injury of livestock or assault of an individual 98 Several articles also specifically mention acts of the gods If an animal were to die by certain circumstances the individual could claim that it died by the hand of a god Swearing that what they claim was true it seems that they were exempt from paying compensation to the animal s owner 96 98 Injuries inflicted upon animals owned by another individual are almost always compensated with either direct payment or trading the injured animal with a healthy one owned by the offender 98 Not all laws prescribed in the tablets deal with criminal punishment For example the instructions of how the marriage of slaves and division of their children are given in a group of articles The slave woman shall take most of the children with the male slave taking one child 98 Similar instructions are given to the marriage of free individuals and slaves Other actions include how breaking of engagements are to be handled 96 98 Biblical Hittites editMain article Biblical Hittites The Bible refers to Hittites in several passages ranging from Genesis to the post Exilic Ezra Nehemiah The Hittites are usually depicted as a people living among the Israelites Abraham purchases the Patriarchal burial plot of Machpelah from Ephron HaChiti Ephron the Hittite and Hittites serve as high military officers in David s army In 2 Kings 7 6 however they are a people with their own kingdoms the passage refers to kings in the plural apparently located outside geographic Canaan and sufficiently powerful to put a Syrian army to flight 99 It is a matter of considerable scholarly debate whether the biblical Hittites signified any or all of 1 the original Hattians 2 their Indo European conquerors who retained the name Hatti for Central Anatolia and are today referred to as the Hittites the subject of this article or 3 a Canaanite group who may or may not have been related to either or both of the Anatolian groups and who also may or may not be identical with the later Syro Hittite states 100 101 Other biblical scholars following Max Muller have argued that rather than being connected with Heth son of Canaan the Anatolian land of Hatti was instead mentioned in Hebrew Bible literature and apocrypha as Kittim Chittim a people said to be named for a son of Javan 102 In ancient Greek mythology editOne single mention of a Trojan ally named Ceteians Greek Khteioi is made by Homer in the Odyssey Various scholars agree that the Homeric Ceteians correspond to the Bronze Age Hittites 103 104 See also edit nbsp Asia portalHittite plague List of Hittite kings List of artifacts significant to the Bible Short chronology timelineReferences edit Drapkin Israel 1989 Crime and Punishment in the Ancient World Lexington Books p 29 ISBN 0 669 01279 3 Hittite Definition History Achievements amp Facts Britannica www britannica com 1 October 2023 Retrieved 20 October 2023 Kloekhorst amp Waal 2019 a b Kloekhorst 2020 Ancient History Encyclopedia Sea Peoples September 2009 Sea Peoples Archived 18 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine The peaks and troughs of Hittite 7 July 2004 Archived from the original on 3 February 2017 Retrieved 19 December 2016 Kristiansen Kristian Larsson Thomas B 2005 The Rise of Bronze Age Society Cambridge University Press pp 342 343 ISBN 9780521843638 Archived from the original on 29 March 2023 Retrieved 21 December 2021 Kristiansen Kristian Larsson Thomas B 2005 The Rise of Bronze Age Society Cambridge University Press p 249 ISBN 9780521843638 Archived from the original on 29 March 2023 Retrieved 21 December 2021 Muhly James D 2003 Metalworking Mining in the Levant In Richard Suzanne ed Near Eastern Archaeology Eisenbrauns pp 174 183 ISBN 1 57506 083 3 Waldbaum Jane C From Bronze to Iron Gothenburg Paul Astoms Forlag 1978 56 58 Jambon Albert 24 November 2017 Bronze Age iron Meteoritic or not A chemical strategy PDF Journal of Archaeological Science 88 47 53 Bibcode 2017JArSc 88 47J doi 10 1016 j jas 2017 09 008 S2CID 55644155 Hittites British Museum London Trustees of the British Museum Archived from the original