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Topic: Hattusili II


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In the News (Tue 8 Dec 09)

  
  Kings.html   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Labarna first known Hittite king 1680-1650 Hattusili I nephew/adopted son of Labarna 1650-1620 Mursili I grandson/adopted son of Hattusili I 1620-1590 Hantili assassin and brother-in-law of Mursili I 1590-1560 Zidanta I son-in-law of Hantili 1560-1550 Ammuna son of Hantili 1550-1530 Huzziya I son of Ammuna?
Alluwamna son-in-law of Huzziya I Hantili II son of Alluwamna 1500-1450 Zidanta II ?
1450-1420 Arnuwanda I son-in-law of Tudhaliya II 1420-1400 Tudhaliya III son of Arnuwanda I 1400-1380 Tudhaliya son of Tudhaliya III 1380?
www.asor.org /HITTITE/Kings.html   (126 words)

  
 Hittites   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
These tablets tell that a Hattian king Pitkhana of a small city-state named Kussara or Kussar (which has yet to be identified by archeologists) and his son Anitta conquered several neighboring city states — including the city of Nesa (perhaps the same as Kanesh), and Hattusas.
The founding of the Hittite Empire is usually attributed to Hattusili I, who conquered the plain south of Hattusa, all the way to the outskirts of modern-day Aleppo in Syria.
Though it remained for his heir, Mursili I, to conquer that city, Hattusilis was clearly influenced by the rich culture he discovered in northern Mesopotamia and founded a school in his capital to spread the cuneiform style of writing he encountered there.
www.casimiro.com /wiki/en/wikipedia/h/hi/hittites.html   (2139 words)

  
 Peace treaty - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
The Treaty was concluded between Ramses II and Hattusili III in in its eighteen articles it first calls for peace and then says that their respective gods also demand peace.
In more modern times certain intractable conflict situations especially those involving terrorism are first brought to cease-fire and are then dealt with via a peace process where a number of discrete steps are taken on each side to eventually reach the mutually desired goal of peace and the signing of a treaty.
Since the founding of the United Nations after World War II this organization has sought to act as a forum for resolution in matters of international conflict and is often instrumental in peace processes and peace treaties.
www.encyclopedia-online.info /Peace_treaty   (812 words)

  
 Suppiluliuma I - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Some of the priests later reported this to Suppiluliumas's son and successor Mursilis II, holding it as an outstanding crime of the whole dynasty.
Suppiluliuma decisively crushed the independent Mitanni kingdom, reducing it to a client state under his son-in-law Shattiwazza; and rebuilt the Hittite capital at Hattusas.
The Annals of Suppiluliuma, compiled after his death by his son Mursili II, is an important primary source for the 14th century BC.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Suppiluliumas   (399 words)

  
 Ramses and the first Peace Treaty in History
After the death of the Hittite king, “Hattusili III” usurped the throne from the legitimate prince who fled to Egypt and was granted political asylum by “Ramses II”.
And Hattusili, the great king, the king of the country of Hatti, shall never attack the country of Egypt to take possession of a part (of that country).
Hattusili that he has not sent any gifts except one handicapped slave, despite Egypt did send numerous physicians who were highly demanded in Syria and worldwide, with a substantial amount of herbs.
www.arabworldbooks.com /ramses.htm   (2078 words)

  
 Origin of the Indo-European languages: Part VIII   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Later on, a tablet containing the text of a nonaggression pact between the pharaoh Rameses the Second and a king by the name of Hattusili* the Second was unburied.
Nonetheless, they contained names of kings both in hieroglyphic and cuneiform versions, which corroborated the fact that the translators had read the names of the monarchs properly and the system being used was the right one.
At the end of World War II, the Hittite basic grammatical system was understood, and a group of hieroglyphic signs could be translated.
www.sanskrit-sanscrito.com.ar /english/linguistics/origin8.html   (2998 words)

  
 History's Great Peacemakers - MSN Encarta
Consider one of the earliest of these "peacemakers," the Egyptian pharaoh Ramses the Great (Ramses II*).
Instead of gathering an army, Ramses sat down with Hattusili III, the Hittite king, and the two men drew up a treaty.
Read a translation of the Hittite version of the peace treaty between Ramses II and Hattusili III.
encarta.msn.com /encnet/features/Columns?Article=peacemakersmain   (528 words)

