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A Hittite Scribal Tradition Predating the Tablet Collections of Ḫattuša?
This article discusses the origins of a group of four Hittite OS tablets, which share some unique and peculiar features with respect to their shape, spelling conventions and palaeography.
Alwin Kloekhorst, W. Waal
semanticscholar +1 more source
Adapting to New Contexts. Cuneiform in Anatolia [PDF]
This article focuses on cuneiform and scribal education in Anatolia. It attempts to trace some of the developments in the corpus of knowledge and training when it let the confines of its initial area of relevance and was received in Anatolia by the ...
Weeden, Mark
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HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL HERITAGE OF TURKEY AS А TOURIST DESTINATION
The paper focuses on the objects of historical and cultural heritage of Turkey, included in the UNESCO World Heritage List. The purpose of the research is to draw attention of travel agencies to the centuries-long history of Turkey to include some ...
L. Yu. Kitova
doaj
"Da wurden diese zwei großen Länder zu einem Land". Die Beziehungen zwischen Hattusa und Ägypten im Lichte ihrer diplomatischen Korrespondenz [PDF]
Der ägyptisch-hethitische Friedensvertrag wurde nach der Schlacht bei Kadesch und jahrelangen Grenzstreitigkeiten im Jahr 21 der Regierungszeit Ramses II. zwischen Ramses II. und dem Hethiterkönig Hattusili III. geschlossen.
Quack, Joachim Friedrich
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Survey and Analysis of Hieroglyphic Inscriptions in the Postern of Yerkapı–Ḫattuša
Yerkapı, a prominent structure within Ḫattuša, the capital of the Hittite Empire (17th–12th century BC), exemplifies the sophisticated architectural and cultural practices of this ancient civilisation.
Leopoldo Repola +4 more
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State Correspondence in the Hittite World [PDF]
Chapter surveys the corpus of letters between officials and the royal family to throw light on mechanisms of communication and decision-making within the Late Bronze Age Hittite ...
Weeden, Mark
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Sacked and Cursed? New data on the transition from the city-state to the Hittite capital Hattuša
When: Karum Period: First centuries of the 2nd millennium B.C. when Assyrian and Anatolian merchants took part in large-scale commercial exchanges between Aššur and central Anatolia.
Néhémie Strupler
semanticscholar +1 more source
Tuwati and Wasusarma: Imitating the behaviour of Assyria [PDF]
This essay reviews the evidence concerning the Tabalian king Wasusarma and his father Tuwati, who appear in Neo-Assyrian and Urartian annals. The context for the removal of Wasusarma (Uassurme) from power by the Assyrian king is assumed to have lain in ...
Akdoğan +51 more
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The Storm-Gods of the Ancient Near East: Summary, Synthesis, Recent Studies. Part II [PDF]
In many regions of the ancient Near East, not least in Upper Mesopotamia, Syria and Anatolia where agriculture relied mainly on rainfall, storm-gods ranked among the most prominent gods in the local panthea or were even regarded as divine kings, ruling ...
Schwemer, Daniel
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The subject of this study is Aškašipa, a god mentioned in Akkadian and Hittite cuneiform texts dating to the second millennium BC. Aškašipa is morphologically a combination of the word aška- (/door) and the suffix -šipa/-zipa (/spirit).
Ali Özcan
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