figurines (featuring
stylised navels,
breasts and
vulvas) discovered at
Alacahöyük. Several
archeological sites in central
Anatolia, dating from the
Early Bronze Age (second half of the 3rd millennium BC) are attributed to ancient Hattians. The structure of archeological finds in some sites, like
Hattush, reveal the existence of a complex culture with distinct social stratification. Most scholars believe that the first Hattian states existed already during the period of the
Akkadian Empire. That assumption is based on some later sources, mainly
Hittite and
Assyrian. The epic known as the "
King of Battle" (recorded in several versions from the 14th century BC onward) narrates about a war between
Sargon the Great of
Akkad (24th-23rd century BC) and king Nur-Daggal of
Purushanda, but those events are not attested in contemporary sources, that would date from the period of the
Akkadian Empire. A
Hittite version from 1400 BC of an older
Akkadian story also narrates some events that are related to early times, taking place during the rule of king
Naram-Sin of Akad (23rd century BC). The story describes a conflict between Naram-Sin and an alliance of 17 kings. The Hittite version of that story includes
Pamba of Hatti among those kings, but that inclusion is not attested in Akkadian versions of the story, nor in contemporary sources, that would date from the period of the
Akkadian Empire. Some scholars hold that the Hittite version (from 1400 BC) can be accepted as reliable and derived from some local sources. In that case, the narrative would contain a trustworthy tradition, thus providing a base for an assumption that the ancient Kingdom of Hatti existed already during the period of the Akkadian Empire. The Hattians were organized in
monarchical city-states. These states were ruled as
theocratic kingdoms or principalities. Hattian regions of Anatolia came to be influenced by mighty
Mesopotamian polities, such as those of the
Akkadian Empire (24th-22nd century BC) and the succeeding
Old Assyrian Empire (21st-18th century BC), both of which set up trading colonies called
karum, located throughout eastern and central Anatolia. During the first centuries of the 2nd millennium BC, an Assyrian trade colony existed in the city of
Hattush, and several Assyrian inscriptions mention (usually by office, not by name) the existence of local rulers (kings) of Hattush, also referring to their relations with other city-states in the region. ==Language==