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Topic: Anittas


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In the News (Sun 27 May 12)

  
  User talk:Anittas - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anittas, if you are here for editing as you claim, you should have edited more and spread about hatred less.
Anittas, I don't know the formal process, but I'd suggest that there are two separate issues here: the block (technical prevention from editing pages) and the ban (that Jimbo has effectively decided that you are unwelcome).
Anittas, you must learn that having a point about things is not enough, you also need to to know how to state it.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/User_talk:Anittas   (2969 words)

  
 Hittite Online
Anittas himself was a real person who was active during the time of the Assyrian merchant colonies, the petty king, or strong man, ruling the city of Kussara.
The city-states that Anittas conquers, Nesa, the city which the Hittites considered their city of origin, Zalpuwa, a city in northern Anatolia near the Black sea, and, of course, Hattusas, which was later the Hittite capital, were all important places during the Hittite empire.
The Anittas document is preserved in a copy written in the Old Kingdom period and in later copies, and it exhibits a number of archaic features of grammar and writing.
www.utexas.edu /cola/centers/lrc/eieol/hitol-1-R.html   (6293 words)

  
 Rendeciler orman ürünleri ltd- keresteci-
Around 1800 BC, one of the early kings, Anittas, began to extend his dominion by conquering first the city of Kanesh (Kayseri), then Hattush.
Between Anittas and the foundation of the Hittite kingdom there is a gap of several generations.
Then the policy of expansion was continued by another king of Kussara, Labarnas, whose son another Labarnas, decided to rebuild and occupy Hattush - a natural stronghold domination the northern valleys.
elba.globat.com /~rendeciler.com/turkey/hattusas.htm   (707 words)

  
 Hittites, History Of the Ancient Hittites, Rise and Fall   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Only a few of the tablets of the Hittite archives found at Bogazköy can be dated earlier than the 17th century BC; nevertheless, certain historical texts of this period have survived in the form of more or less reliable copies made in the 14th or 13th centuries.
Also included in the list is Hattusas (Khattusas), known to be the ancient name of the later Hittite capital at Bogazköy, which Anittas was said to have destroyed.
The fact that no direct connection could be inferred between these two kings and the subsequent history of the Hittites has been explained by later archaeological discoveries, which demonstrated that Pitkhanas and Anittas were in fact native Anatolian (Hattian) rulers of the 18th century BC.
ragz-international.com /hittitesrise.htm   (585 words)

  
 Anatolia: Ancient cultures - Ancient Man and His First Civilizations
Also included in the list is Hattusas/Khattusas, known to be the ancient name of the later Hittite capital at Bogazköy, which Anittas was said to have destroyed.
The fact that no direct connection could be inferred between these two kings, and the subsequent history of the Hittites, has been explained by later archaeological discoveries.
These new discoveries demonstrated that Pitkhanas and Anittas were in fact native Anatolian (Hattian) rulers of the 18th century B.C. NOT Hittites.
www.realhistoryww.com /world_history/ancient/Anatolia_Turkey_2.htm   (666 words)

  
 Hattusas   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
During this period, the Hittites, according to their memories, were ruled by Hittite kings at a city called Kussara.
Around 1800 B.C., Anittas, one of the early Hittite kings, began to extend his domain.
After Anittas there was a gap of several generations before the founding of the Hittite kingdom.
idcs0100.lib.iup.edu /westcivi/hattusa.htm   (479 words)

  
 Wikipedia: Hittites
They apparently emerged as a small city-state named Kussara, which has yet to be identified by archeologists.
Under king Anittas, the Hittite state grew to encompass the cities of Kanesh and Hattush (aka Hattusa), which was the capital at the zenith of Hittite power.
Located near the Turkish village of Bogazköy in central Anatolia, Hattush can still be visited today.
www.factbook.org /wikipedia/en/h/hi/hittites.html   (1218 words)

  
 hattusas
The merchants lived in the lower part of the city, which extended up to the great hill, whereupon the king's palace was probably located.
The entire city was destroyed, probably by a King Anittas of Kussara sometime after 1800 BCE.
A Hittite text supposed to have been written by him describes his conquests in Anatolia, noting he destroyed Hattusas, killed its King Piyusti, and cursed the city's site.
www.hattusas.com /hattusas.html   (559 words)

