Posted on 05/19/2006 12:46:21 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
An exhibition titled "The Hittite Winds" by sculptor and ceramic artist Erdinç Bakla opened on Tuesday at the Istanbul Archaeology Museum in Topkap Palace.
The exhibition, which interprets Hittite artifacts in various materials, features 35 pieces of marble, bronze, plexiglas and fiberglass as well as a golden dinner set and silver tea set.
The exhibition will run until May 28 and will also be on display in Ankara in June, reported the Anatolia news agency.
(Excerpt) Read more at turkishdailynews.com.tr ...
Anthropologist Uncovers Lost Culture in Turkey; Wins Service Award and $10,000 GrantSteadman, an associate professor of anthropology, said her excavation team has made several key discoveries at Cadir Hoyuk that have led to greater understanding of the people who lived there over a period of 6,300 years. Ronald Gorny, a research associate at the Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago and director of the Cadir Hoyuk project, said he originally hired Steadman because of her expertise in prehistoric cultures...
SUNY Cortland News
5/18/2006
Steadman, coordinator of the International Studies Program at SUNY Cortland, said the major finding excavators have made at the site was determining that Cadir Hoyuk was a sophisticated settlement in the prehistoric, Hittite and Byzantine eras. Up until the teams work, researchers assumed that the region was "a backwater with a bunch of podunks living there and doing nothing," she said.
In the prehistoric period, dating from 5200 to 3000 B.C., excavations showed that the settlement had large-scale architecture and that the site was enclosed by a wall, suggesting that the inhabitants felt they might be invaded. The archaeologists have found an open high place, facing the highest mountain at the site, which may have served as a ritual area. A collection of pots unearthed in a building in this section may have been used to make offerings of food to the deities, Steadman said...
In the Hittite era, from about 1800 to 1200 B.C., when Turkeys first empire was established, the settlement served as either an administrative or religious center. The team has revealed monumental architecture dating to this period, including a gateway to the city and major public buildings, which indicates that the site was important to the Hittite rulers.
Smenkhkhare, the Hittite Pharaoh
BBC History | September 5, 2002 | Dr Marc Gabolde
Posted on 07/30/2004 12:42:36 PM EDT by SunkenCiv
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1181802/posts
Layers of clustered apartments hide artifacts of ancient urban life
San Francisco Chronicle | Monday, April 18, 2005 | David Perlman
Posted on 04/20/2005 12:26:57 PM EDT by SunkenCiv
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1387451/posts
Lycian Influence To The Indian Cave Temples
The Guide to the Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent | spring of 2000 | Takeo Kamiya
Posted on 07/12/2005 1:37:19 AM EDT by SunkenCiv
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1440990/posts
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I wanna get me some of that Hittite plexiglas dinnerware.
Interesting piece of art.
Better to get Hittite Tupperware. If it is damaged at all, you can get brand new replacements.
It was King Tupper (1434-1406 B.C.) supperware and it pretty much became the benchmark until King Ziplock (1220-1200 B.C.) turned into Turkey.
LOL!!
I think you mean TeshupperWare.
The product was taken from the shelves and replaced with Good King Tupper's reliable wares.
So this walled settlement began about 7,200 years ago. This would roughly coincide with the eruption of Mt. Mazama (Crater Lake) which left a 6 mile diameter caldera. There was probably some real nasty weather as a result, which could have increased warfare and raiding for food, and the need for walled towns.
Hittite graves, artifacts unearthed in Adana
Turkish Daily News | Thursday, Jun 15 2006 | unattributed
Posted on 06/15/2006 1:55:32 AM EDT by SunkenCiv
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/1649658/posts
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