List of Hittite kings explained

The dating and sequence of Hittite kings is compiled by scholars from fragmentary records, supplemented by the finds in Ḫattuša and other administrative centers of cuneiform tablets and more than 3,500 seal impressions providing the names, titles, and sometimes ancestry of Hittite kings and officials. Given the nature of the source evidence, reconstructions vary among scholars, and the dating or even existence, relationships and sequence of some kings is disputed at several point within Hittite history. The list below indicates instances of such debates, with references.

All dates in the list below should be considered approximate. Hittite Chronology is almost completely dependent on synchronisms with other ancient Near Eastern countries.[1] Such synchronisms are few and usually open to interpretation. Muršili I is believed to have overthrown Samsu-ditāna, the last king of the Amorite dynasty of Babylon, but the dating of this event varies widely across chronological schemes based on interpretations of the records of observation of Venus during the reign of Samsu-ditāna's predecessor. These have resulted in several chronologies for Mesopotamia. In reference to the capture of Babylon by Muršili I, these are High (1651 BC), Middle (1595 BC), Low (1531 BC), and Ultra-Low (1499 BC),[2] with additional variants such as the lower Middle Chronology (1587 BC).[3] The distinction between these Mesopotamian chronological models disappears in the Late Bronze Age. Egyptian chronology is also subject to variant interpretations, resulting in three leading options, High (1304 BC), Middle (1290 BC), and Low (1279 BC), for the accession of Ramesses II, the contemporary of the Hittite kings Muwatalli II and Ḫattušili III.[4] Assuming the preferred Low Chronology for Egypt, Ramesses II fought Muwatalli II at Kadesh in 1274 BC (Year 5), concluded a peace treaty with Ḫattušili III in 1259 BC (Year 21), and married the latter's daughter Maathorneferure in 1246 BC (Year 34).[5]

On the Hittite side there are very few precise indicators. The "Apology" of Ḫattušili III indicates that his nephew and predecessor Muršili III reigned for 7 years.[6] A text of Muršili II records an omen of the sun at the beginning of the campaign season against Azzi-Ḫayaša, in Year 9 or 10 of the reign. It is often considered to have been a solar eclipse, with current scholarly opinion divided between one on 24 June 1312 BC (which was visible from central Anatolia but seemingly late in the year, apparently adopted in the chronologies of Amélie Kuhrt and Trevor Bryce) and one on 13 April 1308 BC (which was earlier in the year but marginally visible, from eastern Anatolia, apparently adopted in the chronology of Jacques Freu).[7]

The lists below use variations of the Mesopotamian Middle Chronology, the most generally accepted chronology of the Ancient Near East and the chronology that accords best with Hittite evidence.[8] The variants represented below derive from three comprehensive reconstructions of the chronological sequence of rulers, by Amélie Kuhrt (1995), Trevor Bryce (2005), and Jacques Freu (2007). All regnal dates remain approximations.

Old kingdom

Ruler!width="25%"
Reign (MC, Kuhrt, Bryce) [9] Reign (MC, Freu)[10] Lineage and notes
Ḫuzziya (I)(omits)Father or father-in-law of Labarna;[11] existence disputed.
Labarna I [12] Traditional founder of the royal line; son or son-in-law of Ḫuzziya;[13] existence disputed.
Ḫattušili INephew of the wife of Labarna I[14]
Muršili IGrandson of Ḫattušili I. Sacked Babylon .[15]
Ḫantili IBrother-in-law of Muršili I
Zidanta ISon-in-law of Ḫantili I
AmmunaSon of Zidanta I
Ḫuzziya I (II)Son of Ammuna (?)
TelipinuBrother-in-law of Ḫuzziya I

Middle kingdom (often not distinguished from Old kingdom)

Ruler!width="25%"
Reign (MC, Kuhrt, Bryce) [16] Reign (MC, Freu)[17] Lineage and notes
AlluwamnaSon-in-law of Telipinu
Ḫantili IISon of Alluwamna
TaḫurwailiCousin of Telipinu;[18] placement uncertain[19]
Zidanta IISon of Ḫaššuili, a possible brother of Ḫantili II;[20]
Ḫuzziya II (III)Son or son-in-law of Zidanta II (?);[21]
Muwatalli IUnclear lineage

