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Tarḫunz

Tarḫunz (stem: Tarḫunt-) was the weather god and chief god of the Luwians, a people of Bronze Age and early Iron Age Anatolia. He is closely associated with the Hittite god Tarḫunna and the Hurrian god Teshub.

Tarhunza of Aleppo

Name edit

The name of the Proto-Anatolian weather god can be reconstructed as *Tṛḫu-ent- ("conquering"), a participle form of the Proto-Indo-European root *terh2, "to cross over, pass through, overcome". It has cognates in Hittite tarḫu-, Latin trans-, Dutch door, German durch, and English through.[1][2] The same name was used in almost all Anatolian languages: Hittite Tarḫunna-; Carian Trquδ-; Milyan Trqqñt-, and Lycian: Trqqas (A), Trqqiz (B), who has been identified with Zeus.[3][4][2]

Norbert Oettinger has argued that the functions of the Anatolian weather god ultimately come from the Proto-Indo-European god Perkwunos, but that they did not preserve the old name to coin instead the new epithet *Tṛḫu-ent- ("conquering"), which sounded close to the name of the Hattian Storm-god Taru.[1]

In Luwian cuneiform of the Bronze Age, his name appears as Tarḫunt- (Tarḫuwant- in the oldest texts).[5] He is also named using the Sumerograms dU ("God 10") or dIM ("God Wind"). In hieroglyphic Luwian, his name was written as Tarhunza- and Tarhunta- or with the ideograms (DEUS) TONITRUS ("God Thunder").

The name Tarhunt- is also cognate to the present participle turvant-, also meaning "vanquishing, conquering", an epithet of Vedic deity Indra.[6][7][8]

Onomastic legacy edit

The god's name often appears in personal names. The oldest example is "Tarḫuan", known from a 19th-century BC Hittite text from Kültepe.[9] Among the Luwians, it was customary for people to bear a simple god's name, but names were often combined. In the Bronze Age and Early Iron Age, these names are very common. The latest examples derive from Hellenistic southern Anatolia, like Tarkumbios (Ταρκυμβίος, luw. *Tarhun-piya- "Tarhun-Gift“) or Trokombigremis (Τροκομβίγρεμις; *Tarhun-pihra-mi- "Shining Tarhun") which are attested in Cilicia.[10]

Further attestations of the deity's name appear as Tarhundaradu, a king of Arzawa, and variation Tarhunnaradu, believed to be the Hittite version of the former, and both referring to the same person, attested in the Ortaköy Letters.[11][12] In a 2022 paper, scholar Ignasi Xavier Adiego [es] postulates the existence of "four different Luwian (and Luwic) stems: Tarhu̯ant-/Tarhunt-, Tarhun-, Tarhu- and Tarhunza". In addition, following Starke, he adduces further onomastic evidence, namely, a royal scribe's name Tarḫu(n)mii̯a, Cilician names Ταρκυννις, Ταρκυμ-βιας, Τροκον-βιας, Τροκομ-βιγρεμις, Τροκον-γιλανις; and a Lycian name Τροκομ-μας.[13]

Additionally, the Hittite city of Tarhuntassa was named after the Luwian weather god.[14]

Description edit

 
Tarhunza of the vineyard; İvriz relief

The Luwian weather god retained his Indo-European roots more clearly than the Hittite weather god Tarḫunna.[15] Thus, he was less closely linked with the bull, which was common in Anatolia, than with the horse. According to the ritual against horse-plague of Uḫḫamuwa in Arzawa, the horses of the weather god were fed and his chariot was oiled with sheep fat.[16]

