Information about Neo-hittite
The states that are called Neo-Hittite, or more recently Syro-Hittite, were Luwian, Aramaic and Phoenician-speaking political entities of Iron Age northern Syria and southern Anatolia that arose following the collapse of the Hittite Empire around 1180 BC and lasted until roughly 700 BC. The term "Neo-Hittite" is sometimes reserved specifically for the Luwian-speaking principalities like Melid (Malatya) and Karkamish (Carchemish), although in a wider sense the broader cultural term "Syro-Hittite" is now applied to all the entities that arose in south-central Anatolia following the Hittite collapse — such as Tabal and Quwê — as well as those of northern and coastal Syria [1].
The collapse of the Hittite Empire is usually associated with the gradual decline of the Eastern Mediterranean trade networks and the resulting collapse of major Late Bronze Age cities in the Levantine coast, Anatolia and the Aegean [2]. It is understood to have culminated in the final (apparently peaceful) abandonment of Hattusa (modern Bogazkoy), the Hittite capital, ca. 1180-1175 BC. Following this collapse of large cities and the Hittite state, the Early Iron Age in northern Mesopotamia saw a dispersal of settlements and ruralization, with the appearance of large numbers of hamlets, villages, and farmsteads. [3] Syro-Hittite states emerged in the process of such major landscape transformation, in the form of regional states with new political structure and cultural affiliations. David Hawkins was able to trace a dynastic link between the Hittite imperial dynasty and the "Great Kings" and "Country-lords" of Melid and Karkamish of the Early Iron Age, proving an uninterrupted continuity between the Late Bronze Age and the Early Iron Age at those sites; [4]. thereby the old "Dark Age" hypothesis of a chaotic illiterate interregnum has been discredited.
Some scholars have associated the collapse of Late Bronze age palace economies with the so-called invasion of "sea peoples", attested in Egyptian texts at the time. Having found no reliable support from archaeological evidence, archaeologists and ancient historians now largely believe that the movement of the "sea-peoples" was probably a result and not the cause of the collapse, involving unrelated populations around the Mediterranean who were dislocated by the declining exchange network.
Aside from literary evidence from inscriptions, the uninterrupted cultural continuity from the Late Bronze Age to the Early Iron Age is now further confirmed by the recent archaeological work at the sites of Aleppo (Temple of the Storm God on the Citadel)[5] and Ayn Dara (Temple of Ishtar-Shawushka)[6], where temples built in the Late Bronze age continue into the Iron Age without hiatus, and those temples witness multiple rebuildings in the Early Iron Age.
The northern group includes:
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مدينة حلب
City of Aleppo
Citadel of Aleppo
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مدينة حلب
City of Aleppo
Citadel of Aleppo
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Late Bronze Age-Early Iron Age transition
- Further information: Bronze Age collapse
The collapse of the Hittite Empire is usually associated with the gradual decline of the Eastern Mediterranean trade networks and the resulting collapse of major Late Bronze Age cities in the Levantine coast, Anatolia and the Aegean [2]. It is understood to have culminated in the final (apparently peaceful) abandonment of Hattusa (modern Bogazkoy), the Hittite capital, ca. 1180-1175 BC. Following this collapse of large cities and the Hittite state, the Early Iron Age in northern Mesopotamia saw a dispersal of settlements and ruralization, with the appearance of large numbers of hamlets, villages, and farmsteads. [3] Syro-Hittite states emerged in the process of such major landscape transformation, in the form of regional states with new political structure and cultural affiliations. David Hawkins was able to trace a dynastic link between the Hittite imperial dynasty and the "Great Kings" and "Country-lords" of Melid and Karkamish of the Early Iron Age, proving an uninterrupted continuity between the Late Bronze Age and the Early Iron Age at those sites; [4]. thereby the old "Dark Age" hypothesis of a chaotic illiterate interregnum has been discredited.
Some scholars have associated the collapse of Late Bronze age palace economies with the so-called invasion of "sea peoples", attested in Egyptian texts at the time. Having found no reliable support from archaeological evidence, archaeologists and ancient historians now largely believe that the movement of the "sea-peoples" was probably a result and not the cause of the collapse, involving unrelated populations around the Mediterranean who were dislocated by the declining exchange network.