  
 Notebook
The Anatolian Hittites were immigrants of Caucasian stock whose earliest home seems to have been in the Araxes valley, where their settlements have been traced back to neolithic times.
King Anittas, after securing and destroying Hattusas, carried his victories further to the east and added to his dominions Kanesh [c.
At the same time as the al 'Ubaid culture was developing in the Mesopotamian delta, before 3500 B.C., the chalcolithic people of Palestine showed a promise which proved to be illusory.
www.noteaccess.com /Texts/Woolley/1b.htm   (1895 words)

  
 Chronological overview
This is particularly true of actions involving Mesopotamian states - from the time of Hammurabi through until that of Cyrus, one or other of Assyria or Babylon would have taken the lead in such an undertaking.
The actions of the Hittite leader Tidal resemble those of the early Hittite chieftains such as Anittas.
Territorial invasions of a similar scale and motive were carried out by Sargon of Akkad (around 2350 conventionally, 2100 New Chronology), Naram-Sin around 2250 conventionally, 2000 New Chronology), and Shamshi-Adad of Assyria (around 1800 conventionally, about 200 years later New Chronology).
www.oldtestamentstudies.net /chron/chronblocks.asp?area=patriarchs   (1827 words)

  
 The Old Kingdom   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
A 14th or 13th century B.C. copy of an earlier historical text tells of two semi-legendary Hittite kings named Pitkhanas and Anittas.
They are connected to the city of Kussara (Kushshar), a site not yet identified.
The text gives an impressive list of cities that Pitkhanas conquered, among them Nesa, which his son, Anittas, later adopted as his capital.
idcs0100.lib.iup.edu /westcivi/the_old_kingdom.htm   (724 words)

  
 Adventures with Cassiopaea
But we hear of local princes and their palaces and it is evident that the country was broken up into small principalities.
[…] It was probably during the reign of Anittas that the commercial activity of the Assyrians in Cappadocia, having flourished for more than a century, came to a sudden end.
Whether this was the result of the conquests of Anittas, or of some disaster which befell the city of Assur at this time, is unknown.
www.cassiopaea.com /cassiopaea/adventures260.htm   (2416 words)

  
 Hittite Empire, Turkey - Timeline Index
The Hittites ruled the area from the city of Hattusas/Hattusha possibly as early as 1900 B.C. During the early period, they enjoyed trade with the Assyrians.
Around 1800 B.C Anittas and his father Pitkhanas of Kussara sacked several Hittite cities and the Hittites came to a "decline" until the founding of "The Old Kingdom" under King Labarnas around 1680 B.C. The Hittites now started to expand, and they fought wars with Syria and Assyria.
King Mursilis I (1620-1590 B.C) sacked Babylon in 1595 B.C. with help from the Kassites and brought an end to the Old Kingdom of Babylon and Hamurabi's dynasty.
www.timelineindex.com /content/view/1596   (170 words)

  
 Ethics of Sumer, Babylon, and Hittites by Sanderson Beck
Though people had been living in Anatolia for several millennia, little is known of its history until Assyrian traders settled on the central plateau about 1900 BC.
Aryan influence can be seen in the name of the ruling city Purushhattum, which is very close to the Sanskrit word meaning "highest person." In an ancient document Anittas described how a king of Kussara took the city of Nesa at night by force but did not harm anyone.
Anittas took Hattusas by force, fortified Nesa, and campaigned against Salatiwara.
www.san.beck.org /EC3-Sumer.html   (14890 words)

  
 History of Cappadocia
The Hittite period stretches from 1900 to 1200 B.C. To begin with there were small city-kingdoms, sometimes resolving their differences through warfare.
The first to gain the ascendancy was King Pitkhana of Kussara, whose son Anittas established absolute dominance, destroying rival Hattusas in the process.
A succeeding king, Labarnas, was to realize the strategic importance of Hattusas and in fact rebuild it as his capital.
abone.superonline.com /~Cappadocia/history.htm   (4799 words)

