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This topic is discussed in the following articles:
  • comparison with Judaism

    Judaism: Myths
    ...YHWH and a monster variously named Leviathan (Wriggly), Rahab (Braggart), or simply Sir Sea or Dragon. The Babylonians told likewise of a fight between their god Marduk and the monster Tiamat; the Hittites told of a battle between the weather god and the dragon Illuyankas; while a Canaanite poem from Ras Shamra (ancient Ugarit) in northern Syria relates the discomfiture of Sir Sea by the deity...
    Moses (Hebrew prophet): The Covenant at Sinai
    During the 14th century bce the Hittites of Asia Minor made a number of treaties with neighbouring rulers who came under their control. The agreement was not between equals, but between the Hittite king (the suzerain) and a subordinate ruler (the vassal). In the prologue the Hittite ruler described himself as “the great king,” the one granting the treaty. Then followed a...
  • Middle Eastern religions

    Middle Eastern religion: The “archaeological revolution”
    ...found at Megiddo in Israel, showing that the Mesopotamian version was current in Palestine before the Hebrews, under Joshua, conquered the land about 1200 bc. A previously little-known people, the Hittites, are, because of archaeological discoveries, now recognized as a major power of antiquity with a rich legacy of religious texts, especially rituals.
    Anatolian religion: Sources of modern knowledge
    ...Minor was above all the home of the religion of Cybele, the Great Mother of the Gods, whose cult was centred in Phrygian Pessinus. A monument such as the colossal, but much weathered, figure of a Hittite goddess carved high up on the slopes of Mount Sipylus (near Manisa) was of necessity ascribed by the 2nd-century- ad Greek traveler and geographer Pausanias to the Mother of the Gods, since...
  • sacred kingship

    sacred kingship: The divine or semidivine king
    ...most prevalent artistic representations of the sacred king, and the practice of addressing the king as “my sun” are well depicted in rock reliefs and inscriptions in areas ruled by the Hittite kings. The Persian king was regarded as the incarnation of the sun god or of the moon god. In addition to sky or sun deities, the sacred king also has been identified with other gods: the...
    sacred kingship: The king as priest and seer
    ...most cultivated of the magicians. The king in Ugarit (in Canaan) also carried out priestly functions and as prophet was the receiver of revelations. Like other ancient Middle Eastern monarchs, the Hittite king was the chief priest.
  • use of covenants

    covenant (religion): Late Bronze Age developments
    About the beginning of the late Bronze Age ( c. 1500 bce), there occurred a major step forward in both the form and the concept of political covenants as is attested by treaties of the Hittite empire of Asia Minor. Though the realities of political life were probably little changed, since the foreign policy of the Hittite empire was primarily military, the structure of suzerainty treaties...
  • worship of

    • Arinnitti

      Arinnitti
      Hittite sun goddess, the principal deity and patron of the Hittite empire and monarchy. Her consort, the weather god Taru, was second to Arinnitti in importance, indicating that she probably originated in matriarchal times. Arinnitti’s precursor seems to have been a mother-goddess of Anatolia, symbolic of earth and fertility. Arinnitti’s attributes were righteous judgment, mercy, and royal...
    • Kubaba

      Kubaba
      goddess of the ancient Syrian city of Carchemish. In religious texts of the Hittite empire ( c. 1400– c. 1190 bc), she played a minor part and appeared mainly in a context of Hurrian deities and rituals. After the downfall of the empire her cult spread westward and northward, and she became the chief goddess of the successor kingdoms (the neo-Hittite states) from Cilicia to...
    • Teshub

      Teshub
      in the religions of Asia Minor, the Hurrian weather god, assimilated by the Hittites to their own weather god, Tarhun ( q.v.). Several myths about Teshub survive in Hittite versions. One, called the “Theogony,” relates that Teshub achieved supremacy in the pantheon after the gods Alalu, Anu, and Kumarbi had successively been deposed and banished to the netherworld. Another...
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