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Corpus of Hieroglyphic Luwian Inscriptions : Volume III: Inscriptions of the Hettite Empire and New Inscriptions of the Iron Age

Hawkins, John DavidWeeden, Mark(Contributions by)Taniguchi, Junko(Edited by)
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Luwian and the closely related Hittite are the oldest known languages of the Indo-European group.

Luwian is written in two scripts: Cuneiform and its own Hieroglyphic, which survives mostly on stone monuments collected from Turkey and Syria.

The texts fall into two main groups, those of the Hittite Empire (c. 1400–1200 B.C.), and those of the Iron Age (c. 1000–700 B.C.),with a transitional period (c. 1200–1000 B.C.). One of the editor’s principal research efforts has been the establishment of reliable texts presented in facsimile copies and photographs.

His Inscriptions of the Iron Age were published as Vol.

I in 2000, and the great Luwian-Phoenician Bilingual in collaboration with Halet Çambel as Vol.

II in 1999. Vol. III will present the Inscriptions of the Hittite Empire along with the newly discovered Iron Age inscriptions, thus completing the whole corpus.

It will then make available to the scholarly world the Luwian language in its Hieroglyphic manifestation, which will be of importance to philologists and ancient historians alike.

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£196.80
Product Details
De Gruyter
3110778858 / 9783110778854
Digital (delivered electronically)
491.998
06/05/2024
Germany
924 pages, 612 Illustrations, black and white; 30 Illustrations, color