Warriors of Anatolia. A Concise History of the Hittites - Trevor Bryce

(Marcin) #1

  1. For references and further details, see Bryce,The World of the Neo-Hittite
    Kingdoms(Oxford, 2012), p. 21.

  2. *Beckman, Bryce, Cline,Ahhiyawa Texts, pp. 154–7.

  3. *Ibid., pp. 123–33.

  4. *Ibid., pp. 50–67.

  5. *For references and translated excerpts, see Bryce,Kingdom of the Hittites,
    pp. 316–18.

  6. For references and further details, ibid., pp. 321–3.


CHAPTER24 HATTI’SDIVINEOVERLORDS



  1. For a detailed account, see Seeher,Gods Carved in Stone. The Hittite Rock
    Sanctuary of Yazılıkaya(Istanbul, 2011).

  2. *Hoffner,Hittite Myths(Atlanta, 1998), pp. 14–20.

  3. After Hoffner. For translations of both versions, see*Hoffner, ibid.,
    pp. 10–14.

  4. For further discussion of the myth, see Bryce,Life and Society, pp. 215–19.


CHAPTER25 DEATH OF ANEMPIRE



  1. For a detailed account of the collapse of the Bronze Age civilisations, see
    Cline,1177 BC. The Year Civilization Collapsed(Princeton, 2014).

  2. *Hawkins,The Hieroglyphic Inscription of the Sacred Pool Complex at
    Hattusa (Südburg)(Wiesbaden, 1995), pp. 21–2.

  3. Further on these inscriptions, with references, see Bryce,Neo-Hittite
    Kingdoms, pp. 21–2.

  4. *Pritchard,Ancient Near Eastern Texts, pp. 262–3 (transl. J. A. Wilson).

  5. See most recently Marc Van De Mieroop,A History of the Ancient Near
    East(3rd edn) (Oxford, 2016), pp. 207–8. On the Sea Peoples in general,
    see Elezier Oren,The Sea Peoples and Their World: A Reassessment
    (Philadelphia, 2000), Cline,1177 BC.

  6. *For further discussion, text references, and translations from the relevant
    texts, see Bryce,Ancient Syria, pp. 90–3.

  7. For the text and other relevant material, see Bryce,Kingdom of the Hittites,
    pp. 331–2.

  8. See Bryce,Neo-Hittite Kingdoms.


NOTES TO PAGES 234 – 267 279

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