The various Luwian epithets of Tarhunz indicate his functions. He was 'powerful' (cuneiform: dU muwatalla/i-; hieroglyphic: muwatalis Tarhunz) and 'helpful' (cuneiform: dU warraḫitaššaš; "Tarhunz the Helper"), but also 'stern' (cuneiform: tapattanašši- dU). Thus, in Iron Age depictions, Tarhunz is shown slaying enemies with his axe. In battle he rushed ahead of the king, ensuring victory, and he could therefore be referred to as "Tarhunz of the (battle)field" (cuneiform: immarašša- dIM) or "Tarhunz of the commander" (hieroglyphic: kuwalanassis Tarhunz). The weather god is also connected with mountains (cuneiform: ariyattališ dIM-anz; hieroglyphic: aritalasis Tarhunz; "Mountain-Tarhunz"). In Iron Age Carchemish, there was a cult of Tarhunz of Mount Arputa (Arputawanis Tarhunz). As a sky god, he was referred to as Tarhunz of the Heavens. As a shining or lightning-wielding god he bore the epithets piḫaimiš ("flashing, shining") and piḫaššaššiš ("of the thunderbolt, of the flash"). The name of the winged horse Pegasus in Greek mythology is derived from this last epithet.[17]

Personal god of Muwatalli II edit

The Hittite Great King Muwatalli II named the weather god of the thunderbolt (dU piḫaššaššiš) as his protective deity, calling him "weather god of the thunderbolt, my lord, king of heaven." By his account, the god raised him and installed him as king of the Hittite realm. His prayer to the god shows Luwian characteristics:[18]

"Weather god of the thunderbolt, glow on me like the moonlight, shine over me like the son god of heaven!"
(KUB 6.45 iii 68-70)

Tarhunz of the vineyard edit

A Luwian innovation is the idea of the weather god of the vineyard. He is first attested in a southern Anatolian vineyard ritual from the 16th century BC, in which he is called upon to make the royal vineyard thrive, along with the goddess Mamma and other divine couples, like Runtiya and Ala or Telipinu and Maliya.

During the Iron Age, Tarhunz of the vineyard (turwarasina Tarhunza) was worshipped with particular intensity in Tabal. King Warpalawas II of Tuwana (2nd half of the 8th century BC) had an imposing rock relief with a depiction of this aspect of the god erected near a productive spring at İvriz. Tarhunz is depicted as a bearded god with curly hair and a helmet. He wears a knee-length skirt and a belt, but no sword. In his left hand he holds a bunch of grapes and ears of wheat in his right hand. Animals were offered to him and in return "Plenty came down from the heavens and plenty came up from the earth." In Sam'al he appears in an Aramaic version as Hadad of the vineyard (hdd krmn 'Hadad Karmîn').

Cult sites edit

Already in the early Bronze Age, Aleppo (Halpa) was a major city of the weather god. With the conquest of Syria by Suppiluliuma I (1355-1325 BC), this city was incorporated into the Hittite realm and Suppiluliuma installed his son Telipinu as priest-king of Aleppo. The temple of the weather god of Aleppo was adjusted to conform to Hittite cult. During the Iron Age, a new temple was dedicated to Tarhunz of Halpa.

Dragon slayer edit

 
Late Luwian relief from Arslantepe with the weather god and a companion battling a serpent monster

In a relief from Arslantepe, the weather god and a companion are shown battling against a snake-like water creature. This depiction recalls the Hittite Illuyanka and Hurrian Ḫedammu, a myth which is widespread in Proto-Indo-European religion and in the Near East.

The Anatolian myth was taken over into Greek mythology, in which Zeus battles with the dragon-like Typhon. It has been suggested that the myth was taken over from Cilicia in particular, since there was intensive contact between Greeks and Anatolians there from a very early date. The key locations of the myth also point in this direction: Mount Kasios in northwestern Syria and the area around Corycus in Rough Cilicia, where Luwian religion endured into the Roman period.[19]

Depiction edit

 
Jupiter Dolichenus of Heddernheim

There are no depictions from the Bronze Age that can be identified as the Luwian weather god. However, over sixty reliefs and statues of the weather god are known from the Iron Age. These can be divided into three types.[20]

In the first type of depiction, he is shown as a bearded god with a horned helmet, short skirt, and a sword hanging from his belt. In the rear hand he holds an axe and in the front hand he holds a thunderbolt. A winged sun may be depicted above his head, indicating his divine authority.

