Ahmet Ünal - Hanti̇taşşu
Ahmet Ünal - Hanti̇taşşu
Ahmet Ünal - Hanti̇taşşu
AHMET Ner
I
CONTENTS
VII.VIII
PREFACE
I. Introductory Remarks on the Dichotomy Between Hittite
l-13
Medicine and Magical Practices' '
II,TraditionandDifferentCompositionsofthe$antita$u.
1+16
Ritual.
A = KBo 11.14 .........
t4
r+15
B = KBo 13.745
r5
C = KUB a3.57 (+) I(Bo 18.174""
15
D = KBo L7.104 (+) 2029/5........,
III. Transliteration and Translation of KBo 11.14 with its
Duplicates.. 17-32
exchange for other craftsmen such as masons from the southern Anatolian added almost nothing to the medical sciencel0. The evidence on
city of upina6. Therefore, in a society deprived all kind of rational drawbacks of the Hittite medicine rises also on a solid ground and is as
medical practices, the significance of magic becomes selfevident. Thus it is such irrefutable. Accordingly my own assessment and understanding of the
the lack of the remedial pharmacological substances in medical sense that subject matter compels me to object to the view of Dinol, which results
often gave reason for the application of magic in restoring the health of from his a prior ''anthropological'' comparisons with simple but universal
patients and in all kinds of purely medical difficultieso. These practical medico-magical practices among other primitive societiesll and his alleged
requirements promoted magical practices to a status equal to that of sympathy for the subject matter rather than from textual evidence; many
medicine, and, in most cases, it even surpassed medical practices and reasons oblige me to retain my petio principii, which I will not repeat
overshadowed them. here, since it would be redundant. All scholars of ancient oriental studies
sympathize involuntarily to a certain degree with the achievements of
Although the capabilities of Hittite medicine were limited by the
ancient societies, but this sympathy must remain within given scientific
previously mentioned factors and its blemishes and flaws have long been
limitations. In the case of Hittite medical traditions it is very easy to make
known to the Hittitologists as well as laymen sinc a long time, in a recent
study Hittite medicine has been praised from a somewhat fanciful point of
up one's mind by perusing the Hittite medical texts, since they have
survived even if in a limited number and are sufficient to convey us an
ew by M. A. Dinol in his marginal remarks on Hittite medicine in his
approximate impression on the matter. Moreover, they have been
edition of the AeIIa ritual7. Dinol Contests my results8 pertaining to
assembled in a corpus and are readily accessible to everybodyl2. What we
Hittite medicine, culled from a detailed study of the textual edence and
find in these medical texts concerning medical practices is rather a
in accordance to the common opinion of other scholars such as H, G.
collection of treatments from other cultures within the Hittite orbit in
Gtiterbock9, one of the prime authorities of the subject, that the Hittites
broader Sense' i' e,, Baby|ona, Egypt, Hurri lands and native AnatoLian
achievements. Thus, as disappointing as the corollary might yet be, the
truth is that the Hittites on their own did not add a single innovation or
improvement to medicine as a science. I would like to repeat here once
(1980) 475-495; G..Becftman, RIA 7/7-8 (1990) 629-31; idem, women's Role in Hittite again what I wrote fifteen years ago: The only empirical medical knowledge
Medicine ard MagicJouqal of Ancient Cilizations 8 (1993) 25-39; H. otten - C. Rste
"Arztin'' im hethitischen Schrifttum, Fs N. zg (1993) 539-54l C. M\ani,-o. Carruba,
Farmacia nel mondo minoico-miceneo ed egeeanatolico (1986); G. Wilhelm, Medizinische 10
B..t., l75 (1980) 433ff.; note, for example, that in an exhaustive study on
omina aus $attua in akkadischer Sprache, StBoT 36 (1994); Egypto-Hittite letters between medicine in the Ancient World such as D. GoIa, Studien zur altorientalischen und
Ramses ii and' flattuili , also the ones dealing with medical cases, are now completely griechischen Heilkunde. Therapie-Azneibereitung-Rezeptstrukture, in: Sudhoffs Archive
edited by E. EdeI,AHr 1so+; 53f.,80tr, 1l6tr, 170tr, l78ff. fO (1974) there is not a single mention of Hittite medicine.
5 The crucial text passage attesting the exchange
of Eglptian doctors for Hittite stone ll Th" famous book ofJ. G. Frazer, The Golden Bough. A Study in Magic and
cutters from flup'jna comes unfortunately in broken context from a letter of Ramses ii to
Religion. Part I The Magic Art and the Evolurion of Kings. vol. I (198b)3 +gn fu reeming
flattuili xI, KUB 3.67 obv., see most recently E. Edel, Agyptische Arzte und igyptische .vith this kind of examples and instances. More surprisingly some of the Hittite-Ancient
MedizinamhethitischenKnigshof (1976) 85tr;idem,AHKI (1994) l70f., cf.K.Bittel,Die Anatolian magical (and medical) practices have survived and continue to be engaged in
Hethiter (1976) 233f.; A. nat, Hittite Architect and a RopeClimbing Ritual, Belleten 205 some regions of modern Turkey, see S. Ve;ac mek, Trk Halkbilimi (Ankara 1977 tg2tr.,
(1989) 1471 note 5; B. Hrouda, Fremde Knstler bei den Hethitern? Fs Akurgal,
|42tr., |45tr. and passim ard A. na], BMECCJ 4 (1988) 75 on recovering a lost pet animal
Anadolu,/Anatolia 22 (981/82 t1989]) 40.
by magical means using a knife or a rope.
6 On magic see now in details V. Haas,Geschichte
der heth. Religion (1994) 87Gglf 12 collected by c. Burde,stBoT 19
7 .'\sb"u Rituali (CTH 394) ve Hititlerde
.
Q97a);rhere are, however, a few medical texts and
Salgn Hastalklara Kar Majik lemlere incantations which must be added to Burde's collection, but they do not change the
Toplu Bir Bak, Belleten 193 (1985) 6tr absolute result. For the application of conjurations as belle chant in psychiatric therapy see
8 A. nal, Hitit Tbbnn Anahatlan, Belleten 175 (1980) 47549. A. naL, Parts of Trees in Hittite According to a Medical Incantation Text (KUB 43.62), Fs
9 See above note 4. Sedat Alp (1992) 49&500.
4 AHMETNAI- THE RITUAL oF HANTITASU 5
enced by the Hittites was to carry a person away from a Contaminated area one of the links in man's long-term experiences with his enronment' we
if one wanted to save his or her lifel3. In short, the prudent expectedly can easily notice that it might have little to do with supernatural Powers
placed up to now no confidence and will not do it in the future in Dinol's and beings, as most scholars are accustomed to think. This approach
claim which is completely baseless since it is set out from the beginning on ignores the tremendous efforts necesafy for early man merely to survive
the premises of his own subjective observations. physically, even long before he became what we cal| "homo sapens'', and
Magic14 is certainly one of the most ingenious defensive inventions of before he was mentally developed enough to ponder in a highly
mankind in his incessant efforts to ward off ever-threatening sophisticated and philosophic manner about abstract and impercePtible
enronmental circumstances, to cope with them or, if possible, profit from things such as el powers, devils, ghosts, genii, gods and demons, as
them, in short to adjust to his enronment. It is well known that in the moderns anachronistically often assume. The minds of ancient peoples
minds of early men natural and supernatural powers \ivere conceived as were "preoccupied with questions concerning the meaning of death,
good and bad, the latter being represented by natural forces such as afterlife and power of the sprits. Fear of the unknown and the
volcanic mountains, flooding, rivers, winds, the sun, the moon, the stars unperceptable must have had a very disturbing effect on the community as
and dangerous animals in the local fauna; it is thus understandable that a whole each time one of its members died or suffered physical pain due to
magical rituals had to be carried out at certain periods of the year to a disease or internal injuries. It is logical to assume that .... rituals were
appease these powersl5. Magic thus became an inseparable part of daily devised involving among other things the use of sacred material
life. mediums."16
The time has come for researchers to change their preconceived From the very beginning, magic seems to be an inseparable part of
persuasions about magic and their approach towards its meaning and man's rebellious attitude toward the natural forces. It is this rebellious
function i4 early human societies. It would suffice to evaluate magic nature that permanently incited him not to surrender, but to struggle. As a
correctly if pve moderns could conceive of it by its own means, i. e. as a result, without the power and support of magic, primitive man would never
practical and useful instrument in ancient societies. If we think of magic as have overcome his problems and coped with his requirements, nor would
he have survived the cataclysms of natural catastrophes or man-made
calamities such as wars and devastations. In contrast to religion's absolutely
13 KBo l8.10 obv. 2tr., na]'Belieten T75 p. 494. submissive nature, magic is also insurgent. We should not scoffat this effort
14 Ot Hittit. magic see most recently D. H. Engelhard, Hittite Magical Practices: An of early man, which has often been banned by theologians of the Judaeo-
Analysis (Ph. D. Brandeis 1970) M.
Giorgier, Magia e intrighi alla corte di Labarna- Christian persuation who have declared magic to be the work of ''the del'',
Hathsili, Istituto Lombardo 124 (199r) 247-277; A. Goetze, Kleinasien2 (1957, reprinted "a system of exploitation", and thus to be a dangerous opponent of the
1974) l51tr; V. Haas, Magie und Myen im Reiche der Hethiter (|977);idem, Hethitische monotheistic religions, forgetting that magic always had an equal status in
Berggtter und hurritische Steindimonen 1982; idem, RIA s. v. "Magie,,; idem, Magie in
early societies next to religion or as part of the latter. Some theologians
hethitischen Grten, Fs Otten (1988) l2r-142; idem, Geschichte der hethitischen Religion,
in: Hdo (1994) 876tr; M. Hutter, Bemerkungen zur verwendung magischer Rituale in
failed to grasp or admit that magic has never been inferior to religionlT.
mittelhethitischer Zeit, AoF 18 (1991) 3243; G. F. del Monte, Rituali magici e potere nell' Today .e Can say without exaggeration that our ancestors owed their
anatolia itta, in: M. Fales (ed.), Sopranaturale e Potere nel Mondo Antico e nelle Societa survival much more to non-fatalistic, rebellious magic, than to the
e Ancient Anatolian Religions dogmatic and submissive tenets of religions. Luckily, recent research,
BMECCJ 3 (1988) 56ff.; D. P. conducted mainly on the part of Scandinavian scholars, has put magic in a
B. Janowski et al. (eds),
, Nordsyrien und dem Alten
Testament, Orbis Biblicus er Orientalis 129 (1999) 47Tb06. 161. Y^ku,op. cir. p. 38f.
-75 1.
Yuk^r,speculating on the concepts of the "supernatural" in Neolithic Anatolia, 17 s.. A. nal,The Role of Magic in the Ancient Anatolian Religions According to e
XI. Trk Tarih Kongresi Vol. I (1994) 40f. Cuneiform Texts from Boazky-$attua, BMECCJ 3 (1988) 56f.
6 AHMETUNAL THE RITUAL OF HANTITASSU 7
new light; it has shown the important role of magic in its own right and A close glance at different types and amount of the magical utensils
confirmed that there is no religion without magic. Hittite religion serves as and ingredients in Hittite texts, which were allegedly necessary for the
a good example in this regardr8. performance of rituals and served at the same time as a means of
payment22 to the practitioner, shows indeed how expensive the
The role of magic in early societies does not consist merely of
performance of a magical ritual must have been. A ritual text gives an
encouraging man in his efforts to survive but also of the invention of
example of one of the greediest ritual Practitioners so far known to us:
natural and human sciences, because without magic early human societies
would not have been able to reach exalted levels of culturel9 and Hatya, a woman from the town of Kanzapida. At the end of her ritual
performance she candidly declares:
developed sciences20 such as chemistry, medicine, astronomy, physics and
even mythology and literature. "I keep [the utensils of earthen ware] (and) utensils of wickerwork
for myself which I have been usng in the course of (this) riaal; (my)
The origins of magical practices2l certainly go back to primitive and
client does not take23 anything'24.
empiric folk medicine which has been applied by common people since
very ancient times. Pseudo-medicine and subsequently scientific medicine, It is for this reason that in some cases, mostly in the fluwa{{ana-
as well as some branches of fine arts and natural sciences, emerged from rituals from the Luwian speaking southern parts of Anatolia, that ritual
the long term occupation with magic. experts took the poverty of their clients into account and charged less
material from poor clients for the observance of the rite25. In spite of what
The primary medical core of magical practices shimmers through in
seems at first sight to be welfare for the poor, \.ve must assume that usually
most Hittite magical texts. Magic has been from the beginning a sort of
these rituals were observed only for wealthy people who could defray the
"bastard" science which flourished among ancient peoples. This primitive
cost. In addition to these costs and ingredients for the efficacy of the ritual
folk medicine and other magical practices made up an ever present source
from which the medicine men, doctors and magical experts subsequently
borrowed and developed highly sophisticated methods of treatment in the
service of higher social classes. Once taken over by the practitioners and 22 I.,
adopted to sadsry the ambitious demands and needs of the ruling classes, it -ort cases the fee of the doctor or ritual practitioner is paid by means of ritual
residues; it is why somemes e expert seems intentionally to have required more valuable
became an unaffordable luxury for common people, who were at the utensils to be used in the course of the ritual or rnedical cure than actually needed. At the
outset the real originators and initiators of these rich medico-ethnological end it really turns out that the practitioner takes them home as means of self-paym.ent. A
rnaterials, and thus an enduring source of them. we may compare this very illustrative example is given in a construction ritual where the practitioner (here as
phenomenon with the sophisticated and immensely expensive oracle carpenter) takes the golden axe and knife as his fee after ey have been allegedly used for
"ritual" purposes; it is also the shrewdness of the ritual practitioner (here again the
ser,ice at the popular De]Phi versus west Anatolian and Lycian oracle
carpenter) who planned them from the very beginning as his fee; this explains why they
Centers during the late Hellenistic and Roman periods, which fulflled the
have been intermingled in a ritual disguise, see A. nal, Hittite Architect and a Rope-
simple needs of impecunious common people, taking up their oracular Climbing Ritual, Belleten 205 (1989) 1477,1479.
inquiries at affordable prices. 23 Read: "is not allowed to take"l
24 KBo tUNUrGI&] UNLrIAD.KID uitANA SSKUR armi (29)
15.25 rev. 28-29:
fna=at=za am]muk dai EN.SiSKUR-za EGIR-pa UL kuitk da, o. Carruba, Das
18 See na.l, op.
cit. 57f. Beschwrungsritual fr die Gttin Wiurijanza' StBoT 2 (1966) 6f.
79 B. Mainowskl, in: L.
Petzoldt (ed.), Magie und Religion: Beitrge zu einer Theorie 25 cr. suppyng of a live donkey by a rich patient while a poor patient delivers only a
der Magie (1978) 106; for details s. nal, op. cit. 52ff. donkey figure made of clay, KUB 56.59 rev.3T34, and the obligation of one cow, one sheep
20 C. C]"-rn in: Petzoldt (ed.), op. cit. p. 78. and four goats by a poor customer while a wealthy person must supply one cow, six sheep
21 O., magic see the literature given above and two goats, KUB 77.24| 16f.; cf. also similarly KUB 27.59 i 26f.; KBo 9.139 obv. 4f.; KBo
note 14. For a rapid orientation see A.
Goetze, Kleinasien2 (1957, reprinred lg74) 151ff. and V. Haas,RlA s. v. ',Magie,,. 29.76 obv. i? l3f. ard fragmentary KUB 32.105.
8 AHMETNAL THE RITUAL oF HANTITASU 9
the offerer often had to supply presents as bribes for the gods26. The control2T. However, from a subjective point of view it is extremely difficult
common peoples, on the other hand, may have continued to use their own to draw a line between white and black magic, because magical practices
ritual practices of which, except for occasional indications in the state can be regarded as white or black magic depending on the point of wiew.
archives, we do not have any records.
It is remarkable that in Hittite Anatolia the influx of magic came
Immediately after the foundation of the Hittite Empire (ca. l6b0 B. mainly from Hurrian and Luwian speaking regions, that is from south and
c.) native Anatolian, Hurrian and North syrian magicians together with southeast Anatolia, especially from Kizzuwatna, the heartland of the
other experts and artisans from different regions and ethnic origins were Hurrians. Although we have known for a long time that the Hurrians
deported forcibly to the Empire's capital Uattua, where they were officially produced a major upheaval in cultural, political and cil life at flattua
employed as artists and experts of magical and medical matters because and other urban centers of the empire, at present ve are unfortunately still
they were thought to be in possession of versatile kinds of recipes and far from being able to estimate its exact extend, intensity and diversity. The
pseudo-medical magical means against all kind of diseases, afflictions and recently discovered Hurro-Hittite bilinguals from Boazky28 give an
various kinds of misfortunes. In the following decades they must have come approximate idea of the intensity of the Hurrian influences since at least
to flattua voluntarily, because they discovered there a new and lucrative from the Middle Hittite period, and perhaps from the ord Hittite
business opportunity for their innovative and truely prodigious magical Kingdom. The newly discovered group of texts from oraky, (in Process
treatments. In this new metropolis the magicians willingly put themselves at of excavation since 1990;zo, also includes a great number of Hurrian texts
the disposal of the rich and powerful rulers and their clan members who, (mos itka]zi- and other rituals) and reveals to us once more quite clearly
though skillful and ctorious in military matters, lacked merits in respect to what extent Hurrian influences penetrated into the heart of Hittite
to culture and civilization. The new rulers of the country seem to have territories as far north as northern Cappadocia.
been enchanted by the multitude and versatility of magical rites, their The geographical serting of this sprawling provincial Hittite city at
applications, and the medical techniques and skill of the experts.
ortaky, with its administrative, religious, and defensive buildings and its
In the course of the 450 years of the Empire there were numerous vast archives for local administrative, military, religious, and cultic matters,
cases of medical needs and political intrigues where the Hittites resorted to as well as the time period of the texts covering Middle Hittite and Empire
sorcerers. In other words, the rulers became from the very beginning
dependent on magic and magicians, whether for curing ailments,
defending themselves against the maledictions of their enemies, dispelling
27 Src A' nal,'the Role of Magic in the Ancient Anatoliar Religions According to the
the results of black magic or using them to destroy their enemies by magic.
Cuneiform Texts from Boazky-$attua, BMECCJ 3 (19ss) 64; on the application of black
Thus tley became almost addicted, and gave every imaginable support and magic in historical context see G. F. del Monte, Rituali magici e potere nell'Alatolia ittita, in:
generous payment in favor of magic. However, the Hittites also made a M. Fales (ed.), Sopranaturale e Potere nel Mondo Antico e nelle Socieri Tradizionali
strict distinction between black and white magic; whereas they feared the (re86) 83tr
former and tried by all means' including legal stipulations, to ward it of 28 No* published in hand
copies in KBo 32.14ff.
they venerated the latter. since Hittite history is from the very beginning 29 nat, Newsletter for Anatolian Studies
7/I (Lgs|) l and my paper read at the
full of scandals and intrigues which were instigated by mischievous and Hittite Festival at orum, July 1994 and A. Se/, ortaky: Eine hethitische Stadt mit
malicious opponents of the royal dynas and its clan members, the Hittites hethitischen und hurritischen Tontafelentdeckungen' Fs Alp (1992) 4s7492; ead.,orum-
Ortaky 1990 Y'l Kazs - Ausgrabungen bei orum-ortaky im
were very concerned to keep black magic under avery strictjurisprudential Jahr lg90, Anadolu
Medeniyetleri Mzesi 1991 Yl Sonbahar Dnemi Konferaslan ( 992) sgtr ead., lgg0 l
;
orumOrtaky Kaz almalan, 14. KsT II (1993) 495ff. Some sixteen Hittite ad Hurrian
26 s". KUB 29.4 ii 67ff. attesting silver jewelry
as bribery in shape of ,,sou/,,(ZI) and texts from ortaky acquired by the Museum of orum before the beginning of the
stars; cf. also the pledges made on the condition of "do ut des', in the vow texts of excavations are presently being prepared by myself for publicationz A-na1, Hiitite
and
Puduepa, CTI{ 58}590, see below p. 54ff. Hurrian Cuneiform Tablets from Ortaky, Central Turkey (forcoming).
10 AHMET N.q THE RTTUAL OFHANTTTASSU 11
Periods, best fits all requirements for an identification with \apinuwa30. teeming with huge mounds34, will certainly help us pretty soon to better
Sapinuwawas known up to now from the texts as a major Hurrian center, understand and appreciate the Hurrian role and influences, and finally to
famous of its
itka[zi-ritals, which scholars tended on account of solve the Hurrian enigma.
predominating Hurrian influence to locate in Southeast Anatolia, i. e. the It is evident that the Hittites scarcely had their own magical
proper Hurrian countries. Thus my first assumption of ortaky's identity practices3S. what, indeed, they possessed according to the preserved text
Hakmi/Ilakp on the premises of some historical considerations and
1ntln corpus was rather a collection of local magical practices which surely
most importantly without having no idea of the nature and contex of the prevailed since the stone age in various provinces of the empire, i. e.,
texts discovered there3l is proven to be deceptive. Luwiya, Arzawa, Kizzuwatna, Hurrian lands and Hatti lands; they also
The fact that Hurrian presence reached that far north should not borrowed from Babylona ad other unknown SourCeS. Thus as a result of
surprise us because according to a letter fuorr. Maaf, the borders of this mixture and convergence, cornmensurate with the needs of the ruling
Kizzuwatnacomprised the territory around Maa9z, and this record has to class at flattua, new sophisticated compilations of magic were developed.
be taken seriously. This would de facto imply, during the reign of one of Without rivals among the inhabitants at ryaftuja, the foreign
Suppiluliuma the First's predessors, a temPorary expansion of Hurrian magicians could now brag all the more so as they considered themselves
political power as far north as the ortaky-Maar line in the middle omnipotent and believed they had all sorts of remedies against any
ekerekvalley, references of which can be found in the annals of Tutaliya imaginable evil which could disrupt human life. From the standpoint of
ii which attest a largescale onslaught of the Hurrians under the command those times, the exorcists were surely the best 'anthropologists', because
of general Muwa together with Iuwan inhabitants of a Hurrian speaking they collected from the multi-level sources of ethnic groups all kinds of
countryside on the Middle Euphrates (today the Keban dam region), into superstitious beliefs and remedies and put them at the service of their
Hittite heartland33. It is significant to note that the annals encounter Iuwa clients at ryaua. Astonishingly the Hittites did not show any backlash
as a ''bg country" (ialli KUR-e). This Hurrian military expansion has against these mongers of a new kind of "health care" and superstitious
certainly been only one part of the "Hurrianization" Process of the Middle beliefs; as a rule they conceded voluntarily all sort of these new magical
Hittite dyrasty. Future researches' excavations and discoveries in Hurrian means which the strange missionaries have brought to Hatt. There is only
centers in Southeast and Central Turkey, from the plain of Harran to the feeble edence in the written records indicating Some aversion of flattuili
uPper Courses of the Tigrs River, as well as in North Syria, a region i against an alleged collaboration of the Tawananna ymlh the magicians
(old women). The basic relevance of rhese collections is that they helped
to perpetuate the most ancient anthropological values of the country which
otherwise would have been lost. Factually this serr.ice of the magicians was
30 a. s., in an unpublished paper read at the XIIth Turkish Historical Congress, au-pair; they were conceded eagerly and accoladed in every respect very
September 1994. generously by the new lords of the Country at flattua.In their collections
31 Se. above note 29. In the same way M, Forlanini's srmise seems to be conjectural, the magicians culled from an immensely rich and old "folklore" of ancient
tolook for ortaky's ancient name among the settlemens of lkamafua, Seria, Malazziya Anatolia and neighboring regions hundreds of medical and psychological
and Tagga\ta: Le spedizioni militari ittite verso Nerik i percorsi orientali, Istituto Lombarda cases. They were then kept diligently as ready-made case histories in the
Academia de Scienze e Lettere 125 (1991) 303. state and temple archives of the empire always in readiness as "empy
32 HsN4 74:|2ff.
= s. A\p, HBM (1991) 262f.,342; idem, Hitit anda Anadolu formlae" (Leerformel) to be filled out with the name and affliction of
Corafyas Baz Atrlmlar ve Yeni Umutlar, in: Uluslararas 1. Hititoloji Kongresi Bildirileri
(19-21 Temmuz 1990) ||992| 22; differently interpreted byJ. Klinger' Das Copus der Maat-
34 ct. n. Landsberger,ber
Briefe und seine Beziehungen zu den Texten aus $attuSa, ZA 85 (995) 85f. den Wert knftiger Ausgrabungen in der Trkei, Belleten
III ( 1939) 207 -224 ( German), 22b-241 (Turkish) .
ru 23.11 rev.