on 7 November 2014 Retrieved 7 November 2014 a b Erimtan Can 2008 Hittites Ottomans and Turks Agaoglu Ahmed Bey and the Kemalist Construction of Turkish Nationhood in Anatolia Archived 22 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine Anatolian Studies 58 141 171 Ardzinba Vladislav 1974 Some Notes on the Typological Affinity Between Hattian and Northwest Caucasian Abkhazo Adygian Languages In Internationale Tagung der Keilschriftforscher der sozialistischen Lander Budapest 23 25 April 1974 Zusammenfassung der Vortrage Assyriologica 1 pp 10 15 Cline Eric H 2021 Of Arms and the Man 1177 B C The Year Civilization Collapsed Princeton University Press p 32 ISBN 9780691208015 Francis William Newman 1853 A history of the Hebrew monarchy from the administration of Samuel to the Babylonish Captivity 2nd ed London John Chapman p 179 note 2 The Hittites the story of a forgotten empire By Archibald Henry Sayce Queen s College Oxford October 1888 Introduction Texier Charles 1835 Rapport lu le 15 mai 1835 a l Academie royale des Inscriptions et Belles lettres de l Institut sur un envoi fait par M Texier et contenant les dessins de bas reliefs decouverts par lui pres du village de Bogaz Keui dans l Asie mineure Report read on 15 May 1835 to the Royal Academy of Inscriptions and Belle lettres of the Institute on a dispatch made by Mr Texier and containing drawings of bas reliefs discovered by him near the village of Bogaz Keui in Asia Minor Journal des Savants in French 368 376 Archived from the original on 28 April 2019 Retrieved 10 October 2018 Kloekhorst 2014 Rediscovery of the Hittites www hethport uni wuerzburg de Retrieved 28 March 2022 Guterbock Hans Gustav 1 January 2002 Recent Developments in Hittite Archaeology and History Papers in Memory of Hans G Guterbock Eisenbrauns p 101 ISBN 978 1 57506 053 8 Retrieved 18 February 2022 Hatir Ergun Korkanc Mustafa Schachner Andreas Ince Ismail 1 September 2021 The deep learning method applied to the detection and mapping of stone deterioration in open air sanctuaries of the Hittite period in Anatolia Journal of Cultural Heritage 51 38 39 doi 10 1016 j culher 2021 07 004 ISSN 1296 2074 Retrieved 18 February 2022 The Hittite Empire Chapter V Vahan Kurkjian John Marangozis 2003 A Short Grammar of Hieroglyphic Luwian Beal 1986 Beal 1986 p 426 Kloekhorst Alwin 2022 Anatolian in Thomas Olander ed The Indo European Language Family A Phylogenetic Perspective Cambridge University Press p 78 the Anatolian split may be dated to the period between 4400 4100 BCE If Proto Anatolian indeed first broke up into its daughter languages around the thirty first century BCE it would mean that it had some 1 300 1000 years to undergo the specific innovations that define Anatolian as a separate branch Lazaridis Iosif et al 2022 The genetic history of the Southern Arc A bridge between West Asia and Europe in Science 26 Aug 2022 Vol 377 Issue 6609 Research Article Summary p 1 Around 7000 5000 years ago people with ancestry from the Caucasus moved west into Anatolia Some of these migrants may have spoken ancestral forms of Anatolian Kloekhorst Alwin 2022 Anatolian in Thomas Olander ed The Indo European Language Family A Phylogenetic Perspective Cambridge University Press p 75 a Proto Hittite ancestor language that may have been spoken only a few generations before the oldest attestations of Kanisite Hittite twentieth century BCE i e around 2100 BCE Kroonen Guus et al 2018 Linguistic supplement to Damgaard et al 2018 Early Indo European languages Anatolian Tocharian and Indo Iranian in Zenodo 2018 p 3 The Anatolian branch is an extinct subclade of the Indo European language family attested from the 25th century BCE onwards see below that consists of Hittite known 20th 12th centuries BCE Luwian known 20th 7th centuries BCE and a number of less well attested members such as Carian Lycian Lydian and Palai a b Kuhrt Amelie 1995 The Ancient Near East Volume I London and New York Routledge pp 226 27 ISBN 978 0 415 16763 5 Puhvel J 1994 Anatolian Autochton or Interloper Journal of Indo European Studies 22 3 amp 4 251 