  
 The Briefing Room: The Abraham Debate
My understanding of Hittite records is that they trace themselves back to a ruler in the 19th century BC named Anittas, so they're not anachronistic either.
Kitchen and others identify this with Ur in south Babylonia, and say the "Chaldees" reference is a post-Mosaic addition "precisely to distinguish the patriarchal Ur from possible northern counterparts", which is basically the Philistine modern usage argument again.
Similarly your fourth possibility that the original Philistines were the same race as the later ones, but that settlement came in two waves hundreds of years apart does not stand up to any sort of examination.
www.investigatemagazine.com /archives/2006/03/the_abraham_deb.html   (8503 words)

  
 Kabala is Babylon the Hor
While Kussara has not been pin-pointed, it is located (I presume from a list of cities in which it is found) in south-east Turkey.
In that list was also Nese, a city ruled by Anittas, son of Pithana.
This could mean that "Anittas" was so named after a Nese entity, and that may just have been the Horite city of Nuzi!
www.tribwatch.com /sephirot.htm   (5781 words)

  
 [No title]
Hammurabi's ancestor list: Less well transmitted, but goes back 7 centuries, and includes some who were not kings, but minor family chiefs.
Hittite archives of 14-13 cent.: These preserved copies of an Annalistic Report by King Anittas of Kussara who was supposed to have reigned before the Old Hittite Kingdom, in 19-18 centuries BC Now tablets of his contemporaries naming him have been found, and a spearhead inscribed "Palace of Anittas." 4.
King List of Uragit: A ritual tablet from just before 1200 once had a list of about 36 consecutive kings of Uragit, spanning 6 centuries, to the founder Yaqaru in 19th century.
www.ewtn.com /library/SCRIPTUR/CRITIQUE.TXT   (2848 words)

  
 WI: A Third Hittite Empire is established. - Alternate History Discussion Board   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
The newcomers intermarried with the locals, adopted many of their religious practices, and allowed business to continue as normal.
The first invasion by the Indo-European Hittites was under King Anittas, who sacked several cities, including Hattusas, and who made his capital near Kayseri.
A gap exists after his rule, and the Hittite Empire is dated from the rebuilding of Hattusas by a successor, King Labarnas, around 1750 BCE.
alternatehistory.com /Discussion/showthread.php?t=3616   (5394 words)

  
 jolt.co.uk public forums - Equal rights to women
Show 40 posts from this thread on one page
Category: Social Justice Strength: Significant Proposed by: Anittas
Description: Many women around the world are abused and discriminated.
forums.jolt.co.uk /printthread.php?t=333189   (999 words)

  
 wolfminadiarypage
I Started hand brushing Minas red dress so far so good I havent come across any major Problems, even the cutting in is going okay, More tomorrow
I Started on dry brushing wolfs fur, first Anittas Coffe then Anittas Sand, Also painted Minas hair Black, still no problems, fingers crossed, more tomorrow
I Started Detailing both characters eyes and mouths and started shading Minas dress, not happy with this stage yet needs toning down before I go on to highlightin the folds more soon
www.markatherton4.com /wolfminadiarypage.html   (197 words)

  
 derKİ - en Kİ'li internet dergisi
Furthermore, this same Indo-European warlords attacked Babylon and ceased the activities of Assyrian trade colonies in southwestern Anatolia soon after they seized the power in Asia Minor – around 1600 BC.
And he adds: “It is not certain what caused this: The conquests of Anittas or a natural disaster which destroyed the city of Assur” (3).
This was a very “unlucky” time for Mesopotamia's once proud Babylonian empire because they even couldn't get the strength to resist the Hittites.
www.derki.com /ingilizce/firstissue/marduk.html   (11138 words)

  
 Anatolia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Early Bronze Age at Troy and other cities A-17
Anittas, King of Kushshar (Kussar) and his father Pitkhana in Cappadocia defeated Bijustis, King of Hatti and their capital Hattushash A-49
Labarnash ruled at Kushshar, queen Tawannannas, son Hattishlish I
www.packrat-pro.com /anatolia.htm   (385 words)

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