33 iii 28ff., cf. also KUB 23.16 + KBo 22.13 rev. iii 6ff., esp. 12ff.; also
35 Fo. details see A. na|,BMECCJ (1988)
KBo 22.28, 3ff. 3 66 and note 82.
12 AHMET UNAL THE RTTUAL OF HANTTTASSU 13
the customers and to be used for their urgent requirements. By means of One of the remarkable idiosyncrasies of ancient Anatolian magical
their application even a non-medical practitioner of modern times would literature is the individuality of its authorsST. This means that almost all
be able to deal with some of the exigent ailments of his patients, if only he magical rituals have their own authors who are usually mentioned by name,
knew the modern equivalent names of medical herbs, nowadays certainly profession, sex and home town, either at the begining of the rituals, in
mostly disappeared from Anatolian flora, other drugs, remedial substances colophons or both. Thus the ritual compositions are not merely
and complicated pharmacological procedures of the prepaiations, anonymous works, but intellectual achievements of distinguished
concoctions and aphrodisiacs. In their own domain the magicians individuals. It means that each magician or doctor had "copyright" or
deservedly considered themselves omnipotent and unbeatable; they saw no "patent" on his or her invention or compilation. with each use of these
limits to their power of influencing the will of the gods, supernatural ritual compilations the name of the author had to be cited even after his or
powers and demons, who were allegedly the instigators of evil and calamity, her death. These achievements are certainly a considerable step forward in
to their own advantage. Their belief in the effectiveness of their magical the intellectual history of mankind before the beginning of Greek
practices was so staunch that they would never admit a failure. philosophy in Western Anatolia (Ionia) and must be taken into
Accompanying their medical treatments, they often uttered verbal consideration.
imperatives or suggestions which made the patients believe that "they
wll/must get wel|!'' Again, we should not scoff at the firmness of these
suggestive methods and magician's self-confidence, since bragging,
absolute trust and belief on the part of magician as well as his patient are
the basic principles of magical treatment in their interactions. It was these
suggestions and verbal spells muttered during the performance of the
ritual practices which gave more efficacy to the rites. It is impossible not to
admire the self-confidence of an Old Woman, when she in a text
challenges her opponent, the instigator of black magic, with the following
words which should not be taken merely as mumbo jumbo:
"Whatever words the sorcerer spoke, whatever he twined together,
whate,er he wove, whatever he made n whatever pLace, those
(things) he did not (properly) know, the sorcerer. He built up
Sorcery lke a pillar, twned t together Like a string. I am thwarting
him' I ha,e pushed'o,er these words of sorcery ]ike a pillar, I ha,e
entwined them Like a sting" and "The spell [that was superi]or' my
spelL-bnding has ,anquished ('80'
Without possessing expertise knowledge magicians would certainly
not have had this courage to boast; therefore they must have attained their
power by virtue of their education and proficiency in medical as well as
psychological fields.
il. TRADITION AND DIFFERENT COMPOSITIONS OF THE .he obverse has been used here in the reconstruction
of the whole
HANTITAu nrrue, .o.po*,o", while
the re'erse is given below in chapter VII (p'86f') only in
Eansliteradon'
As already stated the widespread application of the Santitadiu ritual C KUB a3.67 (+) KBo 18.l74 is on its ob,erse i r'ery badly preserved
=
since its first introduction at least as early as the Mi<idle Hittite Period
resulted in many manuscripts from different times compiled for a variety of
ailing persons and kings. We can distinguish at least fir,e differet \/ersions
which were in use. Because none of these manuscripts is preserved intact,
for the overall resonstruction of the main example the following texts have ouite different version and thus does not at all constitute
a direct part or
been used. A caveat is ir order here that this reconstructed text in no way Jontinuation of A. Its colophon also gives the only clue for reconstructing
represents the original composition with its all details, including also some e title and incipit of the ritual ensemble.
arcilliary rituals:
D = KBo 77.104 (+) 2029/9 also reveals many variations from the
A = KBo 11.1438 is the main manuscript and is a copy of the main example A. Its obr,. ii runs parallel to Aii 2-11. Then, after a gap of
Ilanttau ritual from the second half of the 13th Century B. C.39 of the some 5 lines, there follows the indirect join with unpubl. 2029/gal which
originally four columred tablet unfortunately only the upper parts of obr,. parallels A ii 18-34. The rev. of D is preserved only on the tiny piece of KBo
lii and lower parts of rer'. iii-iv are preserved. Because of the heavy blurring 17.104.Its context can possibly be placed in the big gap at the beginning of
and abrasion on the surface of the tablet (also ,isible in the hand copy), it A iii, i. e. before the fragment KBo 13.145 begins. Since this version is
is often hard to read many cuireiform signs even in its better presen,ed partly unpublished, it is given below in chapter VII (p.8af.) in full
oortions (see note 38). The reconstructed text in my edition here is based transliteration.
'on similar compositions of the same ritual although they neither rurl
In E. Laroche's CTH no. 395 and its supplement42, KBo 20.34 + KUB
parallel nor duplicate exactly the main example A.
36.lll are given as belonging to the same composition. However, a close
B = KBo a tablet. It merely
13.145 constitutes the middle part of examination of the text reveals that it has scarcely anything in common
consists of 14 lines on the ob,. (ii?) and 17lines of the rer,. (iii?). While with the ritual group of flanttau47.It rather represents a Very different
obv. (ii?) runs parrially parallel ro KBo 11.14 ii l2ff. (A) and thus version of this group of rituals. In fact, it makes up the earliest presened
representS a sonewhat abbreviated version of A, omitting scme passages' Middle Hittite version of this group of the santitau ritual44. The only
the exact placemert of re''. (iii?) remains undetermined. A placement in
rhe big gap at the beginning of broken A rer,. iii is only possible, if we can
gp.9+o[.KAM], but this is uncertain. For this reason orly 4l Through the kind permission of H. Otten and the courtesy of Raci Temizer, t're
restore rer,. 15:
former director of the Museum of Anatolian Cilizationsin Ankara, I was able to use a
transliteration of this fragment which I made 1981 in Ankara. Otten supplied me later in a
38 Dr. to t'he Courtesy of Mr. Raci Temizer,the forner director of the A'chaeological letter of 12.5.1985 with a hand copy and gave me [he formal permission to edit it here. I
ir Ankara, and M'. Lhan Temizsoy, the present direc|or of the same Museum, I wish to express my thanks once again to both of these gentlemen.
Museum
42 .r+e
vas able to co]late i 1979 and November 1987 some c'itical passages of the tablet which, 30 (1972) 107.
bad presevation, are unfortunately still many. The broken or e-ased signs 43 Cf also M. Hutter, Bemerkungen zur Verwendung magischer Rituale in
because of tlre
resist all attemPts at. areasonable reading and 'es[oraLion of the Context. The presevation mittelhethitischer Zeir,AoF 18 (1991) 35.
of the tablet is so bad that we in general have to confess that readings on the basis of 44 On the Middle Hittite date of this
text s. S. Heinhold-Krahmer, I. Hoffmann, A.
co]ladons fail rnless they ae suPPo'ted by contextual edence or similar text Kammenhuber, G. Mauer, Probleme der Textdatierung in der Hethitologie, TH 9 (1979)
Passages.
39 Fol the date of the individual examples see below chapter VI. 63; I. Hoffmann, in: Heinhold-Krahmer, op. cit. p. lt2;J.Boley, The Senrence Particles
40 Tre 'eading 7is also possible. (1989) 24; cf. also M. Hutter,AoF 18 p. 35 with note 15.
16 AHMET NAL
clue which shows close relationship with the ritual group of Iandraiiu is
the mention of the Middle Hittite personality Atta, Attai (see below). III. TRANSLITERATION AI{D TRANSI-ilTION OF I(Bo 11.14
Ne'ertheless, it seems appropriate to present a transliteration of the whole WITH ITS DUPLICATES
text in chapter VII; (p.87ff.), because of the fragmentary nature of the texr A. KBo 11.14
a translation, at least at the present, is impossible; see also the discussion
B. KBo 73.145 (obv. is par. to A ii lzff.)
below under the identity of Atta.
C. KUB 43.57 (+) KBo 18.174 (obv. i is par to A i 6ff., rev. iv is par. to
In recent times two more related versions of the flantitaiu ritual
have been published as a hand copy in KUB 57.79 and KUB 58.94 (= Bo A iv 5ff)
27251; in their preserved columns they only partially duplicate each orher.
D. KBo 17.704 (+) 2029/S (par. to A ii zff.)
Both texts rePresent again another completely separate version of the ritual
and thus confrm our view of the Constant usage and compilation of this A obv. i
text group. Full transliteration of KUB 57.79 and KUB 58.94 is given again l I ma-a-an UK-1 as LIJ -a n a-a-ma SAL-zan u-u j-ji MU.KAMH.ASU
below in chapter VII. (p.90ff., 95ff.)
2 f n i.n i-in-k6] n-te< P n a-an ud4a-n a-a EN_a.d kj-a3 o -zi
3 t (ju-u-Ei*'6)]n DUTU-i IGI-an4a c34yp-un da-a-i
4 Inu-u.-.la-an r NINDA.EpirS da-a-i I-NA 14 NIN1DA.E]RiNurs-
ma-a-a-an,e-i NUMUNHI.A
5 [u-u-ma-an u-ub-fua-i
1 Restoration of tle beginning of the line from the context and C iv 24f.
2 The restoration is again according to C iv 24f.
3 C obu. i 1:
[/<][.-ja_an.
4 The sign for number J is written
in ligature with the following sign for NINDA, which
recurs often in the following lines.
5 C obu. i 6z zi-in-nal-il.
6 <so a.7+:3 has reversed
word order.
7 xso g.7+:5 om. A-NA.
l8 AHMET NAL THE RITUAL or gawrreSSu l9
24 DUTU_uj_za EZEN-an D-atl7 nu-Za da-p-u DINGIRME-u[J 20we expect here in accordance ^,i KUB 58.94 i 5 EN.SISKUR-m a-a-i-kdnbut the
t
bal'za!-a-igr& traces of half broken signs do fit for this reading.
z r In this broken passage at least 40 lines
25 f n u-z] a u-u-ma-an4a-an DUMU.L . TJLIJ L,U-an
bal-za! -a-i{
|9 are missing according to KUB 57 .79 obv. i 3tr.
and KUB 58.94 obv. i 3ff. which mostly deal with the "party", see below commentz.ry on obv.
i24and p.51tr
22 cr. rus b8.94 i 9.
23 Thi, clause must have preceded the end of obv. i because
of the particle of direct
8c2'p11av_6. speech in obv. ii 2.
9c3'T|-an-ti. 24 Restoration according to the context, see commentary.
25 KBo 17.104 obv. ii |: Ma-a4u-ta-x-x-x; the last three
10 A, in i 4 written again in ligature. signs look like p11p'eS
1l For the ligature see line 4. 26 Restored in this way because in ii 5 Maddura calls e offerant her TUR-ta=m an
"my
12 c 8,'kat-t[a. child'.
13 27 R.rto."d from KBo 17.104 ii
Co"tio', confirms that the two signs following -za are erod,ed and erefore quite 2.
illegible. 28 Restoration according to the context.
14c2,MUN_an. 29 Certainly to be emended as DUTU-j EN-mitt-jt]]; I(Bo 17.104 ii
3 reads ]UTU-a.EN-
15 c i 2g: Ii-li-pa-a-ki-id4u. mi.
L6 c i 2+, uru- me-na-afu-a-afn4a' 30 hand copy shows JU
17 nZnN iya-atLested also in KUB 57.79 ob. i 4ff. and KUB 58.94 obv. i 4ff., see below.
31 of KI is sible on the tablet.
18 Reading on the basis of the context and very conjectural; the collation and 32
KUB
55
58.94 obv. i 4 seem, however, to conform with this reading.
19 Se. th. remarks in footrote 18. 34 Restoration from KBo 17.104 ii 6.
20 AHMET NAL THE RITUAL OF HANTITASSU 2r
8 nu-za GUSKIN da-a EN.SISKUR-ma-mu EGIR-pa pa-a|- nu-Za 23 i-ya-zi' ida-lu-u j-,a55 UD.KAM-"Z56
1e-m
r. gABgAR da-a EN. SISKUR-ma-m u35 EGIR-P a p a-a-il 24 EN.SISKUR57 i-e KAR-zj na-at-ta am-me<l [udda-a-a]f8
9 nu-zaNA+7,A.GiN aa-a EN.SISKUR -ma-muEGlR-pa pal-a-il 25 DUTU-a 9D Kam-ru-i-p a-a-a ud4a-a-a|r]
t0 nu-zaNA+GUG da-a36 EN.SISKUR-ma-mu EGIR-pa pa[-a-F7l 26 ta-andu-k-n a-a-atDUMU-a, u-u_[ uk-ma-u,_.decj a-a- an4u]60
7l nu-zaNen1(p1GIR.RA da-a EN.SISKUR-ma-n u EGIR-pa pa-a|-il
27 nu ku-u-un bu-u-uk-ma-in 7-36l b[fu-u-uk-z)62 nu]
|2 nu-zaNA4TI da-a38 EN. SISKUR-ma-m u EGIR-p a pa-a- 28 7NINDA.KU\.RA par-,'-ya - ir-ba|-a-z-zil63
13 nu-zaN{ap a-ra-a3-[a-,an da-aEN.SISKUR-ma-mu EGIR-p a lpa-a-i]39 29 n u l 64
NINDA. KUfu .RA p ar-i-ya
u t u-u-u [< ! -k-i-k-iz-z]65
14 nu-zaBAPPIR BULG da-a EN.SISKUR-ma-mu EGIR-pa pa-a-i 30 NINDA. KUfu RA7tr .
6 fi1 -an D
fl16-pl eF8 r par-Si-ya-an-n a-i1.
75 zi-iqgaDUTU-uj i-it nu t40-ri-n 441-in 542-in |da-a/3 la-a-a] 3l me-mi-i*ki-iz-zl-A"un QA-rAM-MAo1y11-70 zi.iqga?
1 6 1<-el-1-i-1 a-n a-ya44 La-a-a d a-r i-ya-an -ta ! |'an] 32 az-zi-ik-k nu ki- me-mi-i-ki-mi77
17 tu-r-ya-ma wa-ar-3a-an-h45 33 [u-u-uk-ki-i3-ki-mi-ya72 ku-t
\8 La-a-a da-r-ya-an-ta-a tu-u-ri-ya-ma46 wa-ar-i'ya-an'ta|-anl
34 n a-at-mu DUTU-ui EGIR-an tar-n a7 3 ma-a-an bu-u-uk-ma-in I zi.in-n a-
79 na-at S te-si+7 il74
29 NA+AI-ru -k6n GlM-an kappi-i*8 B-par-t-ie'iz'z 35 NINDA. KUfu . RA-ya p|6r-sa? GESTIN ] u-n -iz-a
27 EN.SISKUR -ken4s DA-ag-nF0 KAxIJ-za QA-TAM-MA i3-par-ti-id-du5r
22 IGI-z-an52 GIM-an cS1rr.-1r'-r', EGIR-zi-.$3 an4a -ur 54 s i g, KAR-zi.
55 s i a and2029/g:8: s]Ul-,Iu-uj_ja.
Db 2o2s g 8: uD.I(AM-za.
7
35 Cf. KBo 17.104 ii 7 which mentions instead of EN.SISKUR the client by his name, sc. 57 ZOZOTg:A menrions the client by his name, sc.mAt-ta-a-afnO; cf. KBo 17.104 ii Z,
n'At-taf-a-an(-). He is also attested by e same name in 2029/9:8' see commentary. above note to A ii 8.
36 58 T.r... of -ARsible in2029/99.
KBo 17.104 ii 8 uses rhe abbrevation KI.MIN.
37 59 B ii g, Duru-ia-ar.
KBo 17.104 ii 9 again KI.MIN.
60 Restored from2029/g 10. B ii 10 has DUMU.L.u.]-ur-Tl-ma-at
38 KBo lz.t45 =B|l: da-la-i. u-uk-ma-a-u a|-
39 s i z has line dider after this. a-adu. B has no line dider.
40 Reading of the sign according to B ii 3.
41 I., B ii 3 the traces are be-tter sible; the reading is, however, not sure. e contexr cf. KUB 57.79 obv.i24.
42 See th. preceeding note.
43 By .tr. of the lack of the reflective particle -za this restoration may seem to be
unlikely, see commentary. o below line 33.
44 Readirrg according to the rest of signs on the original tablet.
45 B ii 4, tu-i'ya-]a-ta-a wa-ar-3i-yfa-a-ta-an' g to collation.
46 2O2g / gtg tu-u-lriya-an4al-an. re.
47 2o27g:+: te-f-z-z. B ii 4 omit line.
$ "'a'
48 B ii 6, kappi.
49 s i o' EN.SISKUR-ya-k6n.
5o B ii 6, oAg-ni. 72 zozo7g::
u-&icj-fu -mi na-a|t'
ku-'] t
51 2o2g / g:at fl E-par-zadu. 73 T.u.", of erasedare visible; for context see KUB 57.79 obv. i 28ff., where the Sun
a.
30 ttrk-na-a.i DUTU_u mu-ki-i*k6n4u nuH [UL-ru] 6 n a-a-it-ta70a fu-uq-qa DINGIRMES 2-u-m I a-] an-tea -p 5]0a aLzi-ya-
b
3 l .ku-jr D -nu-un n a-n-mu DINGIRME EGIR [-pa me-mi-i-kdn- du] a4u
7 ud4a-a-n'-6|05 EN-aj LUGAL -i ar-ku[-wa-] z-zi
32 rSA$-an TUR-aa90 tfl-it-ti-yal an-ta1-an |a-ra-a da-a-i|9 8 |na-a] -k6n pa-ra-a i-iz-ziUD. 9I.KAM tfi]b-u-u*-ta
33 na-a-ta a-ap-pe3-na-za [u-u-ma-a|n4a-az ku-wa-pf|
34 ku-wa-p |JZIJ -an??92 ku-ir-zi nu-k6n [A-NA DUTU-]
9 lnu-za? SII?
- SA GUD.MAH EGIR-pa LU [GAL-u J da-a-i ku-wa-ad4a-
;n_zalo6
35 GAM_a 4a da-a-iGBSrN-a.r S $i-pa-an-ti] l0 IEGIR-P]u.|0.7'.-LUGAL-u da-a-i na-an-za [(da-a?)-i
36 nu ki-an me-ma-i -u.k GIM-a 1uzugp.u'' GAM-a4a te-e-bu- NINDA. IERlNMEslO8-ma NINDA.KU&. RA7210e
un?193 ll lar-ba a4]a-a-zi
|i3-tap-p)u.-ulJ-ya-an-ta-al71|0
l2 cs34, NSUR.AD. KIa --^-rrl7| udda-n a-fa,d EN-a.
37 lba?-ap)94'Pi+#na-a|JZ|J x (x)
[ ]
1 d] a-a-i
.L--
28 AHMET NAL THE RITUAL OF HANTITASSU 29
(i 20-23):Onto the top of it (i. e., brazier) he pours flour and salt,
and speaks (the conjurations) as follows:'As the sheep is
accustomed to lick (and to swallow) the salt, in the same
way let the Sun God come and lick away these
conjurations entirelyl43.' The practitioner invokes'the Sun
God for the first time as follows:
(i2[26):'You the Sun God, have organized a banquet. To (this (ii 27-39):He will repeat this conjuration seven times. (Meanwhile)
banquet) you have invite-4l4+ all deities [ind you have he breaks seven thick loaves and ma[kes] the round once.
invitd (also)] u11 -o.61.'l45. He breaks one thick loaf and conj[uresJ (at the same
(i27-30): (nothing is pre-served, butthere followed certainly lavish
tim ?) thick loaves
eating and drinking, see below commentary on line 24ff.)
for God, eat, and
gra u) and what I
(i"73"-ii 5):[He speaks as follows: 'as soon as] the Sun God [finishes am trying soon as [he
to tulrn around, lletl Madura, [his (i. e., the patient's) finishesl th b[reaks] a thick loaf [and
mother gol to him (i. e., Sun God) and lkneei] on her fillls [the invokes?) the Fate Deity
knees i[n front ofl the Sun God (1nd make the following (Gufd,a.{). [He] brea . e., thick loaf) to the very
inquiry): 'O Sun God, my Lord! [Give him] (me) back'i Fate Deity. (37-39 too tary, then broken).
Give (me) my calf, my smill baby!
Rev. iii (iii 14):'[Sun God, my TCI$, behold, I have brought for you a
(ii &11):(Yoq)_. the luminous Sun God, lend your ear (towards ']grant'' ( tagnuwr||3) ] . r,o*) have I ta.\en "my refue] to
me) ! Take all (these) se [you, the Sun-Go- my Lord]. Grant i1l54 1o ine! [rant
my Lord, sa[ve but in r me in return the life of my client?1.' They now [carry] the
gold for yourself and s "grant" [up to the] ro[ofJ and they pour (also) rhe-seeds
silver for yourself and s at the top of the r[oo]f.
lapislazuli for yourself
Take the carnelian for
client! Take the Babylo ,r. meaning of welwila-isuncerrain, see commenrary.
111
client! 148 vrr. h..
149 111. "find., meet, encounter".
150 11; "tet them become! "
7a\ n.e.otne; RlA 8/3-4 (7ggg) 203 renders i.NuN ,,ghee,,. 151 111. "saying,'.
as
L+z' or ''honey of l52 9. literally ''Now, because I am uttering
b.Q)"; on the conjectural meaning of u-u-u|-za as ''wax of honey" ths repeatedly ad conjuring repeatedly
see commentarv. (as well), grant it me!"
li.lipa(i)-."to lick" used here as a metaphor for "to accept voluntarily" the conrexr of
. ^':' \53 t*nr*u, certainly represents here a symbolic model, made
of precious metal, of
Godis organization of a "Party".
""':t?T,1ff,;
145
.*j},'"" the wishes, demands and inquiries relating to the life of the client for which the ritual
Fo. tti. nd reconstruction of the context see the expert has been asking the Sun God all the time. As an inciting object tarnuwar sees as gift
commentary. or bribery of e Sun God.
146 1i1 give me back. 154 I. .., the demard of the
sacrificer.
\-.
30 AHMETNAL THE RITUAL OF HANTITASSU 3l
(iii 5-10) : (While) the sun is still sh [in] ing155 the ritual expert takes (iii 32-37):[He (now) lifts] (the corpse of) the sucking pi[gl]et
a spade(?)156 urr6 he places it into the inner chamber of (from the pit). He trims pieces of meat from its entire
the house. As soon as it gets da[rk], the ritual experr digs body parts [here] and there and places them down
out (apit) bymeansof (that) [spa]de(?) (into) theearth [before the Sun God]. [He pours] one time wine and
beneath the door bolt. He now takes one piglet and speaks as follows: '(Behold), how U am placing these
slaughters it into (that) pit; its blood he releases down limbs for youl ! The meat(s) of (these) limbs [are
(into the very pit). delicious(?). Eat them, O Sun God!.I'
(iii 11-19) Now (the corpse of) the sucking-piglet, the fine grounded
rev. iv
[flou]r, cor[n,ewa]n-grain, kuna- (and) a tallow cake he
(iv 1-3):lvhatever x-x-x-x-ku?-an [he] gi[ves] to the king, the king
[pla]ces down into the pit. He takes one fat bread, breaks
[stand]s opposite to the Sun God and he takes them (i. e.
the lukanta:;160. 11., (then), turns/binds (all of) them
around his neck.
una- , tallow cake (an (iv48):15s ritual practitioner utters (the conjurations) as
satiation!' (Moreover) he follows: 'As you (i.e the king) have been turning/carryng
it into the pit three.times
deitiesl. (There is) corn the slaughtered limbs16l 1of the piglet) for (your) 1i"t62
placesl plant oil. (around your neck(?)) for nine days163, et the gods
acclaim your name164'. 11r. ritual Practitioner entreats to
(iii 20-27):By means of (this plant) oil they lub[ricate] the door bolt;
the king [and] he leaves the locality of the .i1rr4165. 16.
and he places down to rhe door bolt a thick loaf (and) a
pure/clean [. . . ], and he puts onto them a tallow cake. ninth day [comles to an end.