264 Steiner G 1990 The Immigration of the First Indo Europeans into Anatolia Reconsidered Journal of Indo European Studies 18 1 amp 2 185 214 Mallory J P 1989 In Search of the Indo Europeans Language Archaeology and Myth New York Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 05052 1 Retrieved 18 February 2022 Anthony 2007 p 133 Anthony 2007 p 229 Anthony 2007 p 262 Mallory amp Adams 1997 pp 12 16 Parpola 2015 pp 37 38 Anthony 2007 pp 345 361 367 Anatolian languages Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Archived from the original on 16 March 2016 Retrieved 1 May 2016 Petra Goedegebuure Anatolians on the Move From Kurgans to Kanesh Marija Gimbutas Memorial Lecture Oriental Institute University of Chicago retrieved 23 November 2021 Lehmann Winfred P Slocum Jonathan Hittite Online Linguistics Research Center University of Texas at Austin College of Liberal Arts Archived from the original on 12 April 2010 Retrieved 12 April 2010 Matessi Alvise 2021 The ways of an empire Continuity and change of route landscapes across the Taurus during the Hittite Period ca 1650 1200 BCE in Journal of Anthropological Archaeology Volume 62 June 2021 the Hittite state emerged in Hatti in the bend of the Kizilirmak from a mosaic of canton polities occupying North Central Anatolia during the Middle Bronze Age MBA ca 1900 1650 BCE Kloekhorst amp Waal 2019 p 189 Kloekhorst Alwin and Willemijn Waal 2019 A Hittite scribal tradition predating the tablet collections of Ḫattusa The origin of the cushion shaped tablets KBo 3 22 KBo 17 21 KBo 22 1 and KBo 22 2 in Zeitschrift Fur Assyriologie Und Vorderasiatische Archaologie 109 2 p 190 Three of the four documents that have this peculiar cushion shape are generally regarded as showing Old Script OS KBo 3 22 KBo 17 21 and KBo 22 1 Forlanini 2010 pp 115 135 a b Forlanini 2010 p 121 Kloekhorst Alwin 2021 A new interpretation of the Old Hittite Zalpa text CTH 3 1 Nesa as the capital under Ḫuzzii a I Labarna I and Ḫattusili I in Journal of the American Oriental Society Vol 141 No 3 p 564 ed StBoT 18 Kloekhorst Alwin 2021 A new interpretation of the Old Hittite Zalpa text CTH 3 1 Nesa as the capital under Ḫuzzii a I Labarna I and Ḫattusili I in Journal of the American Oriental Society Vol 141 No 3 p 564 Around 1750 BCE Pitḫana king of Kussara conquered Nesa and took over power He was succeeded by his son Anitta a b Forlanini 2010 p 122 a b Forlanini 2010 p 130 Bryce 2005 Joost Blasweiler 2020 The kingdom of Hurma during the reign of Labarna and Hattusili Part I academia edu Forlanini 2010 p 119 Mark Joshua 28 April 2011 The Hittites World History Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 13 April 2021 Retrieved 9 May 2017 Roebuck 1966 p 93 The Hittites Resources of Ancient Anatolia Pericles Press May 2017 Archived from the original on 6 March 2017 Retrieved 5 May 2017 a b c d Roebuck 1966 p 94 Forlanini 2010 pp 115 116 Gurney 1966 p 25 Gurney 1966 pp 25 26 a b Roux Georges 1993 Ancient Iraq Penguin Non Classics ISBN 978 0140125238 Zuckerman Molly K Martin Debra L 2016 New directions in biocultural anthropology 1st ed Hoboken New Jersey Wiley Blackwell p 297 ISBN 978 1118962961 Trevisanato S I 2007 The Hittite plague an epidemic of tularemia and the first record of biological warfare Medical Hypotheses 69 6 1371 1374 doi 10 1016 j mehy 2007 03 012 PMID 17499936 Windle Joachim Latacz 2004 Troy and Homer Towards a Solution of an Old Mystery Oxford Oxford University Press pp 121 122 ISBN 978 0 19 926308 0 Archived from the original on 27 February 2017 Retrieved 2 April 2016 Bryce 2005 pp 57 60 Beckman Gary M Bryce Trevor R Cline Eric H 2012 Writings from the Ancient World The Ahhiyawa Texts PDF Writings from the Ancient World Atlanta Society of Biblical Literature 6 ISSN 1570 7008 Archived PDF from the original on 23 April 2016 Retrieved 2 April 2016 At the very least perhaps we can say that the Ahhiyawa Problem Question has been solved and answered after all for there is now little doubt that Ahhiyawa was a reference by the Hittites to some or all of the Bronze Age Mycenaean world Gurney 1966 p 