Aside from literary evidence from inscriptions, the uninterrupted cultural continuity from the Late Bronze Age to the Early Iron Age is now further confirmed by the recent archaeological work at the sites of Aleppo (Temple of the Storm God on the Citadel)[5] and Ayn Dara (Temple of Ishtar-Shawushka)[6], where temples built in the Late Bronze age continue into the Iron Age without hiatus, and those temples witness multiple rebuildings in the Early Iron Age.
List of Syro-Hittite states
The Syro-Hittite states may be divided into two groups: a northern group where Hittite rulers remained in power, and a southern group where Aramaeans came to rule from about 1000 BC.[7][8]The northern group includes:
- Tabal or Tubal. It may have included a group of city states called the Tyanitis (Tuwana, Tunna, Hupisna, Shinukhtu, Ishtunda)
- Melid or Milid or Kammanu (modern Malatya)
- Hilakku
- Quwê or Que, Qawe (with a stronghold at modern Karatepe)
- Gurgum or Marqasi
- Kummuh or Kummuhu
- Karkamish (a.k.a. Carchemish, Gargamiš)
- Unqi or Hattina or Pattina (with the city of Kinalua or Kalneh)
- Sam'al or Bit-Gabbari (formerly, under Hittite rule, called Ya'diya), cities: Sam'al (Samalla, modern Zincirli), Lutihu
- Bit-Adini, with the city of Til Barsip
- Bit-Bahiani (Tell Halaf/Guzana)
- Bit Agusi, with the cities of Arpad (Arpadda), Napigu (Nampigi, Lîta-Aššur, Manbiğ), and (later on) Aleppo
- Hatarikka-Luhuti (or Lu'aš), the capital city of which was at first Aleppo (Halman), and then Hatarikka (Biblical Hadrach)
- Hama or Hamat
Inscriptions
Luwian monumental inscriptions in Anatolian hieroglyphs, are uninterruptedly continued from the thirteenth-century Hittite imperial monuments to the Early Iron Age Syro-Hittite inscriptions of Karkamish, Melid, Aleppo and elsewhere [9]. Luwian hieroglyphs was chosen by many of the Syro-Hittite regional kingdoms for their monumental inscriptions, which often appear in bi or tri-lingual inscriptions with Aramaic, Phoenician or Akkadian versions. The Early Iron Age in Northern Mesopotamia also saw a gradual spread of alphabetic writing in Aramaic and Phoenician. During the cultural interactions on the Levantine coast of Syro-Palestine and North Syria in the tenth through eighth centuries BC, Greeks and Phrygians adopted the alphabetic writing from the Phoenicians. [10].Notes
1. ^ Hawkins, John David; 1982a. “Neo-Hittite States in Syria and Anatolia” in Cambridge Ancient History (2nd ed.) 3.1: 372-441. Also: Hawkins, John David; 1995. "The Political Geography of North Syria and South-East Anatolia in the Neo-Assyrian Period" in Neo-Assyrian Geography, Mario Liverani (ed.), Università di Roma “La Sapienza,” Dipartimento di Scienze storiche, archeologiche e anthropologiche dell’Antichità , Quaderni di Geografia Storica 5: Roma: Sargon srl, 87-101.
2. ^ See Hawkins, John David; 1994. “The end of the Bronze age in Anatolia: new light from recent discoveries,” in Anatolian Iron Ages 3: Proceedings of the Third Anatolian Iron Ages Colloquium, Altan Çilingiroğlu and David H. French (eds.); The British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara Monograph 16: London, 91-94.
3. ^ See Wilkinson, Tony J.; 2003. Archaeological landscapes of the Near East. Tucson: The University of Arizona Press.
4. ^ See "Karkamish" and "Melid" in Hawkins, John David; 2000. Corpus of Hieroglyphic Luwian Inscriptions. (3 vols) De Gruyter: Berlin. Also: Hawkins, John David; 1995b. “Great Kings and Country Lords at Malatya and Karkamis” in Studio Historiae Ardens: Ancient Near Eastern Studies Presented to Philo H.J. Houwink ten Cate, Theo P.J. van den Hout and Johan de Roos (eds.), Istanbul: 75-86.
5. ^ Kohlmeyer, Kay; 2000a. Der Tempel des Wettergottes von Aleppo. Münster: Rhema.
6. ^ Abū Assaf, Alī; 1990. Der Tempel von ءAin Dārā. Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern.
7. ^ Tübinger Bibelatlas / Tübingen Bible Atlas. Siegfried Mittmann, Götz Schmitt (eds.), Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 2001, Map B IV 13-14
8. ^ O.R. Gurney, The Hittites. Harmondsworth: Pelican, 2nd ed., 1976 = 1954. p. 39-46.