The second type depicts him similarly, but standing atop a bull. This image was used for the weather god of Aleppo, which exercised a strong influence over perceptions of Tarhunz in Syria. This depiction disappeared in the 7th century BC, but reappeared in Northern Syria at the beginning of the Roman Imperial period and was brought to central Europe as Jupiter Dolichenus, whose cult centre lay in Doliche, northwest of Carchemish. The bronze triangle of Heddernheim [de], in particular, shows obvious similarities to the Luwian depiction of Tarhunz in Northern Syria.[21]

The third type shows the weather god with ears of corn and bunches of grapes. This type is common in Tabal (Anatolia). The aforementioned İvriz relief is the best known example. This version of Tarhunz may be depicted unarmed or shown with an axe or thunderbolt.

Depictions of Tarhunz edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Hutter (2003), p. 221.
  2. ^ a b Kloekhorst, Alwin (2008). Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon. Brill. p. 835. ISBN 9789004160927.
  3. ^ Mouton, Alice; Rutherford, Ian; Yakubovich, Ilya (2013-06-07). Luwian Identities: Culture, Language and Religion Between Anatolia and the Aegean. Brill. ISBN 9789004253414.
  4. ^ Arbeitman, Yl (2000). The Asia Minor Connexion: Studies on the Pre-Greek Languages in Memory of Charles Carter. Peeters Publishers. ISBN 9789042907980.
  5. ^ Frank Starke (1990). Untersuchung zur Stammbildung des keilschrift-luwischen Nomens. Studien zu den Boǧazköy-Texten. Vol. 31. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. p. 136. ISBN 3-447-02879-3.
  6. ^ Watkins, Calvert. How to Kill a Dragon: Aspects of Indo-European Poetics. Oxford University Press. p. 344. ISBN 978-0-19-802471-2.
  7. ^ Sims-Williams, Nicholas. “A Bactrian God.” In: Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 60, no. 2 (1997): 338. doi:10.1017/S0041977X00036430.
  8. ^ Kloekhorst, Alwin. Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon. Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series 5. Leiden, The Netherlands; Boston, 2008. pp. 965, 967. https://hdl.handle.net/1887/11996
  9. ^ Thomas Zehnder (2010). Die hethitischen Frauennamen. Katalog und Interpretation. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. pp. 284 f. ISBN 978-3-447-06139-1.
  10. ^ Houwink ten Cate (1961), pp. 125–128.
  11. ^ Süel, Aygül. "Tarhunnaradu/Tarhundaradu in the Ortaköy texts". In: P. Taracha and. M. Kapełuś, (eds.). Proceedings of the Eighth International Congress of Hittitology: Warsaw, 5–9 September 2011. Warsaw: AGADE, 2014. pp. 933-940.
  12. ^ Adiego, Ignasi-Xavier. "Luwian Tarhunaza-, Cilician Τροκοναζας, Τρικοναζας". In: Indogermanische Forschungen, vol. 127, no. 1, 2022, p. 77. https://doi.org/10.1515/if-2022-0005
  13. ^ Adiego, Ignasi-Xavier. "Luwian Tarhunaza-, Cilician Τροκοναζας, Τρικοναζας". In: Indogermanische Forschungen, vol. 127, no. 1, 2022, pp. 77-78. https://doi.org/10.1515/if-2022-0005
  14. ^ Matessi, Alvise. "The Making of Hittite Imperial Landscapes: Territoriality and Balance of Power in South-Central Anatolia during the Late Bronze Age". In: Journal of Ancient Near Eastern History, vol. 3, no. 2, 2016. p. 146. https://doi.org/10.1515/janeh-2017-0004
  15. ^ Hutter (2003), p. 222.
  16. ^ HT 1 ii 34ff.
  17. ^ Manfred Hutter (1995). "Der luwische Wettergott piḫaššašši und der griechische Pegasos". In Michaela Ofitsch; Christian Zinko (eds.). Studia Onomastica et Indogermanica. Festschrift für Fritz Lochner von Hüttenbach zum 65. Geburtstag. Graz: Leykam. pp. 79–97. ISBN 3-7011-0015-2.
  18. ^ Hutter (2003), p. 223.
  19. ^ Houwink ten Cate (1961), pp. 203–220.
  20. ^ Sanna Aro (2003). "Art and Architecture". In In: H. Craig Melchert (ed.). The Luwians. Handbuch der Orientalistik. Vol. 1. Leiden: Brill. pp. 317ff. ISBN 90-04-13009-8.
  21. ^ Guy Bunnens (2004). "The Storm-God in Northern Syria and Southern Anatolia from Hadad of Aleppo to Jupiter Dolichenus". In Manfred Hutter (ed.). Offizielle Religion, lokale Kulte und individuelle Religiosität. Ugarit-Verlag. pp. 57–82. ISBN 3-934628-58-3.

