Geographie et l'histoire des pays d'Arzava.
Geographie et l'histoire des pays d'Arzava.
Formas de Pago
- PayPal
- Tarjeta de crédito
- Transferencia Bancaria
- Pubblica amministrazione
- Carta del Docente
Detalles
- Año de publicación
- 1953
- Lugar de impresión
- Ankara
- Autor
- Füruzan Kinal.
- Páginas
- 0
- Editores
- Ankara Üniversitesi Dil ve Tarih - Cografya Fakültesi Yayinlari
- Formato
- 4to - over 9¾ - 12" tall
- Materia
- Archeology & Ancient history
- Descripción
- Soft cover
- Conservación
- Muy bueno
- Idiomas
- Inlgés
- Encuadernación
- Tapa blanda
Descripción
Paperback. Small 4to. (26 x 18 cm). In French. 52 p. Ills. Arzawa in the second half of the 2nd millennium BC (roughly from late 15th century until the beginning of the 12th century) was the name of a region and a political entity (a "kingdom" or a federation of local powers) in Western Anatolia. The core of Arzawa is believed to have been located along the Kestros River (Küçük Menderes), with its capital at Apasa, later known as Ephesus. When the Hittites conquered Arzawa it was divided into three Hittite provinces: a southern province called Mira along the Maeander River, which would later become known as Caria; a northern province called the Seha River Land, along the Gediz River, which would later become known as Lydia; and an eastern province called Hapalla. It was the successor state of the Assuwa league, which also included parts of western Anatolia, but was conquered by the Hittites in c. 1400. Arzawa was the western neighbour and rival of the Middle and New Hittite Kingdoms. On the other hand it was inclose contact with the Ahhiyawa of the Hittite texts, which corresponds to the Achaeans of Mycenaean Greece. Moreover, Achaeans and Arzawa formed a coalition against the Hittites, in various periods.