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Topic: Mursili III


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In the News (Mon 7 Dec 09)

  
 Hittites - Biocrawler   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Two of the letters from a "kingdom of Kheta", apparently located in the same general region as the Assyrian/Babylonian "land of Hatti", were written in standard Akkadian cuneiform script, but in an unknown language; although scholars could read it, no one could understand it.
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.
Mursili was assassinated shortly after his return home, and the Hittite Empire was plunged into chaos.
www.biocrawler.com /encyclopedia/Hittites   (2406 words)

  
 Hittites   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Two of the letters from a "kingdom of Kheta", apparently located in the same general region as the Assyrian/Babylonian "land of Hatti", were written in standard Akkadian cuneiform, but in an unknown language; although scholars could read it, no one could understand it.
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.
Mursili continued the conquests of Hattusili, reaching down to Mesopotamia and threatening Babylonia itself.
www.wikimoz.org /wiki/en/wikipedia/h/hi/hittites.html   (2139 words)

  
 Rendeciler orman ürünleri ltd- keresteci-
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.
elba.globat.com /~rendeciler.com/turkey/hitit.htm   (5504 words)

  
 Ancient Egyptian History: The New Kingdom - Dynasties 18 to 20   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Toward the end of her reign she lost influence to Thutmose III who came to be depicted as her equal.
Thutmose III (c.1504-1450 BCE) was very young when his father, Thutmose II, died and was until 1482 the co-regent of his aunt, Hatshepsut.
During the reigns of Ramses III or IV most centres of Egyptian power in Canaan were destroyed and Ramses VI withdrew from Serabit el Khadim, the copper mines of Timna and possibly Megiddo.
nefertiti.iwebland.com /history18-20.htm   (2452 words)

  
 Hittites - Crystalinks
Mursili continued the conquests of Hattusili, reaching through Mesopotamia and even ransacking Babylon itself in 1595 BC (although rather than incorporate Babylonia into Hittite domains, he seems to have instead turned it over to his Kassite allies, who were to rule it for the next four centuries).
Having inherited a position of strength in the east, Mursili was able to turn his attention to the west, where he attacked Arzawa and a city known as Millawanda in the coastal land of Ahhiyawa.
Ironically, the language of the Lydians, spoken in the West of Asia Minor until the 1st century BC, was apparently a linguistic descendant of Hittite, and not Luwian.
www.crystalinks.com /hittites.html   (2810 words)

  
 [b-hebrew] Rohl's Chronology Deconstructed
It was as though Mursili, himself, was demonstrating that he had some knowledge of the Egyptian language.
Added to that, the chamberlain who travels to Egypt to see if all this stuff is on the level, is called "Hattu-ziti", which I suspect means nothing more than "the Hittite vizier" because "ziti" is precisely how the Egyptian term for vizier --T3ty--would have been vocalized at this time.
Just because the king of Babylon (whom Amenhotep III didn't really like on account of his begging ways) couldn't get an Egyptian princess--doesn't necessarily mean a Hittite king couldn't obtain one as part of a treaty.
lists.ibiblio.org /pipermail/b-hebrew/2004-July/020024.html   (547 words)

  
 Kings of the Land of Hatti - Encyclopedia FunTrivia
Mursili I succeeded his grandfather, Hattusili I, to the Hittite throne.
Later, Mursili took the city of Aleppo, in Syria, and marched on to sack Babylon in 1595 B.C.E. I was the son of a king, the brother of a king, the nephew of a king, and the cousin of a king.
Kurunta was a younger son of Muwatalli II, the brother of Mursili III, the nephew of Hattusili III, and the cousin of Tudhaliya IV.
www.funtrivia.com /en/subtopics/Kings-of-the-Land-of-Hatti-156947.html   (459 words)

  
 Hittites, History Of the Ancient Hittites, Kings   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
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?
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?
Arnuwanda III son of Tudhaliya IV 1220-1215 Suppiluliuma II son of Tudhaliya IV 1215-1200
ragz-international.com /line_of_hittite_kings.htm   (154 words)

  
 Vedic Astronomy
The dates also have been corrected to earth’s rotation rate variation due to mass-inertia changes of polar caps etc. The eight eclipses cover a period of 2053 BC down to 984 BC (sic from Ref[9]).
The Lunar eclipse on the 19th April 1793 BC identified as best candidate for the Adaru eclipse, (Second Eclipse of Ur III) which marked the end of the reign of Ibbisin or the Eclipse of Ibbisin.
The Lunar eclipse on 31 July 1835 BC, the Ur III Simanu eclipse (First Eclipse of Ur III), said to mark the end of the reign of Shulgi or the Eclipse of Ur III.
www.vedicastronomy.net /mb_pasteclipses.htm   (466 words)

