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Lukka

(660 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[German version] Hittite name attested in the 14th-13th cents. BC ( Lu-uk-ka/ ka4-a- [Lukkā-], with a stem ending of prolonged grade and certainly accented. Akkadian Lukki, Egyptian Rk [Luka/i]) for the area encompassing southwestern Asia Minor, western Pamphylia/ western Pisidia, Lycia and southern Caria, which stretched in the east to the Cestrus (Hittite Kastraja), in the north to Arzawa (or Mira) and bordered on Mycenaean settled Millawa(n)da ( Miletus) ( Hattusa II with map). It should be understood only in the poli…

Luwian

(2,869 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[German version] A. Documented period, language area Derived from the Hittite designation Luu̯ili-, Luwian is the term for the most widespread representative of the Anatolian languages in Asia Minor. It is attested in two dialects, both recorded in different writing systems. Cuneiform Luwian (CL, 16th to 13th cent. BC) and Hieroglyphic Luwian (HL, 15th to early 7th cent. BC), as well as in its late successors Pisidian (Pis., 3rd cent. AD), Lycian (5th to 4th cent. BC) and Milyan (Mil., 5th/4th cents. BC), …

Sēḫa (Seha River Land)

(776 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[German version] I. Geographic location, borders Luwian-speaking (Luwian) state in Northwestern Asia Minor documented in Hittite transmission in the 15th-13th cents. BC. Its core area comprised the valleys of the Hermus [2] and the Caecus [1] (merging near the coast), and its name is derived from one of these two rivers. The Hittite designation is Sēḫas utnē (in Akkadian orthography KUR ÍD ŠE-E-ḪA) 'the land of S.,' while the name 'river land of S.', often found in secondary literature, is based on the inappropriate translation of the determinative ÍD 'river.' In the north, S. borde…

Horsemanship

(884 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[German version] A. Introduction Horsemanship refers to the riding style developed in ancient times for military use of the  horse that has remained dominant up to the present time for European riding - the ‘classical riding style’. It is distinguished from other riding styles (that were only passed down or arose in modern times) in that in the training of the horse it is not satisfied with mere habituation but follows a systematic, gradually increased exercise programme that is based on strict obse…

Hittite

(863 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[German version] A. Tradition The language, passed down to us in Babylonian cuneiform, of the Hittites who had political leadership in Asia Minor in the 2nd millennium BC (core area appr. the geographical region outlined by Halys/Kızıl İrmak,  Ḫattusa II), which they themselves called Nesumnili- ‘Nesic’, a derivative of the place name Nēsa- (= Old Assyrian Kaneš, near Kayseri; the modern term has its origin in the historical development of the discipline); at the same time the most important representative of the  Anatolian languages from the point …

Tarhuntassa

(247 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[German version] Inland country of the Hittite Empire (Ḫattusa II. with map) in southern Asia Minor, which first makes an appearance in history at the time of Muwattalli II ( c. 1290-1272 BC) during the temporary relocation of the Hittite capital to this region's capital of the same name (T.; at modern Karaman or in the upper  Calycadnus valley). After Mursili III Urḫitesub ( c. 1272-1265) was deposed, Ḫattusili II (previously “III”; c.  1265-1240) established in T., as compensation for his brother Kurunta Ulmitesub who had been excluded from the legitimate successi…

Palaic

(335 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[German version] The language of the country of Plā (cuneiform Pa-la-a-) situated northwest of the Halys in Paphlagonia. It belongs to the Anatolian languages and is passed down from the 16th-15th cent. BC by the Hittites (Ḫattusa II, Hittite). The names of Plā and of neighbouring Tum(m)anna (Ḫattusa II , map), survive in the Greek regional names Blaē̈nḗ and Domanítis. It would therefore seem more accurate if the name of the language, which derives from Hittite Plaumnili- (derivation from the ethnic name Plaumen-*), were 'Plaic'. The extent of the area in which P. was spoken is…

