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Mitanni

Mitanni (/mɪˈtæni/; Hittite: 𒆳𒌷𒈪𒋫𒀭𒉌, romanized: KUR URUMi-ta-an-ni; Mittani or Hittite: 𒈪𒀉𒋫𒉌, romanized: Mi-it-ta-ni), c. 1550–1260 BC, earlier called Ḫabigalbat in old Babylonian texts, c. 1600 BC;[1] Hanigalbat or Hani-Rabbat (Hanikalbat, Khanigalbat, Akkadian: 𒄩𒉌𒃲𒁁, romanized: Ḫa-ni-gal-bat, Ḫa-ni-rab-bat) in Assyrian records, or Naharin in Egyptian texts, was a Hurrian-speaking state with Indo-Aryan linguistic influences in northern Syria and southeast Anatolia (modern-day Turkey).[citation needed] Since no histories, royal annals or chronicles have yet been found in its excavated sites, knowledge about Mitanni is sparse compared to the other powers in the area, and dependent on what its neighbours commented in their texts.[citation needed]

Kingdom of Mitanni
c. 1600 BC – c. 1260 BC
Kingdom of Mitanni at its greatest extent under Barattarna c. 1490 BC
CapitalWashukanni
Common languagesHurrian
Akkadian
Amorite
Religion
GovernmentMonarchy
King 
• c. 1540 BC
Kirta (first known)
• c. 1300 BC
Shattuara II (last)
Historical eraBronze Age
• Established
c. 1600 BC 
• Disestablished
 c. 1260 BC
Preceded by
Succeeded by

The Hurrians were in the region as of the late 3rd millennium BC.[2] A king of Urkesh with a Hurrian name, Tupkish, was found on a clay sealing dated c. 2300 BC at Tell Mozan.[3][4] The first recorded inscription of their language was of Tish-atal (c. 21st century BC), king of Urkesh.[5] Later on, Hurrians made up the main population of Mitanni, that was firstly known as Ḫabigalbat, at Babylonia, in two texts of the late Old Babylonian period,[1][6] during the reign of Ammi-Saduqa, (c. 1638–1618 BC), in low middle chronology.

The Egyptian official astronomer and clockmaker Amenemhet (Amen-hemet) apparently ordered to write on his tomb that he returned from the "foreign country called Mtn (Mi-ti-ni),"[7][8] but Alexandra von Lieven (2016) and Eva von Dassow (2022) consider that the expedition to Mitanni could have taken place in pharaoh Ahmose I's reign (c. 1550–1525 BC), actually by Amenemhet's father.[9][10] During the reign of pharaoh Thutmose I (1506–1493 BC), the names Mitanni and Naharin are among the reminiscences of several of the pharaoh's officers. One of them, Ahmose si-Abina, wrote: "...His Majesty arrived at Naharin..." Another one, Ahmose pa-Nekhbit, recorded: "...when I captured for him in the land of Naharin..."[11]

After the Battle of Megiddo, an officer of pharaoh Thutmose III (1479–1425 BC), in the pharaoh's 22 regnal year, reported: "That [wretched] enemy of Kadesh has come and has entered into Megiddo. He is [there] at this moment. He has gathered to him the princes of [every] foreign country [which had been] loyal to Egypt, as well as (those) as far as Naharin and M[itanni], them of Hurru, them of Kode, their horses, their armies."[12] In several later military campaigns the Annals of Thutmose III mention Naharin, in particular those of his regnal years 33, 35, and 42.[13] After that time, records become more available from local sources until the empire's end in the mid-13th century BC.[14]

The Mitanni Empire was a strong regional power limited by the Hittites to the north, Egyptians to the west, Kassites to the south, and later by the Assyrians to the east. At its maximum extent Mitanni ranged as far west as Kizzuwatna by the Taurus Mountains, Tunip in the south, Arraphe in the east, and north to Lake Van.[15] Their sphere of influence is shown in Hurrian place names, personal names and the spread through Syria and the Levant of a distinct pottery type, Nuzi ware.[16]

Name

Mitanni

The earliest recorded form of the name of this state is Maitanni, composed of a Hurrian suffix -nni added to the Indo-Aryan stem maita-, meaning "to unite" and comparable with the Sanskrit verb mith (मिथ्; lit.'to unite, pair, couple, meet'). The name Maitanni thus meant the "united kingdom."[17]

Paralleling the evolution of Proto-Indo-Aryan máytʰati lit.'he unites' into Sanskrit méthati (मेथति), the name Maitanni evolved into the later form Mitanni, where the stem maita- had given way to mita-.[17]

Ḫani-Rabbat



mꜥṯn(j)[18][19]
in hieroglyphs
Era: New Kingdom
(1550–1069 BC)

The Mitanni kingdom was firstly known as Ḫabigalbat before 1600 BC at Babylonia, during the reign of Ammi-Saduqa, attested as ḫa-bi-in-gal-ba-ti-i, and ḫa-bi-in-ga-al-ba-at, in two texts of the late Old Babylonian period.[1][6] Egyptians referred to it as Naharin and Mitanni,[18][19] it was Ḫurri to the Hittites, and Ḫanigalbat or Ḫani-Rabbat to the Assyrians. These names seem to have referred to the same kingdom and were often used interchangeably, according to Michael C. Astour.[20] Hittite annals mention a people called Hurri (Ḫu-ur-ri), located in northeastern Syria. A Hittite fragment, probably from the time of Mursili I, mentions a "King of the Hurri," and the Assyro-Akkadian version of the text renders "Hurri" as Hanigalbat. Tushratta, who styles himself "king of Mitanni" in his Akkadian Amarna letters, refers to his kingdom as Hanigalbat.[21]

The earliest attestation of the term Ḫanigalbat can be read in Akkadian, along with the Hittite version mentioning "the Hurrian enemy,"[22] in a copy from the 13th century BC of the "Annals of Ḫattušili I,"[23] who possibly reigned since 1630 BC.[24]

The reading of the Assyrian term Ḫanigalbat has a history of multiple renderings. The first portion has been connected to, "𒄩𒉡 Ḫa-nu," "Hanu" or "Hana," first attested in Mari to describe nomadic inhabitants along the southern shore of the northern Euphrates region, near the vicinity of Terqa (capital of the Kingdom of Hana) and the Khabur River. The term developed into more than just a designation for a people group, but also took on a topographic aspect as well. In the Middle Assyrian period, a phrase "𒌷𒆳𒄩𒉡𒀭𒋫" "URUKUR Ḫa-nu AN.TA," "cities of the Upper Hanu" has suggested that there was a distinction between two different Hanu's, likely across each side of the river. This northern side designation spans much of the core territory of Mitanni state.

The two signs that have led to variant readings are "𒃲 gal" and its alternative form "𒆗 gal9". The first attempts at decipherment in the late 19th century rendered forms interpreting "gal," meaning "great" in Sumerian, as a logogram for Akkadian "rab" having the same meaning; "Ḫani-Rabbat" denoting "the Great Hani". J. A. Knudtzon, and E. A. Speiser after him, supported instead the reading of "gal" on the basis of its alternative spelling with "gal9", which has since become the majority view.

There is still a difficulty to explain the suffix "-bat" if the first sign did not end in "b," or the apparent similarity to the Semitic feminine ending "-at," if derived from a Hurrian word. More recently, in 2011, scholar Miguel Valério,[25] then at the New University of Lisbon provided detailed support in favor to the older reading Hani-Rabbat.[26] The re-reading makes argument on basis of frequency, where "gal" not "gal9," is far more numerous; the later being the deviation found in six documents, all from the periphery of the Akkadian sphere of influence. Additionally argued, although graphically distinct, there is a high degree of overlap between the two signs, as "gal9" denotes "dannum" or ""strong"" opposed to "great", easily being used as synonyms. Both signs also represent correlative readings; alternative readings of "gal9" include "rib" and "rip," just like "gal" being read as "rab."

The situation is complicated by there being, according to linguists, three separate dialects of Hurrian, central-western, northern, and eastern.[27]

The Egyptians considered the Euphrates River to form the boundary between Syria and Naharain.[28]

History

Summary

 
Cylinder seal and modern impression: nude male, griffins, monkey, lion, goat, c. 15th/14th century BC, Mitanni

The first known use (by now) of Indo-Aryan names for Mitanni rulers begins with Shuttarna I who succeeded his father Kirta on the throne.[29] King Barattarna of Mitanni expanded the kingdom west to Aleppo and made the Amorite[30] king Idrimi of Alalakh his vassal,[31] and five generations seems to separate this king (also known as Parattarna) from the rise of Mitanni kingdom.[32] The state of Kizzuwatna in the west also shifted its allegiance to Mitanni, and Assyria in the east had become largely a Mitannian vassal state by the mid-15th century BC. The nation grew stronger during the reign of Shaushtatar, but the Hurrians were keen to keep the Hittites inside the Anatolian highland. Kizzuwatna in the west and Ishuwa in the north were important allies against the hostile Hittites.

Mitanni's major rival was Egypt under the Thutmosids. However, with the ascent of the Hittite Empire, Mitanni and Egypt struck an alliance to protect their mutual interests from the threat of Hittite domination. After a few successful clashes with the Egyptians over the control of Syria, Mitanni sought peace with them, and an alliance was formed. During the reign of Shuttarna II, in the early 14th century BC, the relationship was very amicable, and he sent his daughter Gilu-Hepa to Egypt for a marriage with Pharaoh Amenhotep III. Mitanni was now at its peak of power.

However, by the reign of Eriba-Adad I (1390–1366 BC) Mitanni influence over Assyria was on the wane. Eriba-Adad I became involved in a dynastic battle between Tushratta and his brother Artatama II and after this his son Shuttarna II, who called himself king of the Hurri while seeking support from the Assyrians. A pro-Hurri/Assyria faction appeared at the royal Mitanni court. Eriba-Adad I had thus loosened Mitanni influence over Assyria, and in turn had now made Assyria an influence over Mitanni affairs.[33] King Ashur-uballit I (1365–1330 BC) of Assyria attacked Shuttarna and annexed Mitanni territory in the middle of the 14th century BC, making Assyria once more a great power.[34]

At the death of Shuttarna, Mitanni was ravaged by a war of succession. Eventually Tushratta, a son of Shuttarna, ascended the throne, but the kingdom had been weakened considerably and both the Hittite and Assyrian threats increased. At the same time, the diplomatic relationship with Egypt went cold, the Egyptians fearing the growing power of the Hittites and Assyrians. The Hittite king Suppiluliuma I invaded the Mitanni vassal states in northern Syria and replaced them with loyal subjects.

In the capital Washukanni, a new power struggle broke out. The Hittites and the Assyrians supported different pretenders to the throne. Finally a Hittite army conquered the capital Washukanni and installed Shattiwaza, the son of Tushratta, as their vassal king of Mitanni in the late 14th century BC.[35] The kingdom had by now been reduced to the Khabur Valley. The Assyrians had not given up their claim on Mitanni, and in the 13th century BC, Shalmaneser I annexed the kingdom.

The Mitanni dynasty had ruled over the northern Euphrates-Tigris region between c. 1600 and 1350 BC,[36] but succumbed to Hittite and later Assyrian attacks, and Mitanni was reduced to the status of a province of the Middle Assyrian Empire between c. 1350 and 1260 BC.[36]

Early kingdom

 
Cylinder seal, c. 16th–15th century BC, Mitanni

As early as Akkadian times, Hurrians are known to have lived east of the river Tigris on the northern rim of Mesopotamia, and in the Khabur Valley. The group which became Mitanni gradually moved south into Mesopotamia before the 17th century BC. It was already a powerful kingdom at the end of the 17th century or in the first half of the 16th century BC, and its beginnings date to well before the time of Thutmose I, dating actually to the time of the Hittite sovereigns Hattusili I and Mursili I.[37]

Hurrians are mentioned in the private Nuzi texts, in Ugarit, and the Hittite archives in Hattusa (Boğazköy). Cuneiform texts from Mari mention rulers of city-states in upper Mesopotamia with both Amurru (Amorite) and Hurrian names. Rulers with Hurrian names are also attested for Urshum and Hassum, and tablets from Alalakh (layer VII, from the later part of the Old Babylonian period) mention people with Hurrian names at the mouth of the Orontes. There is no evidence for any invasion from the North-east. Generally, these onomastic sources have been taken as evidence for a Hurrian expansion to the South and the West.

A Hittite fragment, probably from the time of Mursili I, mentions a "King of the Hurrians" (LUGAL ERÍN.MEŠ Hurri). This terminology was last used for King Tushratta of Mitanni, in a letter in the Amarna archives. The normal title of the king was 'King of the Hurri-men' (without the determinative KUR indicating a country).

