Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Hittite Gilgamesh
View through CrossRef
From the late third millennium BCE on, the adventures of the hero Gilgamesh were well known throughout Babylonia and Assyria, and the discovery of Akkadian-language fragments of versions of his tale at Boğazköy, Ugarit, Emar, and Megiddo demonstrates that tales of the hero's exploits had reached the periphery of the cuneiform world already in the Late Bronze Age. A century of excavation at the Hittite capital of Hattusa (mod. Boğazköy) has yielded more textual sources for Gilgamesh than are known from all other Late Bronze Age sites combined. The Gilgamesh tradition was imported to Hattusa for use in scribal instruction, and has been of particular importance to modern scholars in reconstructing the epic and analyzing its development, since it documents a period in the history of the narrative for which very few textual witnesses have yet been recovered from Mesopotamia itself. And it is this very Middle Babylonian period to which scholarly consensus assigns the composition of the final, "canonical" version of the epic. The Hittite Gilgamesh offers a full edition of the manuscripts from Hattusa in the Hittite, Akkadian, and Hurrian languages recounting Gilgamesh's adventures.
Title: The Hittite Gilgamesh
Description:
From the late third millennium BCE on, the adventures of the hero Gilgamesh were well known throughout Babylonia and Assyria, and the discovery of Akkadian-language fragments of versions of his tale at Boğazköy, Ugarit, Emar, and Megiddo demonstrates that tales of the hero's exploits had reached the periphery of the cuneiform world already in the Late Bronze Age.
A century of excavation at the Hittite capital of Hattusa (mod.
Boğazköy) has yielded more textual sources for Gilgamesh than are known from all other Late Bronze Age sites combined.
The Gilgamesh tradition was imported to Hattusa for use in scribal instruction, and has been of particular importance to modern scholars in reconstructing the epic and analyzing its development, since it documents a period in the history of the narrative for which very few textual witnesses have yet been recovered from Mesopotamia itself.
And it is this very Middle Babylonian period to which scholarly consensus assigns the composition of the final, "canonical" version of the epic.
The Hittite Gilgamesh offers a full edition of the manuscripts from Hattusa in the Hittite, Akkadian, and Hurrian languages recounting Gilgamesh's adventures.
Related Results
Hittite Geographers: Geographical Perceptions and Practices in Hittite Anatolia
Hittite Geographers: Geographical Perceptions and Practices in Hittite Anatolia
AbstractHittite archives are remarkably rich in geographical data. A diverse array of documents has yielded, aside from thousands of geographical names (of towns, territories, moun...
Religious Convergence in Hittite Anatolia: The Case of Kizzuwatna
Religious Convergence in Hittite Anatolia: The Case of Kizzuwatna
Hittite “religion” is often described as the dynamic product of a long-term trans- culturation process, as “Culture in the Making.” According to this view, Hittite “religion” seems...
THE REPATRIATION OF GILGAMESH DREAM TABLET: REBUILDING THE IRAQI RELIGIOUS LEGACY
THE REPATRIATION OF GILGAMESH DREAM TABLET: REBUILDING THE IRAQI RELIGIOUS LEGACY
The Epic of Gilgamesh, a 3600-year 12-tablet collection, was looted from an Iraqi museum during the 1991 Gulf War, and fraudulently imported into the United States. In September, 2...
Ways of Being: Hittite Empire and Its Borderlands in Late Bronze Age Anatolia and Northern Syria
Ways of Being: Hittite Empire and Its Borderlands in Late Bronze Age Anatolia and Northern Syria
In this paper, I take identity as a characteristic of empire in its periphery, denoting the totality of: 1) the imperial strategies an empire pursues in different regions, 2) the i...
Dimensione temporale e collocazione spaziale: Qualche breve reflessione
Dimensione temporale e collocazione spaziale: Qualche breve reflessione
In un recente contributo sulle particelle hittite k?ša, k?šma e k?šat(t)a, E. Rieken ha convincentemente dimostrato la loro primaria funzione di disambiguazione deittica spaziale d...
Solar and Chthonic Deities in Ancient Anatolia: The Evolution of the Chthonic Solar Deity in Hittite Religion
Solar and Chthonic Deities in Ancient Anatolia: The Evolution of the Chthonic Solar Deity in Hittite Religion
The “Sun-goddess of the earth” and the less clearly defined category of “chthonic solar deities” of Hittite religion have been the objects of various studies in recent years. This ...
Prince Zannanza: Egyptian and Anatolian Perspectives
Prince Zannanza: Egyptian and Anatolian Perspectives
Sometime in the 14th century BC, the widow of an Egyptian king contacted the Hittite Great King Šuppiluliuma I with the request to send a son of his as her future husband and king ...
Perseus and the Achaeans in the Hittite Tablets
Perseus and the Achaeans in the Hittite Tablets
Dr. Forrer's discovery of the Achaeans in the Hittite cuneiform tablets of Boghaz Keui is now well known to classical scholars. His identification of them with the Hittite Akhkhiya...

