Niğde Kınık Höyük: New Evidence on Central Anatolia during the First Millennium BCE

The sudden fall of the Hittite Empire at the turn of the thirteenth century BCE is a major case study for political disruptions in the history of the Mediterranean, and it resulted in the profound transformation of central Anatolia, the former Hittite core territory.1 This disruption affected the wh...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Near Eastern archaeology
Authors: D'Alfonso, Lorenzo 19XX- (Author) ; Gorrini, Maria Elena (Author) ; Casagrande-Kim, Roberta (Author) ; Castellano, Lorenzo (Author) ; Highcock, Nancy (Author) ; Trameri, Andrea (Author) ; Yolaçan, Burak (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: University of Chicago Press [2020]
In: Near Eastern archaeology
Year: 2020, Volume: 83, Issue: 1, Pages: 16-29
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Hittites / Anatolia / Malatya (Region) / Carchemish / Niğde (Region)
RelBib Classification:HB Old Testament
TC Pre-Christian history ; Ancient Near East
Online Access: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
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Summary:The sudden fall of the Hittite Empire at the turn of the thirteenth century BCE is a major case study for political disruptions in the history of the Mediterranean, and it resulted in the profound transformation of central Anatolia, the former Hittite core territory.1 This disruption affected the whole eastern Mediterranean, but nowhere was hit as severely as Hittite Anatolia. Hittite political legacy survived only at the eastern borderlands of the empire—the Upper Euphrates, Malatya, and Karkemiš—and only to the tenth century in northern Syria and south of the Taurus Mountains (fig. 1; Weeden 2013). As for central Anatolia, scholars generally concur that a degree of political complexity was reintroduced only in the eighth century BCE. Famine, mass migrations, and conflicts have been considered the main driving factors behind the sudden decrease in settlement occupation after the fall of the empire.
ISSN:2325-5404
Contains:Enthalten in: Near Eastern archaeology
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1086/707314