After the fall of Mitanni

With the final decline of the Mitanni Empire the western portions of its territory came up direct control of the Hittites and the eastern portions came under direct control of the Assyrians. The middle part continued on as the rump state of Hanigalbat. Eventually, under Shalmaneser I, that remaining part of the former Mitanni territory came under direct Assyrian control. This continued until the decline of Middle Assyrian power after the death of Tukulti-Ninurta I.[38][39]

While under direct Assyrian control Hanigalbat was ruled by appointed governors such as the Assyrian grand-vizier Ilī-padâ, father of Ninurta-apal-Ekur (1191–1179), who took the title of King of Hanigalbat.[40] He resided in the newly built (over an existing Mitanni tower and residence) Assyrian administrative centre at Tell Sabi Abyad.[41]

The Babylonian Kings List A names the Assyrian ruler Sennacherib (705–681 BC) and his son Ashur-nadin-shumi (700–694) as being "Dynasty of Ḫabigal".[42][43]

The name Hanigalbat was still in use as late as the later portion of the 1st millennium BC.[44][45]

Indo-Aryan linguistic influences

Eva von Dassow regards that "[w]hile the practice of bestowing throne names of Indo-Aryan derivation on most of Mittani's kings suggests significant contact with an Indo-Aryan-speaking population, it does not indicate that the royal dynasty (much less the ruling class) was of Aryan 'blood' – whatever that might mean."[15] Whereas Alexander Lubotsky considers "[t]he military elite of the Mitanni kingdom (of Aryan descent) was present in Syria and northern Iraq in the fourteenth century BCE and probably arrived there a few generations earlier, in the sixteenth to fifteenth century BCE."[46]

Some theonyms, proper names and other terminology of the Mitanni exhibit similarities to Indo-Aryan or Proto-Aryan. Several Mitanni rulers had names which could be interpreted as Indo-Aryan, most notably Shuttarna.[29] The deities Mitra, Varuna, Indra, and Nasatya (Ashvins) are listed and invoked in two treaties found in Hattusa, between the kings Sattiwaza of Mitanni and Šuppiluliuma I the Hittite: (treaty KBo I 3) and (treaty KBo I 1 and its duplicates).[47][48]

Kikkuli's horse training text includes technical terms such as aika (eka, one), tera (tri, three), panza (pancha, five), satta (sapta, seven), na (nava, nine), vartana (vartana, turn, round in the horse race). The numeral "aika" (one) is of particular importance because it places the loanwords in the vicinity of Indo-Aryan proper as opposed to Indo-Iranian or early Iranian (which has "aiva") in general.[49] Annelies Kammenhuber (1968) suggested that this vocabulary was derived from the still undivided Indo-Iranian language,[50][51] but Mayrhofer has shown that specifically Indo-Aryan features are present.[52][53]

Alexander Lubotsky (2023) concludes that "[t]he language has a clear Indo-Aryan (rather than PIIr.) character, [due to] the word for 'one', Mitanni a-i-ka- (Sanskrit eka-) [differs from] Iranian *ai-ua- [as the form] with the suffix -ka- is found nowhere else and must be [a typical] Indo-Aryan innovation, whereas the Iranian suffix -ua- is also found in Greek οἶος < *Hoiuo- (and in the Sanskrit particle evá 'thus', most probably of the same origin as Iranian *ai-ua-)."[46]

Another text has babru (babhru, brown), parita (palita, grey), and pinkara (pingala, red). Their chief festival was the celebration of the solstice (vishuva) which was common in most cultures in the ancient world. The Mitanni warriors were called marya, the term for warrior in Sanskrit as well; note mišta-nnu (= miẓḍha,~ Sanskrit mīḍha) "payment (for catching a fugitive)."[54]

Jasper Eidem in 2014 reported on Farouk Ismail's earlier study,[55] in reference to the word marijannu that was found in a letter from Tell Leilan in northeastern Syria dating to a period slightly before 1761 BC, which is the time when the reign of Zimri-Lim ended in the region of Mari. According to Kroonen et al. (2018) this may be considered as an early Indo-Aryan linguistic presence in Syria two centuries prior to the formation of the Mitanni realm, as mariannu can be seen as a Hurrianized form of the Indo-Aryan *marya, which means man or youth, associated to military affairs and chariots.[56] Jasper Eidem (2014) comments that it is very surprising that "the mention of marijannu soldiers to be exchanged between a ruler of Leilan and another king with a Hurrian name" and that "Leilan letter L.87–887, [was] sent from Kirip-seris to Himdija,[...] with reference to a journey to Babylon to visit the 'king'. Presumably the letter dates to the very end of Zimri-Lim's reign, or shortly after the fall of Mari. The soldiers exchanged are described as ṣāb ma-ri-ia-nim /ṣābī ša ma-ri-a/ia-nim."[55]

Origins and archaeology

A concept known as "Dark Age" was applied, until recently, to the archaeological gap between the Middle and Late Bronze Age on Northern Mesopotamian sites, but Costanza Coppini considers it a "transition" instead, which can be called "Late Bronze Age 0," attested from the Tell Leilan's end caused by Samsu-iluna during his 23rd year of reign, c. 1728 BCE [Middle Chronology], to Mitanni's predominance (c. 1600-1550 BCE). These are the first traces of what, in the Late Bronze Age I, was Mitanni in historical terms, at the emergence of the third phase of Khabur ware.[57]

The archaeological core zone of Mitanni is Upper Mesopotamia and the Trans-Tigridian region (Northeastern Iraq).

Upper Mesopotamia

Sites with Mitannian remains were found mainly in three regions of Upper Mesopotamia: Northeastern Syria Jazira Region, Northern Syria, and Southeastern Turkey (Upper Tigris).

Northeastern Syria (Jazira Region)

 
Jazira region in light green, Northeastern Syria.

Mitanni's first phase in Jazira Region features Late Khabur Ware from around 1600 to 1550 BC, due to this pottery was a continuity from non-Mitannian previous Old Babylonian period.[58] From around 1550 to 1270 BC, Painted Nuzi Ware (the most characteristic pottery in Mitanni times) developed as a contemporary to Younger Khabur Ware.[58][59]

Mitanni had outposts centred on its capital, Washukanni, whose location has been determined by archaeologists to be on the headwaters of the Khabur River, most likely at the site of Tell Fekheriye as recent German archaeological excavations suggest. The city of Taite was also known to be a Mitanni "royal city" whose current location is unknown.[60]

The major 3rd millennium urban center of Tell Brak which had dwindled to a minor settlement in Old Babylonian times, saw major development c. 1600 by the Mitanni. Monumental buildings including a palace and temple were constructed on the high ground and a 40 hectare lower town developed.[61] The Mitanni occupation lasted until the site was destroyed (in two phases) between c. 1300 and 1275 BC, presumably by the Assyrians.[62] Two Mitanni-era tablets were found during the modern excavation. One (TB 6002) mentioned "Artassumara the king, son of Shuttarna the king".[63] Seventeen late period Mitanni tablets were found at Tall Al-Hamidiya.[64]

Northern Syria

Mitanni period occupation, between 1400 and 1200 BC (radiocarbon) was found at the site of Tell Bazi.[65][66] Finds included a Mitanni cylinder seal and several ritual bowls. Two cuneiform tablets of the Mitanni period sealed by Mitanni ruler Saushtatar, one by Artatama I were also found.[67] There is also a record of Mitanni governance at Tell Hadidi (Azu).[68]

Southeastern Turkey (Upper Tigris)

The (2017) salvage excavations at the Ilısu Dam in the right bank of upper Tigris, southern Turkey, have shown a very early beginning of Mitanni period, as in the ruins of a temple in Müslümantepe, ritual artefacts and a Mitannian cylinder seal were found, radiocarbon-dated to 1760–1610 BC.[69] Archaeologist Eyyüp Ay, in his (2021) paper, describes the second phase of the temple as an "administrative center, which had craftsmen working in its workshops as well as farmers, gardeners and shepherds, [that] might have been ruled by a priest bound to a powerful Mitannian leader."[69]

Trans-Tigridian region (Northeastern Iraq)

To the east of upper Tigris river, Trans-Tigridian region in northern Iraq, a site now called Bassetki was excavated, which in all likelihood was the ancient town of Mardama with Mitanni layers from 1550 to 1300 BC, as its Phase A9 (in trench T2) may alternatively represent a Middle Bronze/Late Bronze transitional, or Proto-Mitanni occupation within 16th century BC.[70] In a subsequent excavation season, the deeper Phase A10 was identified as having a mix of Middle Bronze and Mitanni potteries, considered to be in the turn of the Middle to the Late Bronze Age transitional period (late 17th – early 16th century BC).[71]

In 2010, the 3,400-year-old ruins of Kemune, a Bronze Age Mitanni palace on the banks of the Tigris in modern-day Iraqi Kurdistan, were discovered.[72] It became possible to excavate the ruins in 2018 and again in 2022 when a drought caused water levels to drop considerably. In the 1st excavation 10 Mitanni-era tablets were found, in Babylonian cuneiform written in Akkadian, bearing Hurrian names, dating to the Middle-Trans-Tigridian IA and IB periods.[73] Middle Trans-Tigridian IA and IB are dated to (c. 1550-1350 BC) and (c. 1350-1270 BC) respectively by Peter Pfälzner (2007). In the 2nd excavation the entire city was mapped and 100 Middle Assyrian tablets were discovered. They were dated to after the city's destruction by earthquake and have not yet been published.[74]

Pottery and other characteristics

At least since around 1550 BC, in the beginning of Late Bronze age, Painted Nuzi Ware was identified as a characteristic pottery in Mitanni sites,[75] the origin of this decorated pottery is an unsolved question, but a possible previous development as Aegean Kamares Ware has been suggested by Pecorelia (2000), and S. Soldi claims that Tell Brak was one of the first centers specializing in the production of this Painted Nuzi Ware, and analyses on samples support the assumption that it was produced locally in various centers throughout the Mitanni kingdom, it was particularly appreciated in Upper Mesopotamia, but appears only sporadically in western Syrian cities such as Alalakh and Ugarit.[75]

At the height of its power, during the 15th and the first half of 14th century BC, a large region from North-West Syria to the Eastern Tigris was under Mitanni's control.[76]

Mitanni rulers

Mitanni, which first rose to power before 1550 BC,[77][78] presents the following known kings:

All dates are Middle chronology

All dates must be taken with caution since they are worked out only by comparison with the chronology of other ancient Near Eastern nations.

Parattarna I / Barattarna

King Barattarna is known from a cuneiform tablet in Nuzi and an inscription by Idrimi of Alalakh.[80] He reigned c. 1500–1480 BC.[81] Egyptian sources do not mention his name; that he was the king of Naharin whom Thutmose III (1479 – 1425 BC) fought against, can only be deduced from assumptions. This king, also known as Parratarna is considered, by J. A. Belmonte-Marin quoting H. Klengel, to have reigned c. 1510–1490 BC (middle chronology).[82] Parsha(ta)tar, known from another Nuzi inscription (HSS 13 165), an undated inventory list which mentions his death, is considered a different king than Barattarna by M. P. Maidman, Eva von Dassow, and Ian Mladjov.

Thutmose III again waged war in Mitanni in the 33rd year of his rule. The Egyptian army crossed the Euphrates at Carchemish and reached a town called Iryn (maybe present day Erin, 20 km northwest of Aleppo.) They sailed down the Euphrates to Emar (Maskanah) and then returned home via Mitanni. A hunt for elephants at Lake Nija was important enough to be included in the annals.

Victories over Mitanni are recorded from the Egyptian campaigns in Nuhašše (middle part of Syria). Barattarna or his son Shaushtatar controlled the North Mitanni interior up to Nuhašše, and the coastal territories from Kizzuwatna to Alalakh in the kingdom of Mukish at the mouth of the Orontes. Idrimi of Alalakh, returning from Egyptian exile, could only ascend his throne with Barattarna's consent. While he got to rule Mukish and Ama'u, Aleppo remained with Mitanni.

Shaushtatar

 
The central section of Shaushtatar's royal seal. The cuneiform legend reads "DUMU Par-sa-ta-tar" and "LUGAL Ma-i-ta-ni"

Shaushtatar reigned as King of Mitanni c. 1480–1460 BC.[81] He sacked the Assyrian capital of Assur some time in the 15th century during the reign of Nur-ili, and took the silver and golden doors of the royal palace to Washukanni.[83] This is known from a later Hittite document, the Suppililiuma-Shattiwaza treaty. After the sack of Assur, Assyria may have paid tribute to Mitanni up to the time of Eriba-Adad I (1390–1366 BC).

The states of Aleppo in the west, and Nuzi and Arrapha in the east, seem to have been incorporated into Mitanni under Shaushtatar as well. A letter (HSS 9 1) sealed with the seal of Shaushtatar was discovered in the house (Room A26) of Prince Šilwa-teššup in Nuzi which lay just north of the main mound. The letter is addressed to Ithia, vassal ruler of Arrapha under Mitanni. Because Šauštatar is not mentioned in the letter and dynastic seals were often used after the reign of a ruler, especially in the periphery of empire, it is difficult to date this letter. Stein, based on various factors, puts the date at c. 1400 BC. His seal shows heroes and winged geniuses fighting lions and other animals, as well as a winged sun. This style, with a multitude of figures distributed over the whole of the available space, is taken as typically Hurrian.[84] A second seal, belonging to Shuttarna I and found in Alalakh, used by Shaushtatar in two letters (AT 13 and 14) shows a more traditional Post-Akkadian - Ur III style.[85]

During the reign of Egyptian Pharaoh Amenhotep II, Mitanni seems to have regained influence in the middle Orontes valley that had been conquered by Thutmose III. Amenhotep II fought in Syria in 1425 BC, presumably against Mitanni as well, but did not reach the Euphrates.