9. ^ Hawkins, John David; 1986b. “Writing in Anatolia: imported and indigenous systems,” WA 17: 363-376.
10. ^ Brixhe, C. and M. Lejeune (1984). Corpus des inscriptions paléo-phrygiennes. Paris.
2. ^ See Hawkins, John David; 1994. “The end of the Bronze age in Anatolia: new light from recent discoveries,” in Anatolian Iron Ages 3: Proceedings of the Third Anatolian Iron Ages Colloquium, Altan Çilingiroğlu and David H. French (eds.); The British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara Monograph 16: London, 91-94.
3. ^ See Wilkinson, Tony J.; 2003. Archaeological landscapes of the Near East. Tucson: The University of Arizona Press.
4. ^ See "Karkamish" and "Melid" in Hawkins, John David; 2000. Corpus of Hieroglyphic Luwian Inscriptions. (3 vols) De Gruyter: Berlin. Also: Hawkins, John David; 1995b. “Great Kings and Country Lords at Malatya and Karkamis” in Studio Historiae Ardens: Ancient Near Eastern Studies Presented to Philo H.J. Houwink ten Cate, Theo P.J. van den Hout and Johan de Roos (eds.), Istanbul: 75-86.
5. ^ Kohlmeyer, Kay; 2000a. Der Tempel des Wettergottes von Aleppo. Münster: Rhema.
6. ^ Abū Assaf, Alī; 1990. Der Tempel von ءAin Dārā. Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern.
7. ^ Tübinger Bibelatlas / Tübingen Bible Atlas. Siegfried Mittmann, Götz Schmitt (eds.), Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 2001, Map B IV 13-14
8. ^ O.R. Gurney, The Hittites. Harmondsworth: Pelican, 2nd ed., 1976 = 1954. p. 39-46.
9. ^ Hawkins, John David; 1986b. “Writing in Anatolia: imported and indigenous systems,” WA 17: 363-376.
10. ^ Brixhe, C. and M. Lejeune (1984). Corpus des inscriptions paléo-phrygiennes. Paris.
See also
External links
- http://www.hp.uab.edu/image_archive/uf/ufg.html
- http://oi.uchicago.edu/OI/MUS/GALLERY/EAST/Neo-Hittite-sphinx.html
- http://www.bible-history.com/ancient_art/orthostat_relief_hunting_scene.html
- http://www.pbase.com/andrys/image/38738758
Luwian
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: —
ISO 639-3: either:
xlu —
hlu — Luwian (sometimes spelled Luvian
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Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: —
ISO 639-3: either:
xlu —
hlu — Luwian (sometimes spelled Luvian
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Aramaic
Writing system: Aramaic abjad, Syriac abjad, Hebrew abjad, Mandaic alphabet with a handfull of inscriptions found in Demotic[2] and Chinese[3] characters.
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Writing system: Aramaic abjad, Syriac abjad, Hebrew abjad, Mandaic alphabet with a handfull of inscriptions found in Demotic[2] and Chinese[3] characters.
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Phoenician was a language originally spoken in the coastal region then called Pūt in Ancient Egyptian, Canaan in Phoenician, Hebrew, and Aramaic, and Phoenicia in Greek and Latin.
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Iron Age was the stage in the development of any people in which tools and weapons whose main ingredient was iron were prominent. The adoption of this material coincided with other changes in some past societies often including differing agricultural practices, religious beliefs
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Anthem
Homat el Diyar
Guardians of the Land
Capital
(and largest city) Damascus
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Homat el Diyar
Guardians of the Land
Capital
(and largest city) Damascus
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Hittites were an ancient people from Kaneš who spoke an Indo-European language, and established a kingdom centered at Hattusa (Hittite URUḪattuša) in north-central Anatolia from the 18th century BC.
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Malatya (Hittite: Milid; Greek: Μαλάτεια, Malateia; Armenian: Մալաթիա, Malatia
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Carchemish (called Europus by the Romans) was an important ancient city of the Mitanni and Hittite empires, now on the frontier between Turkey and Syria. It was the location of an important battle between the Babylonians and Egyptians, mentioned in the Bible.
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Not to be confused with Tubal.
Tabal (Bib. Tubal, Gk. Τιβαρηνοί Tibarenoi, Lat...... Read more.