[He takes] wine and beer and pou[rs] in front from each
sort three times. (Afterwards he conjures as follows):
I tAs] you are accustomed to open 160 Reading and meaning of the clause remain very doubtful. Because rev. iv continues
with a new version of the ritual (KUB 43.57) ere does not need to be established a direct
J), go (down) just now and open relationship with the context at the end of A rev. iii. One is sure that from now on the focal
he dark ea[rth],
point of the ritual is nvining a sort of medication made of the limbs of the slaughtered piglet
around the neck of the king; for details see below note 162 and commeniary.
16l hukantarefers ostinsibly to the corpse of the slaughtered piglet in rev. iii 8f., if the
meat has not rotted after nine days; for a possible preparation of poultice see further below
commentarv on hukanta,
162 1. syitactical value of
fiuiwanta is very obscure. Since logically it can not be
taken as ''slaughtered ]imbs" or "copse of a ]ve (animal)'', one may prefer a translation of
the whole sentence like 'As you have been turning/twinng (the carcass of) the slaughtered
(animal) for the sake (of your) life 9 days long (around your neck), let (now finally as a
reward) all of the aforementioned gods summon you(r name, i. e. acclaim your recovery)";
this interpretation of the phrase implies that we have to assume here a genitive of goal
e. The opposite of this is the evening in line 6.
(Genitiv des Zwecks), D. Yoshda, Die Syntax des althethitischen subsLantischen Genitivs'
TH 13 (1987) 64ff. For further details see commentary.
e". 163 f. in the ninth day.
p the primeval deities from the Netherworld 164 1i1 'you' (acc. sg.). Var. "let all the gods call to you 'nu(t) "', see now CHD L/N p,
and let them share the offering material.
476f.
159 I,i1 "Let them
tell me". 165 111 "he comes forth".
32 AHMETNAL
(iv 9-12):
IV. PHILOLOGICAL COMMENTARY
Obv. i lf.:
expression MU.KAMHT.^ nininkanrei is quaint. The
"years" as acc. object of the copiously attested verb ninink- appears for the
first time in this context, and it is fraught with semasiological problems.
This is 'ery unfortunate because the phrase at the beginning of the ritual
conceals the ritual "case"l and has therefore a key word position.
Moreover a similar ritual context never again appears among the collection
of numerous other ritual practices which I have collected completely
elsewhere in a study on Hittite magic2. Thus because of the uniqueness of
open. They put it (i. e., the chest) in the seal house. the context and to some extent the ambivalence of the meaning of the well
Nobody will be allowed to break it open again. known verb nininft- (see below), it is unfortunately extremely difficult to
(iv 1&22):The ritual pracritioner carries out (the resr of this ritual determine the particular meaning of this phrase. since I had to give an
) appellation to the ritual of flantnhu and choose a title for this book, I
in another buildingl72. He does not carry it out
"1or.171 have been compelled to use a somewhat neutral and vague translation
in the palace. (Moreover), the king no longer need.s to
which is confessedly ambivalent, i. e., "disturbed" or "troublesome years,,.
attend (the rirual)173. g, the ninth day he (i. e., the
But it conforms, at least principally, with the primary meaning of ninink-,
king) underrakes the (final) ritual ablution and
as it will be shown below.
removeslT4all (of the ritual paraphernalia from his
body). E. Laroche, being unaware of the colophon in the then not yet
published duplicate text KUB 43.57, restored the gap in i 2 as lbar-ra-aln-
(iv 23-25):The first tablet (containing) the words of flanttaiju, the fe-e,iand translated it as "[si] c'estun homme ou une femme, et que ses
woman from flurma: If for a human being, man or ann1es sont lge]t6es"3. Thus it was Laroche who introduced the incorrect
woman, the years are disturbed- completed.
ritual title '' flantitau ritual aganst short years''. He also adopted the same
Loweredge[PN, the scrib]e, has written (this tablet) [under the interpretation i his CTH (1971) no. 395 'Sj /es ann1es d'un homme Sont
supervision of PNl. $6t6e5"4. Laroche's interpretation of the text has been corceded by many
scholars, most of whom seem still to have in mind barranfe. or
maninkuwanteJ; thus A. Kammenhuber as a "SISKUR . . . . gegen
Alterserscheinungen'5. v. Haastranslates as "ihm seineJahre lkurzl rird'0,
166 Probably it is
the splinter of the horns of a liveox mentioned above in i 13. obviously filling in the gap [maninkuwa]nte and P. Cornil "Si /es annles
(iff?;Ih nature of kuwatta(n), kuwadais obscure, see, however, commentary.
ifr ::
l Fo, u., alternadve opon that this "case" could be identical with
a sickness at the neck
of the patient, see below the commentary on rev. iv 5ff.
a A. Unal, The Role of Magic in the Ancient
Anatolian Religions According ro the
Cuneiform Texts from Boazky-sattua, BMECCJ 3 (1988) 70ff.
3 R."' of KBo 1I,
oLZ58 (1963) 246. For MU.KAM-za arranza "the year[ly crop is]
runed"in KUB HED 3 (1991) 136.
4 This tite s CTH, Premier suppl6ment, RHA 30 (1973) 107.
I Hwz rg
b Hethitisc rritische Steindmonen (1982) 175.
"L-.
34 AHMET NAL THE RTTUAL OF HANTTTASSU 35
d'un homme Sont g6tes'q, adopting exactly Laroche's reconstruction. As 2. man LxR ftuiftj niniktari "In case any enemy dsturbs (the
nu
far as I can see, it was I who shifted for the first time from border lads of Hatt and goes with the ntenon to attack them1''|5.
barrante/maninkuwanre. to the correct reading nininkante and 3. t lx-z nuZAGTUM ninkzi NU.rau ''(If) he (i. e., the enemy)
translated "disturbed /ears(?)"8. Later H. A. Hoffner restored the broken
wll disturb the border land, Iet the oracle be unfavorable''|6.
word in the gap as |nninka]nrejand translated: "If years beLonging to a
4. karitte nnnkanta ''Floods wL| dsturbrdevastate (the [a1"|7.
Person' whether min or woman' ha,e been recaLled'g. The only er.id'ence
for "short years" could be inferred from KUB 57.79 iv 33, if we are allowed 5. NA4'eI(ur|-kfln ma[anf buwanza e[ua pedi UL n|ininkanzil
to interprer the expression MU.KAMHI.A ITU.KAMHI.A UD.IL\MHI.A "As wnd and ra[in are] not fabhe] to d[isturb/damage] the rock sanctuary
taluqae*, i. e., "long years, months (and) days" as antonym of the enigmatic at (u) spor''l8.
phrase MU.KAMHT.A nininkanfe.d in KBo 11.14 i 1, and eventually from E. 6. na=at namma UL kuik ninikzi|9 "Let no one disturb,/break it
Ben,eniste's etymological combination of the Hittite ninjft- with open (i. e', bukanta "slaughtered Lmbs of the pig1et')20, see below.
Lithuanian nikti "to move rapidly"Io and then "short", said of years. To 7. ped|)i=ya=war=at=k6n le nniktar "Let them (i. e', the king's
denote the short span of life the Hittites generally use manin.kuwant-lr.
oath, curse, blood and tears which the sorcerer has nailed and concealed)
Since the verb nnink- is now fully treated in the CHD, I would like not be disturbed/broken open'2T. For the buried ritual remnants feared as
merely to give some additional comments on my understanding of the verb a contaminating evil see also KUB 55.37 iii 12-15 artesting ninink- in the
in regard to its relationship with the "years",In doing this I have taken as meaning of kinu- "to break open" in a broken Context: (4) .... nu-war-at-
primary meaning of ninink- the military connotation "to disturb; to ley" as Jan (l5) ....]x ff-e ni-n-in- k6n-zi and is to be reconstructed from the similar
it was established first by A. GtzeT2; this primary meaning appears now expression of KBo 13.l01 obv. i 31: '.'. a-pie4a-az li-- n-ni-i|k-.''
partly in CHD L-N (1980-1989) 438 (6): "to dsturb, annoy' harass, bother,
8. t(DINGI*'ES-y;]a kuwapi eanz nu ANA PANI p161purS 1.
vex, fret, irritate, constrain, harm, agitate, make resrless or disorderly, to
,kui.dfti ninktari /NA E.EZEN_ya /e .kui,jfti niniktari ''When they are
stir up, to Set up forcbly, to mobilize, to ley''. The basic military usage of
worshipping the deities, let nobody in no way be disturbing/causing
the r'erb must have developed as a result of crude force used by leying
trouble in the presence of the gods. Let no one be disturbing inside of the
troops, i. e., in gathering rhe able-bodied manpower forcibly or by
ce re non ia] buildin g' 22 .
conquering and looting a land, i. e., remong its property and manpower
(NAM.RA)13. In the following I will give a brief overview of the attestations . 9. |nu ma]n? i/t-x-tubmeyanza SA.oNcIRLrM nama tamedani
|Ekarinn k]uijfti23 nikzi nami-*an man SA rDNGRL|M niniktari nu
which are in accord with this basic meaning "to disturb": fualluwain- yazi n=ata EZEN zafuz "I[fl n the inside of a temple or in
7. Madduwatta [seiz]ed the whole [land] . namma=at Sru BpiS aother [shrine] any ir/t-x-tubmeyaza-man drinks and gets drink or he
pa|ngarlit ninik|ta] "Moieo,er he disturbed it with /using (his) wh[ol]e Causes disturbances nsjde the temple and starts a quarrel ad disrupts the
r
course of the festival'24
toops''l{.
10. uzuZfra ZAG- a z nininkan "The gall-bladder is In the following attestations nnnft- can also be interpreted as ''o
16.
dsturbed/ damaged/ de stroyed on the righ(2'' disturb, to torture"
which are listed in CHD LN (1980-1989) 443 (10) sub
11. nu py14glnS-St]-ma EME zi nu GIDIM ninft,jftanzi',Do urnng.unclear": KUB 36.35 i24 ("to beat, to torture"); KUB 57.34:9ff.; KBo
e,,a
anza-ma t...] (7) |...] ni-n-in-ki'e'k6n-
his children slander and (thus) disturb/annoy the spiris of dead?'26. 22'87 rev.6f.: [...] er balLuwekanz
,On account of [that matter?] they used to resort to ,oLence, and they
fzif ,
12. The earthquake(?) will be conceived as a disturbance caused by and] (thus) they bother us relentJessly"'
[attack? us
the god Ninga: DNinga nn|ikzi] '' (I0 Ninga dist[urbs] /sha[kes]'27
obv. i 2. 23. iii 7. iv 20 and KUB 43.57 iv 4. 7. 12. 18 uddanaj EN-a.:
.
13. In another text we have the only adjectival attestation of the word Magic rituals were as a rule carried out by a group of professionals such as
which is very similar to our passage: (38) HULHI.A-ud HI.A_ut,j ...] (39) ,,
old,/wise woman' sbyl" 1se-g. 1,' aawa-), augurs .1-'uSN. ,
nininkante,i u x[....] 28. nninkanfej can here hardly be construed with the -c.,uEN), magicians (LUAZU, LUHAL), doctors (LUA.ZU), priests of
"bad dreams" because they stand in acc. pl. com. gender (dalamu DNN, SAL n.NGRl'rSA oNN1, men of the
certain deities (LU,lNce
te[au) while inin kante is nom. pl. com. gender, and, moreover the gap storm god (L DU,/IKUR), midwives (sSA.zu), hierodules
is too long. It is therefore possible that the "years of Kallawi" who is (SALSUHUR.I/,L) ' purapipeople31, parili-priests and other experts whose
mentioned in i 36 have been troublesome as a result of the bad dreams or profession is not defined exactly i r the texts32. The fact is that these
her sleep deprivation29; ''t'oub1esome years''would be standing here also in persons were not simply magicians, as we moderns would contemptuously
relationship to "bad dreams" ynch can be restored at the end of line 38. assume their role to be in ancient societies; in fact they were experts with a
KUB 30.51 + 45 + HSM 3644 (and dupl., CTH p.
14. In the shelf list comprehensive practical education which they may have acquired in guilds
160) ii 19-23, the only identical usage of the phrase, "troublesome years,, like institutions. As ritual experts they possessed basic knowledge in
are mentioned in combination with those kind of harmful conceptions magical, psychological, pharmacological and medical fields.
such as impurity, bad dreams and perjury: (19) 3 TUPPU INIM mYarinu It seems that mostly in Old Hittite texts (see below) these experts are
L URUEurumna ma|n ... (20) nama-a-kdn anda papranni kuwatqa x[.... referred to as uddana i[a (EN-a,f), which rendered literally means '?ord
(2l) MUHIdsu ninnkante nama-a-k1n ANA l ... (22) memikanza (lit. "man') of logos",' we may therefore designate them here as expert
nama-za-k6n ida]umun |za{ain ukizzi] (23) nama lnkan larz... "Three persons or pundits in a particular field. In an OH/NS text relating the
tab]ets (containing) the prescription of Yarnu, the man fron the city of conquest of Zalpa37, this word seems to comprise a class of experts or
flrma: If [someone inflicts with impurV] or [somebody attracts him] craftsmen who obviously are mentioned among the manpower booty taken
into some sort of impurity, [and thus] his years become troublesome or by the Hittite king (The texts would later call them anonymously
to/against [his person? ,evi] spelll is spoken or if [he experiences] a NAM.RA's). We have to interpret also in a similar context the expatriation
dreadfu] [dream] or he has conmtted Perjury". of various experts and craftsmen by flattuflili i from southeast Anatolian
and north Syrian cities to Hattua mentioned in his annals KBo 10.1 and2
15. If a contracting party of a treaty does not keep the oaths of the
(also sort of NAM.RA's); especially in the Old Hittite Period it is striking
treaty: dankuwayaz=<ma>=k|6n takn)az er arfua nninkandu "may they that the kings were concerned above all with deportation of skilled
(the oaths) hantyou(!) from the dark [ear]th!'Bl'
manpower from the conquered territories, in opposition to deportation of
ten thousands of unskilled masses during the Empire period.
25 KBo 10.97 rev. 5, 16.
26 KBo 2.6 ii 55f. 31 According to O. R. Gumey, Some Aspecs of Hittite Religion (1977) 45f. identical
l! fUO 8.28 obv. 17, rev. 13f., cf. also KUB J0.bb rev. 6; HFAC 84.3. with LUAZU.
28 rus 5.20 + KUB r8.b6 obv. i 38ff. 32 See D.
H. Engelhard, Hittite Magical Practices: An Analysis, Ph. D. Brandeis (1970)
29 Cf. i-mediately below KUB 30.51 + nr. 14. 1ff.: A. nal, BMECCJ 3 (t988)
, 65.
3o KBo 5.8 iv 404i. rr KBo g.3g i 16.
38 AHMETNAL THE RITUAL oF HANTITASSU 39
The expression udda a ifua&a apPears in the following texts, most 6.2 | lff., iv 5ff.; KBo 6.45+ KUB 30.f 4 + (prayer at the roo0; KBo
of which can be dated in the old Hittite period: KBo 3.3g i l6 (oHlNS); 8.54:3ff.; KBo 8.91 obv. 17 (pitching of a tent at the roof); KUB 30.39 +
KBo 10.23 iii l0 (oHlNs;; KBo
13.31 rev. iii 9; KUB il.32 + obv. iii t2 KBo 23.80 + KBo 24.772 obv. 22f.; KBo 11.32 obv. 16; KBo 11.34 i 8f.; KBo
(OH?/NS); KUB r7.r1 rev.7; KUB 12.18 ii 29; KUB 22.77:26;KUB 30.31 + 72.723:7ff. (sacrificial sheep will be thrown down from the roof); KBo 15.52
i 13, 2l (NH); KUB 30.68 obv. 635; KUB 32.t87 + ii 18 (MH/NS); HBM + rev. lff.; KBo 19.134:9ff.; KBo 20.8 obv.; KBo 27.33 + iv56f.; KBo 21.37
45:9(?). It is, however, very significant that uddana a.i appears only in ob'. 23, rev. 10; KUB 7.1 ii l8f.; KUB7'40:7f.; KUB 10.99 vi 15f. (the king
KUB 17.11:7; KUB 17.18 ii 29; KUB 90.3t i 13f. and KUB gz.1a7 ii tB as descends from the roof of the temple of the Sun God); KUB 25.21 iv 3ff.;
practising a magical ritual. His function in these texts is, ho,vever, KUB 29.4 i 62, ii 46,55, iii 5, iv 12; KUB 30.28 rev. lff. (parts of funerary
insignificant so that KBo ll.14 remains the only ritual where his activity as ritual take place at the roo0; KUB 30.40 obv. i 20ff.; KUB 30.43 iii l3f.
magical practitioner is clearly defined36. (shelf list); KUB 45.5 | 4; KUB 51.64 obv.? 2; KUB 53.3 v 6 with dupl.
obv. i 2 ^utia-: The roof is one of the frequently occurring localities (reparation of the roof); KUB 53.6 + iii 19 with dupl.; KUB 55.39 i ll, iv
where rituals (often also festival rituals) were wholly or partly.u..i.d out37. 28f.; KUB 57.63 iii 22f.; KUB 60.121 rev. 21f.;VBoT 128 v 6; IBoT 3.148 iii
In a magical ritual ambience such as the flantitajiu iitual which mainly 13f.; Bo 3762 |? 2 with dupl. KBo 25.34; 473/z 7f. (placing a statue at the
appeals to the sun God in a sunny southern country like Anatolia o,r top of a roo0; Bo 6200 rev. 9f. (unpubl. text in the Archaeological Museum
Kizzuwata. the roof certainly offers the best place to establish contact with of Ankara, A' nal, forthcoming) (hurling of crockery from the roof).
the Sun God and other celestial deities. Anatolian roofs of that time were obv. i 3. 22. 23. ii 1. 3. 4. 6. 7. 15. 25. 31. 34. iii 5. iv 2 DUTU: The Sun
covered with a clayJike, water proof, solid, and pure s6ll38 and could be God is one of the most important protagonists of this ritual. He is the god
repaired easily and kept always clean. Besid.es, the roof was a flat, smooth, with whom the ritual practitioner barters directly to help him save the
spacious, open, loft139, airy and cool place40. Therefore even today during offerant's life, or he is requested to serve as intermediary god with the
the summer time it is a major Part of ling space (especially for sleepingj other deities and demons to the very end.
in the households of south and southeastern Turkey.In the following I
would like to give some attestations which show the roof as focal point The Hittite Sun God is taken into the Hittite pantheon from the
of native inhabitants of Anatolia, the Hattians, with his genuine Hattic name
ritual performance: KBo 4.ll obv. zE (blowing of horns at the roo0;xgo
Etan||; in addition to this masculine deity there exists a feminine Sun
34 Goddess of Arinna42. The Hittites distinguished also a feminine Sun
w.itt .,
35 Attestin Goddess of Earth who is attested mostly in magic rituals43. According to the
36 F*ii; as'
newly published ritual texts it seems that the Hittites identified the Sun
StBoT 27 (19s3) 59 note 22 and' E. Neu,,,Zur unechte,, No-i,rul:"lu;].T:'""?; Goddess of the earth with ERES.KI.GAL, the eschatological "Mistress of the
Hethitischen", Fs Risch (1986) l13.
y
J ".
.FIaas, Geschichte der he. Religion (1994) 278f.
;j
Turkish 'geren topr''; the technicalIerm for is practice is puruta-
--. . , see A' nal,
Hittite Architect and a Rope-Climbing Ritual, Belleten 205
a989) ooi witn notes 18G187.
cr. tn. expression "on the top of the high roofs,,, Eerpargauwaiua"iin
.39 KBo 22.82
rev. iii 7. 41 S"e in general C.
40 ot' Justus,Indo-Europeanization of Myth and Syntax in Anatolian
the construction of the Hittite roof according to the cuneiform Hittite: Dating of Texs as an Index,lES l1 (1983) 71tr
sources s. A.
Goeue, Kleinasien2 (1957, reprint lg74) 175; M. oarga|ritit aa SeeJ. Fredrich, Zu einigen altkleinasiatischen Gottheiten,JKF
Mimarl l: Yap Sanat 2 (1953) 144tf'; V.
-9.85] .l23ff.; N. Boysan-Dietrich, Das
hethitischi Lehmhaus aus der Sicht der IJaa Geschichte der heth. Religion (1994) index on pp. 965{6; for more details s. Daisuke
Keilschriftquellen, TH 12 (1987) 85ff. and A. nat,,,You Should Yoshda in his forthcoming Ph. D. Munich.
Build for Eternity,, New
Light on the Hittite Architects and their work, 43 ct. . otten, Die Gottheit Lelvani der Boazky-Texte,
JCS 40 (lggg) 102ff.; id., Hiuite Architect JCS 4 (1950) 120 n. 7;J.
and a Rope-Climbing Ritual, Belleten 205 (1989' 1502f.; for Friedrich, Ein hethitisches Gebet an die Sonnengttin der Erde, Fs Furlani, Rso 32 (1957)
stucture of the
roof s'../' A. Morson, Alisar: A Unit of Land occupance in -.ha.oogi.ul 217; M. Vieyra, in: Le Monde du Sorcier (1966), 116 n. 39; D. Engelhard, Hiuite Magical
the Kanak Su Basin of Central
Anatolia (Ph. D. Chicago 1939); R. Naumann,Architektur x""uri".,ri
(ibz) sr. Practices (1970) 22with n. 82.