  
 Britain.tv Wikipedia - Hattusa   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Under Tudhaliya I, the Hittites moved north to Sapinuwa, returning later.
Under Muwatalli II, they moved south to Tarhuntassa but assigned Hattusili III as governor over Hattusa.
Mursili III returned the seat to Hattusa, where the kings remained until the end of the Hittites.
www.britain.tv /wikipedia.php?title=Hattusa   (1037 words)

  
 Turkey Heads   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
She was married to king Mursili I and later to Chantilis.
Already as Chief Wife of her husband, Murat III from 1574 she was the power behind the throne especially after the death of her mother-in-law Nurbanu.
She was political influential as advisor of her husband, Abdulhamid I 1733-73 and his successor, Sultan Selim III 1773-1789.
www.guide2womenleaders.com /turkey_heads.htm   (1391 words)

  
 Anatolia:The Cradle of Civilizations - SkyscraperCity   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
The frontiers of Urartu were threatened on several occasions, and to combat this, the Urartu built buffer towns on the edges of their territory that were abandoned in times of danger, and later inhabited.
In 197 BC Lycia was taken from the Ptolemies by Antiochus III, king of Syria.
Reformist sultans such as Selim III (1789-1807) and Mahmut II (1808-1839) succeeded in pushing Ottoman bureaucracy, society and culture ahead, but not in curing all the empire's ills.
www.skyscrapercity.com /showthread.php?t=178197   (14281 words)

  
 The Hittite Empire
However warning voices were also heard among scholars who opposed the idea, very strange to them, that the ancient world of the empires of Egypt and Assyro-Babylonia should be increased by a newly discovered empire of the Hittites.
After all Mursilis and Hattusils are only two rulers toward the end of the Hittite/Chaldean empire and the Chaldeans themselves are also an ancient people.
Since we do not know in what context, layer, and associated materials the broken jar lid was found in we cannot make a better reply at this time but more likely it was brought to its location by trade, as a gift or booty item.
www.specialtyinterests.net /hittites.html   (3704 words)

  
 Day 6: Hattusas, Amasya
From the north, the Kashka people of the Pontic area reached the city around 1400 BC during the reign of Tudhilaya III, and they burned the city down.
Muwatalli's son, Mursili III, moved the capital back to Hattusas.
A family struggle took place, and Mursili II's uncle, Hattusili III, ousted him and bcame Great King.
www.hgriggs.com /turkey/day06.html   (3492 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: Hittite Diplomatic Texts: Books: Gary M. Beckman,Harry A. Hoffner   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
12 Treaty between Mursili II of Hatti and Manapa-Tarhunta of the Land of the Seha River
29 Edict of Mursili II of Hatti recognizing the Status of Piyassili of Carchemish
31A Edict of Mursili II of Hatti concerning the Frontiers of Ugarit
www.amazon.ca /Hittite-Diplomatic-Texts-Gary-Beckman/dp/0788501534   (938 words)

  
 Hittite
Two of the letters from a "kingdom of Kheta" -- apparently located in the same general region as the Mesopotamian references to "land of Hatti" -- were written in standard Akkadian cuneiform script, but in an unknown language; although scholars could read it, no one could understand it.
This war also seems to be the first occasion on which the Hittites found themselves in alliance with Egypt, as it afforded an opportunity for them to attack Aleppo, which they once more managed to capture and destroy.
This may explain why he is said to be destroying mankind, even in his seemingly catatonic state.
www.amanobscured.co.uk /page/history/hittite.html   (3298 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
You, who are a child, how can you equal him." Thus they belittled me. They did not return my subjects.
KUB 26.79 = BoTU 56; i = A. iii: 10 f.
GRELOIS J.-P. Les Annales decennales de Mursili II (CTH 61, I).
membres.lycos.fr /hatti/texts/mursili1-8.html   (5811 words)

  
 homer   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
homêr-euô (A), to be or serve as a hostage, Aeschin.3.133, Antiph.117 ; para tini Aeschin.2.81 ; huper tinos Is.7.8, IG12(7).386.20 (Aegiale, iii B.C.) : metaph., [oinos] pistin anthrôpois kai philian -eueiis the pledge of.
Book III (16 pp.): Menelaus sees Paris in the Trojan ranks, but Paris flees and is mocked by brother Hector; Menelaus offers single combat for Helen and the armies array in lines below the city walls (heroism vs. "gifts of Aphrodite").
The name Hattussa has been attributed to the second Hittite King Hattusili I who conquered the plain south of Hattusa, all the way to the outskirts of modern-day Aleppo in Assyria.
www.geocities.com /protoillyrian/homer   (6433 words)