Bibliography edit

  • Haas, Volkert (1994). Geschichte der hethitischen Religion. Handbuch der Orientalistik. Vol. 1. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-9-004-09799-5.
  • Hutter, Manfred (2003). "Aspects of Luwian Religion". In H. Craig Melchert (ed.). The Luwians. Handbuch der Orientalistik. Vol. 1. Leiden: Brill. pp. 211–280. ISBN 90-04-13009-8.
  • Houwink ten Cate, Philo Hendrik Jan (1961). The Luwian Population Groups of Lycia and Cilicia Aspera During the Hellenistic Period. Leiden: E. J. Brill.

Further reading edit

  • Weeden, Mark (2018). "The Good God, the Wine-god and the Storm-god of the Vineyard". Die Welt des Orients. 48 (2): 330–56. doi:10.13109/wdor.2018.48.2.330. JSTOR 26606982. S2CID 166277083..
  • Zolotnikova, Olga. "The Storm-God with a Battle-Axe on the Early 1st Millennium BC Reliefs from Eastern Anatolia/Northern Syria". In: Proceedings of the 9th International Congress on the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East: June 9–13, 2014, University of Basel. Volume 1: Travelling Images - Transfer and Transformation of Visual Ideas; Dealing with the Past: Finds, Booty, Gifts, Spoils, Heirlooms; Collections at Risk: Sustainable Strategies for Managing Near Eastern Archaeolo, edited by Kaelin Oskar, Stucky Rolf, and Jamieson Andrew. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2016. pp. 295–306. www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctvc770z3.26.