40 AHMET NAL THE RITUAL OF UANTITASSU 4l
Netherworld" 4.lt is well known that Allatum is the frequently attested VBoT 32i? 13; sg.-p.abl. with -az:KBo 25.184 obv. ii 2|,26; KUB 10.45 rev.
form in the Hittite texts4S; ERES.KI.GAL is, on the other hand, identical iii 4; KUB 48.109 iii 1 or with - za:KUB2.5i2l;81/trev. iv 15, sg. dat.-loc.
vtith Lelwani and taknaiDuru with hurrian Allanf. The feminine sex of with -i: KUB 6.46 i 50, sg. gen. with -aj: KBo 4.2 i 24, pl. dat._loc. with _a,:
the Sun Goddess may go back to the Hattian Etanu47 .In her appearance KUB 10.2f iii 13; KUB 11.9 + obv. iii 16. It was F. Somme.ts2 who first
she has a demonic nature48. With only one exception, this deity always proposed to consider (GIs)PaPu- as the syllabic writing o1cS361UR on
appears in the ritual of flantitau without any description, attributes and the basis of a comparison Glspapun ara urutait "(A dog) overturned(??)
epitheta; it is, therefore, difficult to discern which form of the Sun God is the papu:' (KUB 16.34 i l3-l4) *i11, GS341]SUR /akrrt "(A dog)
meant here. The expressis verbi distin ction taknai DUTU "Sun Goddess of o,erturned a tab]e" (KUB 5.7 obv. 24) whichJ. J. S. Weitenberg consents
Earth", attested only once in rev. iii 30 of our ritual text, makes it possible, to53; since both words are u-stem this equation seemed to fit well. The
however, that all other attestations of this deity represent the sun God of hapax papu-'4 never appears, however, in textual context in a similar
Heaven. Moreover, his masculine sex can be concluded from the address function which would come close to that of u cS341qgR. The verb ara
DUTU-we EN-mi, ii 4 and DUTU-i BELI-YAii 7, both "O Sun God, my
burutai- is attested to my knowledge only in KUB 16.34 i 14 and possibly in
Lord!'49.It is significant for our text that the vocative forms show both the -sk-form bu-u-ru-te-e-k6n-zi in KUB 31.100 obv' 2455, and is very
archaic vocative ending with -i and the younger form with -e. controversial with regard to its exact meaningS6 and its semasiological
obv. i 3-8: This passage is treated by C. WatkinsSl and H. A. affiliation with ]aknu-'7. Thus the Hittite equivalenc. o cSg4gp
HoffneFL. remains unidentified.
obv. i 3 GISBALLU&. It has been known for long that the Hittite In fact the Sumerogram GISBANSUR may have had a lot of phonetic
phonetic reading o cS341gUR is a u-Stem, cf. sg. aCC. Com. cs3Agp.- equivalences in Hittite, most of them ending with -u, since what the Hittites
u KBo 4.9 iv 40; KBo 20.|4:5;|{Bo 23.24 iii 3, 14; KBo 24.l13 obv.? i 8; have called "tabLe'' $as not a table in its modern sense' but an assemblage
KBo 25.31 obv. ii 18; KBo 25.158 rev.? 9; KBo 30.69 rev. iii 10; KUB 2,24 of different shapes made of various materials such as wood, reed,
rer'. 'i 7 w. dupl. KUB 25.2 + KUB 6 i 5; KUB 10.3 ii 29; KUB 12.65 + ii 16 wickerwork, different metals, clay, stone etc. We may therefore assume that
and passim; KUB 25.77 i 9; KUB 4I.44 i 6; KUB 54.7b rev. b; Ullik. A iv 50, the ancients did not have any well preconceived notion of "table"!They
53, 56; c ] 27. The other endings in the other cases confirm this: pl. acc. may have specified any elevated gadgetry with an adequate surface for
ends with -u.: KBo 20.10 i 13, ii 10; KBo 26.83:13; KUB 34.|28 obv. 15; placing offering materials and edible articles in their households and in
the sacred places with a common denomination "table". Early examples of
what look to be three legged tables, probably from the Old Assyrian Colony
44 Co*pu." KUB 58.95 rev. KUB
2f. with 59.47 \i 11 and Bo 37|7:7, S. Roak,Review period are illustrated on some seal impressions from Klrepe58. It is
of KUB 58,7a' 80 (1990) 750; M. Popko, weirere Fragmente zu crH 41g, AoF ls (1991)
48..
45
E. Laroche, Recherches sur les noms des dierx hittites, RI{A 7 (|94647) 720f.; H' 52 Reew of KUB 14, KUB l5, KUB 16, KUB 17, KlF 1 ( 1930) 344.
otten, Die Gottheit Lelvani der Boazky-Texte, JCS 4 (1950) 119tr; A. Rammenhuber, !3 oe netltschen U_Srjimme (1984) 253f.
Mar 2.Jt.s v. Chr., Or b9 (1990) 191. 54 co P (1994) 108 cites anoer possible attestation of the word in KBo 29.70 i 28
(1990) lt5f. in broken context.
a badly
bb The reading is, however, not certain, cf.
Background of the Tawananna's J. Tischte HEG I (1983) 3l4; it is also
Posi RHA30 (1972) 58. possible to read it -ul-te'e*k6n-zi, A. nat, Ritual Purity Versus Physical Impurity in Hittite
ggtter und hurritische Steindmonen (1982) 25. A,natolia: Public Health and Structures for Sanitation According to Cuneiform Texts and
the u+rems DUTU-u-e and DUTU-i (| 4,7) and e/i<hange, Archaeological Remains, in: H. I. H. Prince Takahito Mikasa (ed.), Essays on Anatolian
i.e. Itanuwe,/i see E' Laroche, Vocatif et cas absolu en Anatolien, Athenaeum 47 (196;9) Archa note 46.
5
775; E. Neu, Reew ofJ. Tischler, HEG 3, IF 88 (1983) 303f.; H. Eichner, Zur Genese der
hethitischen _
c
';J. Tischler, HEG I (1983) 3l4 "umstossen".
2nff.
5o I.rdo 5- T. ozg (1989) 384ff., pl. 88, 3 (8);94, l (1rA);
51 S".o ew,OB,JBL 136 (1967) g90f. 98, 2 (89A); 104,2 (197).
\
42 AHMET NAL THE RTTUAL OF HANTTTASSU 43
remarkable that the Hittite Hieroglyphic sign for "table" is represented by The main clue to identiff Hittite cSBSR.AD.KID with a table in
quite a different shape5g.
the shape of a basket comes from its depictions on the nandk vase in the
To give an approximate idea we may consider the following words in 2nd, 3rd, 4th rows from the top68, on a relief vase from Boazkfg, on a
Hittite vocabulary for "altar", so far identified: cSAN.Krqr. = GIS7uh- seal from Tarsus, kept now in oxfor\, on A]aca Hyk orthostats7l,
ura-60,Glsda[anga_61, G I szac.ceR.Re = itanana-,62 and' ''tab]e,,: Fraktin relief with a different and broader table with curved extensions on
csg4ggp , GIs haruzzi- (see below) , G|sPaPu-6g , G|spuri-/puriya-.
the left side (perhaps a table coth?72) and. on a stele from Yar73. The
One type of "table" is made of wickerwork and written in the texts as prototypes of these altarJike tables can be seen as early as the Old Assyrian
cS34gp.AD.KID. on the basis of duplicate texts 69,/d iii 6: .... l1rv bolony Period and are attested on the seal impressions from Acemhyk7a'
G|Shariuzzi kit|t]a and Bo 4999 iv: /rvcSB41Sun.a.xrD ktta H. Ehe]otf The archaeologists refer to them not quite wron gly as "altars'?5, because in
tended to identify the Hittite reading o cS341UR.AD.KID ,. cS1rrr;- the archaeological sense they really have the shape of an altar and are
uzz-64, which is cited without further Comments by H. otten65 and'J. functioning as such. Since it is extremely difficult to distinguish the Hittite
P]Ix,g]66. Since its attestation is ambivalent, it may be wise to wait for "altar" from an accessory under the common denomination of "table", itis
further e.idence before accepting this equation. recommendable to call them rather altar- or trunk-shaped tables. On the
sage of this altarJike table in pictographic depictions of the nandkvase these objects are not going to be offered to
and cultic scenes among the archaeoloical the gods, as assumed by T' zg and76 H' G. Gterbock77. They are being
fy the e^xact shape of it, which has remained carried to be used during the ceremonies and amusements in the same way
to nowb/. It appears on many archaeological as the musical instruments such as lyres, cymbals and the instruments
monuments_ depicted like a sturdy pillar or a tree trunk, set uprighl or which strikingly look like saz (lute). For the understanding of the ritual
carried without any effort by cultic personnel. According to these
Scenery on the nandkvase it is significant to note that the lyres which are
depictions it has a narrow neck and above it a flat surface sevin as table.
depicted in small and big shapes can promptly be identified with
GIs'DINGIR.INANNA.TUR (Hitt. or better Hattic ippiznar) ''smalL ltar-
n strum e n t" an d GIs. D INGIR. INANNA. GAL (Hit t. / Hattic
59 A. G|S hun zn ar)
Lnroch.,HH (1960) nr.301.
60 Beside CHD L-N see G. F. de] Monte,Reew ''big ltar-nstIment" which the Hittite festival texts attest frequently78.
of CHD 3/l,oA24 (19s5) 75l: H.
otfen,'Bemerkungen zum hethitischen Wrterbu ch, ZA 72 (lg82) 284f ..
b l written
also NA.daa nga-, see V. Haas, Der Kult von Nerik (1970) 168f.; idem,
Betrachtungen zur Rekonstruktion des hethitischen Frhjahrsfestes (EZEN purulliyas), ZA 68 r. zgt;, inandktepe. An Important Cult Center in the old Hittite Period (1988)
78 (P"8q) 291 note 37; M. Popko. Kultobjekte in der hethitischen Religion (1-928) Bgtr
ua Equated with Sum. ZAG.GAR.RA, fig.6{rPl. I/3,J/4 and also under the dustjacketofthe book.
see J. Friedrich, HW p.9I; M. popko, op. cit. p.
?Y n. w. Boehmer, Die Reliefkeramik von Boazky (1983) 8.31, Taf. |2.32'
66ff;J. Puhvel, HED Vol. 2 (1934) 461ff. 70Boehme., op. cit. Abb. 10b; K. Bitte],Die ethiier (1976) Abb. 154.
oc
J. Friedrich, Hw 266f .; E. Laroche, Review of HW 1. Erg., RA b2 (19bg) 187-rgg; /. 7| Bitt",op. cil., Abb. 214.
s.
J. weitenbery., Die hethitischen U-sriimme (198a) 2b3f.; H. otten, Die Bronzetafel aus 72 Bitr., op. cit. Abb. 194, 196, 198; K. Kohlmeye Felsbilder der hethitischen
Boazky. Ein Staatsvertrag Tutbalijas IV., StBoT Beihef I (1988) 43; G. McMahon,The Gro8reichszeit, Acta Praehistorica et Archaeologica 15 (1983) 69f. For the table cloth and
HittiteStateCultoftheTutelaryDeities,As25(t991) 257;A.na],ZrBeschaffenheitdes its possible Hrouda (1994) 287f.
hethitischen Opfertisches aus philogischer und archiologischer Sicht, Fs Hrouda (1994) c Bit ''Tisch''!
283 note S;for pap(a)-see now CHD p (1994) 96f. 74 N. tolian Art, BMECCJ 5 (1991) 297t. fg.5'
o+ Hethitisch-akkadische
Wortgleichungen,ZA 43 (t936) l72, see in details A. nat, 6.
Zur Beschaffenheit des hethitischen Opfertisches aus philologischer und archologischer 75 Fo, T. zg,op. cit. p. 94f.
Sicht, Fs Hrouda (1994) 28b. io
Loc."*u*p|e
cit.
65 Di. Bronzetafel aus Boazky.
Ein Staatsvertrag Tutbalijas IV., StBoT Beiheft l ]] ap"a T. zg,loc. cit.
(1988) 43. l H. M. KmmeL, Gesang und Gesanglosigkeit in der hethitischen Kultmusik, Fs H.
66 upn 3 (199r) l4s. otten (1973) 169-178; E. Bada], La musica presso gli ittiti; un aspetto particolare del culto
67 S". now in detail, A. na],Zr Beschaffenheit
des hethitischen opfertisches aus in onore di dinita, Bibbia et Oriente 147 (1986) 55s4; idem, Strumenti musicali, musici e
philologischer und archiologischer Sicht, Fs Hrouda (1994) 2gg.2g1. musica nella celebrazione delle feste ittite, TH 15 (1991); O. R. Curney, Some Aspects of
44
AHMETNAL
THE RrruAL oFUANTTTASSu 4s
this, considering arso the possibility that offering
ceremonies ro the
deceased kings may have taken place mostly at the roof..
There may have existed tabres of sim,ar
shape made of other
;"s:H,"7|i'','
49.49 rev.? AOf.
go|d (TAML)' KBo l0'2 i 32f'; KBo
78'777:5; KUB 42'57:3. The Hittit
specific objects, which they used
and perishable material. Aiongs
made of perishable materials su
other moders of houses, temples, randscapes
(mountain), the wickerwork
representations of.human beings are
certainly to be conceived in this sense
(Ar'AM'AD.KID.SALT/ "wickerwork figure
of a woman,KUB 3g.a i l0).
Point of view we would not need a verb da'- in line 7; it would be absolutely obv. i 6ff. For the magical meaning of numbers, especially 3, 7, 9 and
superfluous between two .duba- ''Scatter" in lines 5 and 7. Moreover, how is
14, see Haas94; R. LebrungS and in general F. Heilef6. In line 8 a small,
one to explain the function of the plene writing - ku-u for commonly thick loaf made of wheat is put as topping on the layer of seeds, separating
attested -ku at the end of the word? Moreover it would factually be the seeds from the gems. In another context soldier bread appears as a
incomprehensible to assume that the very scribe would not ha,e Co\er: IfTU NINDA.ERi'S i*tap-pi|- KUB 12.16 ii 14, 79; IsTU
understood the meaning of dai-, one of the most frequently attested. r,erbs NINDA.ERiI tappanz, KUB 4l.13 ii 19; .. er=a=an DUG^nuran (9)
in this ritual and in all the Hittite vocabulary. There are, therefore, other NINDA2-a-an A 1/z SAr tappanzi, KUB 59.53 i 8f., similarly KBo
1....1
possibilities, if one wanted to reduce the number of NUMUN to seven; one 19.t29 obv. 31; na-a-k6n KAxU-jj (5|) kizzaI*TU r.gABgAR GUKIN
of them is to take parluena ewan aS a gen. construction as I did above in NINDA.KUR+.RA-ya (52) itappanza edu,IBoT 3.148 iii 50-52.
my transation (see there the note); see also i 12 the similar gen.
construction DUTU-aj parluena "Sweet concoctjon for/of the Sun Goi,83' obv. i 9ff. Minerals such as gold and silver and precious stones play an
The exact meaning of paruena- is not known. It might designate a by_ important role in the magical rituals; see 14 Haas-H'J. TheP7;V' Haasg};
product of cereals or fruits, something like juice, extract or essence. The G. Kellermangg. They appear more frequently in rituals adhering to the
given translation "concoction" is an approximate guess. H. A. Hoffnef[ Hurrian layer. I will not deal with the stone names here, since an
and F. Pecchio]i Daddi-A' M. Po],an5 leave it without translation. What exhaustive work on the stones and gems in Hittite texts has now been
kind of a plant, seed or flower kutiyan designates is also obscure. How published by A. M. Pol,an;100. 1 would merely like to express my
Watkins deduces the meanin g "lentI" and "chick pea'' for fiattar and zinai] disagreement with A' Ancllot6101, who tends to see in Hittite NA4para-
is difficult to understand86. ba-102 the equivalent of AN.BAR.GEo "ferro nero".
ob,. i 6ff. for the seeds included in this NUMUN_list see in detail obv. i l1 ftappi-: A. Kammen7u6rrl03 gives the meaning "Kmme]"
Hoffnef7 and 1L Ertem8}' For ba(t)tars. E. Neu89 andr[. Puh,eP} which is attested in Hittite as kappani- (Sumerian TIN.TIR) ''c]min''
(cuminum cyminum) or less probably, "caraway Seed" (carum cari)'We
obv. i 6-10 is translated by V Haas9| and, A. M. Po],an92. A synopsis can, from the start, exclude the possibility that kappi- may stand as a
of the passage is given by V. Ha2593 shorter writing for kappani-, since kappani- is attested always in connection
with the colors black (GE6) and white but never red (Sfu), as it is the case
in KBo 11.14 i 11 in connection with kappi-. Another reason for our
objection is the question whether the Hittites would ever have ground the
cumin using a millstone or a grindstone, NA+ARA, Hittite NAabararazi-. It is
b.
L*
48 AHMETNAL THE RITUAL OF HANTITASSU 49
bcal to assume that one would use mortar and pestle to pound.r.-irl104. ohv. 13 alPuemar: This word designates something on the horn (SI,
kappi- must therefore mean, at the same time, an extremely tiny kind of hitt. karawar) of the plow-ox which can be cut off or scraped and removed
seed such as poppy seed which can be found in red and black, and can also without killing, harming or injuring the live animal. Therefore it is
escape or Pour out from the millstone without being grouna[l05. In the common even today's animal husbandry in Turkey to cut off the pointed
meaning of "small seeds" it appears in the following texts: KUB 4l.g | 27 ends of the bull horns so that they do not injure each other. Thus it hardly
with dupl. I(Bo 10.45 ii 61 7 kappin anda pe*iyazz; KBo 5.2 i 38: 14 kappi Can mean "Krtjmmung",i. e' ''bendng (of the horn) ''111, since this part of
5E para ipnna{; ibid. iv 20: nu7 kappin SE da. the horn contains blood vessels, nor can it mean "Gldtte"(?) 112, but only
"smill" as being a synonym of amiyant- the "point" of the horn. Indeed how small this piece must have been is
established: KUB 12.63 obv. 3l (said of er.ident from comparison with a ritual text which attests the remo,a] of a
and
tiny piece from the ear and an unknown body part (UZUarnum,da-l) of a
mou S; KBo 6.29 i 7 and
KBo 4.12 obv. b (said
sheep, although we do not know whether the sheep was living or notl13.
According to an another text they scrape a splint (adur)l|4 from the
horn of a live wild goat, Weidner 1911, 81 i 4: ANA SI UZ6.KUR.RA-ft:fn
haduir tepu baajja. Note that a cow with its horns "broken (ofr)" must
grindstune slirys away, may the sacrificer likewise escape from the jaws have lost a lot of its value, according to Laws $ 74: raft,ku SI GUD nama
of
-Akni'.
Finally kappi' is also attested as a small measurement vessell0d. cin cuo kui^j/<i duwarnizi aPun-Za apa clai cuo SIG5 B.EI GUD pai
(See now R. Haase, 74,86, 1995, 114). The substantive alpuemar is closell,
The forms, techniques and functions of ancient Anatolian millstones
related to adj. alpu- "pointed", the antonym of which is war[ui- "rough,
have been examined from the archaeological point of ew b/ f. FIersftllO. shaggy, bushy, leafy, blunl'115.4. Kammenhr6rrl16, who cites further
obv. i 12 mumuwai- attested also in KUB 57.79 rev. iv 4; cHD L-N literature, rejects all these interpretations and renders alpuemar as (eie
(1980'1989) We may expecr from Substanz); she also does not accept the relationship to alpu-. To me it
context
the nd, amalgamate", as a designates the point of an ox horn (Hornspiue) which can be cut off easily
synonYm of without injuring the live animal. For alpu- and dampu- see also g17rn.7l7
obv. i 17ff. Treat.ed by E. Neu118 and CFID P (1994) 15.
104 po. the terminology of ''grnding, pounding'' etc. see CHD P (199a) 58; it
lists the
following verbsl pakku', ara-,' kuilku-, paiai-, and, zafiurai-.
105 9.";1 20 and related commentary. lll H. M. Kmmel, apud H. otten, Benrerkungen zum hethitischen Wrterbuch, ZA
106 9". also composite words including kappi- kappilai-, ,,to
kappilafi- (certainly not 66 (1976) 100.
showone'shate'',but"to underestmate'to scorn, to sneer, deride, dsdain'', similar or !!7
S. Wei tenberg,Hethitische U-Stmme ( 1984) 87.
mble',, kappilalli-, kappilanu_, kappilazatta-, II KUB 44.15 obv. i 9f.: A-NAGEru uou te-pu ku-ir-ziuzuar-nu-um-ja (10)
[t|e-pu
ku-ir-zi nu-k6n ITU NINDA.KURa.RA a-a -i-i u-u-[a-i.
and
imen ta ",,,..,lHl
Proverbial
#i #
1[#!,, o,,
),, and' G. 114 16r'
ajduirdoes.,ot o.riy mear "twigs, sticks, bash(wood)'', cf.J. Puhvel,HED 3
Beckman, Proverbs Allusions in Hittite,JNES 4b (19g6) 24 n. Br "smail (1e91) 239.
115 5". H. G' Gterboct, Lexicographical Notes II, RHA 74 (1976)
@"'flit"o1/2 (rs,4) 44t " 99; idem, Bilingual
.
Moon omens from Boazky, A Scienfic Humanist, Memorial Saggs (1988) 168-170, citing
used also in Urartian as kap!, see for further details also KBo 11.14 i 12-14.
Yaar
e Geen Baz Seme Kap isimleri (1979) 3438 and rur Lfg. 6lb'
for ]19 (1975)
t t'/ 7666 p. f 00, citing unpubl .222/b and, E. Hamp, Hittite alpu and dampu, HS 102
od Processing Techniques of Neolithic Societies (198e) 21f.
. of Turkey
and Greece, Ph. D. (1981) (2 volumes). 1 l8 I.,t".p."tation der hethitischen mediopassiven Verbalformen, StBoT 5 ( 1968) 150.
50 AHMETNAL
THE RITUAL or
UavrreSu
i 79 huza: G. Beckmanllg compares this word with (NAa)6r31120_ obv. i 21f. transliterated and
5l
"amber??, resin??" which is accepted by A. M. polrrnil2l and.J. pu7r.1122. bI r
translate.I k',
^
1 Dress]er.l3l
Polvani lists KBo 11.14 i lg (wrongly line 8(!)) under (N^4)buti/a-, she obv. i 22: CHD L-N (1980-1989,
ul1"o
does not explain why one has to assume a sg. nom. c' u*za-x together with
u^rjjl2g. on account of the stem Consonant and the case, however, it is
hardly possible to subsume it under (NA4) ujf-, which, according to a ritual
text, seems to be a hard and durable stone,l24since the transitive verb
ameiya'"fumigate something'' would acquire an object in acc. sg.
butin/buran which is attested many times125, although not together with
the verb flameiya- but mostly with the verbs (,der ar[a) wabnu- "to swing
(abo,e)", da- "to take" and kuk- "to pound, to grind''. G, Beckman himself
has trouble finding a reasonable explanation for these diffi.r16..t2o.
Further occurrences which Beckman cites from 2027/k:b and.7g/e rev. 1g
are unfortunately too fragmentary to establish a relationship between these
two words. In our context we expect a combustible substance which can be
used as an incense together with cedar, oil and honey. Since it would not
make any sense to burn honey (after all, it would produce an offensive
smell) uza- mrst designate something belonging to honey, and this can
be only the "wax", here "rhe wax of honey", the Hittite reading of the
Sumerogram GAB.L/DU.L.
obv. i 20: For MUN "sa.lr,,see G. Beckmarl2T; for its usage and
resourcesl28 in the vicinity of anklfl see Sedat Erkuttzg ]nd' M'
porl^nini.l30
50.
in see;[. Puhve], HEG B (199f ) 41lf.
sti Ittiti (1988) 18.
83.
natural resources, especially rock salt beside
L.
52 AHMETNer THE RITUAL or geNrrSSu 53
KUB 58.94 obv. i 3-18 runs, in free translation of the restore6 1.*1135.
i24 dapianduis
obv. used here as usual as a synonym for [umandu,
"Now the ritual expert [utters the words of conjuration] to the sun
cf. the change in KBo 3.7 iv 16 and is dupl.; KUB 4.1 i 19, 21 and its dupl.;
God as f[ollows: 'You, the sun God, have given a party.you have] invited all
KUB 7.41 i 37, ii 74; KUB 32.123 + iii 21, 54 and its dupl.; KUB 58.108 i 12
the gods. You have invited [all the mortals.] The patient, however, [(was and its dupl. KUB 59.58 i 11; Hatt. iv 22 and its dupl.; Ullik. 1A i 3 and its
not invited), he (just) walked intol it. The gods have eaten and drunk. you, dupl. and the replacement of the commonly used phrase dapiza dapian
the su[n God], have entrusted [these words] to the heart (of the gods); SIG5-n in oracle inquiries by bumandaza dapian in KUB 49.74:7|.
you, the sun God, have spoken (to them namely): 'what ldid I do?] I
obv. ii 1DU'[U-uarahzawetr is so far a unique expression, but its
ha[ve] inted all the gods. [I have invited] all the mortals (as well). [But
meaning is evident from the context. It certainly denotes the cycle of the
the patientl has got lost. [The practitioner has concealed] him'.
