Results 1 to 10 of about 2,048 (152)

An interoperable catalogue of Middle and Late Bronze Age settlements in western Anatolia (c. 2000–1200 BCE) [PDF]

open access: yesScientific Data
This dataset offers a comprehensive digital catalogue of 483 archaeological settlement sites in western Anatolia dating to the Middle and Late Bronze Age (c. 2000–1200 BCE).
Alper Aşınmaz   +2 more
doaj   +2 more sources

Indoeuropean +e in Luwian

open access: yesLinguistica, 1984
In the article are presented reflections of IE short +ĕ in the cuneiform Luwian. Based on the material from DLL and ffiv it was established that IE +ĕ in the neutral positions reflects as -a- while in the non-neutral positions (before or behind ProtoLuw.
Marko Snoj
doaj   +3 more sources

The Luwian Goddess Darawa

open access: yesStudia Asiana, 2023
The PN Kammalia-Tarawa in an Old Assyrian tablet seems to be the earliest reference of the deity Darawa. The Luwian background this deity is also apparent, e.g., from the plural form DDa-ra-ú-wa-an-zi or from those texts mentioned in CTH 457 and the etymological interpretation of the divine name to the Luwian verb tarāwi(ya)-.
exaly   +2 more sources

Notes on the Karatepe Storm-god Tarhunza Usanuwami and Baal Krntryš

open access: yesAnadolu Araştırmaları, 2021
The Karatepe storm god has been defined in Luwian inscriptions as Tarhunza Usanuwami, and in the Phoenician version as Baal Krntryš. The meaning of the Krntryš epithet still maintains its mystery.
Faris Demir
doaj   +1 more source

Between Mesopotamia and Greece: Cultural influences in Cilician Coin-iconography from the Late 5th to the Early 4th Century BC

open access: yesGephyra, 2021
Our knowledge regarding Cilician coinage between the late 5th and the early 4th century BC has increased considerably in the course of the last two decades.
Wilhelm MÜSELER
doaj   +1 more source

A New Funerary Stele from Karkemish and New Values for Some Anatolian Hieroglyphic Signs

open access: yesBelleten, 2023
Karkemish is located on the West bank of Euphrates River, about 60 kilometres southeast of Gaziantep, Turkey, and 100 kilometres northeast of Aleppo, Syria.
Hasan Peker
doaj   +1 more source

A note on the Lycian tabahaza

open access: yesStudia Linguistica Universitatis Cracoviensis, 2023
In this short text, I examine the usage of the Lycian word tabahaza, highlight its possible Anatolian cognates, such as the Hittite nēpiš- ‘heaven’ and the Cuneiform Luwian tappaš- ‘id.’, analyze and ...
Marcel Nowakowski
doaj   +1 more source

ORIGINS OF THE GREEKS AND GREEK DIALECTS

open access: yesJournal of Ancient History and Archaeology, 2022
The coming of the Greeks is associated with one of the major transformations: at the beginning of the Neolithic (when the Indo-Europeans appeared there, from which the Greeks separated), at the beginning of EH, in EH II/III, and at the beginning of LH I.
Stanislav GRIGORIEV
doaj   +1 more source

Tuwati and Wasusarma: Imitating the behaviour of Assyria [PDF]

open access: yes, 2010
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
core   +1 more source

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