Artatama I and Shuttarna II

Later on, Egypt and Mitanni became allies, and King Shuttarna II himself was received at the Egyptian court. Amicable letters, sumptuous gifts, and letters asking for sumptuous gifts were exchanged. Three Amarna letters (EA 182 EA 183 and EA 185) were sent by Shutarna with two being sent from "Mušiḫuna".[86] Mitanni was especially interested in Egyptian gold. This culminated in a number of royal marriages: the daughter of King Artatama I was married to Thutmose IV. Kilu-Hepa, or Gilukhipa, the daughter of Shuttarna II, was married to Pharaoh Amenhotep III, who ruled in the early 14th century BC. In a later royal marriage Tadu-Hepa, or Tadukhipa, the daughter of Tushratta, was sent to Egypt.

When Amenhotep III fell ill, the king of Mitanni sent him a statue of the goddess Shaushka (Ishtar) of Nineveh that was reputed to cure diseases.[87] A more or less permanent border between Egypt and Mitanni seems to have existed near Qatna on the Orontes River; Ugarit was part of Egyptian territory.

The reason Mitanni sought peace with Egypt may have been trouble with the Hittites. A Hittite king called Tudḫaliya I conducted campaigns against Kizzuwatna, Arzawa, Ishuwa, Aleppo, and maybe against Mitanni itself. Kizzuwatna may have fallen to the Hittites at that time.

Artashumara and Tushratta

 
Cuneiform tablet containing a letter from Tushratta of Mitanni to Amenhotep III (of 13 letters of King Tushratta). British Museum

Artašumara, reigned c. 1360-1358 BC,[88] is known only from a single mention in a tablet found in Tell Brak: "Artassumara the king, son of Shuttarna the king," and a mention in Amarna letter 17.[63][89] According to the later, after the death of Shuttarna II he briefly took power but was then murdered (by someone named Tuhi) and succeeded by his brother Tushratta,[90] who reigned c. 1358-1335 BC.[88]

Knowledge of Tushratta comes from two sources, the Amarna letters and the texts of the Suppiluliuma-Shattiwaza treaties between Hittite ruler Suppiluliuma I and a son of Tushratta named Shattiwaza. These pair of treaties found at the ancient Hittite capital of Hattusa codify the Mitanni Shattiwaza, probable son of Tushratta, entering the status of vassal to Suppiluliuma I. One (CTH 51, also known as KBo I 1) includes a historical prologue from the Hittite point of view which is complete,[91] this tablet also confirms that the existing Hittite treaty with Artatama II is still in effect so perhaps Suppiluliuma was hedging his bets.[92] The other (CTH 52) includes a historical prologue from the Mitanni point of view which is partially lost though another fragment to this tablet was found in recent years.[93] These prologues provide information about the events of the time of Tushratta but must be considered under the self interest of the two treaty parties.[91] While the preambles of the treaties are a later retrospective and are filtered through the interests of the treaty parties, the tablets found in Egypt provide direct information. Eight Amarna letters were sent to pharaoh Amenhotep III (including EA 19 and EA 23) and four to pharaoh Akhenaten (including EA 27). A single Amarna letter was sent by Tushratta to Queen Tiye, wife of Amenhotep III, mother of Akhenaten and grandmother of Tutankhamun (EA 26). A note in hieratic on the tablet stated that EA 23 arrived in the 36th year of Amenhotep III reign or roughly 1350 BC in the standard Egyptian Chronology.[94]

Some of the Amarna letters covered minor matters between Tushratta and the pharaohs. Amenhotep III asked for Tushratta's daughter Tadukhipa in marriage and after some back and forth over bride-price she traveled to Egypt and became a wife of the pharaoh. And when that pharaoh was ill near the end of his reign Tushratta sent (EA 23) the Hurrian goddess Šauška of Nineveh (actually her cult statue) to him as had been done in the time of Shuttarna II.[95] The main focus of the Amarna letters, though, was a consequence of the realignment of power in Syria with the decline of Egyptian influence and rise of Hittite power, with a number of lesser powers caught in the middle.[96] In the first letter from Tusratta he claimed to have destroyed the Hittite forces that had invaded his territory and included a selection of the booty, including a chariot and several slaves. In later letters we see the Hittite ruler working to improve previously poor relations with the pharaoh so as to counterbalance Mitanni.[94] According to other Amarna letters (EA 85, EA86, EA95) from Rib-Hadda, king of Byblos, Tushratta personally joined a large Mitanni raid into Amurru.[97] In another Amarna letter (EA 75) Rib-Hadda tells Ahkenaten that all the lands of the Mitanni have been conquered by the Hittites but its date is uncertain.

The Suppiluliuma-Shattiwaza treaty says:

When with the Sun, Shubbiluliuma, the great valiant, the king of Hatti, the beloved of Teshub, Artatama king of Harri, made a treaty and thereafter, Tushratta, king of Mitanni, exalted him, the king of Hatti, the valiant, exalted myself against Tushratta, the king of lands on this side of the river I plundered, and Mount Niblani I restored to my domain...When his son waxed strong with his servants, he slew his father Tushratta, the king. And when Tushratta, the king, died, Teshub gave a decision in favor of Artatama, and his son Artatama he spared...But the Harri people had become discontented and Shutatarra with the Marianni tried to kill Mattiuaza, the prince. He escaped and before the Sun, Shubbiluliuma...he came. The great king spoke thus: 'Teshub has rendered a decision in his favor.' Whereupon I took Mattiuaza, son of Tushratta, the king, into my hand, and placed him on the throne of his father."[98]

Tusratta faced a difficult situation, an ascendant Hittite New Kingdom in the west and in the east an Assyrian power beginning to free itself of Mitanni control at the start of the Middle Assyrian Period. A rule book-ended by succession crises. With no Mitanni or Assyrian records we are left with the historical claims of the Hittite king, for better or worse. In summary they are:

  • Political - With the death of Shutarna II a crisis involving Tushratta and Artashumara resulted in Tushratta taking the throne. To counter this the Hittites entered a treaty with another brother Artatama II, which did not pan out. Then, after a reasonably long reign (based on the timing of Amarna letters), Tushratta is killed by his son (unnamed but generally thought to be Shuttarna III) who then allies with the Assyrians to take power in Mitanni with Assyria getting some Mitanni territory in exchange. Another son of Tushratta, Shattiwaza, then becomes a vassal of the Hittite king in exchange for help retaking part of the Mitanni territory (with the rest going to the Suppiluliuma' son Piyassili made king of Carchemish).[99] And this comes to pass. Note that the original treaty with Artatama II is specifically kept in force, suggesting he outlived Tushratta.
  • Military - Tushratta having insulted the Hittite king, perhaps by refusing to be deposed, Suppiluliuma launched two campaigns against Mitanni interests, a "One Year War" and a "Six Year War". The first war is believed to have occurred roughly in the 15th regnal year of Ahkenaten.[100] It is unclear how much time passes between them. Though unsuccessful at defeating Tushratta, the military efforts do manage to seize control of several Mitanni vassals/allies, including Kizzuwatna, Amurru, Aleppo, and Nuhašše.[101][102]

Shattiwaza

 
Cylinder seal, c. 1500–1350 BC, Mitanni

Shattiwaza reigned c. 1330–1305 BC,[88] (alternately Šattiwaza, Kurtiwaza, or Mattiwaza). What little is known about his period, like the later parts of the reign of his father, Tushratta, all comes from the partially recovered pair of Hittite texts in which Shattiwaza becomes a vassal of Hittite king Suppiluliuma I. The first text (CTH 51) lays out the condition of vassalage and in the second (CTH 52) Shattiwaza accepts these conditions. The text can be difficult to interpret because of gaps and the obtuse prose. The Suppiluliuma-Shattiwaza treaty reads:

[When ?] (I), Mattiuaza, son of Tushratta, king of Mitanni, handed over to Shuttarna, [rulership] of Mitanni, Artatama, the king, his father, did what was not right. His palace(?) . . . together with his possessions, he wasted; to give them to Assyria and Alshe, he wasted them. Tushratta, the king, my father, built a palace, filled (it) with treasures, but Shuttarna destroyed it, he overthrew it."[98]

The best that can be parsed out of the Hittite text is that some (unnamed) son killed the prior king Tushratta resulting in a succession crisis between Atratama II, brother of Tushratta, Shuttarna III, son of Tusratta, and Shattiwaza. son of Tushratta. The Hittites then made a treaty with Atratama II (still in effect as of the Suppiluliuma-Shattiwaza treaty). Some combination of Atratama II and Shuttarna III made an alliance with the Assyrians to hold power in Mitanni. returning cultic items taken when Mitanni king Shaushtatar sacked Asshur c. 1450. This resulted in Shattiwaza going to Hittite king Suppiluliuma and declaring vassalage in exchange for Hittite military assistance. This ploy succeeded as the Hittite forces carried the day but the cost, besides becoming a vassal, was the ceding of some Mitanni territory to the Hittites, subsequently ruled by the king's son Piyassili as King of Carchemesh. As part of the agreement Shattiwaza would marry a daughter of Suppiluliuma as Queen and would be allowed ten wives but none of the other wives could be primary and the children from his marriage with the Queen would succeed. The Hittite text does include some tidbits about the war of succession which are hard to interpret. At one point the Hurrian nobles were taken to Taite and "crucified" though that practice was unknown in the ancient Near East until classical times. And at one point Shattiwaza flees to the Kassites with 200 chariots but the Kassites impounded the chariots and tried to kill him, which he mirsculously escapes and finds his way to Suppiluliuma. After presumably ascending the throne of what was left of Mitanni, Shattiwaza is lost to history.

Shattuara I

Shattuara reigned c. 1305–1285 BC.[88] The royal inscriptions of the Assyrian king Adad-nirari I (c. 1307–1275 BC) relate how the vassal king Shattuara of Mitanni rebelled and committed hostile acts against Assyria. How this Shattuara was related to the dynasty of Partatama is unclear. Some scholars think that he was the second son of Artatama II, and the brother of Shattiwazza's one-time rival Shuttarna. Adad-nirari claims to have captured King Shattuara and brought him to Ashur, where he took an oath as a vassal. Afterwards, he was allowed to return to Mitanni, where he paid Adad-nirari regular tribute. This must have happened during the reign of the Hittite King Mursili II, but there is no exact date.

Wasashatta

According to an inscription (BM 115687) by Assyrian king Adad-nirari I, Shattuara's son Wasashatta (also read Uasašatta), who reigned c. 1285-1265 BC,[88] attempted to rebel. He sought Hittite help which did not come. The Hittites took Wasashatta's money but did not help. The Assyrians expanded further, and conquered the royal city of Taidu, and took Washukanni, Amasakku, Kahat, Shuru, Nabula, Hurra and Shuduhu as well. They conquered Irridu, destroyed it utterly and sowed salt over it. The wife, sons and daughters of Wasashatta were taken to Ashur, together with much booty and other prisoners. As Wasashatta himself is not mentioned, he may have escaped capture.[103] There is a letter (KBo. 1, 14) from a Hittle king (to probably the Egyptian king) referring to a "King of Hanigalbat" which was possibly Wasašatta.[104]

Shattuara II

According to the royal annals (A.0.77.1) of Assyrian king Shalmaneser I (1270s–1240s) King Shattuara II of Hanigalbat, rebelled against Assyrian control with the help of the Hittites and the nomadic Ahlamu around 1250 BC.[105] Shalmaneser I claimed to have defeated the Hittites and Mitanni slaying 14,400 men; the rest were blinded and carried away. His inscriptions mention the conquest of nine fortified temples; 180 Hurrian cities were "turned into rubble mounds," and Shalmaneser "slaughtered like sheep the armies of the Hittites and the Ahlamu his allies." The cities from Taidu to Irridu were captured, as well as all of mount Kashiar to Eluhat and the fortresses of Sudu and Harranu to Carchemish on the Euphrates. Another inscription mentions the restoration of a temple to god Adad in Kahat, a city of Mitanni that must have been occupied as well.[106]

