Results 71 to 80 of about 18,460 (212)
Glyptic Findings with Anatolian Hieroglyphs from Kilis – Oylum Höyük
The archaeological excavations at Oylum Höyük were started in 1987 by Prof. Dr. Engin Özgen. Since 2012, they have been carried out by Prof. Dr. Atilla Engin. During these excavations, a total of eight seals or seal impressions with Anatolian hieroglyphs
Metin Alparslan
doaj +1 more source
Tularemia seroprevalence in humans in the region of the Hittite-Arzawa War (Inner Aegean Region), where the first biological weapon was used 3300 years ago. [PDF]
Davarcı İ +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
The Textual Illustration of the "Jester Scene" on the Sculptures of Alaca Höyük [PDF]
Ünal, Ahmet
core +1 more source
Kleine Beiträge zu den unpublizierten Bo-Texten (IV)
The large, six-column tablet Bo 2689 to be discussed here is partially burned. The text has recently been edited as Unpublished Bo-Fragments in Transliteration IV (= CHDS 5) no. 1 and classified as “Spring Festival in Zippalanda”.
Soysal, Oğuz
doaj +1 more source
In the Indo-European department of Leiden University, Alwin Kloekhorst has initiated a discussion on Hittite ammuk ‘me’. The central question is: where did the geminate come from?
Kortlandt, Frederik H. H.
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This study aims to evaluate the metal weapons unearthed from layer IV of Seyitömer Mound, located in Inner Anatolia, which represents the Late Colony and Old Hittite Periods, within the framework of their typological classification and counterparts ...
Rana BAŞKURT USTA
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In 1928 a Syrian peasant farmer stumbled by chance onto a funerary vault of ancient provenance about half a mile from the Mediterranean coastline of Syria and about six miles north of the modern-day city of Latakia.
Ramos, Melissa
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Elsewhere I have argued that the Indo-European verbal system can be understood in terms of its Indo-Uralic origins because the reconstructed Indo-European endings can be derived from combinations of Indo-Uralic morphemes by a series of well-motivated ...
Kortlandt, Frederik H. H.
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Gatekeepers and lock masters: the control of access in the Neo-Assyrian palaces [PDF]
Book description: This volume is intended as a tribute to the memory of the Sumerologist Jeremy Black, who died in 2004. The Sumerian phrase, ‘Your praise is sweet’ is commonly addressed to a deity at the close of a work of Sumerian literature. The scope
Radner, K
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