[The gods sun during the night time which was usually conceived by the ancients as
in their entirerywalked out (and) [spoke] to the sun God: '[whyJ did you
"tIa,el, jorney, striding'' of the Sun. The verb we- ''to turn" is attested in
[not] invite the patient?'The sun God responded: '[He has been the following texts in the meaning of "to stde, to tra,eL, undertake a tour
concealed(?) somewhere; it is why Il could not in[vite] him. (But) now,
of nspecton, to wa]k around'} KUB 36.80 i 6-7: (6) '. ma-a-an-Za a-ru-ni
because [he (just) walked in]to the lparty, let him be here?].'. The gods
ma-a-an-Za A-N[A HUn. secs 1 Q ) |ke-ada-n i-il q-qa (??) wa-ab-b a-an-n a
spoke as follows: '[You, the sun God, he (i.e. patient) has made his] chief
pa-a-aln-za] " (Sun Goddess of Arinna), whether you have gone to the sea
(SAG.DU) god! Let him (please) participate in the party. Let him eat,
[let or [anywhe]re to [the mountains] to travel" and similarly in the prayer to
him drinlk! [Let him] g[o (again)] to you, to (his) chief(?) (deity). Let the
Telipinu KUB 24.r obv. i 8; KUB 36.18 ii 2\: wa[anna Panza eta "he has
patient come in, [et him eat and drink (with us) ! Let him recover his
been tra,eling''|38' <Ug 56.5l obv. 9-12: (l1) |ma]n D Kantipuitti
health againll Let him come [and be a true servant to you,] the sun God,
wabannaza EGIR-pa uizzi "[As] Soon aS K. returns from (hs) trave]"
(his) [chief god. Let him bring you sacrifices again!',,] 136
(preously he undertook a travel (KASKAL) to Tuwanuwa); KUB 40.5 + ii
Now we must. try to analyze the profound. meaning and function of 5: KASKAL-az wefita "he returned from tra,eL"; KBo 30.l64 obv. iii &9: (8)
this unique mythologem in the midst of a magical ritual. First of all we maxfuban-ma LUGAL-uJ (9) KUR-a webzi "When the king undertakes a
should be aware of the ritual ambience in which this ficti,e story has been tour of inspection aroud the country''; KUB 8.57 i 10: [nu] KUR.KgpMEs
skillfully inserted. secondly the patient is given the impression that he has
fuumanda wehikizz|if ''he (Gilgami) tra,els around a]I countries",. KUB
been a guest among the gods. we can imagine how encouraged the patient 33.127 ii 15: mKe,jji ITU.3.KAM-a webandari "Ke tramped around n
must have felt, when this mythologem was recited to him aloud and the mountains for three monrs",'Kup. Ai 24: -.vnSE1aU-ya kuie
publicly in the form of a "belle ,7or1'737. The unspoken verbal message of arabzandaweandari "The free men who are traveling around"; cf. further
it is: "You will/must recover, because even the sun God and other goir rrc Tel. i 45.
fond of you!"
The verb arazanda web- cannot be the main predicate of the
sentence, since it would need the particle -kin which lacks here, see KBo
135 Transiteration
is given below p. 95f. 30.56 rev. v 26; therefore we may restore in analogy to above cited texts at
136 I., the broken
continua[ion of the text there are certainly further disputes with the the end of the |ine, zinna- "finsh, comphete" or pai- "to go"'
Sun God and argumentation, how faithful a seryant the patient will become if
recovers: This sort of barters on the basis of the principle 'ldo ut d.es',
only he obv. ii 2: It is of special interest that the mother of the client is
are well known from
tle prayer for Gauliyawiya|lBo 4.6 +obv. 16f., rev. 22; from the vow texts of Pu]hena mentioned (if our restoration of the break is correct). So far as I know the
(crH 583-584) in the forrn of man-wa DINGIRU T GASAN-yA/EN-yA Durusl Tr-;;;;iL intervention of a mother for the sake of her child is unique among the
nusi fuarti in KUB 15.1 i 5, 21f., ii 2f.; KUB 15.8 i b; KUB tb.t9 obv.
4; KUB 15.22:12f.; KUB
15'23 rev. 2f.; KUB 75.24 i 4f.; StBoT 1 obv. i 3f. Cf. also KUB 6.45 ili +;
Hittite rituals. The personal name rMa(n)duta... is unknown from
rus 2|.27 lii 37; elsewhere.
KUB56.19 i 19, 28f.; KUB 50.25 + KUB 60.118 iii? 3.
" 1 o,, the psychological and therapeutic effects of this conjuration in curing a patient
see A. nal, Parts of Tree' i., Hittit" According to a Medical Incantation Text (KUB 138 . A. nat, Hethitische Mythen
43.62) , und Epen, in: o. Kaiser (ed.), TUAT Il|/4 (1gg4)
FsAp (1992) 495. 858.
..!--
54 AHMETNAL THE RITUAL or gevrreSSu 5D
obv. ii 3ff. E. Larochel3e recognized, 206g/9 (i.e. KBo 17.104) as KUB 60.73 rev. 5-7: .....]MA.NA da-a nu-zar.IgABgAR GUSKIN da-a?l
dupl. (6) ...]x 9 MA.-NA nu-za'eaffi.p1GlR.RtA '... (7) ... MA-I\\A da-a nu-za
obv. ii 4: The incongruence of gender and case in DUTU-u-e EN-mr BAPPIR BULUG S[Af ... Another similar case is artested in KUB 72.24 obv.
is remarkable; I have therefore emended this scribal error to EN-mi[[-ir]], i 2ff. Here the client has fallen ill as a result of divine anger. To paci$
above note to ii 4. I*!ara, the goddess of diseases, and to restore the patient's health the deity
is given silver, iron, black iron, tin, copper, lapislazuli, lead, different kinds
obv. ii 5: AMAR "young anmaL, ca]f'connotes here an endearing or
of wool, beer, wine, cheese, wali- etc. A similar passage is in KUB 27.67 +
allegorical word "child, kid". similarly the mother of the disherited
rev. iv 33fla5., "He scatters [silver] (and) gold, Lapis, cornelian, Babylon
Labarna designates herself as " cow" (GUD) 140. 1y. know that AMAR is a u_
Stone, parafu-stone,Iulluri-stone, ron, tin, copper, (and) bronze- [a little]
stem nounl4l, but there is unfortunately no evidence for its Hittite reading.
(of e,erythinr).... '' The principle do ut des is most clearly sible in the vow
TUR-Ia-ma-an "my child, baby" acc. sg. stands certainly for *TUR-Ia -an-ma-
texts of the queen Pudubep2l46.
an, cf. HAB ii 2; the nasal or weak is omitted before consonantsl42. The
Hittite reading of TUR-/a-is also unknown. It is noteworthy to observe that a mortal who, after making his
sacrifcial offerings, was dissatisfied with the deity's attitude towards him
obv. ii 7-13 treated by A. M. polr*i743. and therefore later changed his opinion, could demand his votives back
obv. ii 7ff.: The barter formura da- and pai-, i. e. ',to accept from the deity: EN.SISKUR- za ANADU arkuwar iyfaz] DU EN_YA EGIR-
something
Pa=war=a=mu pai U M ItI|A
(offering, gift or bribe) on condition that in ,rrponre something DU-MA] immakku=war=a=mu peta
else is
granted" is one of the basic principles of Hittite religionr44, anJ kinun=ma=waI=a=m] EGIR-pa e.dft.[i<^ii] nu-Za EN.SISKUR .AjVA D U
is best
compared to do ut des in Roman religion. In our text it seems to arkuwar i|yaz i] Pai=war=a= mt) n)=wa=ta=k6'n me n a|fo ! an da] u kan zi tai
be a kind DU-aipara peta "The client argues with the Storm God: 'Storm God, my
of bargain with the gods who are thought to be responsible for
the sickness
or any trouble of the client. The practitioner tries also to restore Lord, gi,e them (i'e', his offerings) back to me!' [The Storm God]
the health (responds) as fol]ows: 'Did not you gve them to me (as presents)? (How
of his client in exchange for cerears, minerals and other sacrificial
materials. we may compare this passage with the fragmentary can) you now ask them back from me?' The clent re[peats] his demand':
birth rituar 'Give me them! They watch (obseve) you(?)'. The Storm God (at the
end)
l39R..*of KBo 7L,oLZ58 (1963) ga,e him them.'' (KBo 13.l61 rev. right col. lff.; repeated in lines l0rr.; +z
246.
140 rln ii 1415: In the following I would like to cite more typical examples from the
an-na-a-i-i-ma GUD-u, ma -a-an ta- +j-kr (l5) u-i-wa-an-ti-wa-
mu-kdn GUD-jGiR'' R jar-n:-r ''Butmother stamped like a cow (and cried): ,They have
hs texts which illustrate the principle "do ut des": "They speak as follows:
separated (my) kgs (and) Iimbs from me, the tiving iow,,,, 'Look, (how) the client supples you wth offerings. o deity, take (these)
tn. ,"purutlo., of limbs standing
,...rulf*:.r:ally.for.the removal of labarna,her son, out of the palace.
'aL J. Friedrich, HW3.. Erg. 39; J'J. S. Weitenberg, U-iStimme (l9s4) offerngs for yourseLf and turn towards him in benevo]ence. Whate,er he
56; for
attestations of AMAR_un add there <so io.so ii 11; KUB gb.+o
ert col. 8; KUB 33.38 iv 1; might be telling you, Isten to him!"', kian memanzi kaa=wa=ta sisrun
KUB 33.46 i 14. EN.SISKUR pai nu=wa_za DINGIRLAM ssru da nu=wa=i=an and,a
I42 g' g' Sturteuant,Red
ced Vowels and Syllabic Liquids and Nasals in Hittite,
(1931) 7e88; E. H. sturtevan -E. A. Hahn,A
RHA 3 ailuli naifout nu=ta kuit memikizzi nu=i GESTU-an para lagan
compararive b.u--u. of the Hittite Language f;arak,
(1951) 24f' with note 41; S- A/pThe -n(n)-Formations I(Bo 12.96 rev. iv 16.1a8' LUGAL-u,-, a kuedani (32) MU- ir-ri -ur
in the Hittite ,u.rgrug., Belleten 18
(|954) 449'467;J. Friedric, HE:I (1960) ($36 on
s31 assimilation); C. b*trr,The Hittite panza nu-mari--ri pauwa| ANA DISTAR.LiL (33) URu5rrruga ssruR
Writing of [nk] and [ngJ and Related l"ti..r, JAOS 99 (1979) 93-94;o. Carruba, ambai keldi-ya maldear-a -u (34) eilzi LUGAL-uj kuit gimri -u
Nasalization im Anatolischen, SMEA 24 (lgg4) bltr.
|n''"pietra nei testi oi riuttrl, uesopotamia l5 (l9s0) 86 and
ZA.GiN
eadem, La 745
terminologia.dei min_erali nei tesri iuiti, EOTHEN g (fggg)
taa A' unal'A'Kammenhube4 Zl.
Das arthethitische Losorakel KBo XVIII, Kz gg (lgz4) 746
he Geloften I-III (1984) and KUB 56.1ff.
159 note 8; A' nal, The Role of Magic in the
Ancie-nt Anatolian Religions According to the
I47
Cuneiform Texts from Boazky-sattuSa, BMECCJ 3 (19s8)
62f.
l48 Dr A]vrAKUS1rrra, or. 3g (7964) 240.
5t) AHMET N,q THE RITUAL or gavrreSSu 57
paizzi "If year the king does not go on a mi]tary campaign, there is no
in a
general or for only one particular king; 5) and finally KUB 57.79 with its
ambai-rtuaL, keldi-ritual ad votive offering of "gong-on-the campaign', dupl. KUB 58.94 for an unknown customer. It is hard to estimate how
for the "Itar of the Counuyside of Samuba'', because (this season) the king many examples of the ritual might have been lost.The different find spots
has not gone on a military campaign'l KUB 27.1 obv. i 31-34; kaa uma of each compositio n in flattua indicate three different versions: KBo 1 1. l 4
DIMIN.IMIN.BI-a. SSKUR piwen nu-Za ezzatten
ekutten (3|) |atugae-ma- in Bykkale building K; KBo 13.145 in House at the Slope; KUB 43.57 (+)
kin DIMIN.IMIN.BI-ej KASKAL-az ar|1a namma tiendu nu ANA,A KBo 18.74 in Temple I; KBo 17.l04 (+) 2029/g in Sdmagazin of Temple
ru1rr32g (32) minumar piten nri-*an ANA LUIGAL
SA]L.LUGAL 1151. 5ot1rer result of the frequent usage and copying of the flantitau
D1-J14UIS.LUGAL anda au]i (33) naiten ''Behold., we ha,e gi,en you, ritual is the omission of the direct speech particle -wa in some passages
Pheiades, a sacrfce. Now eat and drink! Let the evi| Pleiades get out of the which causes difficulties in discourse analysis of the text.
way. Grant gentJeness to the tutelary deity of the hunting bag. Turn to the
king, queen (and) princes in favor!", KBo l7.lOb + KBo 84.47 rev. iii 30ff.); The mention of the name of a patient or client is not very common
EGlR-anda-ma- maf ftue.d DINGIp'S] (2) ailawe nu ap|u pl1purs in the texts. His personal appearance and participation must be deemed
akkukanzil "In the foLlowing [they toast (only) to the honor of those rary critical, because his introduction by name shows that e rituals were
deites who have been] benevolent [towards them]'', VBoT 24 iii lf. and not merely theoretical library examples at llattuabut were in practical use
better preserved in rev. iv 29-3l; Sa ruR UR.U7r3ru DINGIRMES ftaja--jmaj whenever daily needs required them. In other words they were a kind of
tuliya baLziyawen nu uwatten nu izzatten ekutten nu=ma=an kaaDINAM empty formula to be flled out anew with the name and affliction of the
patients each time they were used, as already stated The mention
kuit arnummeni nat itamaten "Beho]d, o deties of the Gaga ]ands! We "6ou.152.
ha'e summoned you to a divine assembly. Hurry uP, eat and drink! Listen of clients by their names seems to have prevailed extensively during the
to (, however, n return) whatever litigation we may brng to yol,,, KUB 4.r Middle Hittite and Early Empire period and r'as abondoned in the Empire
period; we observe here a forward shift from individuality to anonymity.
ii 1-6149' cf. also similarly KUB 17.30 iii 3-5, further examples are given by
n. nu1|50; the fragmentary prayer KBo 22.250:14 seems also to deal with a It is remarkable but not surprising that the custom of mentioning a
sort of barter. client's name seems primarily to go back to Hurrian origins, since most of
the rituals, including the name of the patients, stem from the Hurrian
obv. ii 8: As I noted in my transliterarion, the par. texts KBo 17.104 ii
sphere. Thus we find the Hittite prince Tamiarr mentioned in a Hurrian
7 and2029/g line 8 write the clientwith his p...orri name, i. e.,mAtta(-),
rite: a-a.i_u-u_ji-i[ft-/<u-un-n]i-ma m T|a-a#mi-3ar-ril''The c|ient is
instead of anonymous EN.SISKUR (Akk. bel niqe) in KBo 1r.14 ii g.
T|amiarri] '' KBo 27.85+ 792/v..n. 14153. Tamiarri aPpears also in many
As has repeatedly been stressed in previous pages, the ritual of other texts as .1i.r1154 alone and together with Amunika1r55 o. *i1L
l) the old or
|Iantitau consists of at least five versions (see also below): Suppiluliuma j's first TawanannaTaduepa|56. Thi' Tamiarri has been
Middle Hittite original version of flantitau which served as model for all
succeeding examples, esp. KBo 11.14; this most ancient example is
unfortunately lost; 2) KBo 11.14 or the middle Hittite version Xno iO.g+;
3) the version which was used for the personal vicissitudes of Atta (for
the L'I
detaiis on his personality see below), KBo 17.104 and20zg/g; 4) the ritual P. corni,Textes de Boghazky. Liste des lierx de uouraille, Hethitica 7 (19s7) 3r.
152 5.6 above o. llf.
which was enacted to restore the health of an unknown Hittite king, KUB |53 v. H^n,Die Serien ia[i und itkalzi des AZU_Prieters, Rituale fr Ta.miarri und
43.57 (written typically LUGAL). we do nor know whether this TadubePa sowie weitere Texte mit Bezug aTamiarn, ChS I/l (1984) 39.
version
repesents a special compilation preserved to be used only for kings rc+ Haas, op, cit. nos. 4&49, 51, 53tr
in 155 162t,op. cit. no. 52.
L56 gxa,op. ct. nos.6, 8, ll, 14, t9, 20.
!!s^n. -"
Schu,Ie; Die Ikker (1965) 170f.
5U BMECCJ 3,62f.
L
i
58
AHMETNAL
THE RITUAL oF HANTITASU 59
tentatively
Tutfrariyai y_'n
rrtan
connection with her malevolent magical manipulations against Tutfualya,
rituals is her own brother' and against Nkalmat, his wife the queen, and their
Arnuwandaappear also in the Hurrian and children in the magic ritual KBo 15.10 i 19-21164' nu idalu kue ITTIA
.iu6l61. nDutbabiyla ] Nik^l-ati ANA pg14glS-Su,u memikit nu=ma
Now, we hav
Atht62. The most EMEuA [iji],ira nu=u-k6.n i[anaD|JTU_i DIsKUR-ni Paranta [idallu
memkitu__uj alwanzakt''Das Bse, das sie (i.e., Ziplanawiya) gegen
flantitau ritual an
Dutfualya |und] Nikalmati (und) hre Shne immer wieder gesagt und
is closely related to
ihnen aLs Zungen [gema]cht hat, pflegte se darber hinaus (ber) sie
KUB 36.tlt + KBo
beim Sonnengott des B]utes (und) beim Wettergott [aLs Bse]s Zu Sagen;
[1c].dia daranzi ^k u j,i mAt-ta-a-i
und se behexte se immer wieder".
SAL.LUGAL IBII-A.NITA TDUMU
DINGIRUM f m an -ml a-a D|J In recent decades this Tutf;aliya has enjoyed a particular reputation
1csB4NUrR kizziy]a g-an GI
since many historical texts have been re-dated into his reign, and,
moreover, a remarkably bulky sword of Mycenaean type with an Akkadian
"They speak as follows: .Whatever
dedicatory inscription on its blade has been discovered not far from the
Lion Gate at flattua165; this is tangible proof for serious involvement in
d of hea,en [or] the S[un Goddess
ha,e set up) [here and there] nine 164 Szab6, op. cit. l<tf.
|65 6. nu1-4. Ertekin-. Ediz,The Hittite Sword from Boazky_Hattusa, Found 1991
and brlng (in response)
and its Akkadian Inscription, Mze/Museum. 4 (1990_1991) 50-53; A. naL, 1991'de
lient Atta is a high ranking Boazky-Uattua'da Bulunan Hitit Klc ve Uzerindeki Akadca Adak Yazt, Fs Nimet
personality contemporary with
appears also in rev. b), the zg, Ankara (|9,s3) 727-730 and A. Ertekin-. Ediz, A Unique Sword from Boazky-
renowned sister of Tutf;aliya
$attua, Fs Nimet ozg (1993) 7T9-725' This sword has been published by myself and my
evident from the ritual text KB _relationship to king Tutaliya is Turkish colleagues as fast as possible, i.e. three months after its discovery at flattu*a,
26f.
because we did not want to deprive the scientific world of this unique piece. Although this
The name Atta is as "a dgntary of the city of Gagababa,, primary publication in Turkish language, and, for the convenience of others additionally in
an instruction text of Arnuwanda
'attested' in English translation in the Turkish journal Museum and succeedingly in Fs N. zg has
trg il.44i 9) who may be identical flawlessly been done in every respect and it does not lack anything in regard of definition of
with the very prince in question.'Zplatawiya
is also well attested in the sword, reading and translation of its Akkadian inscription, its dating to the reign of
Tutalya ji and relating is historical and achaeological context with the historical events
of the time of this king, and finally its Mycenaean-West Anatolion origin I encounter in
iluliuma as Told by His Son Mursilis II,JCS 10 recent times to my regret an influx of repetitious and mostly unnecessary treatment of the
sword by different colleagues in various journals, which reiterate in general almost our
he Hittite Kingdom, TH b (1925) t623 A. results, illustrate our drawings ard pictures' as if one felt to be in a rush to take part in the
Vorzeichenschau bei den Herhite;
",
TH i unique ralue of this sword. To show how rapidly ese teatments increase I like to give a list
of these publications (so far known to me) here: Il. Bucholz, Eine heth.
Schwerteinweihung, Journal of Prehistoric Religion VIII (1994) 20ff.; (with a grievous
blunder on p. 22 with note 8) E. Cline, Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea. International Trade and
the Late Bronze.Aegean, BAR International Series 591 (1994) 73 and his forthcoming
article, "Assuwa and the Aegean''; Boazky-flattua
Found in 1991, ABSA (The Annal 994) 2lT2l5; MJ.
Mellink, AJA 97 (1993) 108, 112f. - L. Vagnetti,tJna
zur Verwendung magischer Rituale spada di tipo da Boazky, PP 176 (1994) 215_236.
in |A' nal,| Ein hethitisches Schwert mit
akkadischer Inschrift aus Boazky, Antike Welt 23 (1992) 256_257. The immesurable
ungsritual fr das Knigspaar Tutbalia imPortance of the sword for tle Mycenaear archaeology and its uniqueness do not justiff
und
this spoil. Do I have to understand these authors i., ii,i. way that ihey do .rot toi.. *y
L-_
60 AIIMETNa THE RITUAL oF HANTITASU 61
West Anatolia, which is well known from his annals. We can assume that obv. ii 15 reri- attested only here and in KUB 43.60 i 9 as te'ri'ya'a
Attavas among the children of Tutfraliya-Nikalmati, the royal couple, who xu'jl7|; cf. further the
TJD-a, and confirms the Indo-European reading of
have been bewitched by their malicious ant Zplantawiya. Nemesis came,
writing l3-]ya- ab-fua-an-z 4ya-afu-[a-an-zi in the meaning of "to triple'' and
however, upon the evil-doer very soon, since according to e above cited
KUB 36.f 11 + KBo 20.34 rev. 12-15 she shares a common fate with Atta, the "to quadrup/e"in KUB 55.20 + KUB 9.4 + ii 33, 35172.
queen, and the crown prince (probably Arnuwanda i, the successor of obv. ii l6ff. The practitioner tries to save the life of his client by
Tutaliya), who all appear there to be accursed and thus bewitched by
means of some sophisticated metaphors. The interpretation of welwila'in
some deities. The same prince is also attested in the fragmentary text KUB
55.48 i 14 as m?A-at-ta-a in connec - this context causes great difficulties. L. Jakob-R65173, and apparently
feitivals, and.
in the same context as a Muwatalli Another Affa following herJ. Tschler|74, take on the basis of KUB 24.9+ iv 22,28 (s.
appears in the colophon of KBo father of the below) welwi|a-as ''deties'' or "demons"who, like DINGIR.MAH of the
scribe Nananza, and must be a different person. As a scribe he appears also river, seem to stand in relation to rivers. The edence for river-deities is,
in KBo 18.181 rev. 10. Atta as a craftsman in the inventory iext KUB howe,en, very feeble. Note that KUB 36'|45 obv. 9 does not attest welwila'.
42.31:10 certainly represents a third person.
