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      Celestial Aspects of Hittite Religion, Part 2: Cosmic Symbolism at Yazilikaya

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          Abstract

          Evidence of systematic astronomical observation and the impact of celestial knowledge on culture is plentiful in the Bronze Age societies of Egypt, Mesopotamia and Europe. An interest in astral phenomena is also reflected in Hittite documents, architecture and art. The rock-cut reliefs of 64 deities in the main chamber of Yazilikaya, a Hittite rock sanctuary associated with Hattusa, the Hittite capital in central Anatolia, can be broken into groups marking days, synodic months and solar years. Here, we suggest that the sanctuary in its entirety represents a symbolic image of the cosmos, including its static levels (earth, sky, underworld) and the cyclical processes of renewal and rebirth (day/night, lunar phases, summer/winter). Static levels and celestial cyclicities are emphasised throughout the sanctuary – every single relief relates to this system. We interpret the central panel with the supreme deities, at the far north end of Chamber A, as a reference to the northern stars, the circumpolar realm and the world axis. Chamber B seems to symbolise the netherworld.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Journal of Skyscape Archaeology
          JSA
          Equinox Publishing
          20553498
          2055348X
          June 16 2021
          June 16 2021
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Luwian Studies
          [2 ]Griffith Observatory
          [3 ]Karadeniz Technical University
          [4 ]University of Basel
          Article
          10.1558/jsa.17829
          b0b4913c-dbfd-43ed-9cdc-130d0ce29157
          © 2021
          History

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