110 a b c Gurney 1966 p 36 The peace treaty between Ramses II and Hattusili III Ancient Egypt an introduction to the history and culture December 2006 Archived from the original on 8 June 2011 Retrieved 27 January 2013 Horst Nowacki Wolfgang Lefevre Creating Shapes in Civil and Naval Architecture A Cross Disciplinary Comparison Brill 2009 ISBN 9004173455 Gurney 1966 p 39 Spielvolgel Jackson 2011 Western Civilization Boston MA Wadsworth Cengage Learning p 30 ISBN 978 1111342142 Drought may have doomed ancient Hittite empire tree study reveals The Guardian 8 February 2023 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Barnett R D Phrygia and the Peoples of Anatolia in the Iron Age The Cambridge Ancient History Vol II Part 2 1975 p 422 The Georgian historian Ivane Javakhishvili considered Tabal Tubal Jabal and Jubal to be ancient Georgian tribal designations and argued that they spoke Kartvelian languages a non Indo European language The Hittites smie co 12 September 2008 better source needed Akurgal 2001 p 118 The Hittites all about turkey 5 May 2017 Archived from the original on 13 May 2017 Retrieved 5 May 2017 Bryce 2002 p 22 The Empire of the Hittites The Old Testament Student 4 1 32 34 1 September 1884 doi 10 1086 469493 JSTOR 3156304 Gorny Ronald August November 1995 Hittite Imperialism and Anti Imperial Resistance As Viewed from Alișar Hoyuk The Archaeology of Empire in Ancient Anatolia 299 300 69 70 doi 10 2307 1357346 JSTOR 1357346 S2CID 163346233 Telipinus Hittite king Britannica 5 May 2017 Archived from the original on 11 September 2017 Retrieved 5 May 2017 Eduljee K E 5 May 2017 Hittites Heritage Institute Archived from the original on 5 May 2017 Retrieved 5 May 2017 Hrozny Bedrich Die Sprache der Hethiter ihr Bau und ihre Zugehorigkeit zum indogermanischen Sprachstamm ein Entzifferungsversuch Leipzig Germany J C Hinrichs 1917 Hawkins David February 1986 Writing in Anatolia Imported and Indigenous Systems World Archaeology 17 3 363 376 doi 10 1080 00438243 1986 9979976 JSTOR 124701 Melchert 2012 p 7 Jasanoff 2003 p 20 with footnote 41 Siren Christopher B Hittite Hurrian Mythology REF 1 2 Myths and Legends Comcast net Archived from the original on 6 July 2004 Retrieved 8 February 2011 Kershaw Stephen P 2013 A Brief Guide to the Greek Myths Little Brown Book Group ISBN 978 1472107541 Bryce 2002 p 135 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Tas Ilknur Dinler Veysel 1 January 2015 Hittite Criminal Law in the Light of Modern Paradigms Searching for the traces of Modernday Criminal Law in the Past Aramazd Armenian Journal of Near Eastern Studies 9 73 90 a b Sayce A H 1905 The Hittite Inscriptions The Biblical World 26 1 30 40 doi 10 1086 473607 JSTOR 3140922 S2CID 143295386 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Roth Martha Law Collections from Mesopotamia and Asia Minor PDF Writings from the Ancient World Society of Biblical Literature 6 213 246 Archived PDF from the original on 28 April 2019 Retrieved 1 May 2018 a b c Hoffner Harry A 1981 The Old Hittite Version of Laws 164 166 Journal of Cuneiform Studies 33 3 4 206 209 doi 10 2307 1359903 JSTOR 1359903 S2CID 159932628 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Coogan Michael David 2013 A reader of ancient Near Eastern texts sources for the study of the Old Testament New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195324921 OCLC 796081940 King James Bible 2 Kings 7 6 For the Lord had made the host of the Syrians to hear a noise of chariots and a noise of horses even the noise of a great host and they said one to another Lo the king of Israel hath hired against us the kings of the Hittites and the kings of the Egyptians to come upon us Bryce 2005 pp 355 356 Woudstra Marten 1981 The Book of Joshua Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 60 ISBN 978 0802825254 Archived from the original on 16 May 2016 Retrieved 19 October 2015 Full text of Hittites Mittanis amp Aryans Indo Aryan Superstrate in Mitanni Internet archive org Retrieved 14 August 2018 Kelder Jorrid 2005 The Chariots of Ahhiyawa Talanta 65 Retrieved 4 June 