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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2013
In the last two decades, extensive excavations and new discoveries have thrown more light on the little known early religions of Anatolia. Certain religious concepts and symbols of the Neolithic and Chalcolithic periods, which are best illustrated in the religious architecture and art of Çatal Hüyük and Hacilar, may now be considered ancestral to some of the traditions and beliefs in the later Anatolian religions.
Sites like Troy, Kusura, Beycesultan, Karahüyük (Konya), Alişar, Kültepe, Alaca Hüyük, Horoztepe, Pulur (Keban) and Tarsus have provided us with material on the religious architecture and art of Bronze Age Anatolia, but, with the exception of Beycesultan, their contribution to the understanding of the early Anatolian pantheons and religions has so far been fragmentary. At Beycesultan, the various changes observed in the altar assemblages of the twin shrines, through the cultural periods of the Bronze Age, may reflect the alterations, additions and conservatism in the religions practised in South-Western Anatolia, and possibly in the other regions of Anatolia as well.
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3 Room 402 in Level IV a, and House 501 in Level V b housed altar-like structures. They may have been domestic shrines. See Blegen, Carl, Caskey, John and Rowson, Marion, Troy, Vol. II, Part 1 (Princeton, 1951), pp. 144, 258Google Scholar. The Anta House in Level VI h, and the Tower VI i with the four large monolithic pillars set in a row in front of it, seem to have been used as sanctuaries. See, Blegen, , Caskey, and Rowson, , Troy, Vol. III, Part I (Princeton, 1953), 95–8 and 251–2Google Scholar.
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21 In the first phase of the temple the altar assemblage in the holy of holies consisted of two stone stelae (maṣṣeboth), and two fire altars. The third stele (maṣṣebah) belongs to the later phase of the sanctuary. See Aharoni, Y., “Excavations at Tel Arad”, IEJ, Vol.XVII, No.4 (1967), 247–9 pl.47Google Scholar.
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34 Ibid.
35 Pritchard: loc. cit., pl.672.
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47 Mellink, Machteld J., “Excavations at Karataş-Semayük 1966”, AJA Vol.LXXI, No.3, 254Google Scholar, Fig. 77. Bittel, Kurt, “Ein Gräberfeld der Yortan Kultur bei Babâköy”, Afo XIII (1939–1941), 1–28Google Scholar.