See also

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External links

  • Mitanni (livius.org)
  • Dutch excavations at Tell Sabi Abyad
  • Iraq's drought unveils 3,400-year-old palace of mysterious empire

mitanni, hittite, 𒆳𒌷𒈪𒋫𒀭𒉌, romanized, urumi, mittani, hittite, 𒈪𒀉𒋫𒉌, romanized, 1550, 1260, earlier, called, Ḫabigalbat, babylonian, texts, 1600, hanigalbat, hani, rabbat, hanikalbat, khanigalbat, akkadian, 𒄩𒉌𒃲𒁁, romanized, Ḫa, Ḫa, assyrian, records, naharin, e. Mitanni m ɪ ˈ t ae n i Hittite 𒆳𒌷𒈪𒋫𒀭𒉌 romanized KUR URUMi ta an ni Mittani or Hittite 𒈪𒀉𒋫𒉌 romanized Mi it ta ni c 1550 1260 BC earlier called Ḫabigalbat in old Babylonian texts c 1600 BC 1 Hanigalbat or Hani Rabbat Hanikalbat Khanigalbat Akkadian 𒄩𒉌𒃲𒁁 romanized Ḫa ni gal bat Ḫa ni rab bat in Assyrian records or Naharin in Egyptian texts was a Hurrian speaking state with Indo Aryan linguistic influences in northern Syria and southeast Anatolia modern day Turkey citation needed Since no histories royal annals or chronicles have yet been found in its excavated sites knowledge about Mitanni is sparse compared to the other powers in the area and dependent on what its neighbours commented in their texts citation needed Kingdom of Mitannic 1600 BC c 1260 BCKingdom of Mitanni at its greatest extent under Barattarna c 1490 BCCapitalWashukanniCommon languagesHurrianAkkadianAmoriteReligionHurrian religion Ancient Mesopotamian religionGovernmentMonarchyKing c 1540 BCKirta first known c 1300 BCShattuara II last Historical eraBronze Age Establishedc 1600 BC Disestablished c 1260 BCPreceded by Succeeded byHittite EmpireYamhad Middle Assyrian EmpireThe Hurrians were in the region as of the late 3rd millennium BC 2 A king of Urkesh with a Hurrian name Tupkish was found on a clay sealing dated c 2300 BC at Tell Mozan 3 4 The first recorded inscription of their language was of Tish atal c 21st century BC king of Urkesh 5 Later on Hurrians made up the main population of Mitanni that was firstly known as Ḫabigalbat at Babylonia in two texts of the late Old Babylonian period 1 6 during the reign of Ammi Saduqa c 1638 1618 BC in low middle chronology The Egyptian official astronomer and clockmaker Amenemhet Amen hemet apparently ordered to write on his tomb that he returned from the foreign country called Mtn Mi ti ni 7 8 but Alexandra von Lieven 2016 and Eva von Dassow 2022 consider that the expedition to Mitanni could have taken place in pharaoh Ahmose I s reign c 1550 1525 BC actually by Amenemhet s father 9 10 During the reign of pharaoh Thutmose I 1506 1493 BC the names Mitanni and Naharin are among the reminiscences of several of the pharaoh s officers One of them Ahmose si Abina wrote His Majesty arrived at Naharin Another one Ahmose pa Nekhbit recorded when I captured for him in the land of Naharin 11 After the Battle of Megiddo an officer of pharaoh Thutmose III 1479 1425 BC in the pharaoh s 22 regnal year reported That wretched enemy of Kadesh has come and has entered into Megiddo He is there at this moment He has gathered to him the princes of every foreign country which had been loyal to Egypt as well as those as far as Naharin and M itanni them of Hurru them of Kode their horses their armies 12 In several later military campaigns the Annals of Thutmose III mention Naharin in particular those of his regnal years 33 35 and 42 13 After that time records become more available from local sources until the empire s end in the mid 13th century BC 14 The Mitanni Empire was a strong regional power limited by the Hittites to the north Egyptians to the west Kassites to the south and later by the Assyrians to the east At its maximum extent Mitanni ranged as far west as Kizzuwatna by the Taurus Mountains Tunip in the south Arraphe in the east and north to Lake Van 15 Their sphere of influence is shown in Hurrian place names personal names and the spread through Syria and the Levant of a distinct pottery type Nuzi ware 16 Contents 1 Name 1 1 Mitanni 1 2 Ḫani Rabbat 2 History 2 1 Summary 2 2 Early kingdom 2 3 After the fall of Mitanni 3 Indo Aryan linguistic influences 4 Origins and archaeology 4 1 Upper Mesopotamia 4 1 1 Northeastern Syria Jazira Region 4 1 2 Northern Syria 4 1 3 Southeastern Turkey Upper Tigris 4 2 Trans Tigridian region Northeastern Iraq 4 3 Pottery and other characteristics 5 Mitanni rulers 5 1 Parattarna I Barattarna 5 2 Shaushtatar 5 3 Artatama I and Shuttarna II 5 4 Artashumara and Tushratta 5 5 Shattiwaza 5 6 Shattuara I 5 7 Wasashatta 5 8 Shattuara II 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksNameMitanni The earliest recorded form of the name of this state is Maitanni composed of a Hurrian suffix nni added to the Indo Aryan stem maita meaning to unite and comparable with the Sanskrit verb mith म थ lit to unite pair couple meet The name Maitanni thus meant the united kingdom 17 Paralleling the evolution of Proto Indo Aryan maytʰati lit he unites into Sanskrit methati म थत the name Maitanni evolved into the later form Mitanni where the stem maita had given way to mita 17 Ḫani Rabbat mꜥṯn j 18 19 in hieroglyphsEra New Kingdom 1550 1069 BC The Mitanni kingdom was firstly known as Ḫabigalbat before 1600 BC at Babylonia during the reign of Ammi Saduqa attested as ḫa bi in gal ba ti i and ḫa bi in ga al ba at in two texts of the late Old Babylonian period 1 6 Egyptians referred to it as Naharin and Mitanni 18 19 it was Ḫurri to the Hittites and Ḫanigalbat or Ḫani Rabbat to the Assyrians These names seem to have referred to the same kingdom and were often used interchangeably according to Michael C Astour 20 Hittite annals mention a people called Hurri Ḫu ur ri located in northeastern Syria A Hittite fragment probably from the time of Mursili I mentions a King of the Hurri and the Assyro Akkadian version of the text renders Hurri as Hanigalbat Tushratta who styles himself king of Mitanni in his Akkadian Amarna letters refers to his kingdom as Hanigalbat 21 The earliest attestation of the term Ḫanigalbat can be read in Akkadian along with the Hittite version mentioning the Hurrian enemy 22 in a copy from the 13th century BC of the Annals of Ḫattusili I 23 who possibly reigned since 1630 BC 24 The reading of the Assyrian term Ḫanigalbat has a history of multiple renderings The first portion has been connected to 𒄩𒉡 Ḫa nu Hanu or Hana first attested in Mari to describe nomadic inhabitants along the southern shore of the northern Euphrates region near the vicinity of Terqa capital of the Kingdom of Hana and the Khabur River The term developed into more than just a designation for a people group but also took on a topographic aspect as well In the Middle Assyrian period a phrase 𒌷𒆳𒄩𒉡𒀭𒋫 URUKUR Ḫa nu AN TA cities of the Upper Hanu has suggested that there was a distinction between two different Hanu s likely across each side of the river This northern side designation spans much of the core territory of Mitanni state The two signs that have led to variant readings are 𒃲 gal and its alternative form 𒆗 gal9 The first attempts at decipherment in the late 19th century rendered forms interpreting gal meaning great in Sumerian as a logogram for Akkadian rab having the same meaning Ḫani Rabbat denoting the Great Hani J A Knudtzon and E A Speiser after him supported instead the reading of gal on the basis of its alternative spelling with gal9 which has since become the majority view There is still a difficulty to explain the suffix bat if the first sign did not end in b or the apparent similarity to the Semitic feminine ending at if derived from a Hurrian word More recently in 2011 scholar Miguel Valerio 25 then at the New University of Lisbon provided detailed support in favor to the older reading Hani Rabbat 26 The re reading makes argument on basis of frequency where gal not gal9 is far more numerous the later being the deviation found in six documents all from the periphery of the Akkadian sphere of influence Additionally argued although graphically distinct there is a high degree of overlap between the two signs as gal9 denotes dannum or strong opposed to great easily being used as synonyms Both signs also represent correlative readings alternative readings of gal9 include rib and rip just like gal being read as rab The situation is complicated by there being according to linguists three separate dialects of Hurrian central western northern and eastern 27 The Egyptians considered the Euphrates River to form the boundary between Syria and Naharain 28 HistorySummary nbsp Cylinder seal and modern impression nude male griffins monkey lion goat c 15th 14th century BC MitanniThe first known use by now of Indo Aryan names for Mitanni rulers begins with Shuttarna I who succeeded his father Kirta on the throne 29 King Barattarna of Mitanni expanded the kingdom west to Aleppo and made the Amorite 30 king Idrimi of Alalakh his vassal 31 and five generations seems to separate this king also known as Parattarna from the rise of Mitanni kingdom 32 The state of Kizzuwatna in the west also shifted its allegiance to Mitanni and Assyria in the east had become largely a Mitannian vassal state by the mid 15th century BC The nation grew stronger during the reign of Shaushtatar but the Hurrians were keen to keep the Hittites inside the Anatolian highland Kizzuwatna in the west and Ishuwa in the north were important allies against the hostile Hittites Mitanni s major rival was Egypt under the Thutmosids However with the ascent of the Hittite Empire Mitanni and Egypt struck an alliance to protect their mutual interests from the threat of Hittite domination After a few successful clashes with the Egyptians over the control of Syria Mitanni sought peace with them and an alliance was formed During the reign of Shuttarna II in the early 14th century BC the relationship was very amicable and he sent his daughter Gilu Hepa to Egypt for a marriage with Pharaoh Amenhotep III Mitanni was now at its peak of power However by the reign of Eriba Adad I 1390 1366 BC Mitanni influence over Assyria was on the wane Eriba Adad I became involved in a dynastic battle between Tushratta and his brother Artatama II and after this his son Shuttarna II who called himself king of the Hurri while seeking support from the Assyrians A pro Hurri Assyria faction appeared at the royal Mitanni court Eriba Adad I had thus loosened Mitanni influence over Assyria and in turn had now made Assyria an influence over Mitanni affairs 33 King Ashur uballit I 1365 1330 BC of Assyria attacked Shuttarna and annexed Mitanni territory in the middle of the 14th century BC making Assyria once more a great power 34 At the death of Shuttarna Mitanni was ravaged by a war of succession Eventually Tushratta a son of Shuttarna ascended the throne but the kingdom had been weakened considerably and both the Hittite and Assyrian threats increased At the same time the diplomatic relationship with Egypt went cold the Egyptians fearing the growing power of the Hittites and Assyrians The Hittite king Suppiluliuma I invaded the Mitanni vassal states in northern Syria and replaced them with loyal subjects In the capital Washukanni a new power struggle broke out The Hittites and the Assyrians supported different pretenders to the throne Finally a Hittite army conquered the capital Washukanni and installed Shattiwaza the son of Tushratta as their vassal king of Mitanni in the late 14th century BC 35 The kingdom had by now been reduced to the Khabur Valley The Assyrians had not given up their claim on Mitanni and in the 13th century BC Shalmaneser I annexed the kingdom The Mitanni dynasty had ruled over the northern Euphrates Tigris region between c 1600 and 1350 BC 36 but succumbed to Hittite and later Assyrian attacks and Mitanni was reduced to the status of a province of the Middle Assyrian Empire between c 1350 and 1260 BC 36 Early kingdom nbsp Cylinder seal c 16th 15th century BC MitanniAs early as Akkadian times Hurrians are known to have lived east of the river Tigris on the northern rim of Mesopotamia and in the Khabur Valley The group which became Mitanni gradually moved south into Mesopotamia before the 17th century BC It was already a powerful kingdom at the end of the 17th century or in the first half of the 16th century BC and its beginnings date to well before the time of Thutmose I dating actually to the time of the Hittite sovereigns Hattusili I and Mursili I 37 Hurrians are mentioned in the private Nuzi texts in Ugarit and the Hittite archives in Hattusa Bogazkoy Cuneiform texts from Mari mention rulers of city states in upper Mesopotamia with both Amurru Amorite and Hurrian names Rulers with Hurrian names are also attested for Urshum and Hassum and tablets from Alalakh layer VII from the later part of the Old Babylonian period mention people with Hurrian names at the mouth of the Orontes There is no evidence for any invasion from the North east Generally these onomastic sources have been taken as evidence for a Hurrian expansion to the South and the West A Hittite fragment probably from the time of Mursili I mentions a King of the Hurrians LUGAL ERIN MES Hurri This terminology was last used for King Tushratta of Mitanni in a letter in the Amarna archives The normal title of the king was King of the