2023 Peled Ilan 4 November 2019 HL Hittite Laws Law and Gender in the Ancient Near East and the Hebrew Bible Routledge p 85 ISBN 9781000733457 Sources editAkurgal Ekrem 2001 The Hattian and Hittite Civilizations Ankara Ministry of Culture ISBN 9789751727565 Anthony David W 2007 The Horse the Wheel and Language How Bronze Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World Princeton University Press Archi Alfonso 2010 When Did the Hittites Begin to Write in Hittite Pax Hethitica Studies on the Hittites and Their Neighbours in Honour of Itamar Singer Wiesbaden Harrassowitz Verlag pp 37 46 ISBN 9783447061193 Bachvarova Mary R 2010 Manly Deeds Hittite Admonitory History and Eastern Mediterranean Didactic Epic Epic and History Chichester John Wiley amp Sons pp 66 85 ISBN 9781444315646 Barjamovic Gojko 2011 A Historical Geography of Anatolia in the Old Assyrian Colony Period Copenhagen Museum Tusculanum Press ISBN 9788763536455 Beal Richard H 1986 The History of Kizzuwatna and the Date of the Sunassura Treaty Orientalia Vol 55 pp 424ff G Brinkman Hittite Diplomatic Texts Scholars Press 1999 ISBN 0 7885 0551 3 UK Government Web Archive Bryce T The Eternal Treaty from the Hittite perspective BMSAES 6 pp 1 11 2006 Bryce Trevor R 2002 Life and Society in the Hittite World New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199241705 Bryce Trevor R 2005 1998 The Kingdom of the Hittites 2nd ed New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199279081 Bryce Trevor R 2009 The Routledge Handbook of the Peoples and Places of Ancient Western Asia The Near East from the Early Bronze Age to the fall of the Persian Empire London New York Routledge ISBN 9781134159079 Bryce Trevor R 2012 The World of The Neo Hittite Kingdoms A Political and Military History New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780191505027 Bryce Trevor R 2016 The Land of Hiyawa Que Revisited Anatolian Studies 66 67 79 doi 10 1017 S0066154616000053 JSTOR 24878364 S2CID 163486778 Ceram C W 2001 The Secret of the Hittites The Discovery of an Ancient Empire Phoenix Press ISBN 1 84212 295 9 Forlanini Massimo 2010 An Attempt at Reconstructing the Branches of the Hittite Royal Family of the Early Kingdom Period Pax Hethitica Studies on the Hittites and Their Neighbours in Honour of Itamar Singer Wiesbaden Harrassowitz Verlag pp 115 135 ISBN 9783447061193 Gilan Amir Epic and History in Hittite Anatolia In Search of a Local Hero In Konstan amp Raaflaub 2010 pp 51 65 Gilan Amir 2018 In Search of a Distant Past Forms of Historical Consciousness in Hittite Anatolia PDF Anadolu 44 1 23 Gilibert Alessandra 2011 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 Walter de Gruyter ISBN 9783110222258 Goodnick Westenholz Joan 1997 Legends of the Kings of Akkade The Texts Winona Lake Eisenbrauns ISBN 9780931464850 Goodnick Westenholz Joan Historical Events and the Process of Their Transformation in Akkadian Heroic Traditions In Konstan amp Raaflaub 2010 pp 26 50 Gurney O R 1966 The Hittites Penguin ISBN 0 14 020259 5 Guterbock Hans Gustav 1983 Hittite Historiography A Survey in H Tadmor and M Weinfeld eds History Historiography and Interpretation Studies in Biblical and Cuneiform Literatures Magnes Press Hebrew University pp 21 35 Hoffner Jr H A 1973 The Hittites and Hurrians in D J Wiseman Peoples of the Old Testament Times Clarendon Press Oxford Hittite Studies in Honor of Harry A Hoffner Jr on the Occasion of His 65th Birthday Eisenbrauns 2003 ISBN 1 57506 079 5 Jasanoff Jay H 2003 Hittite and the Indo European Verb Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 924905 3 Kloekhorst Alwin 2007 Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon Brill ISBN 978 90 04 16092 7 Kloekhorst Alwin 19 June 2014 Personal names from Kanis the oldest Indo European linguistic material Farewell symposium Michiel de Vaan Leiden Kloekhorst Alwin Waal Willemijn 2019 A Hittite Scribal Tradition Predating the Tablet Collections of Ḫattusa Zeitschrift fur Assyriologie und vorderasiatische Archaologie 109 2 189 203 doi 10 1515 za 2019 0014 hdl 1887 3199128 S2CID 208141226 