Member of any of a succession of peoples who inhabited Anatolia and northern Syria from the 3rd millennium to the 1st millennium
BC. The city of Hattusas (now Bogazköy in central Turkey) became the capital of a strong kingdom which overthrew the Babylonian Empire. After a period of eclipse the Hittite New Empire became a great power (about 14001200
BC), which successfully waged war with Egypt. The Hittite language is an Indo-European language.
The original Hittites inhabited a number of city-states in eastern Anatolia, one of which, Hatti, gained supremacy over the others. An Indo-European people invaded the country about 2000
BC, made themselves the ruling class, and intermarried with the original inhabitants. The Hittites developed advanced military, political, and legal systems. The New Empire concluded a peace treaty with Egypt 1269
BC, but was eventually overthrown by the Sea Peoples. Small Hittite states then arose in northern Syria, the most important of which was
Carchemish; these were conquered by the Assyrians in the 8th century
BC. Carchemish was conquered 717.
The Hittites used a cuneiform script, modelled on the Babylonian, for ordinary purposes, and a hieroglyphic script for inscriptions on monuments. The Hittite royal archives were discovered at Hattusas 190607 and deciphered 1915.
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