Hurri men without the determinative KUR indicating a country After the fall of Mitanni With the final decline of the Mitanni Empire the western portions of its territory came up direct control of the Hittites and the eastern portions came under direct control of the Assyrians The middle part continued on as the rump state of Hanigalbat Eventually under Shalmaneser I that remaining part of the former Mitanni territory came under direct Assyrian control This continued until the decline of Middle Assyrian power after the death of Tukulti Ninurta I 38 39 While under direct Assyrian control Hanigalbat was ruled by appointed governors such as the Assyrian grand vizier Ili pada father of Ninurta apal Ekur 1191 1179 who took the title of King of Hanigalbat 40 He resided in the newly built over an existing Mitanni tower and residence Assyrian administrative centre at Tell Sabi Abyad 41 The Babylonian Kings List A names the Assyrian ruler Sennacherib 705 681 BC and his son Ashur nadin shumi 700 694 as being Dynasty of Ḫabigal 42 43 The name Hanigalbat was still in use as late as the later portion of the 1st millennium BC 44 45 Indo Aryan linguistic influencesMain article Indo Aryan superstrate in Mitanni Eva von Dassow regards that w hile the practice of bestowing throne names of Indo Aryan derivation on most of Mittani s kings suggests significant contact with an Indo Aryan speaking population it does not indicate that the royal dynasty much less the ruling class was of Aryan blood whatever that might mean 15 Whereas Alexander Lubotsky considers t he military elite of the Mitanni kingdom of Aryan descent was present in Syria and northern Iraq in the fourteenth century BCE and probably arrived there a few generations earlier in the sixteenth to fifteenth century BCE 46 Some theonyms proper names and other terminology of the Mitanni exhibit similarities to Indo Aryan or Proto Aryan Several Mitanni rulers had names which could be interpreted as Indo Aryan most notably Shuttarna 29 The deities Mitra Varuna Indra and Nasatya Ashvins are listed and invoked in two treaties found in Hattusa between the kings Sattiwaza of Mitanni and Suppiluliuma I the Hittite treaty KBo I 3 and treaty KBo I 1 and its duplicates 47 48 Kikkuli s horse training text includes technical terms such as aika eka one tera tri three panza pancha five satta sapta seven na nava nine vartana vartana turn round in the horse race The numeral aika one is of particular importance because it places the loanwords in the vicinity of Indo Aryan proper as opposed to Indo Iranian or early Iranian which has aiva in general 49 Annelies Kammenhuber 1968 suggested that this vocabulary was derived from the still undivided Indo Iranian language 50 51 but Mayrhofer has shown that specifically Indo Aryan features are present 52 53 Alexander Lubotsky 2023 concludes that t he language has a clear Indo Aryan rather than PIIr character due to the word for one Mitanni a i ka Sanskrit eka differs from Iranian ai ua as the form with the suffix ka is found nowhere else and must be a typical Indo Aryan innovation whereas the Iranian suffix ua is also found in Greek oἶos lt Hoiuo and in the Sanskrit particle eva thus most probably of the same origin as Iranian ai ua 46 Another text has babru babhru brown parita palita grey and pinkara pingala red Their chief festival was the celebration of the solstice vishuva which was common in most cultures in the ancient world The Mitanni warriors were called marya the term for warrior in Sanskrit as well note mista nnu miẓḍha Sanskrit miḍha payment for catching a fugitive 54 Jasper Eidem in 2014 reported on Farouk Ismail s earlier study 55 in reference to the word marijannu that was found in a letter from Tell Leilan in northeastern Syria dating to a period slightly before 1761 BC which is the time when the reign of Zimri Lim ended in the region of Mari According to Kroonen et al 2018 this may be considered as an early Indo Aryan linguistic presence in Syria two centuries prior to the formation of the Mitanni realm as mariannu can be seen as a Hurrianized form of the Indo Aryan marya which means man or youth associated to military affairs and chariots 56 Jasper Eidem 2014 comments that it is very surprising that the mention of marijannu soldiers to be exchanged between a ruler of Leilan and another king with a Hurrian name and that Leilan letter L 87 887 was sent from Kirip seris to Himdija with reference to a journey to Babylon to visit the king Presumably the letter dates to the very end of Zimri Lim s reign or shortly after the fall of Mari The soldiers exchanged are described as ṣab ma ri ia nim ṣabi sa ma ri a ia nim 55 Origins and archaeologyA concept known as Dark Age was applied until recently to the archaeological gap between the Middle and Late Bronze Age on Northern Mesopotamian sites but Costanza Coppini considers it a transition instead which can be called Late Bronze Age 0 attested from the Tell Leilan s end caused by Samsu iluna during his 23rd year of reign c 1728 BCE Middle Chronology to Mitanni s predominance c 1600 1550 BCE These are the first traces of what in the Late Bronze Age I was Mitanni in historical terms at the emergence of the third phase of Khabur ware 57 The archaeological core zone of Mitanni is Upper Mesopotamia and the Trans Tigridian region Northeastern Iraq Upper Mesopotamia Sites with Mitannian remains were found mainly in three regions of Upper Mesopotamia Northeastern Syria Jazira Region Northern Syria and Southeastern Turkey Upper Tigris Northeastern Syria Jazira Region nbsp Jazira region in light green Northeastern Syria Mitanni s first phase in Jazira Region features Late Khabur Ware from around 1600 to 1550 BC due to this pottery was a continuity from non Mitannian previous Old Babylonian period 58 From around 1550 to 1270 BC Painted Nuzi Ware the most characteristic pottery in Mitanni times developed as a contemporary to Younger Khabur Ware 58 59 Mitanni had outposts centred on its capital Washukanni whose location has been determined by archaeologists to be on the headwaters of the Khabur River most likely at the site of Tell Fekheriye as recent German archaeological excavations suggest The city of Taite was also known to be a Mitanni royal city whose current location is unknown 60 The major 3rd millennium urban center of Tell Brak which had dwindled to a minor settlement in Old Babylonian times saw major development c 1600 by the Mitanni Monumental buildings including a palace and temple were constructed on the high ground and a 40 hectare lower town developed 61 The Mitanni occupation lasted until the site was destroyed in two phases between c 1300 and 1275 BC presumably by the Assyrians 62 Two Mitanni era tablets were found during the modern excavation One TB 6002 mentioned Artassumara the king son of Shuttarna the king 63 Seventeen late period Mitanni tablets were found at Tall Al Hamidiya 64 Northern Syria Mitanni period occupation between 1400 and 1200 BC radiocarbon was found at the site of Tell Bazi 65 66 Finds included a Mitanni cylinder seal and several ritual bowls Two cuneiform tablets of the Mitanni period sealed by Mitanni ruler Saushtatar one by Artatama I were also found 67 There is also a record of Mitanni governance at Tell Hadidi Azu 68 Southeastern Turkey Upper Tigris The 2017 salvage excavations at the Ilisu Dam in the right bank of upper Tigris southern Turkey have shown a very early beginning of Mitanni period as in the ruins of a temple in Muslumantepe ritual artefacts and a Mitannian cylinder seal were found radiocarbon dated to 1760 1610 BC 69 Archaeologist Eyyup Ay in his 2021 paper describes the second phase of the temple as an administrative center which had craftsmen working in its workshops as well as farmers gardeners and shepherds that might have been ruled by a priest bound to a powerful Mitannian leader 69 Trans Tigridian region Northeastern Iraq To the east of upper Tigris river Trans Tigridian region in northern Iraq a site now called Bassetki was excavated which in all likelihood was the ancient town of Mardama with Mitanni layers from 1550 to 1300 BC as its Phase A9 in trench T2 may alternatively represent a Middle Bronze Late Bronze transitional or Proto Mitanni occupation within 16th century BC 70 In a subsequent excavation season the deeper Phase A10 was identified as having a mix of Middle Bronze and Mitanni potteries considered to be in the turn of the Middle to the Late Bronze Age transitional period late 17th early 16th century BC 71 In 2010 the 3 400 year old ruins of Kemune a Bronze Age Mitanni palace on the banks of the Tigris in modern day Iraqi Kurdistan were discovered 72 It became possible to excavate the ruins in 2018 and again in 2022 when a drought caused water levels to drop considerably In the 1st excavation 10 Mitanni era tablets were found in Babylonian cuneiform written in Akkadian bearing Hurrian names dating to the Middle Trans Tigridian IA and IB periods 73 Middle Trans Tigridian IA and IB are dated to c 1550 1350 BC and c 1350 1270 BC respectively by Peter Pfalzner 2007 In the 2nd excavation the entire city was mapped and 100 Middle Assyrian tablets were discovered They were dated to after the city s destruction by earthquake and have not yet been published 74 Pottery and other characteristics At least since around 1550 BC in the beginning of Late Bronze age Painted Nuzi Ware was identified as a characteristic pottery in Mitanni sites 75 the origin of this decorated pottery is an unsolved question but a possible previous development as Aegean Kamares Ware has been suggested by Pecorelia 2000 and S Soldi claims that Tell Brak was one of the first centers specializing in the production of this Painted Nuzi Ware and analyses on samples support the assumption that it was produced locally in various centers throughout the Mitanni kingdom it was particularly appreciated in Upper Mesopotamia but appears only sporadically in western Syrian cities such as Alalakh and Ugarit 75 At the height of its power during the 15th and the first half of 14th century BC a large region from North West Syria to the Eastern Tigris was under Mitanni s control 76 Mitanni rulersMitanni which first rose to power before 1550 BC 77 78 presents the following known kings All dates are Middle chronologyRulers Reigned CommentsMaitta Eponymous founder maybe mythicalKirta c 1540 BC First known king may be also legendaryShuttarna I Son of Kirta based on Alalakh seal 79 Parattarna I c 1500 BC Son of Kirta contemporary of Idrimi of Alalakh Pilliya of Kizzuwatna Zidanta II of HattiParshatatar c 1485 BC Son of Parattarna IShaushtatar c 1465 BC Contemporary of Sinia and Qis Addu in Terqa Tudhaliya I of Hatti Niqmepa of Alalakh sacks AshurParattarna II c 1435 BC Contemporary of Qis Addu in TerqaShaitarna c 1425 BC Contemporay of Qis Addu in TerqaArtatama I c 1400 BC Treaty with pharaoh Thutmose IV contemporary of pharaoh Amenhotep IIShuttarna II c 1380 BC Daughter marries pharaoh Amenhotep III in his year 10Artashumara c 1360 BC Son of Shutarna II brief reignTushratta c 1358 BC Contemporary of Suppiluliuma I of the Hittites and pharaohs Amenhotep III and Amenhotep IV Amarna lettersArtatama II c 1335 BC Treaty with Suppiluliuma I of the Hittites contemporary of Ashur uballit I in AssyriaShuttarna III c 1330 BC Contemporary of Suppiluliuma I of the HittitesShattiwaza c 1330 BC Vassal of the Hittite Empire also known as Kurtiwaza or MattiwazaShattuara c 1305 BC Vassal of Assyria under Adad nirari IWasashatta c 1285 BC Son of ShattuaraShattuara II c 1265 BC Last king of Mitanni before Assyrian conquestAll dates must be taken with caution since they are worked out only by comparison with the chronology of other ancient Near Eastern nations Parattarna I Barattarna Main article Baratarna King Barattarna is known from a cuneiform tablet in Nuzi and an inscription by Idrimi of Alalakh 80 He reigned c 1500 1480 BC 81 Egyptian sources do not mention his name that he was the king of Naharin whom Thutmose III 1479 1425 BC fought against can only be deduced from assumptions This king also known as Parratarna is considered by J A Belmonte Marin quoting H Klengel to have reigned c 1510 1490 BC middle chronology 82 Parsha ta tar known from another Nuzi inscription HSS 13 165 an undated inventory list which mentions his death is considered a different king than Barattarna by M P Maidman Eva von Dassow and Ian Mladjov Thutmose III again waged war in Mitanni in the 33rd year of his rule The Egyptian army crossed the Euphrates at Carchemish and reached a town called Iryn maybe present day Erin 20 km northwest of Aleppo They sailed down the Euphrates to Emar Maskanah and then returned home via Mitanni A hunt for elephants at Lake Nija was important enough to be included in the annals Victories over Mitanni are recorded from the Egyptian campaigns in Nuhasse middle part of Syria Barattarna or his son Shaushtatar controlled the North Mitanni interior up to Nuhasse and the coastal territories from Kizzuwatna to Alalakh in the kingdom of Mukish at the mouth of the Orontes Idrimi of Alalakh returning from Egyptian exile could only ascend his throne with Barattarna s consent While he got to rule