  
 Historical   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Kosak and Kempinski, TA 9; Kempinski, AAT 4:55-57.; Heth 11:25-26 (ii 6-13).
Mursili II 61.III Annals of Mursili II: unidentified fragments
Suppiluliuma II or Tudhalia IV 142.01 Annals of a Tudhaliya
www.asor.org /HITTITE/CTH1-220.html   (4692 words)

  
 Tudhaliya II - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tudhaliya II (also Tudhaliya III) was a king of the Hittite empire (New kingdom) 1430 BC–1400 BC.
The Hittite empire suffered serious loss of territory during Tudhaliya's reign, with even the capital itself being burnt down.
This biography of a member of a Middle Eastern royal house is a stub.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Tudhaliya_II   (192 words)

  
 Al-Ahram Weekly | Heritage | Ancient peace   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
On the morning of 1 September, when the German archaeological mission of Hildesheim was clearing a dump next to a kiln used to produce glass near the ancient capital of Per-Ramses in the reign of Ramses II, a 5x5cm fragment of diplomatic correspondence came to light.
A part of Ramses II's name is also written on the tablet while, from lines two to seven, phrases from the Hittite-Egyptian peace treaty appear.
Second with the correspondence of the Royal Court of Ramses II with the Hittite Court of Hattusili III found at Hattusas- Boghaskoy in Turkey -- and which, Pusch explained, were written in Babylonian and concerned diplomatic marriages, matters of trade and general diplomatic affairs between both countries.
weekly.ahram.org.eg /2003/659/hr2.htm   (726 words)

  
 Egypt: Ramses the Great, The Pharaoh Who Made Peace with his Enemies And the First Peace Treaty in History
This, together with the bitterness Hattusili felt due to the arrogant tone in Ramses’ messages, continued to create tension between the two courts.
Hattusili had send but one handicapped slave as a gift, while Ramses had sent a number of physicians who were in high demand worldwide, along with a substantial quantity of herbs.
During the next 46 regal years of Ramses II, peace continued and the treaty was respected until the fall of the Hittite Empire.
www.touregypt.net /featurestories/treaty.htm   (1931 words)

  
 Peace Treaty between Ramses II and Hattusili III
It is concluded that Reamasesa-Mai-amana, the Great King, the king (of the land of Egypt) with Hattusili, the Great King, the king of the land of Hatti, his brother, for the land of Egypt and the land of Hatti, in order to establish a good peace and a good fraternity forever among them.
Look, the son of Hattusili, king of the country of Hatti, has to assure his sovereignty of the country of Hatti instead of Hattusili, his father, after the numerous years of Hattusili, king of the country of Hatti.
If some people flee from the country of Egypt to go to the country of Hatti, then Hattusili, the great king, the king of the country of Hatti, has to order them to be taken to his brother.
www.reshafim.org.il /ad/egypt/ramses-hattusili-treaty.htm   (1286 words)

  
 Egyptian New Kingdom, Babylonia, Assyria, Hittites, etc.
After Rusa II things get very obscure, and the only certain thing (more or less) is that the Medes end up in possession of the area, variously stated as by 590 or 585 -- part of the campaign that led to Lydia and the Battle of the Eclipse.
Psusennes II but of course the Persians are in the same line as the original Persian XXVII Dynasty, and Manethô himself didn't give the Ptolemaic Dynasty a number, even though he lived under it.
Iuput II Sheshonq VI The Ark would remain safely in Jerusalem, at least until the destruction of the Temple by Nebuchadnezzar in 587 BC.
www.friesian.com /notes/newking.htm   (7979 words)

  
 The Hittite Empire
Hugo Winckler was surprised to read there a copy or draft of the treaty between Ramses II and the king of Hatti, already known from its Egyptian version inscribed on the walls of the Ramesseum and of the great hypostyle hall of the temple of Amon at Karnak.
But the existence of the treaty with Ramses II precluded even a consideration of the conflicting data, and a chronological place in accord with Ramses II was allotted to Hattusilis, the king of Hatti, and to the entire period.
In revised chronology the `Great King of the Kheta,' against whom Ramses II moved his legions, was the king of the Chaldeans, and the signer of the peace treaty, Khetasar, or Hattusilis of the cuneiform version, was Nebuchadnezzar (Nabukudurri-usur).
www.specialtyinterests.net /hittites.html   (3704 words)

