Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Hattic, or Hattian, was a non-Indo-European agglutinative language spoken by the Hattians in Asia Minor in the 2nd millennium BC. Scholars call the language "Hattic" to distinguish it from Hittite, the Indo-European language of the Hittite Empire.

  3. Hattic, or Hattian, was a non-Indo-European agglutinative language spoken by the Hattians in Asia Minor in the 2nd millennium BC. Scholars call the language "Hattic" to distinguish it from Hittite, the Indo-European language of the Hittite Empire. The Hittites referred to the language as "hattili" .

  4. Hattian language, non-Indo-European language of ancient Anatolia. The Hattian language appears as hattili ‘in Hattian’ in Hittite cuneiform texts. Called Proto-Hittite by some, Hattian was the language of the linguistic substratum inside the Halys River (now called the Kızıl River) bend and in.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Some scholars have seen affinities between the Northwest Caucasian (Circassian) family and the extinct Hattic language. Hattic was spoken in Anatolia ( Turkey ), in the area around ancient Hattusa (modern Boğazköy ), until about 1800 BCE, when it was replaced by the Indo-European Hittite language.

  6. Oct 15, 2023 · Hattic was maybe a non-Indo-European language and is known to us primarily through Hittite texts, where it was preserved in religious and cultic contexts. The Hittites, upon establishing themselves in Anatolia, seemingly absorbed various aspects of Hattic culture and religion, venerating Hattic deities and maintaining Hattic rituals.

  7. Characteristics and grammar. Hattic was an ergative, agglutinative language with weakly developed suffixation but heavy prefixation 14 . Verbs contained a string of prefixes with fixed order, expressing different grammatical relations. The verbal roots were predominantly monosyllabic or disyllabic.

  1. People also search for