The Hittites Complex Subterranean World
4000 years ago, a mysterious pagan society called the Hittites dug deep into the soft volcanic rock to carve out an intricate underworld. But after almost 800 years of rule, the
Hittite Empire vanished without a trace. Where did their people go and what clues have they left behind in their complex subterranean world?
The Hittites were an ancient
Anatolian people who established an empire at
Hattusa in north-central
Anatolia around 1600 BC. This empire reached its height during the mid-14th century BC under
Suppiluliuma I, when it encompassed an area that included most of
Asia Minor as well as parts of the northern Levant and
Upper Mesopotamia. After c. 1180 BC, the empire came to an end during the
Bronze Age collapse, splintering into several independent "Neo-Hittite" city-states, some of which survived until the
8th century BC.
The
Hittite language was a member of the Anatolian branch of the
Indo-European language family. They referred to their native land as Hatti, and to their language as Nešili (the language of
Neša). The conventional name "Hittites" is due to their initial identification with the
Biblical Hittites in
19th century archaeology.
Despite the use of Hatti for their core territory, the Hittites should be distinguished from the
Hattians, an earlier people who inhabited the same region (until the beginning of the
2nd millennium BC) and spoke a language possibly in the
Northwest Caucasian languages group known as Hattic.[citation needed]
The Hittite military made successful use of chariots. Although belonging to the
Bronze Age, they were the forerunners of the
Iron Age, developing the manufacture of iron artifacts from as early as the
14th century BC, when letters to foreign rulers reveal the latter's demand for iron goods.
After 1180 BC, amid general turmoil in the Levant associated with the sudden arrival of the
Sea Peoples, the kingdom disintegrated into several independent "Neo-Hittite" city-states, some of which survived until as late as the 8th century BC. The history of the Hittite civilization is known mostly from cuneiform texts found in the area of their kingdom, and from diplomatic and commercial correspondence found in various archives in
Egypt and the
Middle East.
The Hittites used Mesopotamian cuneiform letters. Archaeological expeditions to Hattusa have discovered entire sets of royal archives in cuneiform tablets, written either in the
Semitic Mesopotamian
Akkadian language of
Assyria and Babylonia, the diplomatic language of the time, or in the various dialects of the Hittite confederation.
Before the discoveries, the only source of information about Hittites had been the
Old Testament (see Biblical Hittites).
Francis William Newman expressed the critical view, common in the early
19th Century, that, if the Hittites existed at all, "no
Hittite king could have compared in power to the
King of Judah...". As archaeological discoveries revealed the scale of the Hittite kingdom in the second half of the 19th Century,
Archibald Henry Sayce postulated, rather than to be compared to Judah, the Anatolian civilization "[was] worthy of comparison to the divided
Kingdom of Egypt", and was "infinitely more powerful than that of Judah". Sayce and other scholars also mention that Judah and the Hittites were never enemies in the
Hebrew texts; in the
Book of Kings, they supplied the
Israelites with cedar, chariots, and horses, as well as being a friend and allied to
Abraham in the
Book of Genesis.
The first archaeological evidence for the Hittites appeared in tablets found at the
Assyrian colony of
Kültepe (ancient
Karum Kanesh), containing records of trade between Assyrian merchants and a certain "land of Hatti". Some names in the tablets were neither Hattic nor Assyrian, but clearly Indo-European.