Iron Age Anatolia

E1040351

Iron Age Anatolia refers to the region of modern-day Turkey during the Iron Age, characterized by a mosaic of Neo-Hittite, Phrygian, Urartian, and other kingdoms that emerged after the collapse of the Hittite Empire.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Iron Age Anatolia canonical 1

Statements (61)

Predicate Object
instanceOf archaeological culture area
historical region
archaeologicalEvidence Greek alphabetic inscriptions
citadels
cuneiform inscriptions
fortified settlements
inscriptions in Luwian hieroglyphs
associatedWithLanguageFamily Anatolian languages NERFINISHED
Greek language NERFINISHED
Hurro-Urartian languages NERFINISHED
Indo-European languages NERFINISHED
associatedWithPeople Assyrians NERFINISHED
Carians NERFINISHED
Cimmerians NERFINISHED
Ionians NERFINISHED
Lycians NERFINISHED
Lydians NERFINISHED
Neo-Hittites NERFINISHED
Phrygians NERFINISHED
Urartians NERFINISHED
characterizedBy continuity of Hittite cultural traditions
political fragmentation
regional kingdoms
use of iron metallurgy
economyBasedOn agriculture
long-distance trade
metalworking
pastoralism
emergedAfter collapse of the Hittite Empire
follows Hittite Empire NERFINISHED
Late Bronze Age Anatolia NERFINISHED
hasPart Carian polities NERFINISHED
Cilician polities NERFINISHED
Ionian Greek cities
Lycian polities
Lydian kingdom NERFINISHED
Neo-Hittite states NERFINISHED
Phrygian kingdom NERFINISHED
Urartian kingdom NERFINISHED
interactsWith Greek city-states NERFINISHED
Kingdom of Israel and Judah NERFINISHED
Neo-Assyrian Empire NERFINISHED
Neo-Babylonian Empire NERFINISHED
knownFor mosaic of small kingdoms
transition from Bronze Age to Iron Age societies
locatedIn Anatolia NERFINISHED
modern-day Turkey
notableSite Carchemish NERFINISHED
Gordion NERFINISHED
Karkemish NERFINISHED
Sardis NERFINISHED
Tushpa NERFINISHED
partOf Ancient Near East NERFINISHED
Eastern Mediterranean NERFINISHED
precededBy Hittite New Kingdom NERFINISHED
religionIncludes continuation of Hittite religious traditions
local Anatolian cults
succeededBy Achaemenid Persian rule in Anatolia
Classical Anatolia NERFINISHED
timePeriodEnd circa 600 BCE
timePeriodStart circa 1200 BCE

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Tabal region (probable) partOf Iron Age Anatolia
subject surface form: Tabal region