Abstract

When: Karum Period: First centuries of the 2nd millennium B.C. when Assyrian and Anatolian merchants took part in large-scale commercial exchanges between Aššur and central Anatolia. Most of the epigraphic finds come from the 19th century BC, and the 18th century is less known. We don’t know how the commercial exchanges came to an end. Until the establishment of the administration at the Hittite capital Hattuša/Boğazköy (1650), there is a hiatus in the epigraphical records for more than a century. Who: Anitta, son of Pithana, an ambitious ruler who created one of the first Kingdom in Central Anatolian (modern Turkey) in the mid 18th century.Where: Boğazköy (modern name, in Central Anatolia) was a city called Ḫattuš and was an exchange place in the Anatolian Network of the Karum period. The site was selected as the capital of the Hittites around 1650 by Ḫattušili I, the first well attested Hittite King.

Highlights

  • During the first centuries of the 2nd millennium Assyrian and Anatolian merchants took part in a large-scale commercial exchanges between Aššur and central Anatolia

  • Most of the epigraphic finds come from the 19th century BC, and the 18th is less known

  • We don’t know how the commercial exchanges came to an end and until the establishment of the administration at the Hittite capital Hattuša, there is a hiatus in the epigraphical records for more than a century

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Summary

Introduction

During the first centuries of the 2nd millennium Assyrian and Anatolian merchants took part in a large-scale commercial exchanges between Aššur and central Anatolia. Néhémie Strupler Université de Strasbourg/ Institut Français d’Études Anatoliennes

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