Cyprus Today

Ancient shrine in Turkey is a ‘view of the cosmos’

Experts suggest that carvings of gods, at 3,000 year-old remains of the Hittite capital Ḫattuš, might be a calendar, able to track both solar years and months

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A SHRINE built more than 3,000 years ago in what is now Turkey may be a symbolic representa­tion of the cosmos, according to a new interpreta­tion.

It has now been suggested that the elite of the Hittite society, an empire that dominated what is now Turkey between 1700 and 1100 BC until it was destroyed, created the Yazılıkaya shrine to embody their ideas about how the universe was organised.

Yazılıkaya contains many images in rock relief, and the researcher­s behind the new interpreta­tion argue that these have symbolic meanings relating to the underworld, earth and sky, as well as to cycles of nature like the seasons.

“There are many connotatio­ns with the names of the deities and the arrangemen­ts and groups, and so in retrospect it’s pretty easy to figure it out,” says Eberhard Zangger, president of Luwian Studies, an internatio­nal non-profit foundation.

“But we worked on it for seven years.”

“They may be onto something,” says Ian Rutherford at the University of Reading in the UK.

“I’m not convinced of all the details, but very interested in the whole thing.”

Yazılıkaya is an open-air shrine and was one of the most important sites of the Hittite Empire. The remains of the Hittite capital Hattusa can be found near the modern village of Boğazkale in central Turkey. Yazılıkaya is within walking distance of the ancient capital.

At Yazılıkaya, the Hittites carved and modified natural rock outcrops to create two roofless spaces, decorated with rock relief images of their deities. They used the site for centuries; its present form dates from about 1230 BC.

It isn’t clear why the Hittites built Yazılıkaya or what they used it for. Many ideas have been proposed — for instance, that one of the spaces was used in new year ceremonies, and that the other was a mausoleum for a Hittite king.

In 2019, Zangger and his colleague Rita Gautschy at the University of Basel in Switzerlan­d suggested that some of the carvings of gods might be a calendar, able to track both solar years and lunar months. Such a calendar would have been centuries ahead of its time, and the interpreta­tion was greeted with scepticism.

Now, the pair and their colleagues have taken a new tack. Instead of focusing on the possible uses of the carvings, the researcher­s have considered what these might have meant to the Hittites.

“They had a certain image of how creation happened,” says Zangger. He says the Hittites imagined that the world began in chaos, which became organised into three levels: “the underworld, and then the earth on which we walk, and then the sky”.

As part of this, Zangger says the Hittites would have highlighte­d the circumpola­r stars, which never sink below the horizon. He argues that one prominent group of deities in Yazılıkaya represents the circumpola­r stars.

“There are images like that in Egypt,” he says, and the Hittites were influenced by many neighbouri­ng societies, including

Egypt. Other carvings may have links to the earth and the underworld.

The second aspect of Hittite cosmology was “recurrent renewal of life”, says Zangger — for instance, day following night, the dark moon turning into a full moon and winter becoming summer. The calendar-like carvings reflect this cyclical view of nature, he argues.

“As an idea, it’s not farfetched,” says Efrosyni Boutsikas at the University of Kent in Canterbury, UK. Other cultures, ranging from nearby Mesopotami­a to distant Mesoameric­a, used religious monuments to link terrestria­l life with the wider universe. “Obviously that makes sense, because that’s exactly what religion does. It addresses universal concerns and the place of the people in the world,” she says.

However, Boutsikas is concerned that many of the team’s interpreta­tions of the images aren’t based on Hittite texts, which say little about astronomy. Instead, the researcher­s have often used texts from Mesopotami­an societies, which influenced the Hittites but were also distinct. She says the evidence would be stronger if similar links between gods and astronomy could be found at other Hittite sites.

Journal reference: Journal of Skyscape Archaeolog­y

 ??  ?? Some call Yazılıkaya in Turkey the Sistine Chapel of Hittite religious art
Some call Yazılıkaya in Turkey the Sistine Chapel of Hittite religious art

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