  
 Alternate History Discussion Board - WI: A Third Hittite Empire is established.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Hattusilis brought down the full power of his position as commander of the home army and had Urhi-Teshub deposed, and sent into exile.
Hattusilis III (1275-1250) shared the throne’s power with his wife Puduhepa, and both of them engaged in diplomacy with the neighboring kingdoms to maintain the peace.
Upon the death of the signatory, Hattusilis threatened to abrogate the treaty if the son of the deceased prince was not given the throne.
www.alternatehistory.com /Discussion/printthread.php?t=3616&pp=40   (9012 words)

  
 homer
Book II (28 pp.): Zeus sends a dream of Nestor to Agamemnon, urging him to attack Troy; Agamemnon tests Greeks by urging them to cut their losses by sailing home; Odysseus, warned by Athena, rallies troops by reasoning with kings and by beating foot- soldiers (gods vs. mortals; military orders; class).
Bardylis II - Attested in 295 to 290 BC he was the son of Kleitus.
The conquests of Hattusili sparked the inspiration of Indo European bards, creating large epics for the founder of their empire.
www.geocities.com /protoillyrian/homer   (6433 words)

  
 Luxor-Westbank   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
According to Ali Ebrahim El Assfer, Director of the Antiquities of Thebes West, all other ticket prices (see also our list of ticket prices) for the monuments will be unchanged for the nearer future.
According to Edgar Pusch the context of the tablet means the original peace treaty between Rameses II.
Germany appointed a new Ambassador to Cairo: since August Martin Kobler is the head of the diplomatic mission located in the district Zamalek.
www.luxor-westbank.com /druck/aktuell11_e.htm   (454 words)

  
 The Hittites - All About Turkey
Pudupepa, wife of Hattusilis III, is regularly associated with her husband in treaties an documents of the state and she even carried on correspondence with foreign kings and queens in her own right.
This tablet is a peace treaty concluded after the Battle of Kadesh between the Hittite king Hattusili III and the Egyptian pharaoh Ramses II about 3260 years ago, demonstrating to modern statesmen that international treaties are a tradition going back to the earliest civilizations.
Mursilis II is particularly notable for his duty to religion.
www.allaboutturkey.com /hitit.htm   (5534 words)

  
 Translated Documents   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
In particular, letters sent to her personally from the Egyptian King Ramses II are word for the same as those he sent to her husband Hattusili III.
Here, Ramses II addressing Queen Puduhepa as ‘Great Queen’ and ‘my sister’, says that her decision to give her daughter is also approved by the gods, and he entreats the gods thus:...” And you (gods) give her to the house of the king!
Although Queen Puduhepa, the wife of the Hittite King Hattusili III, played a very important role in diplomatic correspondence between the Egyptian and Hittite states, only a single letter is known written by Queen Naptera, wife of Ramses II.
idcs0100.lib.iup.edu /WestCivI/translated_documents.htm   (1820 words)

  
 New Page 1   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Thuthmosis II 1494-1490 married to Hatshepsut, the daughter of Thuthmosis I, and to Isis, his concubine and mother of Thuthmosis III.
Thutmosis III son of Thuthmosis II by a lesser wife Isis 1490-1436 ANET 22-23, 234-245, 373-375, 446-447; Annals COS 2.2A, pp.
Mummy of Seti II Siptah 1194-1188, son of a secondary wife
fontes.lstc.edu /~rklein/Documents/lb.htm   (934 words)

  
 BrianEpharaoh   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
When Seti I died, his son, Ramses II became pharaoh, and that was the beginning of Pharaoh Ramses II's rule.
Ramses II built many buildings in Egypt, including: two famous temples that he built in Abu Simbel at about 1279 B.C., the famous Hypostyle Hall at Karnak, a mortuary complex at Abydos, the Colossus of Ramesses at Memphis, a tomb in at Thebes, additions at the Luxor Temple, and the famous Ramesseum.
After ruling Egypt for 66 years, Ramses II finally died at the age of 90 in the year 1213 B.C., and was buried in the famous Valley of the Kings.
www.stmarybashacatholic.org /ClassPages/Bober/2003/BrianEpharaoh.html   (373 words)

  
 Egyptian-Hittite Correspondence: Ramses II and Hattusili III
The giving birth to a daughter by her is mentioned, upon which the Hittite king responded, that the birth of a boy would have secured the rule over the Hittite empire.
There is also evidence in the correspondence of a second marriage of Ramses II with a daughter of Hattusili, so far only known from hieroglyphic sources.
The oldest letter, in Akkadian, is that of a queen called Dakhamunzu by the Hittites, considered by many to have been Tutankhamen's widow Ankhesenamen, to the Hittite king Suppiluliuma, proposing an alliance by marriage between the two kingdoms [3].
www.reshafim.org.il /ad/egypt/egyptian-hittite_correspondence.htm   (707 words)

