Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Hittite Geographers: Geographical Perceptions and Practices in Hittite Anatolia
View through CrossRef
AbstractHittite archives are remarkably rich in geographical data. A diverse array of documents has yielded, aside from thousands of geographical names (of towns, territories, mountains, and rivers), detailed descriptions of the Hittite state’s frontiers and depictions of landscape and topography. Historical geography has, as a result, occupied a central place in Hittitological research since the beginnings of the field. The primary aim of scholarship in this area has been to locate (precisely) or localize (approximately) regions, towns, and other geographical features, matching Hittite geographical names with archaeological sites, unexcavated mounds, and—whenever possible—with geographical names from the classical period. At the same time, comparatively little work has been done on geographical thinking in Hittite Anatolia: how and for what purpose(s) was geographical information collected, organized, and presented? How did those who produce the texts imagine their world and their homeland, “the Land of Hatti?” How did they characterize other lands and peoples they came into contact with? Concentrating on these questions, the present paper aims to extract from Hittite written sources their writers’ geographical conceptions and practices. It is argued that the acquisition and management of geographical information was an essential component of the Hittite Empire’s administrative infrastructure and that geographical knowledge was central to the creation of a Hittite homeland.
Title: Hittite Geographers: Geographical Perceptions and Practices in Hittite Anatolia
Description:
AbstractHittite archives are remarkably rich in geographical data.
A diverse array of documents has yielded, aside from thousands of geographical names (of towns, territories, mountains, and rivers), detailed descriptions of the Hittite state’s frontiers and depictions of landscape and topography.
Historical geography has, as a result, occupied a central place in Hittitological research since the beginnings of the field.
The primary aim of scholarship in this area has been to locate (precisely) or localize (approximately) regions, towns, and other geographical features, matching Hittite geographical names with archaeological sites, unexcavated mounds, and—whenever possible—with geographical names from the classical period.
At the same time, comparatively little work has been done on geographical thinking in Hittite Anatolia: how and for what purpose(s) was geographical information collected, organized, and presented? How did those who produce the texts imagine their world and their homeland, “the Land of Hatti?” How did they characterize other lands and peoples they came into contact with? Concentrating on these questions, the present paper aims to extract from Hittite written sources their writers’ geographical conceptions and practices.
It is argued that the acquisition and management of geographical information was an essential component of the Hittite Empire’s administrative infrastructure and that geographical knowledge was central to the creation of a Hittite homeland.
Related Results
SCIENTIFIC AND THEORETICAL FOUNDATIONS OF HUMAN-GEOGRAPHICAL TERMINOLOGY CREATION
SCIENTIFIC AND THEORETICAL FOUNDATIONS OF HUMAN-GEOGRAPHICAL TERMINOLOGY CREATION
The importance of human-geographical terminology-knowledge as area of theory of geographical science is emphasized in this artikle. Human-geographical terminology-knowledge highlig...
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...
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 ...
Timur’un Anadolu’daki Ardılları
Timur’un Anadolu’daki Ardılları
In 1206, Chinggis Khan, who ascended to the throne with the title of “Chinggis Khan” at a kurultai attended by all tribal leaders, made important administrative, military and socia...
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...
Turkmen exodus to the Anatolia and establishing their pricipalities
Turkmen exodus to the Anatolia and establishing their pricipalities
The Turkmen exodus to the Anatolia is considered one of the important historical periods in the history of the Turks. After the tenth century, a number of the Turkish tribes had co...
Hittite Cuisine: fire installations, cooking pottery and foodways in central Anatolia of the Late Bronze Age
Hittite Cuisine: fire installations, cooking pottery and foodways in central Anatolia of the Late Bronze Age
Food and cooking methods are crucial in defining group identity and social relations and in examining the domestic economies. The Poster aims to study, from a functional and typolo...
The Administration of Sacred Time in Hittite Anatolia
The Administration of Sacred Time in Hittite Anatolia
The nature of the administration of sacred time in Hittite Anatolia represents a complex problem, which has received little attention until recent years. This paper provides an ove...

