Anatolian Archaeology
Anatolian archaeology studies the material culture of ancient Asia Minor, from early Neolithic sites such as Çatalhöyük through the Hittite Empire and the Iron Age kingdoms of the Anatolian plateau.
Definition
The archaeological study of ancient Anatolia, encompassing its prehistoric, Hittite, and Iron Age societies and their material culture.
Scope
This topic covers the archaeology of Anatolia from the emergence of farming and early settlements through the Bronze Age, dominated by the Hittite state with its capital at Hattusa, to the Iron Age kingdoms such as the Phrygians, Lydians, and Urartians. It examines settlements, fortifications, monuments, and material culture, integrating excavation with Hittite and other textual sources to study state formation, religion, and Anatolia's role linking the Near East and the Aegean.
Core questions
- How did early village societies such as Çatalhöyük develop in Anatolia?
- How did the Hittite state form, expand, and collapse?
- What characterized the Iron Age kingdoms of the Anatolian plateau?
- How did Anatolia connect the Near East with the Aegean world?
Key theories
- Anatolia as a cultural bridge
- The view of Anatolia as a connecting zone between Mesopotamia, the Levant, and the Aegean, whose material culture reflects sustained interaction and exchange across these regions.
- The Hittite imperial state
- The reconstruction, from excavation at Hattusa and cuneiform archives, of the Hittite Empire as a major Bronze Age power with distinctive religious, legal, and administrative institutions.
History
Anatolian archaeology advanced with the early twentieth-century discovery of the Hittite capital Hattusa and its cuneiform archives, which revealed a previously little-known empire. Excavations at sites such as Çatalhöyük and Troy, and study of the Iron Age kingdoms, have made Anatolia central to debates on early urbanism, Bronze Age politics, and East–West contact.
Debates
- Interpreting Çatalhöyük
- Scholars debate the social organization, symbolism, and significance of the large Neolithic site of Çatalhöyük, including questions of egalitarianism, ritual, and the meaning of its art.
Key figures
- Trevor Bryce
- Antonio Sagona
- Paul Zimansky
- Sharon Steadman
Related topics
Seminal works
- sagona2009
- bryce2005
- steadman2011
Frequently asked questions
- Where is Anatolia?
- Anatolia, also called Asia Minor, is the peninsula that makes up most of modern Turkey, between the Black Sea, the Mediterranean, and the Aegean.
- Who were the Hittites?
- The Hittites were a Bronze Age people who built a powerful empire centered on Hattusa in central Anatolia and left extensive cuneiform archives.