Mukish and Ama u Aleppo remained with Mitanni Shaushtatar Main article Shaushtatar nbsp The central section of Shaushtatar s royal seal The cuneiform legend reads DUMU Par sa ta tar and LUGAL Ma i ta ni Shaushtatar reigned as King of Mitanni c 1480 1460 BC 81 He sacked the Assyrian capital of Assur some time in the 15th century during the reign of Nur ili and took the silver and golden doors of the royal palace to Washukanni 83 This is known from a later Hittite document the Suppililiuma Shattiwaza treaty After the sack of Assur Assyria may have paid tribute to Mitanni up to the time of Eriba Adad I 1390 1366 BC The states of Aleppo in the west and Nuzi and Arrapha in the east seem to have been incorporated into Mitanni under Shaushtatar as well A letter HSS 9 1 sealed with the seal of Shaushtatar was discovered in the house Room A26 of Prince Silwa tessup in Nuzi which lay just north of the main mound The letter is addressed to Ithia vassal ruler of Arrapha under Mitanni Because Saustatar is not mentioned in the letter and dynastic seals were often used after the reign of a ruler especially in the periphery of empire it is difficult to date this letter Stein based on various factors puts the date at c 1400 BC His seal shows heroes and winged geniuses fighting lions and other animals as well as a winged sun This style with a multitude of figures distributed over the whole of the available space is taken as typically Hurrian 84 A second seal belonging to Shuttarna I and found in Alalakh used by Shaushtatar in two letters AT 13 and 14 shows a more traditional Post Akkadian Ur III style 85 During the reign of Egyptian Pharaoh Amenhotep II Mitanni seems to have regained influence in the middle Orontes valley that had been conquered by Thutmose III Amenhotep II fought in Syria in 1425 BC presumably against Mitanni as well but did not reach the Euphrates Artatama I and Shuttarna II Main articles Artatama I and Shuttarna II Later on Egypt and Mitanni became allies and King Shuttarna II himself was received at the Egyptian court Amicable letters sumptuous gifts and letters asking for sumptuous gifts were exchanged Three Amarna letters EA 182 EA 183 and EA 185 were sent by Shutarna with two being sent from Musiḫuna 86 Mitanni was especially interested in Egyptian gold This culminated in a number of royal marriages the daughter of King Artatama I was married to Thutmose IV Kilu Hepa or Gilukhipa the daughter of Shuttarna II was married to Pharaoh Amenhotep III who ruled in the early 14th century BC In a later royal marriage Tadu Hepa or Tadukhipa the daughter of Tushratta was sent to Egypt When Amenhotep III fell ill the king of Mitanni sent him a statue of the goddess Shaushka Ishtar of Nineveh that was reputed to cure diseases 87 A more or less permanent border between Egypt and Mitanni seems to have existed near Qatna on the Orontes River Ugarit was part of Egyptian territory The reason Mitanni sought peace with Egypt may have been trouble with the Hittites A Hittite king called Tudḫaliya I conducted campaigns against Kizzuwatna Arzawa Ishuwa Aleppo and maybe against Mitanni itself Kizzuwatna may have fallen to the Hittites at that time Artashumara and Tushratta Main articles Artashumara and Tushratta nbsp Cuneiform tablet containing a letter from Tushratta of Mitanni to Amenhotep III of 13 letters of King Tushratta British MuseumArtasumara reigned c 1360 1358 BC 88 is known only from a single mention in a tablet found in Tell Brak Artassumara the king son of Shuttarna the king and a mention in Amarna letter 17 63 89 According to the later after the death of Shuttarna II he briefly took power but was then murdered by someone named Tuhi and succeeded by his brother Tushratta 90 who reigned c 1358 1335 BC 88 Knowledge of Tushratta comes from two sources the Amarna letters and the texts of the Suppiluliuma Shattiwaza treaties between Hittite ruler Suppiluliuma I and a son of Tushratta named Shattiwaza These pair of treaties found at the ancient Hittite capital of Hattusa codify the Mitanni Shattiwaza probable son of Tushratta entering the status of vassal to Suppiluliuma I One CTH 51 also known as KBo I 1 includes a historical prologue from the Hittite point of view which is complete 91 this tablet also confirms that the existing Hittite treaty with Artatama II is still in effect so perhaps Suppiluliuma was hedging his bets 92 The other CTH 52 includes a historical prologue from the Mitanni point of view which is partially lost though another fragment to this tablet was found in recent years 93 These prologues provide information about the events of the time of Tushratta but must be considered under the self interest of the two treaty parties 91 While the preambles of the treaties are a later retrospective and are filtered through the interests of the treaty parties the tablets found in Egypt provide direct information Eight Amarna letters were sent to pharaoh Amenhotep III including EA 19 and EA 23 and four to pharaoh Akhenaten including EA 27 A single Amarna letter was sent by Tushratta to Queen Tiye wife of Amenhotep III mother of Akhenaten and grandmother of Tutankhamun EA 26 A note in hieratic on the tablet stated that EA 23 arrived in the 36th year of Amenhotep III reign or roughly 1350 BC in the standard Egyptian Chronology 94 Some of the Amarna letters covered minor matters between Tushratta and the pharaohs Amenhotep III asked for Tushratta s daughter Tadukhipa in marriage and after some back and forth over bride price she traveled to Egypt and became a wife of the pharaoh And when that pharaoh was ill near the end of his reign Tushratta sent EA 23 the Hurrian goddess Sauska of Nineveh actually her cult statue to him as had been done in the time of Shuttarna II 95 The main focus of the Amarna letters though was a consequence of the realignment of power in Syria with the decline of Egyptian influence and rise of Hittite power with a number of lesser powers caught in the middle 96 In the first letter from Tusratta he claimed to have destroyed the Hittite forces that had invaded his territory and included a selection of the booty including a chariot and several slaves In later letters we see the Hittite ruler working to improve previously poor relations with the pharaoh so as to counterbalance Mitanni 94 According to other Amarna letters EA 85 EA86 EA95 from Rib Hadda king of Byblos Tushratta personally joined a large Mitanni raid into Amurru 97 In another Amarna letter EA 75 Rib Hadda tells Ahkenaten that all the lands of the Mitanni have been conquered by the Hittites but its date is uncertain The Suppiluliuma Shattiwaza treaty says When with the Sun Shubbiluliuma the great valiant the king of Hatti the beloved of Teshub Artatama king of Harri made a treaty and thereafter Tushratta king of Mitanni exalted him the king of Hatti the valiant exalted myself against Tushratta the king of lands on this side of the river I plundered and Mount Niblani I restored to my domain When his son waxed strong with his servants he slew his father Tushratta the king And when Tushratta the king died Teshub gave a decision in favor of Artatama and his son Artatama he spared But the Harri people had become discontented and Shutatarra with the Marianni tried to kill Mattiuaza the prince He escaped and before the Sun Shubbiluliuma he came The great king spoke thus Teshub has rendered a decision in his favor Whereupon I took Mattiuaza son of Tushratta the king into my hand and placed him on the throne of his father 98 Tusratta faced a difficult situation an ascendant Hittite New Kingdom in the west and in the east an Assyrian power beginning to free itself of Mitanni control at the start of the Middle Assyrian Period A rule book ended by succession crises With no Mitanni or Assyrian records we are left with the historical claims of the Hittite king for better or worse In summary they are Political With the death of Shutarna II a crisis involving Tushratta and Artashumara resulted in Tushratta taking the throne To counter this the Hittites entered a treaty with another brother Artatama II which did not pan out Then after a reasonably long reign based on the timing of Amarna letters Tushratta is killed by his son unnamed but generally thought to be Shuttarna III who then allies with the Assyrians to take power in Mitanni with Assyria getting some Mitanni territory in exchange Another son of Tushratta Shattiwaza then becomes a vassal of the Hittite king in exchange for help retaking part of the Mitanni territory with the rest going to the Suppiluliuma son Piyassili made king of Carchemish 99 And this comes to pass Note that the original treaty with Artatama II is specifically kept in force suggesting he outlived Tushratta Military Tushratta having insulted the Hittite king perhaps by refusing to be deposed Suppiluliuma launched two campaigns against Mitanni interests a One Year War and a Six Year War The first war is believed to have occurred roughly in the 15th regnal year of Ahkenaten 100 It is unclear how much time passes between them Though unsuccessful at defeating Tushratta the military efforts do manage to seize control of several Mitanni vassals allies including Kizzuwatna Amurru Aleppo and Nuhasse 101 102 Shattiwaza Main article Shattiwaza nbsp Cylinder seal c 1500 1350 BC MitanniShattiwaza reigned c 1330 1305 BC 88 alternately Sattiwaza Kurtiwaza or Mattiwaza What little is known about his period like the later parts of the reign of his father Tushratta all comes from the partially recovered pair of Hittite texts in which Shattiwaza becomes a vassal of Hittite king Suppiluliuma I The first text CTH 51 lays out the condition of vassalage and in the second CTH 52 Shattiwaza accepts these conditions The text can be difficult to interpret because of gaps and the obtuse prose The Suppiluliuma Shattiwaza treaty reads When I Mattiuaza son of Tushratta king of Mitanni handed over to Shuttarna rulership of Mitanni Artatama the king his father did what was not right His palace together with his possessions he wasted to give them to Assyria and Alshe he wasted them Tushratta the king my father built a palace filled it with treasures but Shuttarna destroyed it he overthrew it 98 The best that can be parsed out of the Hittite text is that some unnamed son killed the prior king Tushratta resulting in a succession crisis between Atratama II brother of Tushratta Shuttarna III son of Tusratta and Shattiwaza son of Tushratta The Hittites then made a treaty with Atratama II still in effect as of the Suppiluliuma Shattiwaza treaty Some combination of Atratama II and Shuttarna III made an alliance with the Assyrians to hold power in Mitanni returning cultic items taken when Mitanni king Shaushtatar sacked Asshur c 1450 This resulted in Shattiwaza going to Hittite king Suppiluliuma and declaring vassalage in exchange for Hittite military assistance This ploy succeeded as the Hittite forces carried the day but the cost besides becoming a vassal was the ceding of some Mitanni territory to the Hittites subsequently ruled by the king s son Piyassili as King of Carchemesh As part of the agreement Shattiwaza would marry a daughter of Suppiluliuma as Queen and would be allowed ten wives but none of the other wives could be primary and the children from his marriage with the Queen would succeed The Hittite text does include some tidbits about the war of succession which are hard to interpret At one point the Hurrian nobles were taken to Taite and crucified though that practice was unknown in the ancient Near East until classical times And at one point Shattiwaza flees to the Kassites with 200 chariots but the Kassites impounded the chariots and tried to kill him which he mirsculously escapes and finds his way to Suppiluliuma After presumably ascending the throne of what was left of Mitanni Shattiwaza is lost to history Shattuara I Main article Shattuara Shattuara reigned c 1305 1285 BC 88 The royal inscriptions of the Assyrian king Adad nirari I c 1307 1275 BC relate how the vassal king Shattuara of Mitanni rebelled and committed hostile acts against Assyria How this Shattuara was related to the dynasty of Partatama is unclear Some scholars think that he was the second son of Artatama II and the brother of Shattiwazza s one time rival Shuttarna Adad nirari claims to have captured King Shattuara and brought him to Ashur where he took an oath as a vassal Afterwards he was allowed to return to Mitanni where he paid Adad nirari regular tribute This must have happened during the reign of the Hittite King Mursili II but there is no exact date Wasashatta Main article Wasashatta According to an inscription BM 115687 by Assyrian king Adad nirari I Shattuara s son Wasashatta also read Uasasatta who reigned c 1285 1265 BC 88 attempted to rebel He sought Hittite help which did not come The Hittites took Wasashatta s money but did not help The Assyrians expanded further and conquered the royal city of Taidu and took Washukanni Amasakku Kahat Shuru Nabula Hurra and Shuduhu as well They conquered Irridu destroyed it utterly and sowed salt over it The wife sons and daughters of Wasashatta were taken to Ashur together with much booty and other prisoners As