Alişar Hüyük

Archaeological site in Yozgat Province, Turkey From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alishar Hüyük (in modern Yozgat Province, Turkey) was an ancient city in Central Anatolia. It is near the modern village of Alişar, Sorgun. It has been suggested that in the Iron Age the site was part of the polity of Tabal.[1]

LocationYozgat Province, Turkey
Coordinates39°36′22″N 35°15′41″E
Typesettlement
Founded4th millennium BC
Quick facts Location, Coordinates ...
Alişar Hüyük
View of Alişar Höyük from the south
Alişar Hüyük is located in Turkey
Alişar Hüyük
Alişar Hüyük
Shown within Turkey
LocationYozgat Province, Turkey
Coordinates39°36′22″N 35°15′41″E
Typesettlement
History
Founded4th millennium BC
PeriodsNeolithic, Chalcolithic, Bronze Age
Site notes
Excavation dates1927-1932, 1992-2006
ArchaeologistsErich Schmidt, Ronald Gorny
ConditionRuined
OwnershipPublic
Public accessYes
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History

Alishar Hüyük was occupied beginning in the Neolithic Period, through the Chalcolithic, Bronze Age and the Hittites, and into Phrygian times. The remnants of a Late Roman or Byzantine church were also found. During the Neolithic times (found at 26 meters below the mound surface and about 11 meters above virgin soil) the site was in the middle of a lake and occupation was restricted to the mound. As the area dried in the Chalcolithic Age occupation slowly spread off the mound and outer defenses were built. Eventually in the Early Bronze Age a large defensive fortification wall, with gates, was built.[2]

Middle Bronze Age

  • A trading post in the Assyrian Trade Network between Hattusa and Kanesh.

Shamshi-Adad I of Assyria

One tablet carried the eponym Adad-bāni which has been dated to the final years of Shamshi-Adad I (r. 1808-1775 BCE). Mention in those tablets of the town Ankuwa has caused speculation that the site is the Ankuwa mentioned in other Hittite texts.[3][4][5][6]

Later events

Vessel with a quatrefoil mouth, Alishar, Middle Bronze Age III, 1750-1650 BC, ceramic - Oriental Institute Museum, University of Chicago

Fifty three (allowing for copies) cuneiform tablets in Old Assyrian of the Cappadocia type were found there. The tablets appear to be typical of an Assyrian trading outpost typical of that time in Anatolia. In two cases the writer mentions having returned from Zalpuwa (Zalpa) and in another Kanesh and Hattusa are referred to. One tablet mentions a trader Amur-Assur, also mentioned in tablets at the karum in Kultepe. Two of the tablets carry the seal of an "Anitta the Prince" which has led to speculation that this was Anitta who was king of Kuššara in the late 1700s BC.

Late Bronze Age

Late Bronze IIB

The end of Hittite Empire (c. 1350-1190 BCE) occupation (Stratum IV) at about 1200 BC was marked by widespread destruction including and the site was largely unoccupied until Phryangian times.[7]

Archaeology

Head of an animal, pottery rhyton, 1700-1500 BC, MACA, 3082

The top of the mound is surmounted by a truncated cone (designated A) with three lobes extending from it (B, C, and D). A lower town area extents from the mound to the east and south. An excavation system of 10 by 10 meter oriented squares was used.

The site was excavated between 1927 and 1932 by a team from the Oriental Institute of Chicago. The work was led by Erich Schmidt.[8][9][10] [11] [12] [13] [14] Excavation resumed in 1992, led by Ronald Gorny as part of the Alisar Regional Project. Work at the site appears to have been limited to a topographic survey and aerial photography using camera ballons with little or no actual excavation. Most of the project's work has been at nearby Çadır Höyük.[15][16][17]

More information Stratum, Period ...
Stratum Period Notes
I Neolithic Age to Chalolithic Age
II Middle Bronze Age II Cappadocian Tablets
III Late Bronze Age I Early Hittite
IV Late Bronze Age II Hittite
V Iron Age Phryangian to Medo-Persian
VI Classical Age Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine
VII Modern Seljuk and Osmanli
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Çadır Höyük

About 12 km northwest of Alishar Huyuk, there's another important archaeological site named Cadir Hoyuk (Çadır Höyük in Turkish alphabet). Recent excavators of Cadir Hoyuk have identified this site tentatively with the Hittite city of Zippalanda.[18]

See also

References

Further reading

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