  
 Virtual Museum: On The Oldest Existing Translation (Linguistics)
The city that Ramses II founded to be his administrative capital was called Pi-Ramses and is found on the Nile Delta.
From "Treaty of Peace Between Rameses II and the Hittites," translated by C. Goodwin, in Records of the Past, being English Translations of the Assyrian and Egyptian Monuments, vol.
Look, Hattusili the great king, the king of the country of Hatti, and Reamasesa, the great king, the king of the country of Egypt, his brother, are at peace.
www.proz.com /post/174976?&print=1   (5066 words)

  
 [No title]
The accounts of his accession given by the Greek historians Herodotus and Ctesias are in many points obviously derived from this official version but are interwoven with legends.
Later Darius was in Egypt with Cambyses II, the son of Cyrus and heir to his kingdom, as a member of the royal bodyguard.
After the death of Cambyses in the summer of 522 BC, Darius hastened to Media, where, in September, with the help of six Persian nobles, he killed Bardiya (Smerdis), another son of Cyrus, who had usurped the throne the previous March.
saturniancosmology.org /files/kings/mesopotakingslist.txt   (1671 words)

  
 Day 6: Hattusas, Amasya
A hundred years later, there was threat of invasion again from the north, and King Muwatalli II (ca 1305 - 1282 BC) moved the capital from Hattusas to Dattassa in Kummanni.
When his empire broke up, Amasya became the capital of the kings of Pontus, a kingdom ruled by a family of Persian satraps.
By the time of King Mithridates II (281 BC), the kingdom of Pontus was entering its golden age and it dominated a large part of Anatolia.
www.hgriggs.com /turkey/day06.html   (3492 words)

  
 IV HISTORY   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Thutmose I may well have married his sister before his accession or Thutmose II may have reigned fifteen years so the standard account of Hatshepsut as an ambitious woman in her late twenties or early thirties on her husband’s death may still be valid.
15, the Libyan pharaohs Sheshonq I, Osorkon II and Harsiese, Sheshonq III, Takelothis II, Pedubastis I and Osorkon III.
3-4 the reigns of Amenhotep I, Tuthmosis I and Tuthmosis II are described in brief, in contrast to the fuller treatment of the reigns of Tuthmosis III and Hatshepsut in ch.
www.leidenuniv.nl /nino/aeb95/aeb95_4.html   (10963 words)

  
 SF-Fandom - Egyptology news
The 31-foot-tall, 90-ton granite statue of the Egyptian pharaoh Ramesses II (1279-1213 B.C.) was found in the 1920s in the ancient religious capital of Memphis, 15 miles south of Cairo.
In 1954, after Gamal Abdel Nasser assumed control of the newly independent state of Egypt, the statue was cut into three parts, loaded onto trucks, transported to Cairo and re-erected in front of the Cairo railroad station, as a symbol of resurgent Egyptian nationalism.
13th Century tablet could lead to lost archives of Ramses II The discovery of a stone tablet detailing diplomatic ties between the ancient Egyptians and Hittites in the 13th Century BC could be the key to the lost archives of Ramses II, according to archaeologists.
www.sf-fandom.com /vbulletin/showthread.php?t=328&page=3   (3117 words)

  
 Sitios de Arnuwanda III | Historia y Presente
Arnuwanda I son-in-law of Tudhaliya II 1420-1400 Tudhaliya III son of Arnuwanda I 1400-1380...
1450-1420 Arnuwanda I son-in-law of Tudhaliya II 1420-1400 Tudhaliya III son of...
Arnuwanda I son-in-law of Tudhaliya II 1420-1400 Tudhaliya III son of Arnuwanda I...
www.sitios-de-celebres.com /buscar.php?id_biograf=QXJudXdhbmRhIElJSQ==   (205 words)

  
 Hattusili II: Facts and details from Encyclopedia Topic   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Hattusili II: Facts and details from Encyclopedia Topic
Hattusili II was a king of the Hittite empire Hittites quick summary:
The hittites is the conventional english-language term for an ancient people who spoke an indo-european language and established a kingdom centered in hattusa...
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/h/ha/hattusili_ii1.htm   (56 words)

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