Wasashatta himself is not mentioned he may have escaped capture 103 There is a letter KBo 1 14 from a Hittle king to probably the Egyptian king referring to a King of Hanigalbat which was possibly Wasasatta 104 Shattuara II Main article Shattuara II According to the royal annals A 0 77 1 of Assyrian king Shalmaneser I 1270s 1240s King Shattuara II of Hanigalbat rebelled against Assyrian control with the help of the Hittites and the nomadic Ahlamu around 1250 BC 105 Shalmaneser I claimed to have defeated the Hittites and Mitanni slaying 14 400 men the rest were blinded and carried away His inscriptions mention the conquest of nine fortified temples 180 Hurrian cities were turned into rubble mounds and Shalmaneser slaughtered like sheep the armies of the Hittites and the Ahlamu his allies The cities from Taidu to Irridu were captured as well as all of mount Kashiar to Eluhat and the fortresses of Sudu and Harranu to Carchemish on the Euphrates Another inscription mentions the restoration of a temple to god Adad in Kahat a city of Mitanni that must have been occupied as well 106 See alsoChronology of the ancient Near East List of Mesopotamian dynasties Cities of the ancient Near East History of the Hittites Seven dots glyphReferences a b c van Koppen Frans 2004 The Geography of the Slave Trade and Northern Mesopotamia in the Late Old Babylonian Period in H Hunger and R Pruzsinszky eds Mesopotamian Dark Age Revisited Osterreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften Vienna p 21 and footnote 65 An unpublished Old Babylonian text dated to Ammi saduqa circa 1600 B C the knowledge of which I owe to the kindness of Mr Douglas Kennedy of the Centre National de Recherches de Paris deals with the issue of beer to the tu ur gu ma an ni sa eren ḫa bi in gal ba ti i the dragomans of the Hanigalbatian soldiers workers quoting Gelb 1968 97 and A personnel register probably also from the reign of Ammisaduqa mentions the person ib ba tum eren ḫa bi in ga al ba at BM96955 iii 9 Buccellati Giorgio and Marilyn Kelly Buccellati 1997 Urkesh The First Hurrian Capital The Biblical Archaeologist vol 60 no 2 1997 pp 77 96 Abstract the sealings provided satisfying proof that Tell Mozan was the site of the third millennium Hurrian capital city Urkesh Salvini Mirjo The earliest evidences of the Hurrians before the formation of the reign of Mittanni Urkesh and the Hurrians Studies in Honor of Lloyd Cotsen Urkesh Mozan Studies Bibliotheca Mesopotamica Malibu Undena Publications 1998 99 115 Lawler Andrew Who Were the Hurrians Archaeology vol 61 no 4 2008 pp 46 52 Yakubovich I 2011 Review of Einfuhrung in die hurritsche Sprache by I Wegner Journal of Near Eastern Studies 70 2 337 339 a b von Dassow Eva 2022 Mittani and Its Empire in Karen Radner Nadine Moeller D T Potts eds The Oxford History of the Ancient Near East Volume III From the Hyksos to the Late Second Millennium BC Oxford University Press pp 467 469 Amenemhet s memoir was published in Borchardt L 1930 Altagyptische Zeitmessung in E von Basserman Jordan Die Geschichte der Zeitmessung und der Uhre vol I 1930 Berlin Leipzig pp 60ff Mentioned in Astour 1972 104 footnotes 25 26 transliterating Mtn as Me ta ni although Alexandra von Lieven 2016 219 mentions it as Mi ti ni De Martino Stefano 2018 Political and Cultural Relations between the Kingdom of Mittani and its Subordinated Polities in Syria and Southeast Anatolia in Changing Faces of Kingship in Syria Palestine 1500 500 BCE Alter Orient und Testament 459 Ugarit Verlag p 37 The earliest attestation of the toponym Mittani comes from an Egyptian source an inscription from Thebes on the grave of a state official called Amen hemet The inscription refers to the Syrian military expedition this official had taken part in which advanced as far as the country of Mtn Mittani we presume that this expedition was the one led by Tuthmosis I von Lieven Alexandra 2016 The Movement of Time News from the Clockmaker Amenemhet in RICH and GREAT Studies in Honour of Anthony J Spalinger Faculty of Art Charles University in Prague p 220 The most likely explanation for the preceding story about Mitanni is that it is part of the background of the speaker This could imply that perhaps Amenemhet s father had risen in rank due to some major feat accomplished during Ahmose s military campaign there von Dassow Eva 2022 Mittani and Its Empire in Karen Radner Nadine Moeller D T Potts eds The Oxford History of the Ancient Near East Volume III From the Hyksos to the Late Second Millennium BC Oxford University Press p 466 We owe the earliest extant mention of Mittani to the tomb autobiography of Amenemhat the astronomer and clockmaker who refers to a campaign that may have taken place as early as Ahmose s reign in the late sixteenth century BC Redford Donald B 1979 A Gate Inscription from Karnak and Egyptian Involvement in Western Asia during the Early 18th Dynasty in Journal of the American Oriental Society vol 99 no 2 p 275 Wilson John A VII Egyptian Historical Texts The Ancient Near East An Anthology of Texts and Pictures edited by James B Pritchard Princeton Princeton University Press 2021 pp 226 245 Spalinger Anthony A Critical Analysis of the Annals of Thutmose III Stucke V VI Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt vol 14 1977 pp 41 54 Leonard Albert Archaeological Sources for the History of Palestine The Late Bronze Age The Biblical Archaeologist vol 52 no 1 1989 pp 4 39 a b von Dassow Eva 2014 Levantine Polities under Mittanian Hegemony In Eva Cancik Kirschbaum Nicole Brisch and Jesper Eidem eds Constituent Confederate and Conquered Space The Emergence of the Mittani State pp 11 32 Diana L Stein Khabur Ware and Nuzi Ware Their Origin Relationship and Significance Malibu 1984 a b Fournet 2010 p 11 a b Gauthier Henri 1926 Dictionnaire des Noms Geographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hieroglyphiques Vol 3 p 25 a b Wallis Budge E A 1920 An Egyptian hieroglyphic dictionary with an index of English words king list and geological list with indexes list of hieroglyphic characters Coptic and Semitic alphabets etc Vol II John Murray p 999 Astour Ḫattusilis Ḫalab and Ḫanigalbat Journal of Near Eastern Studies 31 2 April 1972 102 109 p 103 Astour 1972 103 noting Amarna letters 18 9 20 17 29 49 De Martino Stefano 2018 Political and Cultural Relations between the Kingdom of Mittani and its Subordinated Polities in Syria and Southeast Anatolia in Changing Faces of Kingship in Syria Palestine 1500 500 BCE Alter Orient und Testament 459 Ugarit Verlag p 37 The term Ḫanigalbat first occurs in the Akkadian version of the Annals of Ḫattusili I whereas the Hittite version uses the generic expression the Hurrian enemy as do two old Babylonian texts perhaps this term refers to the Hurrian progenitor of Mittani Bryce Trevor R 2018 The Annals and Lost Golden Statue of the Hittite King Hattusili I in Gephyra 16 November 2018 p 3 Like most other Hittite documents the Annals have survived only in a late 13th century copy the last in a line of copies made over several centuries There are generally only minor variations between the Hittite and Akkadian versions of the text Consistent with van den Hout s proposals I have suggested that the document was first composed in Akkadian and later translated into Hittite contra the suggestions that both versions were composed at the same time or that the Akkadian version was translated from an original Hittite one Yener Aslihan K 2021 Some Thoughts about Middle Bronze Age Alalakh and Ugarit Reassessing an Alalakh Wall Painting with Archival Data in Ougarit un anniversaire Bilans et recherches en cours Peeters Leuven Paris Bristol p 579 the Level VII Palace was destroyed by Hattusili I in his second year 1628 BC middle chronology Miguel Valerio Universita di Bologna Dipartimento di Filologia classica e Italianistica FICLIT Valerio Miguel 2011 Hani Rabbat as the Semitic Name of Mitanni in Journal of Language Relationship International Scientific Periodical Nº6 2011 Russian State University for the Humanities Institute of Linguistics of the Russian Academy of Sciences Moscow p 174 The present essay intends to rehabilitate Hani Rabbat as the accurate normalization of the Assyrian name of Mitanni by showing the unmotivated nature of the alternative Hanigalbat as opposed to the more substantiated reading of GAL as rab in the spelling of this toponym Astour Michael C A Reconstruction of the History of Ebla Part 2 Eblaitica Essays on the Ebla Archives and Eblaite Language Volume 4 edited by Cyrus H Gordon and Gary A Rendsburg University Park USA Penn State University Press 2021 pp 57 196 Spalinger Anthony A New Reference to an Egyptian Campaign of Thutmose III in Asia Journal of Near Eastern Studies vol 37 no 1 1978 pp 35 41 a b De Martino Stefano 2014 The Mittani State The Formation of the Kingdom of Mittani in Constituent Confederate and Conquered Space in Upper Mesopotamia The Emergence of the Mittani State De Gruyter Berlin Boston p 69 Lauinger Jacob 2020 Statue of Idrimi in The Electronic Idrimi Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus ORACC 1 I am Idrimi the son of Ili ilimma a servant of IM Hebat and ISTAR the lady of Alalah the lady my lady 3 In Aleppo the house of my father a bad thing occurred so we fled to the Emarites sisters o f my mother and settled at Emar Though my older brothers lived with me none deliberated matters as I did So Idrimi was an Amorite son of Ili ilimma from Aleppo Van De Mieroop Marc 2007 A History of the Ancient Near East c 3000 323BC 2nd ed Malden MA Blackwell Publishing p 152 ISBN 978 1 4051 4911 2 De Martino Stefano 2004 A Tentative Chronology of the Kingdom of Mittani from its Rise to the Reign of Tusratta in Mesopotamian Dark Age Revisited Proceedings of an International Conference of SCIEM 2000 Vienna 8th 9th November 2002 Vienna p 37 George Roux Ancient Iraq Penguin Books 3rd ed edition March 1 1993 ISBN 978 0140125238 Cline Eric H 2014 1177 B C The Year Civilization Collapsed Princeton University Press p 61 ISBN 978 1400849987 Devecchi Elena Details That Make the Difference The Akkadian Manuscripts of the Sattiwaza Treaties Die Welt Des Orients vol 48 no 1 2018 pp 72 95 a b Novak Mirko 2013 Upper Mesopotamia in the Mittani Period in Archeologie et Histoire de la Syrie I Harrassowitz Verlag Wiesbaden p 349 De Martino Stefano 2014 The Mittani State The Formation of the Kingdom of Mittani in Constituent Confederate and Conquered Space in Upper Mesopotamia The Emergence of the Mittani State De Gruyter Berlin Boston p 61 1 Akkermans Peter MMG Jose Limpens and Richard H Spoor On the frontier of Assyria excavations at Tell Sabi Abyad 1991 Akkadica vol 84 85 pp 1 52 1993 Devecchi Elena 6 The Governance of the Subordinated Countries Handbook Hittite Empire Power Structures edited by Stefano de Martino Berlin Boston De Gruyter Oldenbourg 2022 pp 271 312 Hagens Graham The Assyrian King List and Chronology A Critique Orientalia vol 74 no 1 2005 pp 23 41 2 During Bleda S Eva Visser and Peter MMG Akkermans Skeletons in the Fortress The Late Bronze Age Burials of Tell Sabi Abyad Syria Levant 47 1 2015 30 50 Babylonian and Assyrian Historical Texts Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament with Supplement edited by James B Pritchard Princeton Princeton University Press 2016 pp 265 317 Uncertain Dynasties Rulers of Babylonia Toronto University of Toronto Press 2016 pp 90 274 Da Riva Rocio A New Attestation of Ḫabigalbat in Late Babylonian Sources Die Welt Des Orients vol 47 no 2 2017 pp 259 64 Da Riva Rocio Addendum to Rocio Da Riva A New Attestation of Ḫabigalbat in Late Babylonian Sources WdO 47 2 2017 259 264 Die Welt Des Orients vol 48 no 1 2018 pp 96 98 a b Lubotsky Alexander 2023 Indo European and Indo Iranian Wagon Terminology and the Date of the Indo Iranian Split in K Kristiansen G Kroonen amp E Willerslev eds The Indo European Puzzle Revisited Integrating Archaeology Genetics and Linguistics Cambridge University Press Cambridge p 260 Fournet Arnaud 2010 About the Mitanni Aryan Gods in Journal of Indo European Studies 38 1 2 pp 26 40 See in this pdf version pp 3 5 and 10 Devecchi Elena 2018 Details That Make the Difference The Akkadian Manuscripts of the Sattiwaza Treaties in Die Welt Des Orients vol 48 no 1 2018 pp 72 95 See p 72 The so called Sattiwaza treaties are a set of two documents CTH 51 and CTH 52 ratifying the subjugation of Sattiwaza of Mittani to the Hittite king Suppiluliuma I an event dated to the 2nd half of the 14th century BCE Thieme Paul 1960 The Aryan Gods of the Mitanni Treaties Journal of the American Oriental Society 80 4 301 17 doi 10 2307 595878 JSTOR 595878 Kammenhuber Annelies 1968 Die Arier im vorderen Orient Heidelberg Carl Winter Universitatsverlag p 238 On p 238 she indicates they spoke a noch ungeteiltes Indo Iranisch Drews Robert 1989 Chariot Warfare The Coming of the Greeks Indo European Conquests in the Aegean and the Near East Princeton University Press p 61 ISBN 0 691 02951 2 Mayrhofer M 1974 Die Arier im Vorderen Orient ein Mythos Sitzungsberichte der Oesterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften Vienna 294 3 Mayrhofer M 1986 2000 Etymologisches Worterbuch des Altindoarischen Vol