The Hittite state was founded c. 1650 BC and developed thereafter. The Hittites were able to establish their rule in Anatolia's hostile landscape and overcome the difficulties it presented to create an empire-an objective that they achieved with the aid of their remarkable organizational skills. Despite the frequent occurrence of geographical names in the state archives, only a small number of them can be safely localized and, although Hittitology is a 100-year-old field, the regional names have only recently been determined. This article serves as a general introduction to the Hittites as well as a review of the problem of geographical names, revealing the complexity it presents
Strabo, the geographer, was born (64/63-23? AD) in Amesia in Asia Minor. Today Amasia is called as A...
Hittite Empire (13th c. BC) preferred open-air temples, centered around the Tarhuntassa region and t...
This dissertation is about the Kaska people of the central Black Sea region and their interactions w...
The talk will discuss a new, three-year project that is about to start at the University of Warsaw. ...
In this paper we deploy both archaeological evidence, principally from survey, as well as topographi...
The Hittite cuneiform texts (16th-12th cent. BCE) contain a number of detailed descriptions of borde...
Abstract : According to the cuneiform tablets found in Anatolia, the names of many cities, large and...
Bilindiği üzere Hititler, MÖ. 2. Binyıl’da Anadolu’da büyük bir medeniyet kurmuşlardır. Yine aynı co...
In 14th century BC, the Hittites became the supreme political and military power in the Near East. H...
Spatial analysis techniques, performed using Geographical Information System (GIS) software packages...
The paper offers a revision of some problematic points concerning the historical geography of wester...
It is quite clear that after the Old Hittite Kingdom had been established, the Hittites focused thei...
Hittite was the language of the Hittite Empire that ruled over vast parts of Turkey from 1650 - 1180...
The articles often published about localization of settlements mentioned in the Hittite tablets and ...
When we examine the documents that give information about Western Anatolia we see that on the shores...
Strabo, the geographer, was born (64/63-23? AD) in Amesia in Asia Minor. Today Amasia is called as A...
Hittite Empire (13th c. BC) preferred open-air temples, centered around the Tarhuntassa region and t...
This dissertation is about the Kaska people of the central Black Sea region and their interactions w...
The talk will discuss a new, three-year project that is about to start at the University of Warsaw. ...
In this paper we deploy both archaeological evidence, principally from survey, as well as topographi...
The Hittite cuneiform texts (16th-12th cent. BCE) contain a number of detailed descriptions of borde...
Abstract : According to the cuneiform tablets found in Anatolia, the names of many cities, large and...
Bilindiği üzere Hititler, MÖ. 2. Binyıl’da Anadolu’da büyük bir medeniyet kurmuşlardır. Yine aynı co...
In 14th century BC, the Hittites became the supreme political and military power in the Near East. H...
Spatial analysis techniques, performed using Geographical Information System (GIS) software packages...
The paper offers a revision of some problematic points concerning the historical geography of wester...
It is quite clear that after the Old Hittite Kingdom had been established, the Hittites focused thei...
Hittite was the language of the Hittite Empire that ruled over vast parts of Turkey from 1650 - 1180...
The articles often published about localization of settlements mentioned in the Hittite tablets and ...
When we examine the documents that give information about Western Anatolia we see that on the shores...
Strabo, the geographer, was born (64/63-23? AD) in Amesia in Asia Minor. Today Amasia is called as A...
Hittite Empire (13th c. BC) preferred open-air temples, centered around the Tarhuntassa region and t...
This dissertation is about the Kaska people of the central Black Sea region and their interactions w...