The abbreviated fi-e-elstands there for i-e-el-wa'a which occurs in line
| 9 hatta- is primarily a terminus technicus of butchery. It covers a 7175.
broad semasiological spectrurn: "to make a hole, pierce, prick, stab, slash,
perforate, stick (as means of killing), hit, strike, engrave'\68. In spite of its The word welwila- is attested only very few times, unfortunately always
primary meaning rendered by Puhvel which implies "to stick, stab (an in fragmentary context. I would like first to quote the related attestations
animal) " it is still obscure what kind of slaughtering method it exactly and to ponder thereafter some possibilities for determining approximate
denotes. It seems that the meaning "to stick, to stab" iJrather to be soughi
meaning of the word: in KUB 24.9+ iv 22 it seems to stand in relation to the
ina quite diffel Other terms of slaughtering ire
ark1 ep(p)-, ar 69, river: [nu-k 6]n i-i 2NINDA.S1ES iD-a ,i*<l-i--Ia-a pariya ''He breaks
fouek-, kuen-, mik-, -i'iya-,
arf,a par-, ara two thn ]oa,es to the ri,er, (i. e.) to we|wLa- of the river". KUB 24.9+ iv
27f.: .'.. i- as |teel-rt-i-la-a. DINGIR1MES 3y-2g az-zi-k-ki-ten ak-ku-u-ki-
ten |''Deities of the welwila-f of the ri,er; eat (and) drnkl". KUB 37.127 +
primary publication seriously so that they need to repeat it wi their own signature? I hope
ABoT 44 rev. iv &7 is too fragmentary and corruPt to gain any context, but
sincerely that this is not the case! Moreover, it now seems, to my pleasure, that is of
findings belong no more to rarities, all the more so as there is another "unique" sword'o.t
from
it shows again that we|wIa- can designate a SPace or locality as it appears
Kastamonu at present being prepaired by myself for publication. Moreover, most together with aIIu_ "deep, Iow'' (an adjective used generally for the valleys
surprisingly, in September 1995 the Director Mr. lhan Temizsoy kindly showed me in and rir'ers?): nu (erasure) a'a|n-..' fi-i-el-w]Ja-a (erasure) i-na-na-x'x-
Ankara a silver bowl acquired by the Museum of Anatolion Civilizations (now exhibited in
the Museum), similar to those found in the region of Kastamonu (A. narotu -K Emre, A
x(erased)-p1t an-da-an bal-lu-wa-i nu? i'-el-i-i-Li li-e' Since KBo 11.14 is
Group of Metal Hittite Vessels from Knk - Kastamonu, Fs N. zg (1993) 675_713) which very badly presen,ed at this point, rve can also consider another optional
bears a Hieroglyphic inscription of Tuthaliya J on its outer rim. The inscription is a reading for this crucial word: iee1-fi-']a-a. GUDHI'A which the collation
dedicatory one on the occasion of his conquer of Tarawazawa, ard compares in regard to its
wording, style and historical background with the Akkadiar inscription of the swoid. It wi
be published by D' H. Hawkns. It is, therefore, reasonable to wait unl further ''unique', |71 o. Carnba, Sui numerali da "l" a "5" in Anatolico e indoeuropeo, Amsterdam
objects turn out. Another surprising finding of recent times is an ax of Ammuna with an Studies in the Theory and History of Linguistic Science IV, Fs Szemerenyi (197?) 191-205;
Akkian inscription on it, M. Salvini, Un documento del re ittita Ammuna, SMEA 32 H. Eichner, Anatolian, in: J. Gvozdanoc (ed.), Indo-European Numerals, Trends in
Linguistics. Studies and Monographs 57 (f992) 65 without citation of KBo 11.14 ii 15; J.
(1987) 48.1f.
U-Priesters, ChS IIlt (1986) Zg.
makes possible' a|so "(unte) the cows of welwila''. From these fragmentary ii 2l DAgj: See for more details H. otten 'M. Mayrhof.rl8l; A'
obv.
Kammenhu6rrlS2; K. K. Riemschnei{rrlSS;H. M. *'--11184; E.
attestations one can gain only the following possibilities:
r ZZ (1976) 237b.
*l="'
there the following different writings
i,ff}li}:ir]',i:H.!1'J:I"]',?,ii
par-za-i (KUB 40.33 obv. 20); -par-za-az-zi (Targ obv. 10; 66.
Kup B iii 32) .
L-
64 AHMET er THE RITUAL OF HANTITASSU 65
.L--
66 AIIMET Ner THE RITUAL OF HANTITASSU 67
precious metals such as gold and silys1209 and soul again made of gold and rev. iii 8: The pig as a sacrificial animal has a preeminent function in
silver2l0. The abstract ConcePtions ''.life'' (T|, fuuwatai2ll ard "we]I being" this and in some other rituals. First of all it seems to have been especially
(SIG5) are also represented as concrete objects which can be conceived as preferred by the gods of the underworld, since obviously on account of the
hieroglyphic signs for "TRIANGLE" and "ANKH' respectively2l2. tenderness of its meat and abundance of its blood it often appears in
rev. iii 5. 7: As is noted in transliteration the reading of GISMAR in conjurations for the Underworld deities. It is attested with the verbs ed- "ro
lines 5 and 7 is very uncertain. F. Josephson, who cites this passage does not eaf"KBo 10.16 iv lff.;KUB 77.28i2-3 ba-''to open'216I(g3 44'57:5;asin
attemPt to read this crucial g916213. Note, however, the usage ocSMNlin flantita{u- ritual f,atta- ''to c]t oPen' pierce, stab, slash, to strike down"
a similar Context in the ritual KUB 7.41 + i 46: karuwariwar-uAzJ fl-ir KUB 17.28 i 6; ftuen- ''to klL"I<Bo 2.3 ii 3ff. with dupl. KUB 15.39 + ii; KUB
43.56 rev. iii 11f.; kuer- "to cur"KUB 7'54ii 20ff.; KUB 17.28 iv 47; ipant-
bai |na-a-k6n anda] paizzi URUDUAL URUDUMAR uUDugu/Jubi [arz | l
''to consecrafe" KBo 10.37 iv 32; zau- "to cook''KI.JB 17.28 i 16. Its relation
6gft2l2 URUDUAL paddai pattear URUDUMAR-jr x [ ] ''Nexr morning the
di,ner oPens the house [and] goes [into] (it)' He ho]ds a hoe, a spade to the "inner chamber" is also edent from KUB 17.28 i22ff.: Sag.u-an
(and) a sckle (in his hand). He digs (a hole in) the earth wth the hoe. dafui na-an B.A-na anda pedabi ''I take the pg\et and bring it into the
inner channber". While in our passage its blood will be poured down into
[He] e[mpties?] (the earth in) the hole with the spade"274 and in KUB
53.4 rev. 26: aki I*TU cS14AR GISAT K.BABBAR GAR.RA purut the sacrifcial pit, in KUB 43.56 rev. iii rlff. they pour the blood of a pig
into a thin bread (a sort of unleavened bread in thin sheets like Turkish
lpaddanzil, cf. also KUB 53.3 rev. iii 3f.,v 4ff.; KUB 53.6 + iii 17f.
yufka) and place it in front of the deity: nataSag para pedanzi na-an-k6n
rev. iii 8: For
paddai-cf. N. Robertso2|5.Itis attested in the
reftan kunanzi nu efuani kattan NINDA.SIG kattan appanzi natan PANI
following texts: paddai- KBo 4.2 ii 36; KBo 10.37 ii 49; KBo 22.177
eftan DINGIRUM EGIR-pa tiazi AH--a e anzi |n a]-an-k6'n pttahwan markan zi,
rev.? iii 3f.; KUB 12.44 |i 3, 12; KUB 39.12 rev.? 15; Mastigga ii 32, 5t; "They bring out the pig and slaughter it. (To catch the blood) they place
daganzipan GAM-an ara paddai-: KUB 24.12 ii 4; daganzipu*-a ara underneath (its) blood a and put it in front of the deity. The pig itself (
paddai-: KBo 24.93 rev. iii 79; taknaz=kdn kue (var. &uir) ara paddai-; KUB ma) they prepare (i. e. butcher for cooking) and butcher it'plain"'217. 11.
58.74 obv.22; kattanda dankui takni karuilej DINGIRME-a Paddaj-: KUB offering list to the deceased kings KUB l0.ll vi 5-6, 16 gives the only
37.727 + obv. ii 2. The unique writing cS6*-1r5r, p6d4a-a-i in KUB 24'9 + ii parallel for "catching the b|ood of sheep behow": (5) u UDUHI..A*a ee-!a-
18 can scarcely mean "he digs (out) by means of a mattock/hoe", therefore ni kat-ta-an (6) ap-pi-i3-ki-iz-zi nu ZAG.GAR.RA-i (7) e+-[ar pi-ra-an i-pa-
it has to be taken as a mistake for tekan "earth". an-za-k-iz-zi, cf. vi 15ff. concerning the blood of bulls. According to KUB
36.83 i 3ff. the pig is slaughtered into a sacrificial pit, which must than be
bridged over to allow the offerant to stand over the carcass,J. Puhvel2l8. ...-
209 3o 77.40 i 7; KUB 58.28 iv 8; IBoT 2.1 rev. v 4 and e ktn paddan nu-k6n SAg-an (4) IGRUI.]-Su is\iyanz na-an-kiln patteni
vows of Pudu[epaCTH
58&584. kattanta (5) |tia)nzi namma=i huppiyanni fuanda er tiyaizzi. The binding
210 Made of gold: KUB 55.54 iii 6, iv 13; KUB 39.17 rev.
iv 6; KUB 1b.11 obv. ii 22;
KUB 15.18 obv. ii 6; KUB 15.19 obv.? 13;8o2738 i 18 and made of silver: KUB 7.27:7;KIJB the legs of the sacrificial piglet before slaughtering it has its closest parallels
l5.l ii 12, iii 3; KUB l5.l5 rev. 7, see the details in A. naL, Review of KUB 55,Bior 44 in the Islamic sacrificial rites. According ro KBo 10.16 iv bff. the meat of
(1987) 485f. the piglet has been eaten up in connection with a cultic ceremony in front
21115. Luwian hieroglyphic equivalence of TI or ZI may be atari- "form, fgure, soul", of the door b.olt: nu H.uR NINDA x[.... cS42]ta\wa-pd.t piran ara
seeJ. D. Hawkins, More Late Hittite Funera y Monuments Fs zg (19s9) 190 with note
l96f.; N. BolatiGuzzo, Review of R. Werner, Kleine Einfhrung ins Hieroglyphen-Luwische, adan|zi ....] LUZUba]para kuit azi na-at-an ANIA ... Ila[uwanz. on the
Or 63 (1994) 289. importance of pigs in Hittite economy, husbandry and cuisine see A.
212 6nu1,loc. cit.
213 The Function of the Sentence Parcles in
old and Middle Hittite (1972) 333.
214 5.. L.JakobRost, Das Ritual der Malli 216 Probaby
aus Arzawa gegen Behexung, TH 2 (rg72) or ts
66tr zr / See CHD
215 FI1166 Ritual at Sardis, Classical Anquity
1 (1982) l27.
218 R..*of 3 (19s3) 479.
66 AHMET Nar THE RITUAL OF HANTITASSU 67
precious metals such as gold and silvs1209 and soul again made of gold and rev. iii 8: The pig as a sacrificial animal has a preeminent function in
The abstract ConcePtions ''Jife'' (T|, uiilwatar)2ll and "well being" this and in some other rituals. First of all it seems to have been especially
'i1o..2l0.
(SIG5) are also represented as concrete objects which can be conceived as preferred by the gods of the underworld, since obviously on account of the
hieroglyphic signs for "TRIANGLE" and "4Nm' respectively2l2. tenderness of its meat and abundance of its blood it often appears in
conjurations for the Underworld deities. It is attested with the verbs ed- "to
rev. As is noted in transliteration the reading of GISIU,\R in
iii 5. 7:
eaf''KBo l0.l6 iv lff.; KUB 77.28i2-3; ba-"to open'2l61gg 44.57:5;asin
lines 5 andT is very uncertain. F.Josephson, who cites this passage does not
attempt to read this crucial 16.6213. Note, however, the usage 6f GISMAR in
flanta{{u- ritual batta- ''to cut oPen' perce, stab, slash, to strike down"
KUB 17.28 i 6; kuen- "to kill"l<Bo 2.3 ii 3ff. with dupl. KUB 15.39 + ii; KUB
a similar context in the ritual KUB 7.41 + i 46: karuwariwarLtAzu fr
URUDUAL URUDUI\{AII unuDugu/Iubi 43.56 rev. iii 11f.; ker- "to Cuf''KUB 7.54ii 20ff.; KUB l7'28 iv 47; ipant-
fia |na-a-k6n anda] pazz barzi I l "to consecrafe" KBo 10.37 iv 32; zanu- "to cook" KUB 17.28 i 16. Its relation
16/22 URUDUAI- paddai pattear URUDUMAR-ir x [ ] ''Nexf morning the
to the ''inner chaber" is also evident from KUB |7.28 i 22ff.: SAfI.TUR-an
di,iner oPens the house [and] goes [into] (iQ' He holds a hoe, a spade
da[f;i na-an B.A-na anda pedabli ''I take the piglet and bring it into the
(ad) a sickle (in his hand). He digs (a hole in) the earth with the hoe.
inner chamber". While in our passage its blood will be poured down into
[He] e[mptes?] (the earth in) the hole wth the Spade''2l4 and in KUB the sacrificial pit, in KUB 43.56rev. iii llff. rheypour the blood of apig
53.4 rev. 26: aki I*TU cSyAIt cSAt r.gABgAR GAR.RA Purut
into a thin bread (a sort of unleavened bread in thin sheets like Turkish
lpaddanzil, cf. also KUB 53.3 rev. iii 3f.,v 4ff.; KUB 53.6 + |iI7f. yufka) and place it in front of the de\ty: nataSA$ para pedanzi na-an-kdn
rev. iii
For tekan paddai-cf. N. Robertso?|5.It is attested in the
8: kunanzi nu efuani kattan NINDA.SIG kattan appanzi natan PANI
following texts: te.kan paddai- KBo 4.2 ii 36; KBo 10.37 ii 49; KBo 22.L77 DINGIRUM EGIR-pa tian zi AH-ma e anzi I n a]-an-k6n pitalwan m arkan zi,
rev.? iii 3f.; KUB 12.44 1i 3, 12 KUB 39.12 rev.? 15; Mastigga | 32, 57; "They bring out the pig and slaughter it. (To catch the blood) they place
daganzpan GAM-an arba paddaj-; KUB 24.12 ii 4; daganzipu-a ara underneath (its) blood a and Put it in front of the deity. The pig tself (
padda-: KBo 24.93 rev. iii 79; taknaz=kLn kue (var. kuir) ara paddai-: KUB ma) they prepare (. e. butcher for cooking) and butcher t'plan"'217. 11.
58.74 obv.22; kattanda dankui takni karuile, DINGIRMES-a paddai-: KUB offering list to the deceased kings KUB 10.11 vi 5-6, 16 gives rhe onry
31.127 + obv. ii 2. The unique writing GtSp.-1r5n p6d4a-a-i in KUB 24.9 + | parallel for ''catching the blood of sheep below": (5) nu UDUHI.La e<|-!a-
18 can scarcely mean ''he dgs (out) by meas of a mattock,/hoe'', therefore ni kat-ta-a (6) ap-pi-i-ki-iz-zi nu ZAG.GAR.RA-n i (7) ees-[ar pi-ra-an i-pa-
it has to be taken as a mistake for tekan "earth". an-za-ki-iz-zi, cf. 15ff. concerning the blood of bulls. According to KUB
36.83 i 3ff. the pig is slaughtered into a sacrificial pit, which must than be
bridged over to allow the offerant to stand over the carcass,r[. Puhve]278' ...-
209 KBo 77.4o i 7; KUB 58.28 iv 8; IBoT 2.1 rev. v 4 and the vows of PuduepaCTH k6n paddan nu-k6n SAH-an (4) tcinu.l-SU isBiyanzi na-an-kl.n patteni
58&584. kattanta (5) |a]nzi namma= uppiyanni [anda er tiyazz. The binding
210 Made of gold: KUB 55.54 iii 6, iv 13; KUB 39.17 rev. iv 6; KUB 15.11 obv. ii 22;
the legs of the sacrificial piglet before slaughtering it has its closest parallels
KUB 15.18 obv. ii 6; KUB 15.19 obv.? 13; Bo 2738 i 18 and made of silver: KUB 7.37:7;KUB
i5.1 ii 12, iii 3; KUB 15.15 rev.7, see the details in A. nal, Review of KUB 55, Bior 44 in the Islamic sacrificial rites. According to KBo 10.10 iv bff. the meat of
(1987) 485f. the piglet has been eaten up in connection with a cultic ceremony in front
21 1 15. Luwian hieroglyphic
equivalence of TI or Z| may be atari- ''forn, igure, soul'', of the door bolt: nu SAg.uR NINDA x[.... Gsb2]talwa-pilt p,iran ar[a
seer[. D. Hawkins, More Late Hittite Funerary Monuments Fs zg (1989) 190 th note
adan|zi ..'.] |UZUha]piilara kuit azi na-at-an ANIA ... I]abuwanzi. on the
196f.; N. Bo]ati4uzzo, Reew of R. Werner, Kleine Einfhrung ins Hieroglyphen-Luwische,
Or 63 (1994) 289. importance of pigs in Hittite economy, husbandry and cuisine see A.
212 6nu1,loc. cit.
213 1r. Function of the Sentence Particles in old ard Middle Hittite (1972) 333.
214 5.. L. Jakob-Rost, Das Ritual der Malli aus Arzawa gegen Behexung, TH 2 (1972)
216Probably gut".
66tr
217 seecHi)
215 tI161" Ritual ar Sardis, Classical Antiquity 1 (1982) 127. 2l8 R..* of S 103 (1983) 479
68 AHMET NAL THE RITUAL OF HANTITASSU 69
n'12|9' attestations of pig in the recently published KUB and KBo on various occasions by many Hittitologists. Starting from the context and
volumes are collected by Ru&iye Doa7220.
from the etymological point of view, I tried many years ago to combine this
rev. iii 9: For battear and' api- "sacrifcal pit" see M. Vieyra22l; H. A. word with the rarb ttta- "sdugen, stIlen" (to give milk, suckle, nourish)
gogn.r222; (see immediately below) and with its Luwian ParticiPe form titai(m)mi-
P.J. McCarthyZzTi A. naP2a. The api- will be opened by "nourrison'z?7, i. e., "suciled, suckng''. Even ough the double writing of
means ou GIAI. (hitt. reftan) "mattock,loe''. The verb used, for this action
in KUB l5.3l obv. ii 6ff. with par. KUB 15.32 obv. ii lff. is knu- ''to break the tenuis -r- remains without any explanatiorr228, the only reasonable
open" (not paddai- "to dig (out)" as here), and this might indicate that the
solution to explain the origin of ti(t)tai- is combining it with a
denominative derivative of (UzU)
titan- "weibliche Brust, Ztze, Euter'' (engl.
Hittite api-'s were dug not in the loose earth like the other sacrificial pits ''teat, ti(1229; see../. Fredriclf30; A. Goeae3|i w. C. Cartefl\z; V. Pian?'};
and holes, but into a resistant surface like stone or rock. In this connection H. G. Gterbock2\4; D. M. Weeks235 considering also the Lycian cognate
it is important to mention the so-called 'cup holes' (Schalenfelsen) tidemi- "son " with this word; see also F. Starkd36. tita- is the Luo_Hittite
scattered all over flattusa and in the close proximity of the Hittite rock equivalence of the logogram (uzu)UBUR; see Friedric7237; E. Laroch$38;
monuments in other regions for which no reasonable explaation has been A. Goead\9. a rcda-, teta(n)-iswell attested in the following texs:
found .o ur225. A very illustrative archaeological sample of a sacrificial pit
HT 6 + KBo 9.125 rev. i 23 (tita) with its dupl. KUB 35.149 obv. i l0
has recently been unearthed not far from Nan tePe at Boazky; it is 2.5
(uzuddan) (the text shows that a newly born puppy instinctively is able to
m. deep and measures 2x2 m. in dimentions. Its determination as sacrificial locate the breast of its mother); KUB 4.1 iv 29 (attesting the breast of a
pit is secured by a whetstone and two bronze axes en miniature lying sheep, UDU_a. tetan); KBo 14.98 obv. i 16 (tera(n), f'or context See
nearby beneath the allual level inside the pit226. immediatelybelow);KUB 35.2 ii 14, iii 1;KBo 29.3 (+) 4 i 6 (UDU.GANAM
rev. |i
77 ti(tltiya-:r would like here to give my own comments on titant|anl, "a sucklng sheep'); KUB 43.52 + KUB 60.17 + KBo 22.145 + t28
and understanding of this crucial word which has already been discussed +350/z iii 1l (a-i_ra_a in opposite to te-ta-nu-u"hrsu in the same line);
KUB 35.102 iii 6, iv 5; te<4a in KBo 3.34i23 i obscure.
. "-'
Beitrge zum Fleischverbrauch in der hethitischen Kche: Philologische 227 E. Iororhe DLL (1959) 9s and C. Melchert,Cuneiform Luwiar Lexicon (1993)
Anmerkungen zu einer Untersuchung von A. von den Driesch und J. Boessneck ber die 228.
Tierkn^o-chenreste aus Boazky-$attua' or 54 (1985) 429 with note 59. 228 5.. now Tiscbler, HEG IIII10 (1994) 343 in regard to tkzz "Diese kann- totz
220 Boazky ,etierinie Geen Baz riuyur., s-i..i, i"' a."dolu Medeniyetleri der Doppelschrebung des in]autenden Dentals, die sich beim Grunduort nie findet, - a]s 3'
Mzesi l Sg. Prs. des sk-Forn *titip- ''siiugen, stillen'' interpretiert werden", citing also GoetzeJCS 18
22r
222 recedenrs to rhe Hebrew,ob,JBL g6 (f967) 3g5tr
(1964) 83; Eichner, Lautgeschichte und Etymologie (f980) 160 and Oettinger,IB$V 37
223 d and Sacrifice,JBl 88 (1969) 166tr; idem, F.urther Notes
(1986) 32.
229 on dta- see E. Laroche,Reew of KBo g, oIZ (1959)
275f. and,J. Tischter, op.
on th-e_SYnbolism ofBlood and Sacrifice,JBL 92 (1973) 205tr
zl'| Beitrdge zum Fleischverbrauch in der hethitischen Kche: Philologische
cit.3ff.
Anmerkungen zu einer Untersuchung von A. von derr Driesch und Boessneck ber die
J.
Tierknochenreste aus Boazky-Hattua, or 54 (19s5) 432 with ,rot. g6; idem, Boazky
Metinlerinin I Altnda Hititler Devri Anadolu'sunda Filolojik ve Arkeolojik e.iler
Arasndaki iikierden rnekler, in: 1992 Yl Anadolu Medeniyeileri Mzesi Konferanslar ;fi;:-
(1993)' 23 and note 43; idem, Reew of M. Hutter' Entshnung und Heilung,
(1993/1994) t23f.
Afo 40-41 235 Hittite Vocabulary: An Anatolian ]H:*,:'IT'Jll? ilH*#:J3.,..,.u
Synonyms in the Principal Indo-European Languages" (Ph. D. University of California 1985)
225 P. Neve, Schalensteine und Schalenfelsen in
Boazky-sata, |M 27/28 31, 87.
(1977/78) 67-72. 236 Urrt...r.hungen zur Stammbildung des keilschrift-luwischen
Nomens, StBoT 3l
(1990) 229f.
in Boazky-$attua 1991, AA (1992) 316r. und Abb. ri, rg; idem, Hattua- Stadt ie, 237 Hw 3. Ers.39.
Gtter und Tempel. Neue Ausgrabungen in
-der
Hauptstadt der Hethit"r, o" Antike Welt'
Sondernummer (1992) 52 andAbb. |42;A' nal,ero +o+ (1993/1994) 123f.
ff!n ni"*or"xso rt,oLZ(1963) 240.
239 Reew ofKBo ll,Jcs 17 (1963) 61.
I
My basic argument for combining (Uzu)teta(n)- 'vu;th ti(t)tai-is of someone, to fondle, to care, to be concerned about someone, to show
because of etymological considerations, i. e. eng. "teat", germ. "Zitze" etc. one's compassion, tender, kindness" :
Moreover, the sg. nom.-acc. neuter participial adjective form tittiyan,
Tel. i 12, 20' URUDIDLI.HI.A Gll .GAl.rru dtante er "The big cities
mentioned in flantitau- ritual in the same context immediately following
ha,e been taken care of by him" (|it. "were nursed, breast-fed') (var. adds
a piglet (SAH.TUR) (A rev. iii 8, l1), can be taken as the syllabic writing of
"in his hand", i.e. ''h his custody'').
SeH.runz40, i. e., a "piglet which is suciled, gi,en breast, nursed, suckling
pig", ger. "Spanferkel", "Span" here meaning exactly the same like its KBo 14.98 i l6f.: ... cg-an teta-et... DUMU.SAL tittikizzi ''on her
middle high German form spen, spune "1s27'247. left breast .... the daughter is sucking".
In ew of all attestations of the word in question I communicated to KBo 10.37 ii 42: ... u-za AMAR-SU ti-i7t-ti-ya-.'. "It su[ckles] its ca]f'.