IV Heidelberg a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link M Mayrhofer Etymologisches Worterbuch des Altindoarischen Heidelberg 1986 2000 Vol II 358 a b Eidem Jasper 2014 The Kingdom of Samsi Adad and its Legacies in Eva Cancik Kirschbaum Nicole Brisch and Jesper Eidem eds Constituent Confederate and Conquered Space The Emergence of the Mittani State p 142 and footnote 16 Kroonen Guus Gojko Barjamovic and Michael Peyrot 2018 Linguistic supplement to Damgaard et al 2018 Early Indo European languages Anatolian Tocharian and Indo Iranian in Zenodo 2018 p 11 Coppini Costanza 2022 Problems of Transitions in Second Millennium BC Northern Mesopotamia A View from Tell Barri Northeastern Syria in Studia Chaburensia 10 2022 pp 15 20 26 a b Oselini Valentina 2020 Defining the MB LB transition in northern Mesopotamia some archaeological considerations on the new data from the Erbil Plain and neighbouring regions in Costanza Coppini Francesca Simi eds Interactions and New Directions in Near Eastern Archaeology Volume 3 Proceedings of the 5th Broadening Horizons Conference Udine 5 8 June 2017 EUT Edizioni Universita di Trieste Trieste p 209 Figure 2 Pfalzner Peter 2007 The Late Bronze Age Ceramic Traditions of the Syrian Jazirah in al Maqdissi Misil Matoian Valerie Nicolle Christophe eds Ceramique de l age du bronze en Syrie 2 L Euphrate et la region de Jezireh Bibliotheque archeologique et historique 180 Beyrouth pp 232 244 and Figure 2 De Martino Stefano 2018 Political and Cultural Relations between the Kingdom of Mittani and its Subordinated Polities in Syria and Southeast Anatolia in Changing Faces of Kingship in Syria Palestine 1500 500 BCE Ugarit Verlag p 38 the recent German archaeological excavations at Tell Fekheriye support the assumption that the capital of Mittani Wassukkanni was located there See also Novak 2013 346 and Bonatz 2014 Oates David Excavations at Tell Brak 1983 84 Iraq vol 47 1985 pp 159 73 UR JASON et al THE SPATIAL DIMENSIONS OF EARLY MESOPOTAMIAN URBANISM THE TELL BRAK SUBURBAN SURVEY 2003 2006 Iraq vol 73 2011 pp 1 19 a b Finkel Irving L Inscriptions from Tell Brak 1984 Iraq vol 47 1985 pp 187 201 Kessler Karlheinz Neue Tontafelfunde aus dem mitannizeitlichen Taidu Ein Vorbericht The Archaeology of Political Spaces The Upper Mesopotamian Piedmont in the Second Millennium BCE edited by Dominik Bonatz Berlin Boston De Gruyter pp 35 42 2014 A Otto The Late Bronze Age Pottery of the Weststadt of Tall Bazi North Syria in M Luciani A Hausleitner Eds Recent Trends in the Study of Late Bronze Age Ceramics in Syro Mesopotamia and Neighbouring Regions Proceedings of the International Workshop in Berlin 2 5 November 2006 OrA 32 Rahden Westf pp 85 117 2014 3 B Einwag and A Otto The Late Bronze Age at Tall Bazi The Evidence of the Pottery and the Challenges of Radiocarbon Dating in From Pottery to Chronology The Middle Euphrates Region in Late Bronze Age Syria Proceedings of a Workshop in Mainz Germany May 5 7 2012 MAAO 1 Gladbeck pp 149 176 2018 4 Otto Adelheid and Berthold Einwag Three ritual vessels from the Mittani period temple at Tell Bazi Stories told around the fountain Papers offered to Piotr Bielinski on the occasion of his 70th birthday 2019 pp 503 518 5 Torrecilla Eduardo and Yoram Cohen A Mittani letter order from Azu Had 8 and its implications for the chronology and history of the Middle Euphrates region in the Late Bronze Age Revue d assyriologie et d archeologie orientale 112 1 2018 149 158 a b Ay Eyyup 2021 A Hurrian Mitanni Temple in Muslumantepe in The Upper Tigris and New Findings in Gaziantep University Journal of Social Sciences April 27 2021 Pfalzner Peter and Hasan A Qasim 2017 The First and Second Seasons of the German Kurdish Excavations at Bassetki in 2015 and 2016 in Zeitschrift fur Orient Archaologie 10 Deutsches Archaologisches Institut Orient Abteilung Berlin pp 19 24 Pfalzner Peter and Hasan A Qasim 2019 Urban Developments in Northeastern Mesopotamia from the Ninevite V to the Neo Assyrian Periods Excavations at Bassetki in 2017 in Zeitschrift fur Orient Archaologie 11 Deutsches Archaologisches Institut Orient Abteilung Berlin p 46 In Phase A10 a characteristic mix of Middle Bronze and Mittani potteries was recorded which leads to the dating of this phase at the turn of the Middle to the Late Bronze Age i e in the transitional MB III period late 17th early 16th century BC Ancient palace emerges from drought hit Iraq reservoir CNN com Retrieved 28 June 2009 Puljiz Ivana et al 2019 A New Mittani Centre On the Middle Tigris Kurdistan Region Report On the 2018 Excavations At Kemune in Zeitschrift Fur Orient Archaologie 12 pp 10 43 See p 33 pottery dating to the Middle Trans Tigridian I A B period Ralf Beutelschieb 2019 and Ten texts in Akkadian language and Babylonian cuneiform script from at least four rooms of the palace Betina Faist 2019 Tubingen University of A 3 400 year old city emerges from the Tigris River phys org Retrieved 3 June 2022 a b De Martino Stefano 2018 Political and Cultural Relations between the Kingdom of Mittani and its Subordinated Polities in Syria and Southeast Anatolia in Changing Faces of Kingship in Syria Palestine 1500 500 BCE Alter Orient und Testament 459 Ugarit Verlag p 44 Oselini Valentina 2020 Defining the MB LB transition in northern Mesopotamia some archaeological considerations on the new data from the Erbil Plain and neighbouring regions in Costanza Coppini Francesca Simi eds Interactions and New Directions in Near Eastern Archaeology Volume 3 Proceedings of the 5th Broadening Horizons Conference Udine 5 8 June 2017 Universita di Trieste EUT Edizioni Trieste p 206 Barjamovic Gojko 2012 Mesopotamian Empires in P F Bang and W Scheidel eds The Oxford Handbook of the Ancient State in the Ancient Near East and the Mediterranean Oxford University Press p 125 The Mitanni empire covered northern and western Syria and northern Iraq ca 1600 1340 BCE but succumbed to internal strife and the pressure of an expanding Assyrian empire Barjamovic Gojko 2020 The Empires of Western Asia and the Assyrian World Empire in The Oxford World History of Empire Volume Two The History of Empires Oxford University Press p 76 After 1600 BCE the area between Iran and Egypt was united into a dynamic regional system of empires Mitanni covered northern and western Syria and northern Iraq circa 1550 1340 BCE Jankowska N B 11 Asshur Mitanni and Arrapkhe Early Antiquity edited by I M Diakonoff Chicago University of Chicago Press 2013 pp 228 260 Grosz Katarzyna 1988 The Archive of the Wullu Family University of Copenhagen Museum Tusculanum Press p 11 ISBN 978 87 7289 040 1 a b Maidman M P 2010 Nuzi Texts and Their Uses as Historical Evidence p xx Belmonte Marin Juan Antonio 2015 Reflexiones sobre el territorio de Carquemis durante el periodo mittanio in Orientalistica en tiempos de crisis Portico Zaragoza p 59 Cline 2014 p 61 E A Speiser A Letter of Sauasatar and the Date of the Kirkuk Tablets J AOS 49 1929 pp 269 275 D Stein A Reappraisal of the Saustatar Letter from Nuzi Zeitschrift fur Assyriologie 79 36 60 1989 Baranowski Krzysztof J Appendix 1 The Senders of the Amarna Letters The Verb in the Amarna Letters from Canaan University Park USA Penn State University Press 2021 pp 216 233 Gestoso Singer Graciela Fortunes and Misfortunes of Messengers and Merchants in the Amarna Letters Fortune and Misfortune in the Ancient Near East Proceedings of the 60th Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale Warsaw 21 25 July 2014 edited by Olga Drewnowska and Malgorzata Sandowicz University Park USA Penn State University Press 2021 pp 143 164 a b c d e Mladjov I 2019 The Kings of Mittani in Light of the New Evidence from Terqa in NABU 2019 No 1 March p 34 Moran William L 1992 The Amarna Letters Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 4251 4 Artzi P The Diplomatic Service in Action The Mitanni File in R Cohen and R Westbrook eds Amarna Diplomacy The Beginnings of International Relations Baltimore London 205 211 2000 a b Kitchen K A P J N Lawrence 2012 Treaty Law and Covenant in the Ancient Near East Wiesbaden Altman Amnon Sattiwaza s Declaration CTH 52 Reconsidered Acts of the V International Congress of Hititology 2005 Beckman Gary New Joins to Hittite Treaties ZAVA vol 87 no 1 1997 pp 96 100 a b 6 Luckenbill D D The Hittites The American Journal of Theology vol 18 no 1 1914 pp 24 58 Frayne Douglas R and Stuckey Johanna H S A Handbook of Gods and Goddesses of the Ancient Near East Three Thousand Deities of Anatolia Syria Israel Sumer Babylonia Assyria and Elam University Park USA Penn State University Press 2021 pp 318 337 Rainey Anson F Amarna and Later Aspects of Social History Symbiosis Symbolism and the Power of the Past Canaan Ancient Israel and Their Neighbors from the Late Bronze Age through Roman Palaestina edited by William G Dever and Seymour Sy Gitin University Park USA Penn State University Press 2021 pp 169 188 Altman Amnon The Mittanian Raid of Amurru EA 85 51 55 Reconsidered Altorientalische Forschungen vol 30 no 2 2003 pp 345 371 a b Luckenbill D D Hittite Treaties and Letters The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures vol 37 no 3 1921 pp 161 211 Yamada Masamichi The Hittite Administration in Emar The Aspect of Direct Control vol 96 no 2 2006 pp 222 234 Bryce Trevor R Some Observations on the Chronology of Suppiluliuma s Reign Anatolian Studies vol 39 1989 pp 19 30 Cordani Violetta One year or Five year War A Reappraisal of Suppiluliuma s First Syrian Campaign Altorientalische Forschungen vol 38 no 2 2011 pp 240 253 Astour Michael C The Partition of the Confederacy of Mukis Nuḫiasse Nii by Suppiluliuma A Study in Political Geography of the Amarna Age Orientalia vol 38 no 3 1969 pp 381 414 Grayson Albert Kirk Assyrian Royal Inscriptions From the beginning to Ashur resha ishi I Vol 1 Otto Harrassowitz Verlag 1972 Skaist Aaron The Chronology of the Legal Texts from Emar vol 88 no 1 1998 pp 45 71 Bryce 2005 p 314 Grayson A Kirk Assyrian Rulers 3rd and 2nd Millennia BC to 1115 BC Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia Assyrian Periods Vol 1 University of Toronto Press 1987 ISBN 9780802026057SourcesBryce Trevor Letters of the Great Kings of the Ancient Near East Routledge 2003 ISBN 0 415 25857 X Fournet Arnaud 2010 About the Mitanni Aryan Gods Journal of Indo European Studies 38 1 26 40 Retrieved 27 September 2023 Gaal E The economic role of Hanilgalbat at the beginning of the Neo Assyrian expansion In Hans Jorg Nissen Johannes Renger eds Mesopotamien und seine Nachbarn Politische und kulturelle Wechselbeziehungen im Alten Orient vom 4 bis 1 Jahrtausend v Chr Berliner Beitrage zum Vorderen Orient 1 Berlin Reimer 1982 349 354 Harrak Amir Assyria and Hanilgalbat A historical reconstruction of the bilateral relations from the middle of the 14th to the end of the 12th centuries BC Texte und Studien zur Orientalistik 400 Hildesheim Olms 1987 7 Kelly Buccellati Marilyn The Urkesh Mittani Horizon Ceramic Evidence talugaes wittes 2020 237 256 Kuhne Cord Imperial Mittani An Attempt at Historical Reconstruction In David I Owen and Gernot Wilhelm eds Studies in the Civilization and Culture of Nuzi and the Hurrians 10 pp 203 221 1999 ISBN 9781883053505 Kuhne Cord Politische Szenerie und internationale Beziehungen Vorderasiens um die Mitte des 2 Jahrtausends vor Chr zugleich ein Konzept der Kurzchronologie Mit einer Zeittafel In Hans Jorg Nissen Johannes Renger eds Mesopotamien und seine Nachbarn Politische und kulturelle Wechselbeziehungen im Alten Orient vom 4 bis 1 Jahrtausend v Chr Berliner Beitrage zum Vorderen Orient 1 Berlin Reimer 1982 203 264 Maidman Maynard P Mittanni Royalty and Empire How Far Back Canadian Society for Mesopotamian Studies Journal 11 2018 15 28 Novak Mirko Mittani Empire and the Question of Absolute Chronology Some Archaeological Considerations In Manfred Bietak Ernst Czerny eds The Synchronisation of Civilisations in the Eastern Mediterranean in the Second Millennium BC III Osterreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften Denkschrift Band XXXVII Wien 2007 ISBN 978 3 7001 3527 2 pp 389 401 Starr R F S Nuzi London 1938 Thieme Paul 1960 The Aryan Gods of the Mitanni Treaties Journal of the American Oriental Society 80 4 301 317 doi 10 2307 595878 ISSN 0003 0279 JSTOR 595878 von Dassow E David I Owen Gernot Wilhelm State and Society in the Late Bronze Age Alalah under the Mittani Empire Studies on the Civilization and Culture of Nuzi and the Hurrians 17 ed David I Owen and Gernot Wilhelm Bethesda 2008 ISBN 9781934309148 8 von Dassow Eva Alalaḫ between Mittani and Ḫatti Asia Anteriore Antica Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Cultures 2 2020 196 226 Weidner Assyrien und Hanilgalbat Ugaritica 6 1969 Wilhelm Gernot The Hurrians Aris amp Philips Warminster 1989 ISBN 9780856684425External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mitanni Mitanni livius org Dutch excavations at Tell Sabi Abyad Iraq s drought unveils 3 400 year old palace of mysterious empire Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mitanni amp oldid 1199617477, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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