III. The Hittites Ancient Anatolia Between the Mediterranean and the Black Sea DU1701 Periods of Art History I Adrien Palladino, M.A., Ph.D. 450842@mail.muni.cz Kingdom of Hattusa, ca. 1350–1300 BCE 1274 BCE, Battle of Qadesh Patera, repoussé gold, 14th–13th century BCE, Ras Shamra-Ugarit, acropolis adjacent to the temple of Baal Musée du Louvre, Paris Reflief with hieroglyphic inscriptions, 8th century CE / from Carchemish Cuneiform tablet with seal, royal decree issued by the Hittite King Tudhaliya IV, 1238–1215 BCE National Museum, Damascus Ruins of Ḫattuša, today Boğazkale Alacahöyük, gateway to the sacred area Eflatun Pinar spring-shrine, ca. 1200 BCE Yazılıkaya Anunnaki – Gods of the Underworld? Rock carving depicting the god Sharuma and the King Tudhaliya IV ca. 1250-1220 BCE Priest-King or Deity, c. 1600 BCE, North Syria, basalt with bone eyes (left, ancient; right, restored); overall: 87.6 cm / The Cleveland Museum of Art Seated goddess with a child, Hittite Empire, 1,300– 1,200 BCE, gold, 4,3 x 1,7 x 1,9 cm Metropolitan Museum, New York Neo-Hittite storm god ‘Tarhunzas’, Teshub, Aleppo museum, Syria Jupiter Dolichenus, Roman empire, 1st half of the 3rd century BCE, found in Austria Wien, Kunsthistorisches Museum Vessel, silver, gold inlay, 18 cm height, ca. 14th–13th century BCE / Metropolitan Museum, New York Vessel, Hittite New Kingdom, reign of Tudhaliya III, 14th century BCE Museum of Fine Arts, Boston