Luwian identities [electronic resource] : culture, language and religion between Anatolia and the Aegean.

By: Mouton, AliceContributor(s): Rutherford, Ian | Yakubovich, IlyaMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Culture and history of the ancient Near East: Publisher: Leiden : BRILL, 2013Description: 1 online resource (612 p.)ISBN: 9004253416; 9789004252790; 9789004253414; 9789004253414 (electronic book)Subject(s): Luwians -- CongressesAdditional physical formats: Print version:: Luwian Identities : Culture, Language and Religion Between Anatolia and the AegeanLOC classification: DS59.L86 | .M68 2013Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Introduction; Part One Present State of the Luwian Studies; Luwians versus Hittites; Peoples and Maps-Nomenclature and Definitions; Part Two Luwian Communities of Central Anatolia; Names on Seals, Names in Texts. Who Were These People?; Anatolian Names in -wiya and the Structure of Empire Luwian Onomastics; Luwian Words in Hittite Festivals; CTH 767.7-The Birth Ritual of Pittei: Its Occasion and the Use of Luwianisms; 'Luwian' Religious Texts in the Archives of Hat̮tușa; The Luwian Cult of the Goddess Huwassanna vs. Her Position in the "Hittite State Cult"
Greek (and our) Views on the KariansPart Five Cultural Contacts between Luwian or Luwic Groups and the Aegean; Divine Things: The Ivories from the Artemision and the Luwian Identity of Ephesos; Iyarri at the Interface: The Origins of Ares; Singers of Lazpa: Reconstructing Identities on Bronze Age Lesbos; Index
Part Three Luwian Culture in South-Eastern AnatoliaA Luwian Shrine? The Stele Building at Kilise Tepe; A New Luwian Rock Inscription from Kahramanmaraş; Carchemish Before and After 1200 BC; Part Four Luwian and Luwic Groups of Western Anatolia; James Mellaart and the Luwians: A Culture-(Pre)history; The Cultural Development of Western Anatolia in the Third and Second Millennia BC and its Relationship with Migration Theories; Luwian Religion, a Research Project: The Case of "Hittite" Augury; Hieroglyphic Inscriptions of Western Anatolia: Long Arm of the Empire or Vernacular Tradition(s)?
Summary: The Luwians inhabited Anatolia and Syria some three thousand years ago. The present collective volume addresses the questions of their homeland, material and spiritual culture, and relationship with neighbors. It strives to promote Luwian studies as a new interdisciplinary research field.
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Description based upon print version of record.

Introduction; Part One Present State of the Luwian Studies; Luwians versus Hittites; Peoples and Maps-Nomenclature and Definitions; Part Two Luwian Communities of Central Anatolia; Names on Seals, Names in Texts. Who Were These People?; Anatolian Names in -wiya and the Structure of Empire Luwian Onomastics; Luwian Words in Hittite Festivals; CTH 767.7-The Birth Ritual of Pittei: Its Occasion and the Use of Luwianisms; 'Luwian' Religious Texts in the Archives of Hat̮tușa; The Luwian Cult of the Goddess Huwassanna vs. Her Position in the "Hittite State Cult"

Greek (and our) Views on the KariansPart Five Cultural Contacts between Luwian or Luwic Groups and the Aegean; Divine Things: The Ivories from the Artemision and the Luwian Identity of Ephesos; Iyarri at the Interface: The Origins of Ares; Singers of Lazpa: Reconstructing Identities on Bronze Age Lesbos; Index

Part Three Luwian Culture in South-Eastern AnatoliaA Luwian Shrine? The Stele Building at Kilise Tepe; A New Luwian Rock Inscription from Kahramanmaraş; Carchemish Before and After 1200 BC; Part Four Luwian and Luwic Groups of Western Anatolia; James Mellaart and the Luwians: A Culture-(Pre)history; The Cultural Development of Western Anatolia in the Third and Second Millennia BC and its Relationship with Migration Theories; Luwian Religion, a Research Project: The Case of "Hittite" Augury; Hieroglyphic Inscriptions of Western Anatolia: Long Arm of the Empire or Vernacular Tradition(s)?

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The Luwians inhabited Anatolia and Syria some three thousand years ago. The present collective volume addresses the questions of their homeland, material and spiritual culture, and relationship with neighbors. It strives to promote Luwian studies as a new interdisciplinary research field.

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