Quwê – also spelled Que, Kue, Qeve, Coa, Kuê and Keveh – was a "Neo-Hittite" Assyrian vassal state or province at various times from the 9th century BC to shortly after the death of Ashurbanipal around 627 BCE in the lowlands of
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The Bronze Age collapse is the name of the Dark Age period of history of the Ancient Middle East extending between the collapse of the Mycenaean kingdoms, the Hittite Empire in Anatolia and Syria, and the Egyptian Empire in Syria and Palestine between 1206 and 1150 BC, down to the
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State Party Turkey
Type Cultural
Criteria i, ii, iii, iv
Reference 377
Region Europe and North America
Inscription History
Inscription 1986 (10th Session)
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Type Cultural
Criteria i, ii, iii, iv
Reference 377
Region Europe and North America
Inscription History
Inscription 1986 (10th Session)
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Hittites were an ancient people from Kaneš who spoke an Indo-European language, and established a kingdom centered at Hattusa (Hittite URUḪattuša) in north-central Anatolia from the 18th century BC.
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Mesopotamia was a cradle of civilization geographically located between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, largely corresponding to modern-day Iraq. Sumer in southern Mesopotamia is commonly regarded as the world's earliest civilization.
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nȝ ḫȝt.w n pȝ ym[3][4]) in his Great Karnak Inscription.[5] Although some scholars believe that they "invaded" Cyprus, Hatti and the Levant, this hypothesis is disputed.
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- For other meanings, see Aleppo (disambiguation). Halab redirects here; for other meanings, see Halab (disambiguation).
مدينة حلب
City of Aleppo
Citadel of Aleppo
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Not to be confused with Tubal.
Tabal (Bib. Tubal, Gk. Τιβαρηνοί Tibarenoi, Lat...... Read more.
Malatya (Hittite: Milid; Greek: Μαλάτεια, Malateia; Armenian: Մալաթիա, Malatia
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Quwê – also spelled Que, Kue, Qeve, Coa, Kuê and Keveh – was a "Neo-Hittite" Assyrian vassal state or province at various times from the 9th century BC to shortly after the death of Ashurbanipal around 627 BCE in the lowlands of
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Karatepe, ("Black Tell") Osmaniye Province Turkey, in the Taurus Mountains, on the right bank of the Ceyhan Nehri, about 23 km from Kadirli, is an ancient city of Cilicia that controlled a passage from eastern Anatolia to the plain of north Syria.
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Carchemish (called Europus by the Romans) was an important ancient city of the Mitanni and Hittite empires, now on the frontier between Turkey and Syria. It was the location of an important battle between the Babylonians and Egyptians, mentioned in the Bible.
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Zincirli (also Zinjirli, Zenjirli, Senjirli; Turkish: Zincirli Höyük) is an archaeological site at the location of the ancient Hittite city of Sam'al. It is located in the Anti-Taurus Mountains of south-central Turkey.
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Til Barsip, or Til Barsib, modern Tell Ahmar, is an ancient site situated by the Euphrates river in Syria.
The site was inhabited as early as the Neolithic period, but it is the remains of the Iron Age city which is the most important settlement at Tell Ahmar.
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The site was inhabited as early as the Neolithic period, but it is the remains of the Iron Age city which is the most important settlement at Tell Ahmar.
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Tell Halaf (Arabic: تل حلف) is an archaeological site in the Al Hasakah governorate of northeastern Syria, near the Turkish border, just opposite Ceylanpınar.
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Arpad was a city located in north-western Syria. Today the site is known as Tell Rif'at. In 743 BCE, Assyrian king Tiglath-pileser III led a military expedition to Syria, defeating there an army of Urartu.
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- For other meanings, see Aleppo (disambiguation). Halab redirects here; for other meanings, see Halab (disambiguation).
مدينة حلب
City of Aleppo
Citadel of Aleppo
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Hama (Arabic: حماه, meaning fortress) is a city on the banks of the Orontes river in central Syria. It is the provincial capital of the Hama Governorate.
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Luwian
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: —
ISO 639-3: either:
xlu —
hlu — Luwian (sometimes spelled Luvian
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Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: —
ISO 639-3: either:
xlu —
hlu — Luwian (sometimes spelled Luvian
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Anatolian hieroglyphs are an indigenous hieroglyphic script native to western Anatolia first appears on Luwian royal seals, from ca. 2000 BC, used to record the Hieroglyphic Luwian language.
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