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  1. Hurrian religion was one of the best attested influences of Hittite religion. The Hurrian pantheon is depicted in the rock reliefs from the Hittite sanctuary at Yazılıkaya, which dates to the thirteenth century BCE. Hittite scribes also translated many Hurrian myths into their own language, possibly relying on oral versions passed down by ...

  2. Hittite mythology was also influenced more directly by the Hurrians, a neighboring civilization close to Anatolia, where the Hittites were located. Hurrian mythology was so closely related that Oxford University Press published a guide to mythology and categorized Hittite and Hurrian mythology together as "Hittite-Hurrian".

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  4. The next most important group of gods is the Hurrian. In the eastern part of the Hittite kingdom, the Hurrian cults of the goddess Hebat and her consort Teshub flourished in many centers. Within the official. religion there was a tendency to identify Hebat with the sun-goddess of Arinna and Teshub with Taru.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HurriansHurrians - Wikipedia

    The Hurrian religion, in different forms, influenced the entire ancient Near East, except ancient Egypt and southern Mesopotamia. While the Hurrian and Urartian languages are related, there is little similarity between corresponding systems of belief. Hurrian incense container The Hittite gods Teshub and Hebat, chamber A, Yazilikaya, Hittite ...

  6. Anatolian religion - Hittites, Hattians, Hurrians: An interval of only a few decades separates the end of the Assyrian colony period from the earliest records of the kingdom of Hatti, and for the next five centuries (c. 1700–1200 bc) the history of Asia Minor is well documented. The texts reveal a country inhabited by a number of distinct peoples. The Hittites in the centre, the Luwians in ...

  7. Dec 28, 2016 · It was during this period that both a remarkable amount of Hurrian textual material entered into the Hittite capital and Hittite kings began having both Hittite and Hurrian names. In this paper I argue that the importation of Hurrian cultural material accompanied the dynastic marriage between the Hittite king and the king of Kizzuwatna.

  8. HURRIAN RELIGION . A Near Eastern phenomenon dating mainly from the second millennium bce, the Hurrian religion is known more from contemporary and later Hittite documents than from native Hurrian sources. The Hurrians were an apparently Armenoid people who moved into northern Syria and northwestern Mesopotamia by at least 2300 bce.

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