Hartapu

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hartapu an entity of type: Person

Hartapu est un prince hittite du Nouvel Empire hittite tardif qui régna, pense-t-on, sur Tarhuntassa au début du xiie siècle av. J.-C. rdf:langString
Hartapu (...) fu forse un sovrano Ittita che regnò sulla Regione di Tarhuntassa, situata nel Sud anatolico, alla fine dell'età del bronzo oppure nell'ottavo secolo a.C. rdf:langString
Хартапу (д/н — бл. 1200 до н. е.) — цар хеттського царства . rdf:langString
Hartapu, Sohn des Mursili, war ein späthethitischer König. Seine Inschriften in hieroglyphenluwischer Schrift sind aus Karadağ, Kızıldağ bei Karaman und Burunkaya bei Aksaray sowie Türkmen-Karahöyük bekannt. Letzteres dürfte die Hauptstadt von Hartapu gewesen sein. Hartapu nennt sich in den Inschriften Großkönig und bezeichnet sich als Sohn des Mursili. rdf:langString
Hartapu was an Anatolian king in the 8th century BCE. He is known from Hieroglyphic Luwian inscriptions from , Mount Karadağ, near Aksaray, and most recently , site of a monumental stele in which he claimed victory over the kingdom of Phrygia, ruled around that time by King Midas. Hartapu, who bore the titles Great king, and Hero, states himself to be the son of another Great King and Hero named Mursili. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Hartapu
rdf:langString Hartapu
rdf:langString Hartapu
rdf:langString Hartapu
rdf:langString Хартапу
xsd:integer 48553170
xsd:integer 1104378603
rdf:langString King of Tarhuntassa
xsd:integer 2
rdf:langString Hartapu, Sohn des Mursili, war ein späthethitischer König. Seine Inschriften in hieroglyphenluwischer Schrift sind aus Karadağ, Kızıldağ bei Karaman und Burunkaya bei Aksaray sowie Türkmen-Karahöyük bekannt. Letzteres dürfte die Hauptstadt von Hartapu gewesen sein. Hartapu nennt sich in den Inschriften Großkönig und bezeichnet sich als Sohn des Mursili. Die 2019 in der Nähe des Siedlungshügels Türkmen-Karahöyuk, etwa 50 km südwestlich von Konya, in einem Kanal entdeckte Inschrift kann eindeutig ins 8. Jahrhundert v. Chr. datiert werden und wurde im Auftrag des Hartapu, Sohn des Mursili, verfasst, der das Land Muska (Phrygien) erobert hatte. Zudem unterwarf er dreizehn Könige.
rdf:langString Hartapu was an Anatolian king in the 8th century BCE. He is known from Hieroglyphic Luwian inscriptions from , Mount Karadağ, near Aksaray, and most recently , site of a monumental stele in which he claimed victory over the kingdom of Phrygia, ruled around that time by King Midas. Hartapu, who bore the titles Great king, and Hero, states himself to be the son of another Great King and Hero named Mursili. If Hartapu is the son of Mursili III, he may have succeeded his uncle Kurunta, the younger brother of Mursili III as king of Tarḫuntašša in the 2nd half of the 13th century BC. Hartapu's use of royal titulation may have been similar to its use by to Kurunta, who also bore the titles Great King and Hero to demonstrate his right to the throne of Hattusa, still occupied by the descendants of the usurper Ḫattušili III. Those descendants were Tudhaliya IV during Kurunta's reign, and Suppiluliuma II during Hartapu's reign. It is known that Suppiluliuma II, last known Great King of Hattusa and usurper from Hartapu's point of view, conquered Tarhuntassa during a military campaign. This may have brought Hartapu's reign to an end. Tarhuntassa may have been ruled by the great king of Hattusa again and collapsed together with the rest of the Hittite empire. Tarhuntassa may have survived the collapse of the Hittite empire. Possible evidence is given by a Hieroglyphic Luwian inscription from in south-central Anatolia. In this an inscription dated to the (later?) 12th century BC, a certain Armanani informs about a visit of a great king named Ir-Teššub in the land POCULUM, at which event the great king gave control of three cities within the country of POCULUM to Armanani. It is sure that Ir-Teššub was a Great King, but his country is unknown. One hypothesis is that he was a Great King of Carchemish and successor of Kuzi-Teššub. The other hypothesis is that he may in fact have been a Great King of Tarhuntassa. This hypothesis is based on epigraphic similarities between the inscription from Karahöyük and the inscriptions of Hartapu. This would imply that the royal line represented by Hartapu continued at least to the early Iron Age. In 2019, a farmer near the site of Türkmen-Karahöyük discovered a stone stele commissioned by Hartapu to commemorate his victory over Phrygia written in Luwian Hieroglyphics. Archaeologists from the University of Chicago joined the Konya Regional Archaeological Survey Project to excavate the stele, and the excavations of the archaeological mound at the site, which is believed to be the capital of Hartapu's as yet unnamed kingdom, will continue in 2020. Luwian hieroglyphs have been found on the stone stele in a canal next to the ancient mound of Türkmen-Karahöyük, describing the military victory of "Great King Hartapu" over an alliance of 13 kings, dating from the 8th century B.C. The description has a reference to defeating the royal house of Phrygia, which included King Midas.
rdf:langString Hartapu est un prince hittite du Nouvel Empire hittite tardif qui régna, pense-t-on, sur Tarhuntassa au début du xiie siècle av. J.-C.
rdf:langString Hartapu (...) fu forse un sovrano Ittita che regnò sulla Regione di Tarhuntassa, situata nel Sud anatolico, alla fine dell'età del bronzo oppure nell'ottavo secolo a.C.
rdf:langString Хартапу (д/н — бл. 1200 до н. е.) — цар хеттського царства .
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6471

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