, a sanctuary of Hattusa In 1833, the French archaeologist
Félix Marie Charles Texier (1802–1871) was sent on an exploratory mission to Turkey, where in 1834 he discovered monumental ruins near the town of Boğazköy. Texier made topographical measurements, produced illustrations, and composed a preliminary site plan. The site was subsequently visited by a number of European travelers and explorers, most notably the German geographer
Heinrich Barth in 1858.
Georges Perrot excavated at the site in 1861 and at the nearby site of Yazılıkaya. Perrot was the first to suggest, in 1886, that Boğazköy was the Hittite capital of Hattusa. In 1882 German engineer
Carl Humann completed a full plan of the site.
Ernest Chantre opened some trial trenches at the village then called Boğazköy, in 1893–94, with excavations being cut short by a cholera outbreak. Significantly Chantre discovered some fragments of clay tablets inscribed with cuneiform. The fragments contain text in both the
Akkadian language and what later was determined to be the
Hittite language. Between 1901 and 1905
Waldemar Belck visited the site several times, finding a number of tablets. In 1905
Hugo Winckler conducted some soundings at Boğazköy on behalf of the
German Oriental Society (DOG), finding 35 more cuneiform tablet fragments at the site of the royal fortress,
Büyükkale. Winckler began actual excavations in 1906, focusing mainly on the royal fortress area. Thousands of tablets were recovered, most in the then unreadable Hittite language. The few Akkadian texts firmly identified the site as Hattusa. Winckler returned in 1907 (with
Otto Puchstein,
Heinrich Kohl,
Ludwig Curtius and
Daniel Krencker), and briefly in 1911 and 1912 (with
Theodore Makridi). Work stopped with the outbreak of WWI. Tablets from these excavations were published in two series
Keilschrifttexte aus Boghazkoi (KB0) and
Keilschrift urkunden aus Boghazköi (KUB). Work resumed in 1931 under prehistorian
Kurt Bittel with establishing stratigraphy as the major focus. The work was under the auspices of the DOG and
German Archaeological Institute (Deutsches Archäologisches Institut) and lasted 9 seasons until being suspended due to the outbreak of WWII in 1939. Excavation resumed in 1952 under Bittel with Peter Neve replacing as field director in 1963 and as director in 1978, continuing until 1993. The focus was on the Upper City area. Publication of tablets was resumed in the KUB and KBo. In 1994 Jürgen Seeher assumed control of the excavation, leading there until 2005, with the focus on the Büyükkaya and non-monumental areas including economic and residential spaces. From 2006 on, while some archaeology continued under new director Andreas Schachner, activities have been more focused toward restoration and preparation for tourist operations. , a monument believed to have religious origins During the 1986 excavations a large (35 × 24 cm, 5 kg in weight, with 2 attached chains) inscribed metal tablet was discovered 35 meters west of the Sphinx Gate. The tablet, from the 13th century BC, contained a treaty between Hittite
Tudḫaliya IV and
Kurunta, King of
Tarḫuntašša. It is held at the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations in Ankara. During 1991 repair work at the site a Mycenae bronze sword was found on the western slope. It was inscribed, in Akkadian, "As Duthaliya the Great King shattered the Assuwa-Country he dedicated these swords to the Storm-God, his lord". Another significant find during the 1990-91 excavation season in the "Westbau" building of the upper city, was 3400 sealed bullae and clay lumps dating from the 2nd half of the 13th century BC. They were primarily associated with land documents.
Cuneiform royal archives Forty mercantile documents written in the Old Assyrian dialect of Akkadian were found in the early 2nd millennium BC
karum. By the middle of the 2nd millennium a scribal community had grown up in Hattusa based on Syrian, Mesopotamian, and Hurrian input. This included the usual range of Akkadian and Sumerian language texts. One of the most important discoveries at the site has been the cuneiform royal archives of clay tablets from the Hittite Empire New Kingdom period, known as the
Bogazköy Archive, consisting of official correspondence and contracts, as well as legal codes, procedures for cult ceremony, oracular prophecies and literature of the ancient Near East.
One particularly important tablet, currently on display at the
Istanbul Archaeology Museum, details the terms of a
peace settlement reached years after the
Battle of Kadesh between the Hittites and the Egyptians under
Ramesses II, in 1259 or 1258 BC. A copy is on display in the
United Nations in
New York City as an example of the earliest known international peace treaties. Although the 30,000 or so clay tablets recovered from Hattusa form the main corpus of Hittite literature, archives have since appeared at other centers in Anatolia, such as
Tabigga (Maşat Höyük) and Sapinuwa (Ortaköy).
Sphinxes A pair of
sphinxes found at the southern gate in Hattusa were taken for restoration to
Germany in 1917. The better-preserved was returned to Turkey in 1924 and placed on display in the
Istanbul Archaeology Museum, but the other remained in Germany where it was on display at the
Pergamon Museum from 1934 until it was moved to the Boğazköy Museum outside the Hattusa ruins, along with the Istanbul sphinx reuniting the pair near their original location. == See also ==