Anatolian languages

(472 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[German version] The earliest documented Indo-Germanic language branch, which occurs in Asia Minor; ranged in the 2nd millennium from the Aegean coast to the Euphrates, gradually in the 1st millennium through  Phrygia, later above all through  Greece until it penetrated relatively inaccessible parts of the Taurus mountains (East Pisidia, Lycaonia, Isauria), where Anatolian (Luwian) language carriers remained, probably until the early Byzantine era. To the Anatolian languages (AL) belong  Hittite. …

Wilusa

(674 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[German version] State recorded in the 14th-13th cents. BC by the Hittite tradition (Hittite U̯ilusa-/ U̯ilussa-) in the northwest of Asia Minor, which was initially known to the Hittites at the end of the 15th cent. under the name Āssuwa (=Ā.). Its geographical location in the Troad (cf. Ḫattusa II, map, and above all the maps in [2. 304-307]), which was proposed as early as 1924 [6] and was able to be proved in 1997 on the basis of new evidence [8; 4], follows from W.'s close connexion with the sea [10. 603…

Mirā

(1,697 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[German version] I. Geographical site, boundaries M. (Hittite also Merā-) is the name of the core territory of the significant Luwian-speaking state of Arzawa in western Asia Minor, which is attested from the 16th cent. BC on, primarily through the Hittite tradition, and of the Hittite vassal state formed out of it in c. 1315 BC. The vassal state grew into a Great Kingdom at the end of the 13th cent., and may have survived the collapse of the Hittite Empire (shortly after 1200 BC; see Ḫattusa II.). The western part of M., with the Arzawan capital of Abasa/Ephesus, encompassed the r…

Carian

(845 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[German version] Language of the inhabitants of Caria ( Cares, Caria), documented in c. 200 inscriptions -- from the 7th-4th cents. BC that are mostly very short or fragmentary and written in a characteristic alphabetic script -- which apart from Greek-Carian bilingual inscriptions from Athens that came from Carian mercenaries and almost solely contain personal names, for the most part come from Egypt (e.g. Saqqāra, Abydus, Abu Simbel), and to a lesser extent from Caria itself (e.g. Caunus, Hyllarima, Sinur…

Lydian

(527 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[German version] Lydian, belonging to the Anatolian languages, is the language of the Lydians and is transmitted in its own alphabetical script, which is written either left-to-right or right-to-left ( Asia Minor V., with map). Around 100 inscriptions are known today (including several graffiti and inscriptions on seals and coins), the majority of them, including two Lydian-Greek and two Lydian-Aramaic bilingual inscriptions, stemming from the 5th-4th/3rd cent. BC, while some of the graffiti and c…

Sidetic

(153 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[German version] One of the  Anatolian languages; written in its own alphabetic script (Asia Minor VI), which runs from right to left, and attested in Side and the surrounding area. In addition to inscriptions on coins (5th/4th cent. BC), six mostly brief dedicatory inscriptions are known today, among them three that are bilingual (Sidetic-Greek; one is from Seleucia/Lyrbe), one voting tablet, and one inscription on a vessel from the 3rd/2nd cent. ([2] and [1] each with older literature; [3]). In …

Karisch

(706 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[English version] Sprache der Bewohner Kariens (Kares, Karia), bezeugt durch ca. 200 zumeist sehr kurze bzw. fragmentarische, in eigentümlicher Alphabetschrift geschriebene Inschr. des 7.-4. Jh.v.Chr., die abgesehen von einer griech.-k. Bilingue aus Athen zum größeren Teil - von k. Söldnern herrührend und fast nur PN enthaltend - aus Äg. (z.B. Saqqāra, Abydos, Abu Simbel), zum geringeren Teil aus Karien selbst (z.B. Kaunos, Hyllarima, Sinuri) und Lydien (Sardes, Smyrna) stammen, sowie durch PN, ON…