tarḫunz, stem, tarḫunt, weather, chief, luwians, people, bronze, early, iron, anatolia, closely, associated, with, hittite, tarḫunna, hurrian, teshub, tarhunza, aleppo, contents, name, onomastic, legacy, description, personal, muwatalli, tarhunz, vineyard, cul. Tarḫunz stem Tarḫunt was the weather god and chief god of the Luwians a people of Bronze Age and early Iron Age Anatolia He is closely associated with the Hittite god Tarḫunna and the Hurrian god Teshub Tarhunza of Aleppo Contents 1 Name 1 1 Onomastic legacy 2 Description 2 1 Personal god of Muwatalli II 2 2 Tarhunz of the vineyard 3 Cult sites 4 Dragon slayer 5 Depiction 5 1 Depictions of Tarhunz 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 Further readingName editThe name of the Proto Anatolian weather god can be reconstructed as Tṛḫu ent conquering a participle form of the Proto Indo European root terh2 to cross over pass through overcome It has cognates in Hittite tarḫu Latin trans Dutch door German durch and English through 1 2 The same name was used in almost all Anatolian languages Hittite Tarḫunna Carian Trqud Milyan Trqqnt and Lycian Trqqas A Trqqiz B who has been identified with Zeus 3 4 2 Norbert Oettinger has argued that the functions of the Anatolian weather god ultimately come from the Proto Indo European god Perkwunos but that they did not preserve the old name to coin instead the new epithet Tṛḫu ent conquering which sounded close to the name of the Hattian Storm god Taru 1 In Luwian cuneiform of the Bronze Age his name appears as Tarḫunt Tarḫuwant in the oldest texts 5 He is also named using the Sumerograms dU God 10 or dIM God Wind In hieroglyphic Luwian his name was written as Tarhunza and Tarhunta or with the ideograms DEUS TONITRUS God Thunder The name Tarhunt is also cognate to the present participle turvant also meaning vanquishing conquering an epithet of Vedic deity Indra 6 7 8 Onomastic legacy edit The god s name often appears in personal names The oldest example is Tarḫuan known from a 19th century BC Hittite text from Kultepe 9 Among the Luwians it was customary for people to bear a simple god s name but names were often combined In the Bronze Age and Early Iron Age these names are very common The latest examples derive from Hellenistic southern Anatolia like Tarkumbios Tarkymbios luw Tarhun piya Tarhun Gift or Trokombigremis Trokombigremis Tarhun pihra mi Shining Tarhun which are attested in Cilicia 10 Further attestations of the deity s name appear as Tarhundaradu a king of Arzawa and variation Tarhunnaradu believed to be the Hittite version of the former and both referring to the same person attested in the Ortakoy Letters 11 12 In a 2022 paper scholar Ignasi Xavier Adiego es postulates the existence of four different Luwian and Luwic stems Tarhu ant Tarhunt Tarhun Tarhu and Tarhunza In addition following Starke he adduces further onomastic evidence namely a royal scribe s name Tarḫu n mii a Cilician names Tarkynnis Tarkym bias Trokon bias Trokom bigremis Trokon gilanis and a Lycian name Trokom mas 13 Additionally the Hittite city of Tarhuntassa was named after the Luwian weather god 14 Description edit nbsp Tarhunza of the vineyard Ivriz relief The Luwian weather god retained his Indo European roots more clearly than the Hittite weather god Tarḫunna 15 Thus he was less closely linked with the bull which was common in Anatolia than with the horse According to the ritual against horse plague of Uḫḫamuwa in Arzawa the horses of the weather god were fed and his chariot was oiled with sheep fat 16 The various Luwian epithets of Tarhunz indicate his functions He was powerful cuneiform dU muwatalla i hieroglyphic muwatalis Tarhunz and helpful cuneiform dU warraḫitassas Tarhunz the Helper but also stern cuneiform tapattanassi dU Thus in Iron Age depictions Tarhunz is shown slaying enemies with his axe In battle he rushed ahead of the king ensuring victory and he could therefore be referred to as Tarhunz of the battle field cuneiform immarassa dIM or Tarhunz of the commander hieroglyphic kuwalanassis Tarhunz The weather god is also connected with mountains cuneiform ariyattalis dIM anz hieroglyphic aritalasis Tarhunz Mountain Tarhunz In Iron Age Carchemish there was a cult of Tarhunz of Mount Arputa Arputawanis Tarhunz As a sky god he was referred to as Tarhunz of the Heavens As a shining or lightning wielding god he bore the epithets piḫaimis flashing shining and piḫassassis of the