I. Hoffmann the basic meaning of tittiyant- as "gesdugt, gendhrt, KBo 22.107 i73: tittianna pafibur bulekmi] "And II will con]jure
'ersorg|242. The word has so far been evaluated and translated differently the suckling/blazng fire/flame (?)'a51'
by many scholars: Friedrch243 "unted, joined, associated",. idem, Die
hethitischen Gesetze (1959) 97 (citing also F. Sommer, HAB p. 121) KUB 57.35 rev. iii 3f. ..... ANA LUGAL SAL.LUGAL (4) tittyanta
"associated with, assign6 16'244' N. ,an gror1<245 takes it as reduplication (context is broken).
of dai- "r6unr, adjoindre(?) "; H. A. Hoffner246 combines it with the verb KUB 42.100 iii
34f.: nu-wa-mu UNUTEMES (gf) ftue EGIR-pa
dai- "put, place, install''; A' ,969247 ffanslates ''assigned (in hs stead)"; c. manyab[ir nu-war-at tittiyan "The utensIs which they ha,e entrusted to me
[,. 67zp48 translates "assigned(?)";J' Tischle7249 "ensetzen, anlegen''; see ha,e been taken care of well''.
also L Hoff1n2172250.
KUB l5.1l ii 31: tittianz (in broken context).
In the following I will try to peruse anew all attesrations of this word
and venture again to find out its basic meaning. In doing so we will see that
KBo 16.97 obr,. 42: ZAC-az G|JB-lazziya tttianza "It is suckled with
with the exception of Laws SS 40-41 all the attestations support the primary
right and left (breast) l" (oracular Context is not clear), similarly re,. 45.
meaning ''to breast-feed, to n]rse' to feed, to Put Someone to the breast, to Laws 40, 47:ru ILKI ttyanza '' (If an artisan is dead and) ILKI man is
take to the bosom, to embrace, to chersh''' and euphemistically "to be fond' supplied (to take care of hs duties).
KUB l3.4 i33: man-a aki-ya kuwapi na-a UL l-a aki MA$SU-ma_ ji
240 o1" tnat AH.TuR is a a-stem
in Hittite, cf. H. Ertem,Boazky Metinlerine Gre tityan-pilt "If he is executed, he does not die alone. His c]an (members)
Hititler Dewi Anadolu'sunun Faunas (1965) 72ff. are Put besde him (put to his breast)'', i. e., as a result of collectir'e penalty
247 K\ug",Deutsches etymblogisches
Wrterbuch (1960) 719; T. V. Gamkre]idze-V. V. they must be executed all together.
Ivanov, Indo-European and Indo-Europeans (1995) 508f. with note 68 do not consider rhis
reading of SAH.TUR, instead they reconstruct the Indo-European word for "piglet" xpl,erkh- KUB 8.l4 rer,. 8f. cSlvaR.6iD.DA_aj tittiyanda|(-) is an astronomical
"sootted".
' ErlaB Telipinus, TH 11 (1984) lb with note
designation for the Big Dipper (Groper Bir, groBer wagen). It seems rhar
?n?Der 1.
4'c Hw 225. the following word tittiant- designates here a constellation of stars, "the
244 Fri"drirh, Hw g. Erg. 83
changed his translation and took two entities under sucklng (baby).of the Big Dpper'' which could only mean the Little
tittiya' |)" einse-a-en; (Sada anhgen'' (nicht ''verein igen(?) , beigesellen(?),,; 2) ,'siugen, . Dipper as "infant" of the Big Dipper252.
<tJ Les thmes verbaux i redoublement du hittite
et le verb indo-europeJn, RHA
;;ffi;;,_
fire" is also possible.
252 Cd a|so -it-'ya-an-ta-anin fragmentary
context in KUB 51.53 rev. right col. 7.
THE NTUAL OF HANTITASSU l5
72 AHMETNAL
l
74 ar.lrr Nar THE RITUAL OF UANTITASSU 75
since the word is never written with cVC sign KUS, but always in broken rev. iv 1: The appearance of the king in this version of the ritual
writing ku-ui-....
(KUB 43.57) is very significant. He is here the patient, i. e. he replaces the
- In general it is accepted that the Hittite reading o c54.KUL is EN.SISKUR. He appears again in iv 13 instead of EN.SISKUR. It is
G.sattalu-270 KRo
13.l09lii G8, however, contradicts this equation, since unfortunate that the name of the king is not known to us. The exclusion of
cSbattalu- tectural dece which serves to open the king in iv 18-22 where he is no longer concerned in the ritual, because
156 GISSAG za GIM-an (7; cs*o".KUL EGIR-pa the ritual expert enacts the rest of the ritual in a place other than the
nanna (8) 'Just as the door-bott (attatu-1 pus palace as royal residence, provides additional proof that KUB 43.57 was
the fthus) op-e-ns the door,,.For bai_ ,,to open,iwith performed for the benefit of a king or kings in general.
Par gnh][6277;
a with -(a)pamust be added to ir'2-3 and 46: Treated in CHD LN (1980-1989) 360a.
the o's study272.
i, 5-6. 13: -za- (an) f;ukanta nai-here and possibly also in ir' 22 (see
rev. iii 28-31 are rreared by H. A. l!6ff11s7278. rhe note to this line) is a unique expression and difficult to interpret.
rer'. iii 28: In spite of the paragraph divider at the end While the meaning of nai- is very well established2TS bukanta remains
of line 27 the
appeal to the door-bolt continues here. uwate sg. imp. enigmatic. It is pl. nom. aCC. neuter of either buek'"to slaughter, to kll" or
z. of uwate- ,,to of [ue]-276
bring, to fetch up (the deities) " seems the onry poisible reading
here, not burr- ''to conjure, to exorcse''. A rapid check of the attestations
i-wa-te-e|n, pl. imp. 2, of uwa- ''come!". For similar shows that the plene writings with bu-u-k mostly denote to tueft-
Context in other texts
see KBo 20.82 obv. ii 29; KUB 12.60 i t0; KUB gb.5 ii g; "slaughter", i. e., u-u-u k-zi, f,u-u-k6n-zi, bu-u- ga-an-zi, [u-uga'an'na, [u-u-
vBoT 58izt,26.
k6n-ta, bu-u-k6n-du-u3, bu-u-ke-ni. While the majority of attestations are
rev. iii 28-29: For -za apiya da- see in a similar conrext r{Bo
4.2 | 24: written f;u-u-k6n-zi, exceptions appear as bu-kdn-zi in the following texts:
nu'war'at' za apiya dandu " (Fodder for the horses, morsels
of food for the IGo 2.12 ii 34; KBo 3.63 ii 3; KBo 7.38 left col. 6; KBo 8.85 obv.? 6; KBo
dogs we brought). Let them (now) take (from) them
for themse],es!,,. 11.10 iii 34;KBo 11.29 rev.3,6; KBo 12.106 + ii 10 (or to "conjure'?);KBo
rev. iii 33f.: bapenaza... ftuer- is attested similarly in 75.33 + 3 iii 13;KBo 16.68 i 6, 12, \i5,77,29; KBo 16.7l + i l0;KBo 16.80
KUB 58.43 v 2:
UZUhappenaza kur-a-k6.n-z'
kuer- "to c]t,, affords usually an acc. object: ii 2; KBo 17.59 obv. 1; KBo 17.105 iii 28; KBo 20.58:14; KBo 29'137:7,8 (or
KUB 3l.68:13: SAG.D|J-an kuer-; KUB 25.12 15: G,gp.MAHu.e to "conjure'?); KBo 20.72 + rev. iii 20; KBo 25.99 rev.? 3; KBo 30.19 obv. 2,
iurr-;
KUB 20.90 iii 12 uzui.g1G kuer-; KBo 23.8 obv. 13; VBoT 8; KUB 17.35 i 7, 20, 1| 4, 29, ir' 9, 20, 28; KUB 20'31:4; KUB 30.19 + i 24;
24 i 33:
i 9, l3: EME-an kuer-.According to KUB 44.21ii 4, iii 2; KUB 51.1 + ii 18; KUB 55.28 ii 3; KUB 56.48 iv 8;KUB
57.67:{5) they cut off meat (arfia 58.61 i 16; VBoT 24 | 36; IBoT 2.63 v 9; Tunn i 57 , 67, ii 54; Bo 3478 (+)
,;:.Tl1';',}i-ff 368/r,line 5; Bo 5478 i 4; Bo 6210 obv.? 6.
(i k a r a n t ) 27 4 d pie c e s .' ;l ;i :#,1i
the c h o_pp e
r3 For determining the exact meaning of bukanta, it is of importance to
obv. 5f.: bumandazaulluR-za (6; uzui tepu danz;KUB
55.20 + KUB 9.4 + note that it always stands in close proximity to sacrificial animals such as
iii l 6: ISTU 1 2 uzugpaL'-a kar-,similarly KUB 9. 34 iii 47 . sheep and cows. In the parallel text of flantitau ritual KUB 57.79 i'5,
26f., bukanra seems to be represented by sinews of a bull (GUD.MAH-aJ
UZUSA) which are shrouded (andakuwai' s. below p.92 note 45) in a
bloody or red ox hide. It therefore must have the meaning of "the
) 332t.
e Hebrew'ob,JBL 86 (1967) 390f.
ssigned to ikaranta:,,.... and make it into 275 cHD L-N (1980-1989) g47ff., 4 (1989) 3b3ft;J. Boley,'tlne Hittite Particle -z/'za
. of the well known verb jftar- ,'sting, prick, (19e3) 132tr
276 5"" now Puhvet,HED 3 (1991) 323tr without consideration of the attestations in
.c1!1q,
stua''' seeJ, Puhvel, Ho -i 1ies+) J.
9-10 "[Meats] which are stuck on the staff,.' the ryaI f. tajjsu ritual.
,\-_
76 A}IMET ar THE RITUAL OF UANTITASSU 77
iv 16. 17: kinu- ''to break open'' and ninink- "to dsturb" in its
rer,. H. Otten295 recording a ritual practitioner from Surma ...ulz-zi SAL
exaggerated meaning "to break open ,iolent[y, to Sunder" are used in this URUHurma in 396/d line 13 and'^Ku-wa-an-n SAL(!) .NcRlr (KUB
text as quasi synonyms, see above p. 25 note 722,35' ftn is written with 32.729 + KBo 33.723 obv. i 1) ; for inconsistent writing in IBoT 2.115 obv. 1
the initial sign gi- in the following texrs: KBo 2.7 rev.16; KBo 10.45 |i 22 fPupuwann; uSN.D and for more examples of this kind see B.
(=kinu-, KUB 7.41 iii 13); KBo 13.f92 obv. 10; KBo 21.22 obv.49; KBo Benedetti296. flantita.ddu's profession is mentioned neither in the incipit
24.56:6; KBo 26.182 i 5; KBo 26.202:2;I{8o26.214:12; KUB t.t7 iv b7; KUB nor in the colophon of the ritual text. Possibly the later compilers or
13.9 iii ll; KUB 13.32 obv. 9; KUB 25'23 i 39, ii 16, i,8, 38; KUB 57.79 iv copyists of the ritual were ignorant of his career as well. H. D. Engelhard
38; KUB 57.97 i 16; Bo 4876:10 (= kinu-, KUB 9.22 ii 49). For rhe disposal infers from a comparison with the rituals of Pakuwatt, Anna, Ambazz,
of ritual residuals and impure objects in general see D. P. Wright2\9. [Jruwanda and' Zual]i (i. e. A.l/i) that santita.j.u was a serSU.GI297. 11i. i'
rev. iv 20: LUGAL_ui--a UL tikizzi is an ellipsis for appa(n) ,,to quite impossible, as he was a man. Therefore, he must have been
a- ^ru67g
care about, to look after, to tend, to busy oneself with". or LUgAL.
rer'. iv 23: geographical location of the city of urma is in
southeast Anatolia, and thus in a genuine Hurrian region290. ryantau,
the name of the ritual practitioner, is originally the name of the city god
who was venerated in flurma alongside the Storm God, Tutelary deity,
Teub, flepat, ''male and female deites", mountains and rivers2gl; see A.
Kempinsk-S. Koak292. Thus the author of the ritual assumed his,/her
name from the city god which might literally mean according to G.
N e u m an n293 " Se h r-s tark", i. e' " the ve ry S t o n g o n e,' or,, fug 75 ;7]<g 7: 29 4 .
The shift of the sex in the personal name determinative m/f
indicates the long tradition of this ritual, i. e., in later times the compilers
or copyists of the ritual became confused in regard to the person and sex
of the author. we may assume, however, that the authentic author was a
man' not a woman' since {/anrira.j,u is the name of a god, not a goddess.
such changes in personal names are quite common in Hittite texts, cf.
fWattit (KUB 7.l iv l0; KUB 30.49 iv 2) versa mWattiti (KUB
30.48:7); see
zwischen Kleinasien, Nordsyrien und dem Alten Testament, Orbis Bibticus et Orientalis 129
(1993) 67-85.
289 Disposa of Impurity in
e Priestly Writings of the Bible with Reference to Similar
Phenomena in Hittite and Mesopotamiar Cultures, Ph. D. University of California, Berkeley
(1984) 238tr
290 G. F. del Monte-J. Tichler,Die
orts-und Gewssernamen der hethitischen Texte,
RGTC 6 (1978) 12af.; del Monte, Die Orts- und Gewassernamen der hethitischen Texte.
Supplement RGTC 6/2 (1992) 43f. with furrher lit.; p. Cornil, Liste des noms
geogrph-iques-des textes hitties. KBo XXII-XXX, KUB xLV-LuI, Heitica l0 (1990) 34.
.Flaas, Geschichte
292 1g 13.
295 Stadt Zalpa, StBoT 17 (1973) 40.
9 (982) 101'
293 i;;; 296
2g7
ia 15 (1980) 9.
294 v. Haas, (1e70) 23f.
THE RITUAL OF HANTITASSU 81
1 Fo. u full list of texts dated to their reign see briefly see F. Freu,
Le d6buts du nouvel
empire hittites et les origins de l' expansion myc6nienne, Annales de la Facult6 des Lettres
et Science Humaines de Nice, 35 (1979) 13tr
2 I. Hoff^unn, in: S. Heinhold-Kahmer et al., TH 9 (1979) 93, l00 and on
page 112
listing old signs such as LI, NI, DU, UK and ZU, cf. also CHD L-N (1980-1989) 79a
determining it as OH/MS.
3 Cf. i., general H. Otten,Bemerkungen zum hethitischen
Wrterbuch, ZA 72 (1982)
283 on New Hittite signs TAR' K, DUMU' LI ad KI; cf. also E. Neu,Interpretation der
hethitischen mediopassiven Verbalformen, StBoT 5 (1968) 51 (ltere Sprache) and C.
Watkins, Hittite and Indo-European Studies II, MSS 45 (198b) 248 (MH or older,/NS).
84 AHMET NAL THE RITUAL OF HANTITASSU 85
3 -aln-zi 3 -lri-ya-anda
4 UD.7.KA]M tu-bu-bu-t[a] 4 -l iz-zil
77 I xx [ (Restbroken)
l Not. that KUS SA5 does not indicate here a "red, bloodstaned''hide, but e natural
color of an animal's hide, as can be seen in KBo 13.145 rev. 9: KUS slAs BABBAR-ya "red
and white hide" (see below). Further attestations indicating the natural color are: KUB 7.33
+ KBo 35.101 obv. 22 (with dupl. Bo 2495 + KBo 35.103 obv. i 6f.; IBoT
KUS cuD sAE r KUS GUD GE6 I KUS GUD BABBAR I KUS uz6 sAE
l KU Uz6 BABBAR;KBo 19.162 rev. 3: 3 KUS UZ6 SABA r SA5 1E6;;
obv. 12; KUB 54.85 obv.l3; KUB 2.2 iv 3. In the meaning of "btoody, bloodstained hide" it
aPPears in the Soldier's oath KBo 6.34 + iii 46f. where SA5 is referred to as earnu- ''to
smear with blood, soak in blood". white and black shoes (for example KUB 2.6 iii 26; KUB
56.35 i 2 ard KBo 10.23 + obv. i 16) were obously not made of animal skin or hide, as it
would seem at the first sight,.but made of white and black wool lsic; , as shown in KUB 2.2
ir 5' INUTIM KU.E.SIR r sic BABBAR I sic GE6. In this case one would beuer speak of
" so cks, I egg in gs" comparabal. *1 6,
(ruc)GArrA DAM.
86 AHMET NAL THE RTTUAL OF HANTTTASSU 87
4 lx (da-a-i nu-k6|n
3 [u me-ma-i? MUUI].A |ma-ni-in-kfu-wa-an-tec* <iah-n? A-NA
EN.SISKUR?]
5 lx-a ftu-ir ftu-ir[ 4 [ku-ie-i? pi-ya-an?ltee [
u-] uk-k6n ki4a-ni [A-NA EN.SISKUR?]
NA4GIUGN&TI NtA+
6
5 |anda? HUL-lu-j] ti-- n[a?-i]4u-ma-aF
I BAIPPIR mu-mu-wla-i
8 -i e-i r-ra-a-a-a|n
6 [nu-ui-],ia-an8 kat-ta t|ar-n]a-a-z 3 NINDA.KU&.RA
l
I KUS SlAs KUS BABBAR-1a pu[2-
7 | na-at?1 lN ki-z 1N |k]i-iz-z-ya
p'l pfu-i-|yanu-u]^i2
l0 I a-ra-a[-z a ar-n u-ul z-z i 8 [J'-ieei_.da-]ni-it ku<-za ir!-!|a-il z-zP nu-uk-k6n a-Pu-un
11 a-ra-a[-z a ] aL?-pa-an GIM-a xI
9 IDUGI] u-pu-rtr-ni-in10 p|a-r) a-a la-u-u-wa-an-zi
72 -lLa-an D-zi l0 a-pu-un-na ar-[a tu-wa-ar-ni-ya-an-zi
13 a] n4u r-z a QA|-TAM-MA D -zP 11 nu l DUG KAS fuu-upra-an a-a-a-an a-ra-af,-za-a4a
t4 lx EN.INIM x[ 72 i-iec-a-ni-it gul-a-zill DUGUAR.LIAB ar-a n-wa-ar-ni-ya-a-z
15 -p]i,e-r I
16 dla-a-i UD. tgl I.KAM QA-TI
77 -ilix[ 4 obv. 7-9, &10, 11-12 ae treated byJ. Boley,The Sentence Particles (1989) 188, 238,
(Rest broken) 439,469,655,439.
5 For this restoration see KUB |2.|7:7; KUB 20.92 rev. ? 9; KUB 33.62 iii 11; KUB
43.31 left col. 6.
6 Restoration is not quite sure. For MU1u.e; mannkuwat- ''short year(s) " (opposite
_gl
expression is GD(.DA) = datuga- ''long year(s)) see KBo 75.|2:|2; I(Bo 17.61 ..n. KBo
25.193 obv. ? 9 (dupl. KBo 21.6 obv. 7); KUB 9.34 i 29, ii 1; KUB 17.14 rev. 19f.; KUB 35.80
rev.? 9; HT 6 + I(Bo 9.125 i 11, 25; IboT 3.102 + Bo 3436:8; Hatt i 14.
' Reading not sure. Note also that the prohibitive Je and imper. 2. pl. dumat are
mism^atching.
8 or .iera-aja-a.
9 This restoration and emendation of this line are beyond any doubt, see KBo 4.13 +
ii
26f., iii rgf. (wi par. KBo 30.77 iii 23f.); KBo 27.49 ii 9f.; KBo 23.56 rev. iv 10f.; KBo 35.155
rev. 4 9f.; KUB 2.8 i 35f., ii 32f. ; KUB 11.26 obv. ii 3tr, 12tr; KUB 20.84 obv. 9f.; KUB 32.87
rev. 16; KUB 41.50 iii 5ff.; KUB 53.11 iii 4; KUB 54.81 obv. 4f.; KUB 55.25 ii 15ff.; KUB
58.5 i 15; KUB 58.71 obv. 10ff.; IBoT 3.1 rev. 51, 57,64f.; IBoT 4.137 ii 6; IBoT 4.317 obv. 5.
10 This orography of the Hurriar
2 vessel name seems to be unique, cf. KBo 5.7 \i 44;
or i[n- or te-?
KUB 45.54 left col 4' (Duc)hu-pur_ni,'KBo 25.|90 +534/b obv. 4: u-wu-ur-n; KBo 24.59 +
3 This obous simile ''as ... makes outsde .,', let it make in the same way inside '..,,is KBo 27.199 iv 23: fuu-u-wu-ur-ni.
not attested elsewhere wiin the Hittite magical repertoire. I I The very phrase
is arresred in KBo 15.25 rev. 2l; KBo 15.34 ii 8; IBoT 1.29 rev. 54f.
88 AHMET UNAL THE RITUAL oF HANTITASU 89
15 tn] u ki-i*a-|a me-ma-i ka-a-a u-ma-a-aA-]NA?? plglpveSla 19 G|7]-pa-r Z-SU 9-an ki<-iz>ma gan lu-uk-k6n-zi
3 nu li-i-ma|6 z[-ik DUTU-u da-ra-an-za Li-i.maD.....l 16 |ka-a-a ki-iz-za 0]an [cS34g5un ki-iz-zi-yJa 9-ancs34Nl1gp1
4 da-ra-an-za zi|-k toUT]U[-u li-i da-ra-an-Za etc. 77 [az-zi-ki-it] -t|i<n nu a-u-ul fi-w]a-te-t-ti<|nl
12 For this rare orthography of ajjaru- instead of commonly used aj_ja-nu-zj see KBo
4.10 + obv. 6; KUB 6.45 iv 1; KUB 7.13 obv. 33; KUB 24.5 rev. 10, 20; KUB 39.31:6; IBoT
4.112 obv. 5; 2011,/u rev. 3.
13 For the restoration see obove line 11 and KBo 15.34 ii 8.
14 Restoration very conjectural, cf. however KUB f5.34 ii 42f.
rb For the restoration see KBo 10.37 iii 39ff. in the following note.
16 B".ur." of plene wring of :- and not gemination of -m_ it is questionable whether
this broken word should be subsumed under the lexeme (: lim(m)a- (a beverage),asis 19 s. . Bin-Nun,The
Tawananna in the Hittite Kingdom, TH 5 (1975) 164 with note
done in CHD LN (1980-1989) 62. A strikingly similar passage from a magical ritual against |64' 254 reads rongly NikaLmat, but on p. 257 she refeis to this line in connection wi
gossip and el tongue KBo 10.37 iii 39ff. reveals clearly at the unique and archaic writing ZiPIa*aYi' see G, Szab6, Ein hethitisches Enrshnungsritual, TH 1 (1971) 62.
fi-i stands here in KBo 20.34 rev. 3 for prohibitive adverb /i-e; KBo 10.37 iii 3M5: DUTLlui
DU-adDLAMMAp1p.vrs da-pi-an-te-el<a-a-ja [X] (40) li-e-maDUTU-u. da-ra-a--za]i-e- '" 0n account of the religio<ultural ambience, the preceding dine names, and the
available space at e end of the line, the most reasonable restoration of the dine name is
ma DU-a da-r|a-an-za| (4|) l<-ma DI-AMMA_aj da-ra-an-za ]i<-ma a-ma-i- DINGIR[LrM]
'D'Ulili'ai,_no! u/- ''green''. on the other hand the optional reading of Uliliyantike
(42) ku-i{ki da-ra-an-za z:-ift DUTU_uJ DU_ni DLA]\4I![\ -i A-NA DINGIRMIS-;a (43) ha-an-te-z- would be farfetched, since it would bring us to the Palaic patheon which definitely is not in
zi-i nu a-a*u |u-u-ma-an u-meD|J-at-ten (44) na-a3-ta$Ul-/u wa-afi-nu-ut-ten na-at a-a- placehere.Forattestationsof Ullyaisee KUB7.5iiLg,iii1, 17;KUB9.27+i4;KUB
ju D-at_ten (45) nu-k6nA-NA DUMUII EME UUL-/u-na an4a le tar-na-a|t-te-]ni //. 14.13 + i 12 (with dupl.); KUB 30.65 + ii 6; KUB 49.39 obv. ii 9; r{. A. Hoffner,paskuwarti's
Since the change of e/iis a commonplace phonological appearance in Hittite phonology Ritual Against Sexual Impotence (CTH 406), Aula Orientalis 5 (1987) 281 relates e name
(E. H. Sturtevat - E. A. Hahn, A Comparative Grammar of the Hittite Language |957 20; J. to e Luwian word wa]ila,/i- ''ield, plan'' ard takes it as a goddes s. I. Wegner,
' Gestalt und
Friedrich, HE 12 1960, 25 K' K. Nemschneder, Zr Unterscheidung der Vokale e und i in Kult der ItaSawuka in Kleinasien'AoAT 36 (1981) 31 ad V. Haas,Geschichte der heth.
der hethitischen Orthographie, Fs Otten (1973) 273-281; H. C. Melchert, Studies in Hirtite Religion (1994) 143, 349,439,611 conceive her as a native Luwio-Anarolian interpretarion
Hist it does not surprise us. of the Mesopotamian goddess ltar. ff is is the case and the etymological conniction to
(1980-1989) 62. Luwian walila/- ''field'' is certain, she might, then, have been venerated is a kind of ''Itar
ee CHD LN 2f0. of
open counsde, steppe'' (ISTAR LiL, written also GASAN ,i-, r i nitt.
mra-).