Anatolische Sprachen

(436 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[English version] Der am frühesten bezeugte, in Kleinasien vorkommende idg. Sprachzweig; im 2. Jt. von der ägäischen Küste bis zum Euphrat verbreitet, im 1. Jt. nach und nach zunächst durch das Phryg., später vor allem durch das Griech. bis auf schwer zugängliche Gebiete des Taurusgebirges (Ostpisidien, Lykaonien, Isaurien) verdrängt, wo anatol. (luw.) Sprachträger sich wohl bis in frühbyz. Zeit halten konnten. Zu den a. S. gehören Hethit. (18. - 13. Jh.) sowie Palaisch (16. - 15. Jh.), das in meh…

Lukkā

(525 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[English version] Im 14.-13. Jh.v.Chr. bezeugte hethit. Benennung ( Lu-uk-ka/ ka4-a- [Lukkā-], mit dehnstufigem, gewiß akzentuiertem Stammauslaut; akkad. Lukki, äg. Rk [Luka/i]) für das sw-kleinasiatische, West-Pamphylien/ West-Pisidien, Lykien und Süd-Karien umfassende Gebiet, das im Osten bis zum Kestros (hethit. Kastraja) reichte, im Norden an Arzawa (bzw. Mirā) und an das myk. besiedelte Millawa(n)da (Miletos) grenzte (Ḫattusa II mit Karte). Sie ist, zumal dem anatol. Kleinasien (anatolische Sprachen) die ethni…

Lydisch

(457 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[English version] Die zu den anatolischen Sprachen gehörende, in einer eigenen, teils links-, teils rechtsläufigen Alphabetschrift (Kleinasien V., mit Karte) überl. Sprache der Lyder. Bekannt sind bis h. ca. 100 Inschr. (einschließlich einiger Graffiti, Siegel- und Mz.-Aufschriften), von denen die Mehrzahl, darunter zwei lyd.-griech. und zwei lyd.-aram. Bilinguen, aus dem 5.-4./3. Jh.v.Chr. stammt, während die Graffiti und Mz. z.T. älter sind (ab E. 8./Anf. 7. Jh.). Haupt-FO ist Sardeis; weitere F…

Palaisch

(282 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[English version] Die zu den anatolischen Sprachen gehörende, aus dem 16.-15. Jh.v.Chr. durch die Hethiter (Ḫattusa II., Hethitisch) überl. Sprache des nordwestl. des Halys in Paphlagonia gelegenen Landes Plā (keilschriftlich Pa-la-a-), das zusammen mit dem benachbarten Tum(m)anna (Ḫattusa II., Karte) in den griech. Landschaftsnamen Blaē̈nḗ und Domanítis fortlebt; die Sprachbenennung, nach hethit. Plaumnili- (Ableitung vom Ethnikon Plaumen-*), sollte also besser “Plaisch” lauten. Über die Ausdehnung des p. Sprachgebietes besteht keine Klarheit, da die be…

Reitkunst

(749 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[English version] A. Einleitung Unter R. ist die im Alt. zur mil. Nutzung des Pferdes (Pf.) entwickelte und bis h. für das europäische Reiten bestimmend gebliebene “klass. Reitweise” zu verstehen. Von anderen (erst neuzeitlich überl. oder entstandenen) Reitweisen unterscheidet sie sich dadurch, daß sie sich in der Ausbildung des Pf. nicht mit bloßer Gewöhnung begnügt, sondern eine systematische, stufenweise gesteigerte Gymnastizierung verfolgt, die auf strikter Beachtung der körperlichen (Exterieur)…

Hethitisch

(721 words)

Author(s): Starke, Frank (Tübingen)
[English version] A. Überlieferung Die in babylon. Keilschrift überl. Sprache der im 2. Jt. v.Chr. in Kleinasien polit. führenden Hethiter (Kerngebiet etwa der vom Halys/Kızıl İrmak umschriebene geogr. Bereich, Ḫattusa II), von ihnen selbst Nesumnili- “Nesisch” gen., eine Ableitung vom ON Nēsa- (= altassyr. Kaneš, bei Kayseri; die moderne Sprachbezeichnung ist wissenschaftsgesch. bedingt); zugleich der hinsichtlich Umfang und themat. Vielfalt seines Textcorpus sowie im Hinblick auf seine philol. Auf- und Durcharbeitung (seit 1915) wichti…
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