New kingdom

Ruler!width="25%"
Reign (MC, Kuhrt) [22] Reign (MC, Bryce)[23] Reign (MC, Freu)[24] Lineage and notes
Tudḫaliya ISon of Kantuzzili, descendant of Zidanta II (?) [25] Identity disputed (= Tudḫaliya II ?) [26]
Ḫattušili IISon of Tudḫaliya I (?) [27] Existence disputed [28]
Tudḫaliya IISon of Ḫattušili II (?) [29] Identity disputed (= Tudḫaliya I ?) [30]
Arnuwanda IAdopted son and son-in-law of Tudḫaliya II
Tudḫaliya IIISon of Arnuwanda I
Tudḫaliya the Younger (?)(omits)(omits)(omits)Son of Tudḫaliya III. Rule disputed.
Šuppiluliuma IAdopted son and son-in-law of Tudḫaliya III[31] Expanded the empire. Mentioned in the Amarna letters.[32]
Arnuwanda IISon of Šuppiluliuma I
Muršili IISon of Šuppiluliuma I
Muwatalli IISon of Muršili II Fought at the Battle of Kadesh.
Muršili IIISon of Muwatalli II
Ḫattušili IIISon of Muršili II Signatory of the Egyptian–Hittite peace treaty.
Tudḫaliya IVSon of Ḫattušili III Fought at the Battle of Nihriya.
Arnuwanda IIISon of Tudḫaliya IV
Šuppiluliuma II [33] Son of Tudḫaliya IV Last known king before the Late Bronze Age collapse and end of the kingdom.

Bibliography

See also

References

  1. Kuhrt 1995: 229-231; Bryce 2005: 376-382.
  2. Bryce 2005: 378.
  3. De Jong & Foertmeyer 2010; for an overview vis-à-vis recent scientific dating, see Höglmayer & Manning 2022.
  4. Kuhrt 1995: 205.
  5. Bryce 2005: 234, 277, 282.
  6. Bryce 2005: 261.
  7. Beckman 2000: 22 in favor of 1312 BC; Huber 2001: 640-644 prefers an earlier eclipse in 1340 BC on purely astronomical grounds; Wilhelm 2004: 74, 76 considers both 1312 BC and 1308 BC; Gautschy 2017 considers the eclipse in 1308 BC both possible and preferable.
  8. Book: Steadman . Sharon R. . The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Anatolia . McMahon . Gregory . 2011 . Oxford University Press . 978-0-19-970447-7 . 598 . en.
  9. Bryce 2005: xv uses the same dates.
  10. Freu & Mazoyer 2007: 25.
  11. Freu & Mazoyer 2007: 52-55.
  12. Kloekhorst, Alwin, (2020). "The Authorship of the Old Hittite Palace Chronicle (CTH 8): A Case for Anitta", in Journal of Cuneiform Studies 72 (2020): "...Recently, Forlanini proposed that the text's author was not Muršili I but rather Ḫattušili I, who tells about the times of his predecessor Labarna I (ca. 1680(?)–1650 BCE)..."
  13. Freu & Mazoyer 2007: 52-55.
  14. Book: Bilgin, Tayfun . Officials and Administration in the Hittite World . 2018 . Walter de Gruyter . 978-1-5015-0977-3 . 22 . en.
  15. Book: Kuhrt, A. . Ancient Near East c. 3000–330 BC . Routledge . 1997 . 978-0-415-16763-5 . London . 12.
  16. Bryce 2005: xv.
  17. Freu & Mazoyer 2007: 25.
  18. Birgit Brandau, Hartmut Schickert: Hethiter Die unbekannte Weltmacht
  19. Kuhrt 1995: 230 and Bryce 2005: xv tentatively place Taḫurwaili after Telipinu; Freu & Mazoyer 2007: 25 place Taḫurwaili after Ḫantili II.
  20. Freu & Mazoyer 2007: 166.
  21. Freu & Mazoyer 2007: 172.
  22. Kuhrt 1995's variant dates for Hittite New Kingdom reigns correspond to the Egyptian Middle and Low Chronology dates for Ramesses II, with his accession in 1290 BC or 1279 BC, respectively.
  23. Bryce 2005: xv; this author tentatively treats Tudḫaliya I and Tudḫaliya II as a single king, whom he designates Tudḫaliya I/II.
  24. Freu & Mazoyer 2007: 25.
  25. Freu & Mazoyer 2007: 311; Kuhrt 1995: 230.
  26. Bryce 2005: 122-123.
  27. Freu & Mazoyer 2007: 311; Kuhrt 1995: 230.
  28. Book: Bryce . Trevor . The World of The Neo-Hittite Kingdoms: A Political and Military History . Bryce . Trevor Robert . 2012-03-15 . OUP Oxford . 978-0-19-921872-1 . en . Appendix III: The Kings of Late Bronze Age Hatti.
  29. Freu & Mazoyer 2007: 311; Kuhrt 1995: 230.
  30. Bryce 2005: 122-123.
  31. Freu & Mazoyer 2007: 200-201.
  32. Book: Cohen . Raymond . Amarna Diplomacy: The Beginnings of International Relations . Westbrook . Raymond . 2002 . JHU Press . 978-0-8018-7103-0 . xv . en.
  33. Book: Drews, Robert . The Coming of the Greeks: Indo-European Conquests in the Aegean and the Near East . 1994 . Princeton University Press . 978-0-691-02951-1 . 67 . en.