thunderbolt of the flash The name of the winged horse Pegasus in Greek mythology is derived from this last epithet 17 Personal god of Muwatalli II edit The Hittite Great King Muwatalli II named the weather god of the thunderbolt dU piḫassassis as his protective deity calling him weather god of the thunderbolt my lord king of heaven By his account the god raised him and installed him as king of the Hittite realm His prayer to the god shows Luwian characteristics 18 Weather god of the thunderbolt glow on me like the moonlight shine over me like the son god of heaven KUB 6 45 iii 68 70 Tarhunz of the vineyard edit A Luwian innovation is the idea of the weather god of the vineyard He is first attested in a southern Anatolian vineyard ritual from the 16th century BC in which he is called upon to make the royal vineyard thrive along with the goddess Mamma and other divine couples like Runtiya and Ala or Telipinu and Maliya During the Iron Age Tarhunz of the vineyard turwarasina Tarhunza was worshipped with particular intensity in Tabal King Warpalawas II of Tuwana 2nd half of the 8th century BC had an imposing rock relief with a depiction of this aspect of the god erected near a productive spring at Ivriz Tarhunz is depicted as a bearded god with curly hair and a helmet He wears a knee length skirt and a belt but no sword In his left hand he holds a bunch of grapes and ears of wheat in his right hand Animals were offered to him and in return Plenty came down from the heavens and plenty came up from the earth In Sam al he appears in an Aramaic version as Hadad of the vineyard hdd krmn Hadad Karmin Cult sites editAlready in the early Bronze Age Aleppo Halpa was a major city of the weather god With the conquest of Syria by Suppiluliuma I 1355 1325 BC this city was incorporated into the Hittite realm and Suppiluliuma installed his son Telipinu as priest king of Aleppo The temple of the weather god of Aleppo was adjusted to conform to Hittite cult During the Iron Age a new temple was dedicated to Tarhunz of Halpa Dragon slayer edit nbsp Late Luwian relief from Arslantepe with the weather god and a companion battling a serpent monster In a relief from Arslantepe the weather god and a companion are shown battling against a snake like water creature This depiction recalls the Hittite Illuyanka and Hurrian Ḫedammu a myth which is widespread in Proto Indo European religion and in the Near East The Anatolian myth was taken over into Greek mythology in which Zeus battles with the dragon like Typhon It has been suggested that the myth was taken over from Cilicia in particular since there was intensive contact between Greeks and Anatolians there from a very early date The key locations of the myth also point in this direction Mount Kasios in northwestern Syria and the area around Corycus in Rough Cilicia where Luwian religion endured into the Roman period 19 Depiction edit nbsp Jupiter Dolichenus of Heddernheim There are no depictions from the Bronze Age that can be identified as the Luwian weather god However over sixty reliefs and statues of the weather god are known from the Iron Age These can be divided into three types 20 In the first type of depiction he is shown as a bearded god with a horned helmet short skirt and a sword hanging from his belt In the rear hand he holds an axe and in the front hand he holds a thunderbolt A winged sun may be depicted above his head indicating his divine authority The second type depicts him similarly but standing atop a bull This image was used for the weather god of Aleppo which exercised a strong influence over perceptions of Tarhunz in Syria This depiction disappeared in the 7th century BC but reappeared in Northern Syria at the beginning of the Roman Imperial period and was brought to central Europe as Jupiter Dolichenus whose cult centre lay in Doliche northwest of Carchemish The bronze triangle of Heddernheim de in particular shows obvious similarities to the Luwian depiction of Tarhunz in Northern Syria 21 The third type shows the weather god with ears of corn and bunches of grapes This type is common in Tabal Anatolia The aforementioned Ivriz relief is the best known example This version of Tarhunz may be depicted unarmed or shown with an axe or thunderbolt Depictions of Tarhunz edit Adiyaman 1 Stele de inscription probably of Suppiluliuma de Adiyaman 2 Stele de inscription of Lakawani Cinekoy inscription inscription of Awariku Gokbez relief no