Kloekhorst Alwin 2020 The Authorship of the Old Hittite Palace Chronicle CTH 8 A Case for Anitta Journal of Cuneiform Studies 72 143 155 doi 10 1086 709313 S2CID 224830641 Konstan David Raaflaub Kurt A eds 2010 Epic and History Chichester John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781444315646 Macqueen J G 1986 The Hittites and Their Contemporaries in Asia Minor revised and enlarged Ancient Peoples and Places series ed G Daniel Thames and Hudson ISBN 0 500 02108 2 Mallory J P Adams D Q 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 884964 98 5 Retrieved 24 March 2012 Melchert Craig 2012 The Position of Anatolian PDF Melchert Craig 2020 Luwian A Companion to Ancient Near Eastern Languages Hoboken John Wiley amp Sons pp 239 256 ISBN 9781119193296 Mendenhall George E 1973 The Tenth Generation The Origins of the Biblical Tradition The Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 1654 8 Neu Erich 1974 Der Anitta Text StBoT 18 Otto Harrassowitz Wiesbaden Orlin Louis L 1970 Assyrian Colonies in Cappadocia Mouton The Hague Parpola Asko 2015 The Roots of Hinduism The Early Aryans and the Indus Civilization Oxford University Press UK Government Web Archive Surenhagen D Forerunners of the Hattusili Ramesses treaty BMSAES 6 pp 59 67 2006 Patri Sylvain 2007 L alignement syntaxique dans les langues indo europeennes d Anatolie StBoT 49 Otto Harrassowitz Wiesbaden ISBN 978 3 447 05612 0 Roebuck Carl 1966 The World of Ancient Times New York Charles Scribner s Sons Weeden Mark 2013 After the Hittites The Kingdoms of Karkamish and Palistin in Northern Syria PDF Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies 56 2 1 20 doi 10 1111 j 2041 5370 2013 00055 x Yakubovich Ilya 2020 Hittite A Companion to Ancient Near Eastern Languages Hoboken John Wiley amp Sons pp 221 237 ISBN 9781119193296 Further reading editBilgin Tayfun 2018 Officials and administration in the Hittite world Berlin de Gruyter ISBN 9781501516627 Jacques Freu et Michel Mazoyer Des origines a la fin de l ancien royaume hittite Les Hittites et leur histoire Tome 1 Collection Kubaba L Harmattan Paris 2007 Jacques Freu et Michel Mazoyer Les debuts du nouvel empire hittite Les Hittites et leur histoire Tome 2 Collection Kubaba L Harmattan Paris 2007 Jacques Freu et Michel Mazoyer L apogee du nouvel empire hittite Les Hittites et leur histoire Tome 3 Collection Kubaba L Harmattan Paris 2008 Jacques Freu et Michel Mazoyer Le declin et la chute de l empire Hittite Les Hittites et leur histoire Tome 4 Collection Kubaba L Harmattan Paris 2010 Jacques Freu et Michel Mazoyer Les royaumes Neo Hittites Les Hittites et leur histoire Tome 5 Collection Kubaba L Harmattan Paris 2012 Imparati Fiorella Aspects De L organisation De L Etat Hittite Dans Les Documents Juridiques Et Administratifs Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 25 no 3 1982 225 67 doi 10 2307 3632187 de Martino Stefan ed 2022 Handbook of Hittite Empire De Gruyter Oldenbourg ISBN 978 3 11 066178 1 Stone Damien The Hittites Lost Civilizations United Kingdom Reaktion Books 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hittites nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Hittites nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Hittites nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Hittites New research suggests drought accelerated Hittite Empire collapse Phys org February 8 2023 Video lecture at Oriental Institute Tracking the Frontiers of the Hittite Empire Pictures of Bogazkoy one of a group of important sites Pictures of Yazilikaya one of a group of important sites Der Anitta Text at TITUS Tahsin Ozguc Hittites info Hethitologieportal Mainz by the Akademie der Wissenschaften Mainz corpus of texts and extensive bibliographies on all things Hittite Missione Archeologica Italiana a Usakli Hoyuk MAIAC usaklihoyuk org in Italian Retrieved 17 January 2023 Map of Hittite Anatolia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hittites amp oldid 1194751387, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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