| The Bronze Age in Anatolia starts
with the use of bronze, a mixture of tin and
copper. The people of this age made all their
weapons, utensils and ornaments from this alloy.
In addition to bronze they also used copper,
gold, silver and electron; an alloy of gold and
silver. A
great advance in metallurgy is notable during
this age, especially from the rich finds of gold,
silver, bronze and copper excavated. Various
vessels, jewelry, bull and stag statuettes,
ritual standards, sun-dials (as symbols of the
universe) and musical instruments were discovered
in the burial chambers of Alacahoyuk. The bull
figure plays an important role as a link between
the Neolithic and the Hittite religions. Thus,
the roots of Hatti and later Hittite religious
belief may be inferred as extending as far back
as the Neolithic Age in Anatolia.
Men were buried
with weapons, women with ornaments and toiletry
articles as well as domestic vessels and
utensils, many of them in precious metals. The
tombs themselves were rectangular pits enclosed
by rough stone walls and roofed with timber.
HATTIANS
The Hatti or
Hattians were a race of indigenous people who
lived in Central Anatolia. As they lived in the
prehistoric age before writing was introduced to
Anatolia their name has come through Hittite
sources. The Hatti gave their name to Anatolia,
which was then called the land of the Hatti.
Even the Hittites called their own kingdom the
land of the Hatti.
The influence of
the Hatti civilization is apparent in Hittite
religious rites, state and court ceremonies and
their mythology. Although they lacked a native
written tradition, these people had reached an
advanced intellectual level; a richness and
sophistication of their own Anatolian culture.
They developed true polychrome pottery and also
monumental architecture; for example, the 60-room
ground level palace at the Kultepe site. The
bronze Hatti sun-disc, with its radial lobes
representing the planets, shows the complexity of
their cosmic views.
ASSYRIAN
TRADERS
This period is
also known as the Middle Bronze Age during which
the old Assyrian state in Mesopotamia established
a trading system with Anatolia. In this period
Anatolia was divided into feudal city states
ruled by indigenous Hattians. They established
markets out of cities each of which was called "karum".
There were 20 of these karums ruled by one
central market, Kanis, located in
Kültepe. They paid tax and rent and in return,
security was granted by local rulers. Caravans
were employed which generally brought tin,
perfumes and ornaments in exchange for goods made
of silver and gold.
Written history
started in Anatolia with the introduction of the
Assyrian language, the cuneiform script and the
use of cylinder seals by the Assyrian traders.
The tablets which
date back to this period are written in cuneiform
script in the language of old Assyria. They are
written, baked, put into envelopes and then
sealed by re-baking; an example of the first use
of envelopes in the world. Most of the tablets
are about trading activities with some about
private lives of people of this age.
"The
figurative symbolism has been one of the most
revealing aspects of the finds at Kultepe,
because it emphasizes the existence of an
authentic and indigenous Anatolian culture
persisting through the vicissitudes of migration
and political change. A fully developed Anatolian
iconography persisted into later centuries,
reappearing almost unchanged in the art of the
Hittites."
HITTITES
The Hittites are a
people mentioned frequently in the Bible (Old
Testament). They were immigrant people who
arrived in Anatolia in 2000 BC. It took them 250
years to establish a kingdom in central Anatolia
after 1750 BC and their powerful Empire
flourished in the 14-13CBC until it was destroyed
in 1200 BC by the Sea Peoples.
When the Hittites,
who lived north of the Black Sea, migrated into
Anatolia that region was already occupied by
native people, the Hattians. Their arrival and
diffusion had been peaceful and accompanied by
intermarriage and alliance with the natives. So
well did the Hittites integrate themselves into
the local culture of central Anatolia that they
even adopted the worship of several native
deities.
Hittites named
their own state as the land of the Hatti. As
Naim Turfan argues, this does not show the
tolerance of the conquering Hittites, but their
meeting of a much higher level of civilization
than their own. For approximately 600 years they
continued this habit of borrowing from wherever
it suited them.
Another argument
by language archeologist, Renfrew claims in 1987
that Indo-European languages derived not from the
Russian plains but from Anatolia. The Neolithic
people of Anatolia carried their languages
together with their plows to Europe and India. In
this case the language of the Hittites did not
need to come from somewhere, on the contrary,
Hittites spoke Anatolian languages. So far
Renfrew's argument has been undisputed.
It is generally
accepted that Anitta founded the Hittite State in
the 18CBC. Hattusilis I established his capital
in the fortress city of Hattusha (Bogazkoy),
which remained the principal Hittite
administrative center. From a strategic point,
Hattusha formed an easily defensible mountain
stronghold. Hattusilis I's campaigns were into
northwestern Syria and eastward across the
Euphrates River to Mesopotamia. Control of that
region was to become a permanent objective of the
Hittites in order to increase their economic
power.
