ISBN-13: 9783565214495 / Angielski / Miękka / 176 str.
While Egypt and Mesopotamia dominate ancient history, the Hittite Empire controlled Anatolia and challenged pharaohs for 500 years-yet remains largely unknown. This book traces how the Hittites built one of antiquity's most sophisticated states between 1600 and 1180 BCE, pioneering iron technology, diplomatic treaties, and decentralized governance that influenced civilizations for centuries.Drawing on cuneiform archives from Hattusa, archaeological evidence, and Egyptian records, the narrative follows the empire's rise from highland chiefdoms to a superpower that fought Ramesses II to a standstill at Kadesh. The Hittites mastered ironworking when bronze dominated warfare, drafted the world's first surviving peace treaty, and created a legal system that protected women's property rights and regulated marriage contracts with unprecedented detail.The book reveals how Hittite scribes preserved eight languages in their archives, how vassal treaties established a model for international relations still studied today, and how climate collapse and Sea Peoples invasions ended their civilization overnight around 1200 BCE. It examines the empire through the experiences of queens who held real political power, provincial governors managing multicultural territories, and metalworkers whose innovations transformed ancient warfare.Relevant for readers interested in how empires adapt to geographical challenges, how technology drives geopolitical shifts, and why some civilizations vanish from historical memory while others endure.
The Hittites forged iron when their rivals still fought with bronze-a technological edge that reshaped ancient warfare and disappeared with their empire's sudden collapse.