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The Hittite Names of Kerkenes Dağ and Kuşaklı Höyük

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

Extract

A major Hittite city-mound in the vicinity of the Kerkenes Dağ having been identified by Dr. Summers (see previous article), the question naturally arises whether their ancient Hittite names can be determined. Unfortunately this central area of the Hittite kingdom was completely distorted in The Geography of the Hittite Empire (1959) by the misplacing of Pala-Tumanna and Nerik and the places, such as Mt. Ḫaḫarwa, associated with them. Allusions to “the sea” locate these places firmly, with Zalpa, at the opposite end of the zone occupied by the Kaška folk, in the far north by the mouth of the Kızıl Irmak, and the maps in that book must be disregarded.

Kuşaklı Höyük stands in the basin of the Kanak Su which rises just above the site of Alişar. This stream is a tributary of the Delice Su which flows north-westward into the Kızıl Irmak and which Forlanini has suggested might be the Hittite “Red River”, said to have “mingled its waters with the Maraššantiya”, but the Kanak Su and its tributaries have not yet been certainly identified in the Hittite texts.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The British Institute at Ankara 1995

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References

1 See Houwink ten Cate, , Florilegium Anatolicum, 160–1Google Scholar; Macqueen, J. G., AS XXX 179 ff.Google Scholar; and my article “Hittite Geography, 30 years on” in Festschrift für Sedat Alp (1992), 213 ffGoogle Scholar.

2 SMEA XVIII, 205Google Scholar; accepted by Alp, S., Hethitische Briefe aus Maşat Höyük, 41Google Scholar. The only reference to this river in a military context is as the assembly point for a campaign against Takkašta (KBo. II 5 ii 2Google Scholar). This would then have been to the north, near its confluence with the Kızıl Irmak.

3 Sedat Alp, op. cit. 17 f., 28, 42 f.

4 Alp, Sedat, Belleten XLI 637 ffGoogle Scholar. with local map p. 647; op. cit. 32 ff.

5 AN.TAḪ.ŠUM: Güterbock, , JNES 19, 80 ff.Google Scholar, NHF 63–66; Houwink ten Cate, , Kaniššuwar, 95 ffGoogle Scholar. Nuntariyašḫaš: Geography, 10 (“Festival List”); Košak, , Linguistica XVI (1976), 5564Google Scholar; H. ten Cate, , Documentum Asiae Minoris Antiquae (Fs. H. Otten), 167 ff.Google Scholar; studied by Goetze, , RHA XV/61 (1957), 93 ffGoogle Scholar.

6 Güterbock, , JNES 20, 89 f.Google Scholar, NHF 64; RGTC VI, 34Google Scholar.

7 Several earlier suggestions are recorded in RGTC VI. Forlanini in SMEA XXII 74 n. 21Google Scholar supports Cornelius' identification with Nefezköy/Tavium 16 km south of Boğazköy, . Börker-Klähn, J. in Fs Bittel (1983)Google Scholar revived Forrer's proposal of 1929, the mound by the Delice Su near Yerköy opposite the warm springs of Ucuz Hamam and now called Bulamaşli Höyük. This site, though otherwise suitable, is 60 km. from the capital, surely too far for the requirements of the text. Most recently Erkut, Sedat in Fs Alp, 1992, 159 ff.Google Scholar, has claimed Alaca Hüyük as its site, on the strength of the possibility that a certain Zuwa mentioned on the fragmentary tablet found there might be the same person as the Zuwa who is elsewhere attested as having charge of gold and silver ornaments belonging to the Sun-goddess of Arinna (for another proposal for Alaca Hüyük see below, n. 11). Cf. Ünal, A., Belleten, XLV/180, 1981, 451 ff.Google Scholar, SMEA 24, 1984Google Scholar, and AS XLIV 216Google Scholar.

8 The text is here restored by KUB LV 5 I 12 ff.Google Scholar, version F in the treatment by H. ten Cate, in Documentum Asiae Minoris Antiquae (Fs. H. Otten), 167 ffGoogle Scholar. This text breaks off before the visit to Zippalanda. The parallel with the spring festival suggests that this is part of the outward journey rather than on the return via Katapa.

9 Identification proposed by Gelb, , Inscriptions from Alishar, 9 f.Google Scholar, but his arguments are very weak, since the name occurs on only three tablets. It was discussed by Bilgiç, E., AfO XV 30 f.Google Scholar, and rejected by Ünal, A., SMEA XXIV (1984), 87107Google Scholar, but defended by Kempinsky and Košak, , Tel Aviv 9 (1982), 107 fGoogle Scholar. and more recently by Gorny, R. in AS XLIII (1993), 163 ff.Google Scholar, with fresh arguments. It may be hoped that Dr. Gorny's recently resumed excavations at the site will provide decisive evidence for or against. But both Ünal and Forlanini would place Ankuwa somewhere in the Kanak Su valley not far from Alişar. See also below.

10 KUB XXV 28 i 1–10Google Scholar; RGTC VI, 20Google Scholar; Kempinsky–Košak, loc. cit.

11 KBo. XXX 155 rev. 4–11Google Scholar; KUB XX 25 + X 78Google Scholar. Thus Zippalanda can hardly have been at Alaca Hüyük, as recently maintained by Popko, M. (Zippalanda, Texte der Hethiter 21. 1994, 11 ff.)Google Scholar. If there had been night stops on the way. they would surely have been mentioned, as in XXV 28.

12 Forlanini, in Hethitica VI, 47 with n. 11Google Scholar and Atlante Storico (1986) p. 2Google Scholar. For the same reason Ünal locates Kuššara at Alişar (op. cit. 105, and RIA VI 381Google Scholar).

13 KBo XV 28Google Scholar, Archi, , SMEA XVI 135Google Scholar, Ünal, , RHA XXXI 53Google Scholar. In the same text but in broken context the river Imralla is mentioned. This could then be the name of the Eğri Öz Su, the stream by Kuşaklı Höyük, as entered on Forlanini' map, loc. cit. On this tributary of the Kanak Su cf. Anderson, J. C., Studia Pontica I 26Google Scholar.

14 KBo IV 4 iii 26 f.Google Scholar, Götze, , AM 126Google Scholar.

15 Forlanini, in Atlante Storico (1986) p. 2Google Scholar puts Katapa at “Babali”, apparently his name for Kuşaklı Höyük itself (see Studia Mediterranea P. Meriggi Dicata, 1979, 180 n. 76)Google Scholar, just as we did in the Geography. The autumn festival started at Katapa, possibly because the king had been in winter quarters there (Güterbock, , JNES XX, 90 f.)Google Scholar. But there was no sacred mountain at Katapa, and this now seems too far south to be the place where the “Festival of the Nerik road” was celebrated (KUB XXV 10 iv 1–7Google Scholar, cf. Güterbock, ibid.). Forlanini's “Çamurlu” is Cemali, a mound south of Kerkenes Dağ now flooded by the Esenli dam (information from Dr. Summers).

16 On Mt. Daḫa see Gonnet, H., RHA XXVI/83, no. 128Google Scholar. It is included among the deities of Zippalanda in Muwatalli's Prayer, KUB VI 45/46 (Geography, p. 116Google Scholar).