It remained for
Suppiluliumas I (1380-1346 BC), an energetic and
successful campaigner, to restore Hittite control
in Anatolia and effectively extend the borders of
his kingdom to the south and east. His major
accomplishments were the defeat of Mitanni and
conquests in Syria, including the capture of the
powerful city-state of Kargamis. His period saw
the Empire at its peak, but even so during that
time the Hittite Empire was never a single,
political unit. Hittite penetration into Syria
brought the newly revived state into conflict
with Egypt. A major battle between the Hittites
under Muwattalis and the Egyptian King Ramses II
was fought at Kadesh on the Orontes River
c.1286BC with victory going to the Hittites. They
were realistic enough to recognize the limits of
their power and far-sighted enough to appreciate
the value of peace and an alliance with Egypt.
Although there was no real victor in this battle,
each side claimed to have won.
The battle was one
of the first in history of which a tactical
description has survived. The Hittite specialist
O. R. Gurney summarizes the Egyptian text as
follows:
"The Hittite
army based on Kadesh succeeded in completely
concealing its position from the Egyptian scouts
and as the unsuspecting Egyptians advanced in
marching order towards the city and started to
pitch their camp, a strong detachment of Hittite
chariotry passed round unnoticed behind the city,
crossed the river Orontes and fell upon the
center of the Egyptian column with shattering
force. The Egyptian army would have been
annihilated, had not a detached Egyptian regiment
arrived most opportunely from another direction
and caught the Hittites unawares as they were
pillaging the camp. This lucky chance enabled the
Egyptian king to save the remainder of his forces
and to represent the battle as a great
victory."
The Peace Treaty
of Kadesh between Hattusilis III and Ramses II
insured peace between the Hittites and Egypt on
the southern border of the Empire (1284BC). It is
accepted as the first recorded international
treaty in the world. The ratification of the
treaty was followed by a cordial exchange of
letters, not only between the two kings but also
from one queen to another. Thirteen years later a
daughter of Hattusilis was married to the
Egyptian Pharaoh.
In Anatolia, the
old pattern of unrest and revolt presented
continuing dangers for the Hittite state, as
vassals sought to reassert their independence.
Beset by both internal and external pressures,
the Hittites were unable to resist the onslaught
of the Sea Peoples, who overran Anatolia about
1200BC.
Hittite Culture
In addition to the
cuneiform script imported from Mesopotamia, the
Hittites also used a picture writing form
(hieroglyphs) which can be seen on their seals
and public monuments. Their rapid adoption of a
new cuneiform script made the Hittites the first
known literate civilization of Anatolia.
Hittite culture
was an amalgamation of native Anatolian and
Hurrian elements in religion, literature and art.
The scribes of imperial Hattusha were familiar
with Sumerian, Assyrian and Babylonian texts and
perhaps to some extent with Egyptian materials as
well. Hittite culture thus drew to itself a
representative sampling of the cosmopolitan
perspectives of the ancient Near East. This is
reflected in the thousands of cuneiform tablets
uncovered in the ruins of the Hittite capital.
The pantheon of
Hittite religion included thousands of deities
many of them associated with various Anatolian
localities. The state cult was dominated by an
Anatolian deity called the Sun-goddess Arinna,
protectress of the royal dynasty. Her consort was
the Weather god Hatti. In the later
empire, strong Hurrian influence in Hittite
religion appeared with the introduction of the
goddess, Hepat, identified with the
Sun-goddess and with Teshub, who became
identified with the Weather-god. "Zeus's
wife Hera and Adam's wife Eve are the extensions
of Hittite goddess Hepat."
Hittite literature
includes historical annals, royal testaments as
well as a number of myths and legends. Many of
the latter appear to be of Hurrian origin.
They created the
best military architecture of the Near East.
Their system of offensive defense works, handed
down from the Old Kingdom, grew into a unique
type of fortification under the Empire.
The major
characteristic of Hittite architecture is its
completely asymmetrical ground plan. They
employed square piers as supports and had neither
columns nor capitals.
Outstanding among
examples of Hittite art are the Sphinx Gate of
Alacahoyuk and the rock reliefs of Yazilikaya, an
outdoor religious shrine in the form of a rock
gallery located outside the walls of Hattusha,
where two converging lines of male and female
deities strikingly depict the major gods of the
Hittite Empire.
First seen in a
relief of 12 gods in Yazilikaya, the number
twelve has been repeated often throughout
historic and prehistoric times with 12 Gods of
Olympus, 12 Apostles, 12 Imams in Islamic
mysticism, 12 in a dozen and 12 months in a year.
Finally, a
significant feature of Hittite culture is to be
observed in the Hittite Law Code, which appears
to be more humane than others in the ancient Near
East and in the Hittite practice of treaty
relations with allies and vassals during the
empire period.
A number of major
Anatolian sites have now been excavated that have
yielded objects or inscriptions of the Hittite
period. Among these, in addition to Hattusha, are
Alisar, Alacahoyuk and Kultepe, all in the
central Anatolian plateau; Karahoyuk, near Konya
in the southwest; and Tarsus and Mersin in the
Cilician plain of southern Anatolia.
There is no
certain typical tradition with regards to their
burial customs, but cremation and inhumation can
be seen together. What is interesting is that
people were buried with their animals, mostly
horses.
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