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ANCIENT GREEN �WISH STONE� OF HATTUSA, TURKEY

SWS International Scientific Conferences on ART and HUMANITIES - ISCAH, 2022
The territory of modern Turkey is abundant in ancient monuments of a various kind and historical periods. Among most notable ones are the ruins of the ancient Hittites capital near modern settlement of Bogazkoy / Hattusas. The remains of the stone structures located in that area have been studied for more than a century and there are many documented ...
Valdis Seglins, Agnese Kukela
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The Hittites: Hattusa and Yazïlïkaya

2003
In many ways the ancient Hittite sites of Hattusa and Yazïlïkaya are among the most distinctive sites related to the Bible in the entire Mediterranean region. Unlike the majority of ancient cities of the Bible in both Turkey and Greece, these sites are not related to the Apostle Paul and the New Testament.
Clyde E. Fant, Mitchell G. Reddish
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A View From Hattusa

2015
Around 1595 BC,1 the Hittite king Mursili I, fresh from his conquest of Aleppoin northern Syria, led his troops east to the Euphrates, and then south along the river to the city of Babylon. He attacked, stormed, plundered, and destroyed the city, taking rich spoils from it and many prisoners-of-war.
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Great Temple of Hattusa

The Great Temple, also known as Temple I, was built by the Hittites around 1600 BCE at their capital city Hattuša, located by the modern day town of Boğazkale in the central Anatolia region of Turkey. It is by far the largest of over 30 temples uncovered within the city.
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babilili-Ritual from Hattusa (CTH 718). By Gary Beckman

Journal of the American Oriental Society, 2021
The babilili-Ritual from Hattusa (CTH 718). By Gary Beckman. Mesopotamian Civilizations, vol. 19. Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 2014. Pp. xiii + 97. $49.50.
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Great Temple of Hattusa, also known as “Temple 1”

2023
The Great Temple, also known as Temple I, was built by the Hittites around 1600 BCE at their capital city Hattuša, located by the modern day town of Boğazkale in the central Anatolia region of Turkey. It is by far the largest of over 30 temples uncovered within the city.
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