90 AHMETUNAL
THE RITUAL OF HANTITASSU 91
5. KUB 57.79 obv. i21
23 xf
I x[...
24 nu .ku-u-un bu-uf-uk-ma-iln 3-S hu-u-uk-z?9 nam-ma-k'n 1
2 [ku-i]t 1.... c34gp
3 DUTU_u[,...
25 DUTU-i IGI-an|-da da-a-i]3o e-ir-ra-a-a-an l NINDA.KUR4.RA
4 [] u EN[.SISKUR22 DUTU-i ki-i*a-an bu-u-uk-2jl23 BA.BA.ZA
5 DUT[U!-uj-za EZEN -anD|J-at nu-za dapindufl2a 26 U P-NI da-a-|i ....'Zi]Z? DUTU-, BAL -an-ti 1 NINDA.KUfu .RA par-.{ -
6 DINGIR'ES-r1d balzai.''.25 yal
7 EN.SISKUR.m[a-ai-,-ft 6n''.'.. 27 GESTIN -ya |i-pa-an-a l ...]x nu me-|m]a-j DUTU-u. GARdu
8 e-re-i[r e-ku-ir nu-za-k6.nDuTu_j..... 28 nu k- A[-wA-TE?l ku-it !|u-u-u]k-ki-i{k-mi ku-it
9 SA+a ftar-na-a UM-MADUTU etc. ..26 29 n a-at-mu oUTU-ui EGIR-an tl ar-n a-afd ! -3t du... l r[.... ] 32
1
40 .de_ej-.da -an-zi P AP PAP37 n i-ku-u{a-a -.,Sgpg-u,$8 r 1 A-NA NINDA.ERfMES 36-;a da-a'i na-atn.A-na pi<4a-i
KUB 57.79
L3 lu-kat-ti-ma-za |JD'9. |.KAM ka-ri-w]a-r'wa-ar [u-u4a-ak
rev. iv
1 Ia W] a'aI-Pu-wa-an-z|i PA'NIJ
GIABME? GIBANIUR'AD'KID ti-|a] n-z
[....NIN] DA.KUR4.RA-I$s tNNa] pu-u|1l-li-i-3a-r240 p a-] ta-an -
cS43 ? 'af n'zi ma-
l5 ININDA.KUR4] .RA lpar-ila'a] n-Z|i n a-atp4--iyJ
2 l'.....k] u-ir an4a ki-it-tar.gABgAR GUSKINNA+ZA.GiN a-an- ken DUTU-[u],
3 [N]A4GUG NA4TI NA4DUH.SU.A SI al-pu -i<-mlar!l !
16 |u-up-]-z[i] nu EN.SISKUR PA-INJI GIAB ti-ya'z
4 |kap-pi-i] mu-m|u-w]a- p161plrS- a par!-[ue-n|a-an1a7 fi4a-i 77 |na-a] A-NADUTU t*x-nN nu-k6n LGUD l UDU
5 | e-ir-] ra-a-a-an GUD.MAH-ad UZUSA A-NA IK] Us SA5?
18 IA-NA] DUTU BAL-an'ti.ju[-u.d] [u<|l-wa'za z6-yla-an'ta-ZaJ46
6 |IG|? -zl i-ya in ?-n a?-a-t{2 an4 a da-a-i n I a-a] t-|a-a] n
19 IDUT]U - ma-n|i-ya-a]-[a-an-za7 a NNo,q..KU7 A-NA DUTU Par-
7 [ a-r] a-ab -za ar-[| a k] u ?-r-zi ta-a t?|...lx-x
!
i|-ya]
8 ( t<] ) ki-in-za-al-pa-|a]a3 GIM-an SU [M-a] n-z[i] c] 5*__ t a|r-!] a? cSgASun NNn4 gpivrs e'ir da-a'i
lpeiya'?l
20 [n u-u,d_] ia<-an>48 4-1y4
9 |nla-at ANA? DINGIRUM ZI ki-a-a!-ilz-zi++ na-f a da-pi-an |ma-]a[- 2I [nuP] A-NA EN.INIM wa-al-a-iSUM-an-zi nu PA'NIGtsaNtun
[la!- anl ti-ya-zi nul
l0 anda | i-k] u-wa-iz-zia5 na-a r E [N. INI ] IM EGIR-pa ka| t-t] a? 22 |A-]NAD?[U]TU? 3-S si-pa-an-t EN.SISKUR me-ma-i
32 |QA-TAM-I|,1]A a-pa-a-at e+c4u [a1-zi-ya-an4u53 4 nu-za da-p-an<-dp-u, DINGIRMES bal_za-a|-1 nu-za da-p-an-du-u
33 nu-u t-t] a MU.KAMHI.A ITU. KJN\4HI.A UD.I(JN\4H| -A ta-]unae+,j a-,a-
.uu-u
|
35 lbul-u-kdn-taINA UD.7.KAM ne-ya-an fiar-zi 7 A+a ar!-na-a UM-MADUTU k-i-wa ku't |'ya-nu'unl
56 Cf. KBo 11.14 i 23 and dupl. KUB 57.79 obv. i 4ff, Trarslation of KUB 58.94 obv. i &
18 is siven above p. 60f.
57 pur'ug. refers to the festival given by the Sun God in KBo 11.14 i 24f., cf. also
ni,
KUB 57.79 obv. i 4ff. and its dupl. KUB 58.94 obv. i 3ff.
51 Thi' context suPPorts also e suggested mearing '' to wrap' for 58 Prererved in KUB 57.79 obv. i 12.
anda j/<uwa.-. It is
possible at the frukanta's are wrapped in a bloody (i. e. fresh) skin to be applied by the 59 Fo, choosing a deity as one's "chief' god cf. DINGIRTTM sA SAG.DU in KUB 36.80
offerant as a kind of p. 76f. obv. 2f.; KUB 24.1 iobv. 6f. As the claims of Qpeen Puduf,epa show clearly, the elevation
52 For this poss C iv 3. of a god as one's main or protective deity is frequently used to deceive that particular deity,
cr All the gods o.ryi1 order to gain its attention towards the worshipper, see KUB 21.27 and also the
D4 This could s as opposite of ninnk-; see above commentary on i oraver for Gaulivawiya KBo 4.6 +, CTH 380.
' ' 60 The imper. ,j. 2.
1tr fo.-
of. ed- "to eat"which is attested only here must be added to
55 cr. rus b8.94 iv 1-3. the forms e-izju, e-ii'za'adu, e-iz-za-ad4u, 'iz'za4u in Hw2 E 128'
96 AHMETNAL
-^
98 AHMETUNAL THE RJTUAL or gar-rraSSu 99
cS.p161p.INANNATUR/GAL... .................43f. kappai- 47
LUHLAL........ 37 47f.
Uzuhapear 48 note 106
kappiha........''
NAaba'arazi- ::: ::: : ;,;;;;;;;,;; /<arawar see SI
G|Sariuzzi- 42 knu-................ 25 note 722,36,68, 78
larrant- kinzalpa- ......... 92 note 43
a.i- ''to open'' 67 wit} note 216, 74 ......... 92note M
IaSduir 49 note 114 ...........45f.
atta '... 60,76 74
cts[attalu ,...73f. TUGftureijal" 43 note 72
46 J<u.aJai-.... 73f.
68 kutiya 45f.
64,75ff. < kuwata........... 77
uwant-. 3l note 162 kuwata tt
fuukat- 26 note 730,75tr. < kuwayat(i)-. 77
umant...'. 26 note 130,53 La-.. 62
fiuppai-/fruppiya ...........48 Gtslahura-. 42
bupurniy'uwurni- ...'.. 87 note 10 laknu-.... 41
c$0urfti-.... ...... 63 le see li-i
fuurtalliya. 48 li-i unique writing for prohibitive adv. lie ............. 88 note 16
47 l1ipa(i) 28 note 143
50 (:)lim(m)a- .... 88 note 16
GISIG 73 LDUlIsKUR_ 37
c.uSrN. 37 LUGAL I5
48 m a inkuwanr_.......... 33f.,87 note 6
87 with note 9 cSM,lR 66
:
100 101
nab SI 49
DUGnakappit-/nikappi ::: ;;;;;fi; SALSUHUR.I-AL ............ JI
34,37 da- 50,54 74
nega 92 note 38 dafuanga-......... 42
nikt (Iit.) ................34 DuGhhakaPP-.
1p4.BpivS .,.......'..',..47 dai-, mena\b an da d. ........
ninink- ......33ff., gg TAMLU
NUMUN 45f. dapi-
pal 53,54f.,64
,^
pakku(uwant) ............. /o
.r.prpr-..... ............41f.
NAaparaa- note 738,47
.............27 with tamuwar
par[uena 27 with note 134f., 46 c51,,,'u-,
paddai- .......66,69 GIS16/22
5t tekan
tepawah
91 note 36
3l
G|spur(ya) 42 ahr
PURSITUM 48 note 109
snu
SaH.run.. ..67f.,70 with note 240
sSAzu. 3t
cSSAG.gL ....................... 73f. *tri see terl-
KUSiaJa-.........................;...... uzuuBUR... .............69
*ameiya.'.. 50 uIili- 89 note 20
LUSANIGA.. oh
.,.,.....,...4 41 note 55
I ulreift-..
.............49 uddar, u ddan a ija-lEN-a. B ELU ...... 37f. with note 33ff.
9l note 36 74,77
ikuwai, anda,................ ......75,92,94 note 51 74
spen, spune (high ger.) 70 -wa, omission of the direct speech particle -wain some versions ......... 57
sSU.G 11,37 wabnu-, appaw.
ubba ....39,46 walila- (Iuw.)
Sr = appa(n) ta.rna- 64 note 197 warIui- 49
102 AHMETNAL THE RITUAL OF HANTITASSU 103
wariyant- .7
62 flaya
we-, DUTU arabza wefu- 1l
53 aauili i .................,
wel- see welwila- ......... I note 4
flattuI ................
wellu Kallawi .................. 36
62
welwila Ma(n)dura 19 note 25,63
.6 I f.
Muwa ................... 10
czAG.GAR.R{.. Muwatal| i.......... 60
uRUDUza/<.ki- ...... Nikalmati 59f.
zina[ Puduepa.....
Pupuwani..,
Ramses ....................
b)DIVINE NAMES Saburunuwa...
Agni/Akni 63 Suppiluliuma i
Tamiarri.
40
40
Tadubepa
..72
ERES.KI.GAL.... Tutlalya ji .................
39f.
Etan(u) '..' Tutaliya ni ................
39f.
I3[ara
b5
Wattiti
ISTAR 56, 89 note 20 Ziplantawiya..
Kamruepa
63
Kattazipuri d)GEOGRAPHICAL NAMES (TURKISH AND ANCIENT)
63
Gu]a'
ob Acemhyk 43
Le|wan
40 Naca Hyk 43
Ninga....
36 Arzawa 11
Uliliyai Ayanky 50 note 128
89 note 20
DUTU
..........39ff. Babylona 11
c)PERSONAL NAMES
ankn..' 50 note 128
Arnuwanda
.......vII,59 ekerek 50 note 128
.vII, 59, g2 Delice river 50 note 128
,......vII,57 Emrgaz ,.44note 79
16,56ff.,93
........ Fraktin 43
,.78f. and passim Hacbekta . 50 note 128
04 THE RITUAL OF UANTITASSU r05
A}IMETNAL
Hakm/ Haftpid....................' bargain with gods.. 64f.
..... l0
barter 54f.
flupina 2 note 5
bIood........ ,,67
flurma 78f.
Inadk belle chant see conjuration
Iuwa bragging ..12
Kazapida bribe 7f. with note 26
Maat colophons 13
h_
108 AHMET NAL HANTTTASSU
THE RTTUAL OF 109
its construction ................... , 38 note 38 B)LIST OF THE FULLY EDITED AND TREATED TEXTS, AND
royal family (s. also ruling class) ,...,............ l CITED PASSAGES
ruling class, dependency of r. on magic........ ...............8f.
A)TEXTS FULLYEDITED
salt
SAZ KBo 11.14. 74,l7ff.
science, natural and human s. ..6f.
KBo 13.145 14f., 20fr., 86
KBo 10.45 ii Ol ................... KBo 32.13 i lff. ....... 5l with note 134
4B
KBo 12.38 ii 10..................., I\Bo 34.47 see KBo 17.105
,.....64 with note l9g
KBo 12.96 re\'. i\, 10ff......... ...........55 KUB 2.2 iv 3,5 , 84 note 1
KBo I 2. 123:7ff. ................... KUB 2.6 iii 26.................. .84 note 1
..........39
KBo l3.l0l ob,. i l3f., 3l... 35,74 with note 274 KUB 4.r ii l-6.................. 5b
KBo l3.109 iii 8........'....... 69
74
KBo l3.l45 re'. 9 ...'............ .84 note I KUB 5.7 obv.24 .......41
KBo 13.161 rev. right col. lff. ..... KUB 5.20 + KUB 18.56 obr'. 38ff............. .... 36 with note 28
D5
KBo 14.98 obv. i tO KUB 6.45 i 4f. 46
69,77
xgo ir.o i l8_2l, 25ff.......'.......... ,.......,............ 59 KUB 6.45 iii 37 ff.
KBo 15.25 rer,. 28f..,... KUB 7.33 + obv. 22..............
7 with note 24
KBo 16.97 obv. 42 KUB7.4r+i4-6
........7r
KBo 16.97 re\,. 5, 10............... KUB 8.14 rer,. 8f.
note 2b
..... 36 with
KBo 17.29 + KBo Z0.t i2....... KUB 8.28 obv. 17, rer'. 13f.
9l note 36
KBo 17.62 + ir'7ff. 35 with note 18 KUB 8.57 i 10 DJ
KBo l7.105 + KBo 34.47 re,. iii 30ff., KUB 9.31 ii 40..
,..,.......... 56
KBo 18.177:5 ........... KUB 10.11 iv 5f., l6 .........
.............. 45
KBo 19.129 obr,. 3l KUB 10.99 vi 15f. .............
..............47
KBo 19.162 re'. 3 ........ KUB 12.16 ii 14, l9 47
..84 note I
KBo 20.1 see KBo l7.Zg + KUB 72.24 obv. i 2ff......... 55
KBo 20.11 obr'. ii 7............. KUB 12.63 + obv. 9ff........ 62
KUB 12.63 obr,.31 48
KUB 13.4 i 33............ 7r
KUB 13.14 + iii 3G39 35 with note 24
KUB 14.1 obv.44f. 34 with note 14
KUB 15.11 ii 3l .................... 77
KBo 23.8 obv. 13..... KB 15.3l obv. ii 6ff............ 68
l{Bo 23.44 rer,. i' l0 KUB 16.34 i 14.. 41
KBo 24.3 + i 9, lB KUB 16.47, 12.. ........76
I(Bo 24.4 + IBoT 4'l4 re,. zff. ....'... KUB 17.24 ii 16f. ... 7 note 25
KBo 24.93 rer,. iii lg. KUB 17.27 + KUB 12.50 ii 28-34, iii 9................ .....72 with note 36
KBo 27.85+t9Z/v rer,. 14........ KUB 17.29 iztr.,6,22ff. 67
KBo 29.209: 13 ................. KUB 17.28 ii 5l 45
KBo 30. I 64 obr,. iii 8f. ....................... KUB 17.30 iii 3-5 btr
LLI
112 AHMET NAL
THE RITUAL OF HANTITASSU 113
KUB 18.12 i 7 KUB 38.3 i 10........... ..........45
KUB 20.90 iii l2
..........53
KUB 21.1 iii 46f.
..........48
KUB 21.27 ii 20...........
..........47
KUB 23.11 rev. iii 28ff........ KUB 42.57:3 .'....',.,45
KUB 42.100 iii 34f.............. ..........77
KUB 42.94 obr,. 17 45
KUB 24.9 + ii 18, ir,7 KUB 43.49 rev.? 30f. 45
KUB 24.9 +iv22,27f. KUB 43.52 + iii 1l ... ..................69
KUB 24.721i 4 KUB 43.56 rev. iii f 1ff............. .................. o-h /
KUB 25.r2 ,i l5 ........'......
KUB 44.15 obv.9f. 49 note l13
KUB 25.27 ii 22f. ..............
KUB 49.7: ll ........ CJ
KUB 27.1 obr,. i 31-34...... KUB 50.79 obv.? 6........ 35 with note 16
KUB 27.67 + ii gff. 73f. KUB53.3v6..... 39
KUB 27.67 + rer,. iv 33ff. ........... KUB 53.4 rev. 26 66
KUB 29.4 ii 67ff......... KUB 55.20 + KUB 9.4 + ii 33,35, iii 16..........
KUB 30.28 rer'. lff. KUB 55.37 iii r2-15 o/
:,j)
KUB 30.51 + 45 + HSM 9644 ii t9-23 KUB 55.48 i 14... 60
KUB 31.68: l3 ............
KUB 56.35 i 2 84 note I
KUB 3t.7l re,. iv 35 ..............
KUB 56.36 ob'. 5f. ......74
KUB 31.86 iv lff. with dupl...............
KUB 56.51 obr'.9-12 ......53
KUB 31.100 obv. 24...........
KUB 56.59 rer,. 33-34...... 7 note 25
KUB 31.127 + ABoT 44rev. iv 6f. .......
KUB 57 .34:9ff..................... cl
KUB 31.127 + obv. ii 2f............
KUB 32.129 + KBo 33.723 obv. 1........
KUB 33.121 ii 15
KUB 35.102 iii 6, iii 5............
KUB 35.145 ii 9..........
66
KUB 35.149 obv. i 10............
......','....,,,,. 47
KUB 36.18 ii 21............ 53 KUB 60.73 rer,. 5-7 .................. 55
.ct
OH
KUB 60.156 rer'. l2ff. 63
.53 HBM 74:72ff. ...... t0 and note 32
.67 HT 6 + KBo 9.125 rev. i 23 ..69
.63 VBoT 24i33... ..74
E
Weidner 1911, 81 i 4...... AOAT Alter Orient und Altes Testament - Neukirchen-Muyn
AoF Altorientalische Forschungen - Berlin
Athenaeum Athenaeum _ Paa
Belleten Trk Tarih Kurumu Belleten - Ankara
BiOr Bibliotheca Orientalis
BMECCJ Bulletin of the Middle Eastern Culture Center in Japan,
ed. by H. I. H. Prince Takahito Mikasa - Otto
Harrassowiz, Wiesbaden
BSL Bulletin de la Soci6t6 de Linguistique de Paris
CHD The Hittite Dictionary of the Oriental Institute of the
Uni,ersity of Chicago (1980ff.)
ChS Corpus der hurritischen Sprachdenkmiler - Rome
CTH E. Laroche, Catalogue des textes hittites, 2nd ed. - Paris
1977
DLL E. Larrche' Dictionnaire de la langue louvite - Paris 1959
EOTHEN Eothen - Florence
Fs Festschrift
IIAB F. Sommer-A. Falkenstein, Die Hethitisch-akkadische
Bilingue des Hattuili I (ABAW, NF 16) - Mnchen 1938
HBM S. Alp, Hethitische Briefe aus Maat-Hy"k - Ankara 1991
AHMET NAL
116
THE RTTUAL OF HANTITASSU r17
HDA E. 'on Schuler, Hethitische Dienstanweisungen fr I-AAA Liverpool Annals of Archaeology and Anthropology -
hhere Hof- und Staatsbeamt'e, Afo Beiheft 10 (l957) Liverpool
HDW J. Tischler, Hethitisch-deutsches Wrterverzeichnis _ LingBal Linguistic Balkanic
Innsbruck 1982 Madd. A. Gtze, Madduwatta (MVAeG 32'1) _Leipzig 1928
HED J. Puhvel, Hittite Eqmological Dictionary - Berlin 1984ff. MSs Mnchener Studien zur Sprachwissenschaft - Mnchen
IIEG J. Tischler, Hethitisches etymologishes Glossar r952ff.
Innsbruck 7977ff.
Mze/Museum published by T. C. Kltr Bakanl Kltr ve Tabiat
Hethitica Hethitica - Louvain-la-Neuve
Varlklarnr Koruma Bakanl, Ankara ( l 989ff. )
HFAC G. Beckman-H.A Hoffner, Hittite Fragments in American
MVAeG Mitteilungendervorderasiatisch-gyptischenGesellschaft
Collections, JCS 37 (1985)
- Leipzig
HH E. Laroche, Les Hi6roglyphes Hittites (1960)
OA Oriens Antiquus - Rome
HSM Harvard Semitic Museum, inventory number
OLZ Orientalistische Literaturzeitung
HT Hittite Texts in Cuneiform Character in the British
Museum - London 1920 Or. Orientalia - Rome
HW J. Friedrich, Hethitisches Wrterbuch _ Heildelberg
RIiA Reve hittite et asianique - Paris
195zff. RIA Reallexikon der Assyriologie - Berlin
HW2 J. Friedrich-A. Kammenhuber, Hethitisches Wrterbuch, StBoT Studien zu den Boazky Texten
2nd ed.- Heildelberg 1975ff. SV J. Friedrich, Staarsvertrige des Hatti-Reiches in
IBoT stanbul Arkeoloji Mzelerinde Bulunan Boazky hethitischer Sprache (MVAeG 31.1, 34.1) Leipzig 1g26,
Tableri - stanbul |944ff' 1930
IF Indogermanische Forschun gen Targ. Treaty of Murili ii with Targanalli, ed. byJ. Friedrich'
JAos Journal of American Oriental Society SV l:51ff.
Tel. Telipinu-Erlass
JBL Journal of Biblical Literature
JCS Journal of Cuneiform Studies TH Texte der Hethiter - Heildelberg
JIES Journal of Indo-European Studies TUAT O. Kaiser (ed.), Texte aus der Umwelt des Alten
Jkr Jahrbuch fr kleinasiatische Forschungen (= Anadolu Testaments
Aratrmalar) - Heildelberg/stanbul Tunn A. Gtze, The Hittite Ritual of Tunnawi (AoS l4) New
-
JNES Journal of Near Eastern Studies - Chicago Haven 1938
KBo Keilschrifttexte aus Boghazki ullik. Ullikummi myth, cited according to H. G. Gterbock,
KST Kaz Sonular Toplantsr, publihshed annaully by the The Song of Ullikummi, revised, rext of the Hittite
Turkish Minstry of Culture, Ankara lgTgff. Version of a Hurrian Myth,JCS 5:135ff., 6:8ff.
KUB Keilschrifturkunden aus Boghazki \lBoT Verstreute Boghazki-Texte
Krp. Treaty of Murili ii with Kupanta-DLAMMA, ed. SV 1:95- Xenia Xenia,Hurriter und Hurritisch. Konstanzer Arthistorische
181
Vortrge und Forschungen' Heft 2l, ed. byV. Haas
KZ Historische Sprachforschung = Zeitschrift fr 74. Zeitschrift fr Assyriologie und verwandte Gebiete
Vergleichende Sprachforschung (Kuhns Zeitschrift)
118 AHMETNar THE RITUAL oF ge111ro,r, 119