Affichage des articles dont le libellé est hittites. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est hittites. Afficher tous les articles

mardi 29 novembre 2016

Arslantepe, cradle of civilizations in Anatolia



Reflecting the rich culture of Anatolia, the Arslantepe Mound in the eastern province of Malatya is shedding light on history thanks to its adobe palace with colorful figures on its walls, a 5,500-year-old temple and many artifacts such as ancient swords and spears. 
Located seven kilometers from the center of Malatya, Arslantepe is one of the historical Anatolian structures that sheltered human beings for centuries thanks to its high agricultural potential, wetlands and geography that helped prevent river floods.

The ancient mound is home to the traces of many civilizations from the Hittites to the Romans and the Byzantines, as well as finds between the Late Chalcolithic Era in 5000 B.C. and the Iron Age.

Excavation works on the mound have unearthed lion statues and an overturned king sculpture. The adobe palace, which has infrastructure to drain rainwater, reveals the structure of the first city state in the area, while the colorful figures and engraved reliefs on the wall show the traces of an early state system at Arslantepe. There are also a number of artifacts similar to those in Mesopotamia unearthed during excavations on the mound.

The finds at the mound include metal artifacts such as silver, gold, copper and lead, as well as 12 spears and nine swords, providing some of the earliest examples of weapons.

Ivory plaque unearthed in this year’s excavations 

Archaeological excavations in the mound were first started in the 1930s by a Frenchteam. Currently, works are being carried out by an Italian team headed by Rome La Sapienza University Professor Marcella Frangipane.

This year, works continued on two different parts of the mound and unearthed juniper wood pieces, small temples and storages, as well as very large city walls in the northeastern section.

The four-meter-high and five-meter-thick walls used a foundation made from rubble, according to the excavation team, which also unearthed the remains of a rubble terrace.

The team also discovered finds and ceramics from the Iron Age as well as an ivory plaque with animal figures on it. The Mesopotamia-style plaque could shed light on commercial trade between Mesopotamia and Anatolia.

Important finds

Stating that important finds had been unearthed in excavations at Arslantepe, Battalgazi Mayor Selahattin Gürkan said the finds and the palace revealed the facts about the first settled state life in the history of human beings, as well as the transition from the Neolithic to the Iron Age.

Gürkan said Arslantepe had a history of more than 7,000 years. “In previous years, adobe walls and the sections of the palace were unearthed. This year special drawings and reliefs were found. This is the center of civilizations that makes Anatolia unique. Finds here are very important for the history of human beings. As the municipality, we are carrying out works with the excavation team here so that Arslantepe enters the World Heritage List.”
 HDN

vendredi 19 août 2016

Religious center of Hittites comes to light



The 11th archaeological excavation season has recently begun in the ancient city of Nerik, recognized as the religious center of the Hittites, in the northern province of Samsun’s Vezirküprü district.

This season the works are being carried out by 30 people, headed by German archaeologist Prof. Rainer Maria Czichon, the head of the Uşak University Archaeological Department.

Czichon said excavations were first initiated in the ancient city 2005, after geophysical exploration.

He said they had deepened the works since 2007 and unearthed various finds, adding, “Since this is a prehistoric era settlement, we find lots of stone and loom artifacts because Anatolia has always been a production place.”

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/religious-center-of-hittites-comes-to-light-.aspx?pageID=238&nID=102780&NewsCatID=375

mercredi 13 juillet 2016

Home of the Hittites awaits visitors

The ancient capital of the Hittite civilization, known as Hattusha, is the only ancient city on both the UNESCO World Heritage List and the Memory of the World Register, as well being Turkey’s first national excavation field, and offers visitors an opportunity to experience some monumental structures. 

One of Turkey’s most important tourism centers, the Central Anatolian province of Çorum is home to the cultural heritage of one of the first Anatolian civilizations, the Hattis, and the Hittite civilization.

Hattusha, located in the Boğazkale district, which has been declared a Historic National Park, is a place worth seeing with its six-kilometer walls, monumental gates, 71-meter underground tunnel, a palace in Büyükkale, the 31 temples which have been unearthed so far, the huge granaries found on the Büyükkaya hills and the Yazılıkaya open air temple.

Hattusha entered the UNESCO World Heritage List on Nov. 28, 1986, for its urban organization, the types of construction work that were preserved, the rich ornamentation of the Lion Gate and the Royal Gate and the ensemble of rock art at Yazılıkaya.




jeudi 22 octobre 2015

Secret tunnel found in historical castle

KONYA - Anadolu Agency

A secret tunnel has been discovered in Konya’s Gevale Castle. Built by the Hittites, the tunnel was also used during the Seljuk era

  AA photos

A secret tunnel has been discovered in Gevale Castle, located on the Takkel Mountain in the Central Anatolian province of Konya’s Selçuklu district, which had been home to many civilizations during the Hittite, Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine, Seljuk, Karamanids and Ottoman eras. 

The head of the excavations at the castle, Necmettin Erbakan University History of Arts Prof. Ahmet Çaycı, said the excavation works at the site had been carried out with a team of 30 people. 

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/secret-tunnel-found--in-historical-castle-.aspx?pageID=238&nID=90026&NewsCatID=375