inscription Ivriz relief inscription of Warpalawas II Keslik Stele illegible inscription Kurtul Stele de inscription of La Nigde Stele inscription of Muwaharani IISee also editLuwian religion Tarḫunna Teshub Perun Perkunas Indra Taranis Tarchon Thor NinurtaReferences edit a b Hutter 2003 p 221 a b Kloekhorst Alwin 2008 Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon Brill p 835 ISBN 9789004160927 Mouton Alice Rutherford Ian Yakubovich Ilya 2013 06 07 Luwian Identities Culture Language and Religion Between Anatolia and the Aegean Brill ISBN 9789004253414 Arbeitman Yl 2000 The Asia Minor Connexion Studies on the Pre Greek Languages in Memory of Charles Carter Peeters Publishers ISBN 9789042907980 Frank Starke 1990 Untersuchung zur Stammbildung des keilschrift luwischen Nomens Studien zu den Boǧazkoy Texten Vol 31 Wiesbaden Harrassowitz p 136 ISBN 3 447 02879 3 Watkins Calvert How to Kill a Dragon Aspects of Indo European Poetics Oxford University Press p 344 ISBN 978 0 19 802471 2 Sims Williams Nicholas A Bactrian God In Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 60 no 2 1997 338 doi 10 1017 S0041977X00036430 Kloekhorst Alwin Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon Leiden Indo European Etymological Dictionary Series 5 Leiden The Netherlands Boston 2008 pp 965 967 https hdl handle net 1887 11996 Thomas Zehnder 2010 Die hethitischen Frauennamen Katalog und Interpretation Wiesbaden Harrassowitz pp 284 f ISBN 978 3 447 06139 1 Houwink ten Cate 1961 pp 125 128 Suel Aygul Tarhunnaradu Tarhundaradu in the Ortakoy texts In P Taracha and M Kapelus eds Proceedings of the Eighth International Congress of Hittitology Warsaw 5 9 September 2011 Warsaw AGADE 2014 pp 933 940 Adiego Ignasi Xavier Luwian Tarhunaza Cilician Trokonazas Trikonazas In Indogermanische Forschungen vol 127 no 1 2022 p 77 https doi org 10 1515 if 2022 0005 Adiego Ignasi Xavier Luwian Tarhunaza Cilician Trokonazas Trikonazas In Indogermanische Forschungen vol 127 no 1 2022 pp 77 78 https doi org 10 1515 if 2022 0005 Matessi Alvise The Making of Hittite Imperial Landscapes Territoriality and Balance of Power in South Central Anatolia during the Late Bronze Age In Journal of Ancient Near Eastern History vol 3 no 2 2016 p 146 https doi org 10 1515 janeh 2017 0004 Hutter 2003 p 222 HT 1 ii 34ff Manfred Hutter 1995 Der luwische Wettergott piḫassassi und der griechische Pegasos In Michaela Ofitsch Christian Zinko eds Studia Onomastica et Indogermanica Festschrift fur Fritz Lochner von Huttenbach zum 65 Geburtstag Graz Leykam pp 79 97 ISBN 3 7011 0015 2 Hutter 2003 p 223 Houwink ten Cate 1961 pp 203 220 Sanna Aro 2003 Art and Architecture In In H Craig Melchert ed The Luwians Handbuch der Orientalistik Vol 1 Leiden Brill pp 317ff ISBN 90 04 13009 8 Guy Bunnens 2004 The Storm God in Northern Syria and Southern Anatolia from Hadad of Aleppo to Jupiter Dolichenus In Manfred Hutter ed Offizielle Religion lokale Kulte und individuelle Religiositat Ugarit Verlag pp 57 82 ISBN 3 934628 58 3 Bibliography editHaas Volkert 1994 Geschichte der hethitischen Religion Handbuch der Orientalistik Vol 1 Leiden Brill ISBN 978 9 004 09799 5 Hutter Manfred 2003 Aspects of Luwian Religion In H Craig Melchert ed The Luwians Handbuch der Orientalistik Vol 1 Leiden Brill pp 211 280 ISBN 90 04 13009 8 Houwink ten Cate Philo Hendrik Jan 1961 The Luwian Population Groups of Lycia and Cilicia Aspera During the Hellenistic Period Leiden E J Brill Further reading editWeeden Mark 2018 The Good God the Wine god and the Storm god of the Vineyard Die Welt des Orients 48 2 330 56 doi 10 13109 wdor 2018 48 2 330 JSTOR 26606982 S2CID 166277083 Zolotnikova Olga The Storm God with a Battle Axe on the Early 1st Millennium BC Reliefs from Eastern Anatolia Northern Syria In Proceedings of the 9th International Congress on the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East June 9 13 2014 University of Basel Volume 1 Travelling Images Transfer and Transformation of Visual Ideas Dealing with the Past Finds Booty Gifts Spoils Heirlooms Collections at Risk Sustainable Strategies for Managing Near Eastern Archaeolo edited by Kaelin Oskar Stucky Rolf and Jamieson Andrew Wiesbaden Harrassowitz Verlag 2016 pp 295 306 www jstor org stable j ctvc770z3 26 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tarḫunz amp oldid 1219141206, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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