Description

Book Synopsis
Why did the Anatolians remain illiterate for so long, although surrounded by people using script? Why and how did they eventually adopt the cuneiform writing system and why did they still invent a second, hieroglyphic script of their own? What did and didn''t they write down and what role did Hittite literature, the oldest known literature in any Indo-European language, play? These and many other questions on scribal culture are addressed in this first, comprehensive book on writing, reading, script usage, and literacy in the Hittite kingdom (c.16501200 BC). It describes the rise and fall of literacy and literature in Hittite Anatolia in the wider context of its political, economic, and intellectual history.

Table of Contents
1. Writing and Literacy among the Anatolians in the Old Assyrian Period; 2. From Kanesh to Hattusa; 3. First Writing in Hattusa; 4. Literacy and Literature in the Old Kingdom until 1500 bc; 5. The Emergence of Writing in Hittite; 6. A Second Script; 7. The New Kingdom Cuneiform Corpus; 8. The New Kingdom Hieroglyphic Corpus; 9. The Wooden Writing Boards; 10. The Seal Impressions of the Westbau and Building D and the Wooden Tablets; 11. In the Hittite Chancellery and Tablet Collections; 12. Scribes and Scholars; 13. The End and Looking Back.

A History of Hittite Literacy

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    A Paperback by Theo van den Hout

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      Publisher: Cambridge University Press
      Publication Date: 3/10/2022 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781108816496, 978-1108816496
      ISBN10: 1108816495

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Why did the Anatolians remain illiterate for so long, although surrounded by people using script? Why and how did they eventually adopt the cuneiform writing system and why did they still invent a second, hieroglyphic script of their own? What did and didn''t they write down and what role did Hittite literature, the oldest known literature in any Indo-European language, play? These and many other questions on scribal culture are addressed in this first, comprehensive book on writing, reading, script usage, and literacy in the Hittite kingdom (c.16501200 BC). It describes the rise and fall of literacy and literature in Hittite Anatolia in the wider context of its political, economic, and intellectual history.

      Table of Contents
      1. Writing and Literacy among the Anatolians in the Old Assyrian Period; 2. From Kanesh to Hattusa; 3. First Writing in Hattusa; 4. Literacy and Literature in the Old Kingdom until 1500 bc; 5. The Emergence of Writing in Hittite; 6. A Second Script; 7. The New Kingdom Cuneiform Corpus; 8. The New Kingdom Hieroglyphic Corpus; 9. The Wooden Writing Boards; 10. The Seal Impressions of the Westbau and Building D and the Wooden Tablets; 11. In the Hittite Chancellery and Tablet Collections; 12. Scribes and Scholars; 13. The End and Looking Back.

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