  
 1992-93 INDIVIDUAL SCHOLARSHIP ANNUAL REPORT   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Kurunta was a younger brother of Mursili III, a king from whom Tudhaliya's father Hattusili III had usurped the throne with Kurunta's help.
The paragraph of the treaty in question concerns Hattusili III's and Tudhaliya IV's fears that should Kurunta have access to his father King Muwattalli II's mausoleum, which probably lay within his kingdom, any attempt in the future by Kurunta to seize the imperial throne would be thereby strengthened.
He delivered a paper on the magic-rituals used by the Hittite army to ensure the loyalty of the men and the help of the gods, the latter rituals doing what we would call morale building.
oi.uchicago.edu /OI/AR/92-93/92-93_Ind_Beal.html   (472 words)

  
 PPKE BTK Ókortörténeti Tanszék
Úr-i dinasztia (2112-2004), Úr-Nammu (2112-2095), Sulgi (2094-2047), Ibbi-Szín (2026-2004), Íszin-Larsza kor (2000-1800), Lipit-Istar (1934-1924), Gungunum (1932-1906), Sumu-el (1894-1866), I. Samsi- Adad (1813-1760), Hammurapi (1792-1750), I. Hattusili (1650-1620), I. Mursili (1620-1590), Telipinu (1525-1500), I. Suppiluliuma (1370-1330), II.
Mursili (1330-1295), Muwattali (1295-1282), qadesi csata (1286), III.
Tabarna, Tacitus, Tarquiniusok, Telipinu, Theodosius, Tiberius, Titus, Traianus, Tudhaliya, III.
clphx.btk.ppke.hu /okortort/fogalmak_k.html   (772 words)

  
 archaeological mind   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
These tablets, known collectively as the Anitta tex, begin by telling how Pithana the king of Kussara or Kussar (a small city-state yet to be identified by archaeologists) conquered the neighbouring city of Nesa (Kanesh).
There were four great rulers though out the Assyrian empire: Tiglath-Pileser III, Sargon II, Sennacherib, and Ashurbanipal.
Tiglahth-Pileser III ruled form 746-727

BC; he was thought to be the founder of the Assyrians.

www.enter-the-past.org /rss   (3714 words)

  
 wellcome to a turkısh boy site !!!! | do you love me ? if you love write I love you to Guestbook hehe please!!!!
Hattusili III and the Egyptian pharaoh Ramses II about 3260 years ago, demonstrating to modern statesmen that international
The empire came to an end, however, when the Persian ruler Cyrus the Great captured Sardis about 546 BC and incorporated Lydia into the Persian Empire.
After the defeat of Persia by Alexander III, king of Macedonia, Lydia was brought under Greek - Macedonian control.
www.freewebs.com /ercanozturk/thelastemperias.htm   (9329 words)

  
 Notes
While hyphens separate signs, equals marks divide enclitics from the stressed word on which they lean, following the practice in Johannes Friedrich & Annelies Kammenhuber's Hethitisches Wörterbuch (2nd ed.
*Cuneiform excerpt from the cover of Visible Language 15, 4 (1981), itself created from from a photo of KBo IV 2 III 40ff.
(Mursili's Aphasia) that was kindly made available to Carol F. Justus for a related project by Professor Horst Klengel & A. Lübse of the Akademie der Wissenschaften der DDR, Zentralinstitut für Alte Geschichte und Archäologie, Beriech Alter Orient.
www.utexas.edu /cola/depts/lrc/iedocctr/ie-texts/notes.html   (668 words)

  
 Ramses II: The reconquest of Canaan   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Likewise it seems that at about this time Ramses, like Thutmose III before him, received gifts from Sengar, Assyria, Alasya and others which were thus considered to be tributary peoples, in accordance with Egyptian tradition.
After curbing the Hittites in Canaan, Ramses did his best to foment unrest among his enemies, such as giving support to Mursili III, the son of Muwatalli, who he had been deposed by his uncle, Hattusili III, first financially and later by granting him asylum.
Feedback: Please report broken links, mistakes - factual or otherwise, etc. to me.
www.reshafim.org.il /ad/egypt/reconquest_of_canaan.htm   (208 words)

  
 The End of the Egyptian-Hittite Hostilities
This points to the border having been some forty kilometres south of Kadesh.
The fact that Hattusili III came to power after ousting the son and legitimate successor of Muwatalli, Mursili III, who fled to Egypt and was given asylum by Ramses, makes the insistence on extradition of fugitives even more understandable.
When I wrote to him: send me my enemy, he didn't extradite him.
www.reshafim.org.il /ad/egypt/egyptian-hittite-peace-treaty.htm   (721 words)

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